A fight between Andreas Eder (EV Zug) and Bastian Guggenheim (SCL Tigers) in the National League in Switzerland. All rights ...
Vom Emmental kehren wir ohne Punkte zurรผck. Wir verlieren auswรคrts gegen die SCL Tigers.
Interviste a cura di Roberto Vedani della 48^ Giornata Campionato National Hockey League - Swiss Ice Hockey tra Hockey Club ...
SC Langnau Tigers are a professional ice hockey team from Langnau im Emmental, Switzerland. They play in the National League .
The canton of Thurgau is a northeast canton of Switzerland. It is named for the river Thur, and the name Thurgovia was historically used for a larger area, including part of this river's basin upstream of the modern canton.
The Frank was the currency of the Swiss canton of Thurgau between 1798 and 1803. It was subdivided into 10 Batzen, each of 4 Kreuzer.
Thurgauer Zeitung is a Swiss German daily newspaper published in Frauenfeld, Switzerland. It is one of the oldest newspapers still in circulation.
Thurnau is a municipality in the district Kulmbach, Germany. It is known for golfing as well as its potteries.
Thurgaton was a wapentake of the historic county of Nottinghamshire, England. It extended north-eastwards from Nottingham.
Thurgarton is a small village in rural Nottinghamshire, England. The village is close to Southwell, and Newark-on-Trent, with a medium-length commuting distance to Nottingham.
Thurgarton is a village in the North Norfolk district of the English county of Norfolk. It lies 6ยฝ miles north of Aylsham and 5ยฝ miles south-west of Cromer, and was once part of the North Erpingham hundred.
Thurgarton railway station is a Grade II listed station which serves the village of Thurgarton in Nottinghamshire, England. In 1880, the village had a station on the Midland Railway and John Kind was the first station master.
The Thurgartstone or Ogrestone is a prominent glacial erratic stone near Dunlop in East Ayrshire, Scotland. The Thurgartstone stands in a field at Brandleside Farm and is thought to have been a rocking stone at one time, but it no longer moves due to a build up of soil beneath.
The Thaua/Thawa, also spelt and also called Yuin-Djuin, were an Indigenous Australian tribe living around the Twofold Bay area of the South Coast of New South Wales.