Appearance
🎉 your wikitable 🥳
"The 2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 45th conference playoff in league history and 50th season where a WCHA champion was crowned. The 2004 tournament was played between March 12 and March 20, 2004, at five conference arenas and the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota. By winning the tournament, Minnesota was awarded the Broadmoor Trophy and received the Western Collegiate Hockey Association's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Format The first round of the postseason tournament featured a best-of- three games format. All ten conference schools participated in the tournament with teams seeded No. 1 through No. 10 according to their final conference standing, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with an identical number of points accumulated. The top five seeded teams each earned home ice and hosted one of the lower seeded teams. The winners of the first round series advanced to the Xcel Energy Center for the WCHA Final Five, the collective name for the quarterfinal, semifinal, and championship rounds. The Final Five uses a single-elimination format. Teams were re-seeded No. 1 through No. 5 according to the final regular season conference standings, with the top three teams automatically advancing to the semifinals. =Conference Standings= Note: PTS = Points; GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against Bracket Teams are reseeded after the first round Note: * denotes overtime period(s) =First Round= (1) North Dakota vs. (10) Michigan Tech (2) Minnesota-Duluth vs. (9) Minnesota State-Mankato (3) Wisconsin vs. (8) Alaska-Anchorage (4) Denver vs. (7) Colorado College (5) Minnesota vs. (6) St. Cloud State =Quarterfinal= (7) Colorado College vs. (8) Alaska- Anchorage =Semifinals= (1) North Dakota vs. (8) Alaska- Anchorage (2) Minnesota-Duluth vs. (5) Minnesota =Third Place= (2) Minnesota-Duluth vs. (8) Alaska-Anchorage =Championship= (1) North Dakota vs. (5) Minnesota Tournament awards =All- Tournament Team= *F Zach Parise (North Dakota) *F Danny Irmen (Minnesota) *F Brandon Bochenski (North Dakota) *D Matt Jones (North Dakota) *D Keith Ballard (Minnesota) *G Kellen Briggs* (Minnesota) * Most Valuable Player(s) See also *Western Collegiate Hockey Association men's champions References External links *WCHA official site *2003–04 WCHA Standings *2003–04 NCAA Standings WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament Category:WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament "
"Banchia-ye Sofla (, also Romanized as Bānchīā-ye Soflá; also known as Bānchīā- ye ‘Olyā and Tāzehābād-e Bānchīā) is a village in Dowlatabad Rural District, in the Central District of Ravansar County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 19, in 5 families. References Category:Populated places in Ravansar County "
"Domenico dall'Oglio (c.1700 – 1764) was an Italian violinist and composer. Biography Domenico dall'Oglio was born in Padua, Italy. He was probably a pupil of Giuseppe Tartini, either after 1721 when Tartini was appointed Maestro di Cappella at the Basilica di Sant'Antonio in Padua, or perhaps after 1726 when Tartini founded his violin school.Mooser proposes that Domenico dall'Oglio might have studied under Antonio Vivaldi: this idea stems from the erroneous assumption that Domenico was the son of a certain Pietro dall'Oglio, who was maestro di choro 1713-1718 at the Ospedale della Pietà in Venice, where Vivaldi was active as a violin teacher for several decades. However, recent research has found that "Pietro dall'Oglio" was a pseudonym of Pietro Scarpari, an important figure at the Ospedale at the time. Another reason for Mooser's mistake may be the fact that Domenico dall'Oglio was very influenced by Vivaldi's style of composition. In 1732 dall'Oglio was appointed violinist at the Basilica di Sant'Antonio, but in 1735 he left Padua to go to Russia with his brother Giuseppe, a cellist. Both brothers remained in St Petersburg for nearly 29 years in the service of the imperial court. Court records make frequent reference to Domenico's activities as a virtuoso violinist and composer, and as a participant in the intrigues of the court. For relaxation he liked to build musical instruments – violins and lutes. He died in Narva, Estonia, on his return journey to Italy. Musical style Most of dall'Oglio's works are instrumental compositions, but at the imperial court of St Petersburg, in the absence of the maestro di cappella Francesco Araja, dall'Oglio was several times called on to produce music for the theatre. He was a master of the Italian virtuoso style of the eighteenth century, with frequent use of double-stopping and passages at high positions. Structurally his violin sonatas follow the shape Allegro-Adagio-Allegro, instead of the then customary structure Allegro-Grave/Largo-Allegro; noteworthy are the slow movements of his compositions, which have elaborate embellishments typical of the school of Tartini. Compositions *12 sonatas for violin and cello or harpsichord (1738 Amsterdam) *6 sinfonias for two violins, viola and bass, Op.1 (1753, Paris) *2 sonatas for flute and bass *12 sonatas for violin and basso continuo *4 sonatas for two violins, viola and bass *Sinfonia Russa for four violins (lost) *Various sinfonias in Russian style (lost) *Sinfonia for two clarinets, two violins, timpani and bass (lost) *Pieces for violetta and bass *17 violin concertos (with two violins, viola and cello obbligati) *10 sonatas for violin and bass *La Russia afflitta (The afflicted Russia), prologue and pieces for Tito Vespasiano (La clemenza di Tito) by Johann Adolf Hasse (lost) *E soffrirò che si – Combattuto da più venti (And who will suffer - Battered by several winds), recitative and aria for soprano and strings, for Didone abbandonata by Francesco Zoppis *Various ballets and music for the theatre References *R.-A. Mooser, Violinistes-compositeurs italiens en Russie au XVIIIe siècle, Italian Music Magazine, vol. XLVIII, p. 219-29 (1946) *V. Duckles and M. Elmer, Thematic Catalog of a Manuscript Collection of Eighteenth-Century Italian Instrumental Music in the University of California, pp. 163–78 (Berkeley, 1963) Notes Category:1700 births Category:1764 deaths Category:18th-century Italian people Category:People from Padua Category:Italian classical violinists Category:Male classical violinists Category:Italian composers Category:Italian male composers Category:Pupils of Giuseppe Tartini Category:18th-century composers Category:18th-century male musicians "