Stavanger Oilers
0 sources
Stavanger Oilers
Summary
Stavanger Oilers is an ice hockey team[1]. It draws 34 Wikipedia views per month (ice_hockey_team category, ranking #270 of 1,710).[2]
Key Facts
- Stavanger Oilers is in the country of Norway[3].
- Stavanger Oilers's instance of is recorded as ice hockey team[4].
- Stavanger Oilers's league or competition is recorded as Elitehockeyligaen[5].
- Stavanger Oilers's Commons category is recorded as Stavanger Oilers[6].
- Stavanger Oilers's chairperson is recorded as Tore Christiansen[7].
- +2000-06-07T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Stavanger Oilers[8].
- Stavanger Oilers's sport is recorded as ice hockey[9].
- Stavanger Oilers's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0b3g_f[10].
- Stavanger Oilers's official website is recorded as http://www.oilers.no/[11].
- Stavanger Oilers's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Stavanger Oilers[12].
- Stavanger Oilers's OpenCorporates ID is recorded as no/984792972[13].
- Stavanger Oilers's topic has template is recorded as Q25888904[14].
- Stavanger Oilers's legal form is recorded as forening/lag/innretning[15].
- Stavanger Oilers's owner of is recorded as DNB Arena[16].
- Stavanger Oilers's Norwegian organisation number is recorded as 984792972[17].
- Stavanger Oilers's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as Stavanger_Oilers[18].
- Stavanger Oilers's category for members of a team is recorded as Category:Stavanger Oilers players[19].
- Stavanger Oilers's Fandom article ID is recorded as icehockey:Stavanger_Oilers[20].
- Stavanger Oilers's Fandom article ID is recorded as internationalhockey:Stavanger_Oilers[21].
Body
Founding
+2000-06-07T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Stavanger Oilers[8].
Leadership
Stavanger Oilers's chairperson is recorded as Tore Christiansen[7].
Why It Matters
Stavanger Oilers draws 34 Wikipedia views per month (ice_hockey_team category, ranking #270 of 1,710).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] It is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]