Yuri Shevtsov

Yuri Shevtsov on 18 April 2007 in Mannheim's SAP Arena

As of July 23, 2009

Yuri Shevtsov (Russian Юрий Анатольевич Шевцов / Yuri Shevtsov Anatoljevich; actually belarusian Юры Шаўцоў / Jury Schauzou; born December 16, 1959 in Sluzk, Byelorussian SSR) is a Belarusian handball coach and former handball player. He even used the French transcription Iouri Chevtsov ..

  • 5.1 successes as a national player
  • 5.2 successes as a club player
  • 5.3 successes as a coach

Career

At 14, he moved from Sluzk in the Handball boarding SKA Minsk. There he played with 18 years in the first team at outside right. With Alyaksandr Karschakewitsch he formed a " wingers " who for years sought second to none in the world club handball.

With 23 years of Yuri Shevtsov regular players of the Soviet men's national handball team was for, he completed 250 matches and with which he became world champion in 1982 and 1988 won the Olympic gold medal.

Career in Germany

In 1992, Yuri Shevtsov from Minsk to the then Bundesliga side SV Blau-Weiß Spandau ( player was Stefan Kretzschmar, among others ). After the descent from the elite class he took over in 1993 at the Berliners as coach.

1996 obliged him TBV Lemgo, with whom he in his first season at first the double - the German championship and the DHB Cup - won. About his first season in which he dominated with the TBV the Bundesliga almost at will, a 22:0 -point start record lay down and twelve points ahead of the SG Flensburg- Handewitt the championship won, the Handball week ruled five years later: " were the three key words of the Stoic White Russians, whose rapid pace Handball league rolled over formal. So .... it is hardly surprising that the TBV Lemgo was also involved in the strangest game of the year. Although Yuri Shevtsov were only six healthy players to field available in OWL derby against TuS Nettelstedt, the Insatiable 8:19 ​​a residue ( 24 ) still walked around in a sensational 36:30 victory. "

In 2001 he moved to TUSEM Essen, where he managed the feat in his last season, in the second leg ( 31:22 ) of the EHF Cup Final against SC Magdeburg offset the high 22:30 first-leg deficit.

In 2005 he signed with the then second division SG Kronau / Östringen a four-year contract. With the Badeners, later renamed into " Rhein- Neckar Löwen ," he managed in 2006 and 2007 to move into the DHB Cup final. In May 2008, he celebrated by reaching the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup and the fourth place in the Bundesliga the most successful in the club's history of Baden, which he put on the crown with the qualification for the Champions League in early September.

In the 2008/ 09 season he started with two wins and 4-0 points. 40:42 After a home defeat against THW Kiel and a 29:29 draw in its own hall against TBV Lemgo he was on 18 September 2008 by the reigning only one year CEO Thorsten Storm (until 2007 in the same position at SG Flensburg- Handewitt dismissed under contract ). Interim successor was Christian Schwarzer. In July 2009 he took over the office of Belarusian national coach Georgi Swiridenko.

Bundesliga record as a player

Season balances as coach

Bundesliga record as coach

Achievements

Success as a national player

  • World Cup 1982
  • Olympic champion in 1988

Success as a club player

  • European Cup Winners ' Cup in 1987, 1989, 1990 with SKA Minsk
  • European Cup Winners Cup Winners 1983, 1988 with SKA Minsk
  • Six-time Soviet champion with SKA Minsk
  • Triple Soviet Cup winner with SKA Minsk

Success as a coach

  • German Champion 1997 with TBV Lemgo
  • DHB Cup winner in 1997 with TBV Lemgo
  • Supercup winner 1997, 1999 with TBV Lemgo
  • EHF Cup Winner 2005 TUSEM Food
  • Finalist in the DHB Cup 1999 Lemgo, 2003 Food
  • Finalist in the European Cup Winners' Cup in 2008 with the Rhein- Neckar Löwen
  • Finalist in the DHB Cup in 2006, 2007 with the Rhein- Neckar Löwen
  • Champions League qualification in 2008 with the Rhein- Neckar Löwen

Awards

  • Coach of the Year 1997

Swell

  • Handball week special issue, "25 years Handball - Bundesliga ", page 70 f, 2002
  • Handball Week No. 16 of 17 April 2007, p 6
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