André Bade

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Basketball player
André Bade
Player information
birthday January 21, 1973 (47 years and 223 days)
place of birth Hamburg, Germany
size 195 cm
position Shooting Guard / Point Guard
Clubs as active
Until 1993 SC Rist Wedel 1993–1994 SG Braunschweig 1994–1998 Steiner Bayreuth 1998 Teamware Helsinki 1998–1999 SSV unit Weißenfels 1999–2003 Oldenburger TB 2003–2005 Bremen Roosters 2005–2006 SC Rist Wedel 00GermanyGermany
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0 00 0 FinlandFinland
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National team 1
1996 Germany 8 games
1 As of August 13, 2011

André Bade (born January 21, 1973 in Hamburg ) is a former German basketball player . In the summer of 1996, Bade briefly moved up to the national team and played eight games in the national jersey. In 1998 he left the German first division team Steiner Bayreuth and played in Finland before playing for various first and second division teams in Germany. After his basketball career, he joined his father's funeral home in Wedel and from 2006 onwards he only played basketball successfully during his free time in old men's teams at his home club, Rist Wedel.

Career

Bade comes from the youth work of SC Rist Wedel near Hamburg, which has been awarded the Dresdner Bank “Green Ribbon” several times for promoting young talent. After the first men's team had been relegated to the 2nd Bundesliga Group North for many years , Bade first moved to the first division club SG Braunschweig and in 1994 within the top German division to Steiner Bayreuth, who was still a double winner in Germany in 1989 . At the Bayreuth club, the 23-year-old Bade was appointed to the national team in the summer of 1996 and made eight appearances between mid-June and early July at international tournaments in Argentina and at the 1996 Acropolis tournament in Greece . Subsequently, the club slowly said goodbye to the national top and in the following two seasons it did not make it into the play-offs for the German championship . After the name sponsor Steiner Optik had already withdrawn in 1997, Bade also left the club in 1998 before it was relegated in the following season and had to file for bankruptcy. In the 1998/99 season he first played for the Finnish champions Torpan Pojat under the sponsor name Teamware in Helsinki , who was trained by the former Bayreuth coach Aaron McCarthy . For the time being, he had his last appearances in international games for the Finnish club, although as before with Bayreuth in the Saporta Cup, they were not very successful before the final rounds. He brought it in eight European Cup games for Helsinki on 9.4 points per game. In the Finnish league, Bade scored 12.3 points per game in twelve appearances. At the end of November 1998 he left Finland and moved back to Germany to the second division SSV Einheit Weißenfels , with whom he made promotion to the Bundesliga.

For the 1999/2000 season he joined the Turnerbund from Oldenburg in the second division. The OTB, which had already belonged to the top division in the 1960s and briefly in the 1980s, managed to return to the upper house of German basketball in the 2nd BBL 1999/2000 . A starting five player in the second division , Bade became a role - player in the basketball league , who more and more disappeared from the rotation of players in the following seasons. After a season plagued by injuries in 2002/03 , Bade moved back to the north group of the 2nd division for TSV Lesum from Bremen . The club was promoted to the second division in 2001 and the first men's team was called Bremen Roosters from 2003 . In 2005, the 32-year-old Bade returned to SC Rist, who had retired to the regional league in 2002 after further second division years while he was joining his father's funeral home. After 2006, swimming was no longer active in the first men's team, but completed only games for the old boys 'team in the age group UE35 with other former greats such as former international Ingo Freyer since 2008 in competition with most of the old boys' team of DBV Charlottenburg to the German championship in this age group was. In Wedel he also works as a youth coach.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ SC Rist Wedel . In: SC Rist Wedel . ( scrist.de [accessed on January 19, 2018]).
  2. ^ Hans-Joachim Mahr: Games by Andre Bade (8). Mahr.SB-Vision.de/dbb, accessed on June 3, 2012 (statistics from a private database recognized by the DBB).
  3. Andre Bade | Saporta Cup (1999) | FIBA Europe. Retrieved August 24, 2020 .
  4. Andre Bade: Uratilastot & saavutukset. In: Suomen Koripalloliitto ry. Retrieved August 24, 2020 .
  5. ToPossa taas pelaajaliikennettä. In: mtvuutiset.fi. December 1, 1998, accessed August 24, 2020 .
  6. SSV hagebau Weißenfels is the East German hope. But the club sports hall is not even worthy of a second division team. Retrieved January 19, 2018 .
  7. SC Rist Wedel - Teams - Men - Over 35s - Successes. SC Rist Wedel , accessed on June 3, 2012 (reports on previous seasons of the senior team).
  8. M18: Bades Jungs take the title. In: SC Rist Wedel. Retrieved April 3, 2019 .