Alexander Arkadyevich Tutschkin

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Alexander Tutschkin
Player information
Full name Alexander Arkadyevich Tutschkin
Nickname "Sascha"
birthday July 15, 1964
place of birth Lviv , Ukrainian SSR , Soviet Union
citizenship RussianRussianRussian / Belarusian BelarusiansBelarusians
height 2.03 m
Playing position Back right
Throwing hand Left
Club information
society Career ended
Clubs as active
from ... to society
1984-1990 Soviet UnionSoviet Union SKA Minsk
1990-1998 GermanyGermany TUSEM food
1998–6 / 2000 GermanyGermany GWD Minden
6 / 2000-12 / 2000 GermanyGermany Eintracht Hildesheim
12 / 2000-2002 SpainSpain Teka Cantabria
2002-2004 GreeceGreece AC Filippos Verias
2004-2005 GermanyGermany TSV Hannover-Burgdorf
2006-2006 GermanyGermany Wilhelmshaven HV
National team
Debut on 1986
  Games (goals)
Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union Belarus Russia
BelarusBelarus 
RussiaRussia 
160 (?)
10 (48)
92 (299)

Status: national team December 28, 2013

Aleksandr Tuchkin ( Russian Александр Аркадьевич Тучкин , Belarusian Аляксанд (а) р Тучкін , Aljaksand (a) r Tutschkin ; born July 15, 1964 in Lviv ) was a Russian-Belarusian handball player .

The 2.03 m tall Tutschkin was deployed in the right back area during his active time .

Athletic career

society

Tutschkin only began playing handball at the age of 17 and was discovered by Spartak Mironowitsch , the long-time coach of the top club SKA Minsk . At the age of 20 he made his debut in the SKA professional team. Here he won the European Champion Clubs 'Cup in 1987, 1989 and 1990 as well as the European Cup Winners' Cup in between in 1988 . In 1990 he used the fall of the Iron Curtain to switch to the German handball league , namely to TUSEM Essen . With the men from Margarethenhöhe he won the German Cup in 1991 and 1992 and won the European City Cup in 1994 . In 1998 he moved on to GWD Minden , where after a serious car accident under the influence of alcohol in September 1999 his contract was no longer renewed. After the fracture of the cervical vertebra, he could not fully regain his performance. Years of wandering followed: in July 2000 he moved to the then promoted Eintracht Hildesheim and in December to the Spanish club CB Cantabria Santander . In 2002 he moved on to AC Filippos Verias in Greece, where he won the championship in 2003 and reached the final of the EHF Challenge Cup . In 2004 he returned to Germany to end his career with the then regional division TSV Hannover-Burgdorf with promotion to the 2nd division . In the spring of 2006 he was persuaded to make a brief comeback at the Wilhelmshaven AGM , but was rarely used there.

National team

After Tutschkin became world champion with the Soviet youth national team in 1985, he made his debut the following year in the Soviet men's national team , with which he won the gold medal at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul . Two years later they surprisingly had to admit defeat to Sweden in the 1990 World Cup final . Tutschkin was the top scorer of the tournament with 55 goals together with Julián Duranona . Due to an injury, he could not compete for the later victorious United Team (EUN) of the former Soviet republics at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona .

Then he decided to play for the Belarusian national team. However, he already played in the preliminary round of the 1995 World Cup, his last of only 10 internationals for Belarus.

At the request of his long-time friend Andrei Lavrov , he played for the Russian national team from 1998 , with which he again lost to Sweden in the final of the 1999 World Cup and the 2000 European Championship . At the following Olympic Games in Sydney , he took revenge and was Olympic champion for the second time . At the age of 40 he won in 2004 in Athens again bronze .

Political career

Today Tutschkin works in the Russian Ministry of Sports, where he and his former companion Andrei Lavrov are trying to make the sport of handball more popular in Russia.

successes

  • Soviet champion: 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989
  • German cup winner: 1991, 1992
  • Greek champion: 2003
  • Greek Cup Winner: 2003
  • European championship champions: 1987, 1989, 1990
  • European Cup Winner: 1988
  • Euro City Cup: 1994

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ihf.info: Handball results of the 2004 Olympic Games, p. 219 (PDF, 4.8 MB)
  2. IH-Academy: Tutschkin: "My players see old recordings and cannot believe that you can play like that" , August 15, 2012, (Russian)
  3. ^ Spiegel.de: Handball stars Tutschkin and Lavrov have an accident , September 9, 1999
  4. thw-handball.de: opponent roster Wilhelmshaven 2005/2006
  5. Ritzau: Skjern får ønske opfyldt. In: berlingske.dk. Berlingske , April 8, 2003, accessed April 24, 2019 (Danish).
  6. taz.de: A buddy with cult status , May 12, 2005
  7. Handball-World: Sascha Tutschkin helps the WHV , May 9, 2006
  8. Belarusian Association: International Match Statistics (accessed December 28, 2013)
  9. pressball.by: Interview with Tutschkin , October 9, 2007 (Russian)
  10. pressball.by: Interview with Tutschkin , June 19, 2009 (Russian)