A brief glimpse into the past

คู่ที่ 1 : 16.00น. NONTHABURI TGE   vs  BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYS : THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022
คู่ที่ 1 : 16.00น. NONTHABURI TGE vs BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYS : THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022

คู่ที่ 1 : 16.00น. NONTHABURI TGE vs BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYS : THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022 แฟนๆบาสฯ ...



คู่ที่ 1 : 14.00น. LEG 2 : NONTHABURI TGE  vs BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER: THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022
คู่ที่ 1 : 14.00น. LEG 2 : NONTHABURI TGE vs BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER: THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022

คู่ที่ 1 : 14.00น. LEG 2 : NONTHABURI TGE vs BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER : THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022 แฟนๆบาสฯ ...



คู่ที่ 2 12.00น. LEG 1 :  NONTHABURI TGE vs  BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYSTHAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022
คู่ที่ 2 12.00น. LEG 1 : NONTHABURI TGE vs BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYSTHAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022

คู่ที่ 2 12.00น. LEG 1 : NONTHABURI TGE vs BAN BUENG DEVIL RAYS THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022 แฟนๆบาสฯ ...



คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 :   SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT  vs   RATCHABURI T REX
คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 : SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT vs RATCHABURI T REX

คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 : SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT vs RATCHABURI T REX แฟนๆบาสฯ รอติดตามและเชียร์แบบติดขอบสนาม ...



คู่ที่ 3 14.00น. LEG 1 :   PRACHINBURI CHAOPHRAYA THUNDERS vs SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT
คู่ที่ 3 14.00น. LEG 1 : PRACHINBURI CHAOPHRAYA THUNDERS vs SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT

คู่ที่ 3 14.00น. LEG 1 : PRACHINBURI CHAOPHRAYA THUNDERS vs SAMUT PRAKAN SHOOT IT แฟนๆบาสฯ ...



คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 :  BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER vs  NONTHABURI TGE:THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022
คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 : BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER vs NONTHABURI TGE:THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022

คู่ที่ 5 18.00น. LEG1 : BANGKOK TIGERS SNIPER vs NONTHABURI TGE :THAILAND BASKETBALL LEAGUE 2022 แฟนๆบาสฯ ...



Team, Place & City Details

2019 Thai general election
2019 Thai general election

The 2019 Thai general election was held in Thailand on 24 March 2019. It was the first election since the 2014 Thai coup d'état that installed coup leader General Prayut Chan-o-cha as prime minister, and the first held in accordance with the 2017 constitution, which was drafted under the ruling military junta.

2001 Thai general election
2001 Thai general election

General elections were held in Thailand on 6 January 2001 to elect the 500 seats of the House of Representatives. In accordance with the recently enacted 1997 constitution, the House of Representatives was composed of 400 members elected from single-member constituencies and 100 elected from national party lists on a proportional basis.

2005 Thai general election
2005 Thai general election

General elections were held in Thailand on 6 February 2005. The result was a landslide victory for the Thai Rak Thai party of Prime Minister, which won 375 of the 500 seats in the House of Representatives, with its former coalition partner, the Chart Thai Party taking 26 seats.

2006 Thai general election
2006 Thai general election

General elections were held in Thailand on April 2006. Elections for the lower house of the Thai National Assembly, the House of Representatives, were held on 2 April 2006 and elections for the upper house, the Senate, were held on 19 April 2006.

October 2006 Thai general election

After Thailand's April 2006 elections were declared invalid by the Constitutional Court, it was decided that new elections would be held on 15 October 2006. Due to delays in the nomination of a new election committee the election were likely to be moved to November, but then cancelled indefinitely after the military's overthrow of the Thai government.

2007 Thai general election
2007 Thai general election

The 2007 Thai general elections were held on 23 December. This was the first legislative election after the Council for National Security, a military junta, had overthrown Thailand's elected government and abrogated the constitution on September 19, 2006.

1996 Thai general election
1996 Thai general election

Early general elections were held in Thailand on 17 November 1996. The result was a victory for the New Aspiration Party, which won 125 of the 393 seats, despite winning fewer votes than the Democrat Party.

2011 Thai general election
2011 Thai general election

General elections were held in Thailand on 3 July 2011 to elect the 24th House of Representatives.The protestors of the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship or "Red Shirts" who occupied downtown Bangkok in April and May 2010 had demanded new elections. The government's counter-proposal to hold elections on 14 November 2010 was rejected by them and was followed by a violent crackdown when the protestors refused to disperse.

1995 Thai general election
1995 Thai general election

General elections were held in Thailand on 2 July 1995. The result was a victory for the Thai Nation Party, which won 92 of the 391 seats.

2014 Thai general election

Early general elections were held in Thailand on Sunday, 2 February 2014, after Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra asked King Bhumibol Adulyadej to dissolve parliament more than a year early owing to Thailand's political crisis. Voters elected a new House of Representatives, the lower house of the National Assembly.