Dmitri Viktorovich Shakulin

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Basketball player
Dmitri Schakulin
Player information
Full name Dmitri Viktorovich Shakulin
birthday May 11, 1968
place of birth Kirov, Soviet Union
size 196 cm
position Small forward
Clubs as active
1985–1992 Dynamo Moscow 1992–1993 Beitar Tel Aviv 1993–1994 Dynamo Moscow 1994–1995 SV Oberelchingen 1995–1996 Dynamo Moscow 1997–1998 PBK CSKA Moscow 1998–1999 SV Oberelchingen 1999–2000 Maccabi Rischon LeZion 2000–2001 Spartak St. PetersburgSoviet UnionSoviet Union
IsraelIsrael
RussiaRussia
GermanyGermany
RussiaRussia
RussiaRussia
GermanyGermany
IsraelIsrael
RussiaRussia
National team
1992-1997 Russia
Clubs as coaches
2003–2005 Dynamo Moscow ( AC , youngsters) 2004–2005 Russia U-20 (AC) 2005–2007 Dynamo Moscow Oblast (AC) 2007 Dynamo Moscow Oblast ( interim ) 2007–2008 BK Chimki (AC) 2007–2008 Russia U- 20 ( AC ) Since 2008 CSKA Moscow (AC) 2010–2011 → CSKA Moscow (interim) Since 2009 Russia (AC) RussiaRussia
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RussiaRussia
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RussiaRussia
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0RussiaRussia
RussiaRussia
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Dmitri Viktorovich Schakulin medal table

Basketball (men)

RussiaRussia Russia
European Championship
silver 1993 Germany Russia
bronze 1997 Catalonia Russia

Dmitri Viktorovich Shakulin ( Russian Дмитрий Викторович Шакулин ; English transcription Dmitry Viktorovich Shakulin ; born May 11, 1968 in Kirov , RSFSR ) is a Russian basketball coach and former player. As a Russian national player , Schakulin won the silver medal at the 1993 European Championship finals and the bronze medal at the 1997 European Championship . In addition to stations in his home country, where he won the Russian championship with ZSKA Moscow in 1997 and 1998, he also played in Israel and for the German first division club SV Oberelchingen in the basketball league . After his active career, Schakulin worked as a trainer, mainly as an assistant coach . His greatest successes as an assistant coach include the U20 European Championship in 2005 and numerous Russian championship titles with CSKA Moscow.

Career

Player (1985 to 2001)

At the age of 14, Schakulin came from his hometown to the then Soviet capital Moscow , where he was promoted to the senior squad of the KGB sports club Dynamo in 1985 . Here he played until the end of the Soviet Union and then moved in the 1992/93 season for the first time abroad to the Israeli club Beitar in Tel Aviv . At the European Championship finals in 1993 he was in the squad of the Russian national team , which, however, lost the final by just one point against hosts Germany . After another year at Dynamo in the 1993/94 season, Schakulin returned to Germany and played in the basketball Bundesliga in 1994/95 for the newly promoted SV Tally from Oberelchingen . The newcomer surprisingly managed to jump into the play-offs for the championship, in which they lost to Bayer Giants Leverkusen in the first round .

In the following 1995/96 season, Schakulin won the runner-up with Dynamo Moscow behind serial champions CSKA Moscow. In February 1997 he finally switched to CSKA himself after Dynamo Moscow ceased its professional game operations for financial reasons, and won the following two championships with his new club in 1997 and 1998. He also made it into the final squad of the national team for a European championship -Final round. At the European Championship finals in 1997 , he won the quarter-finals against hosts Spain together with, among others, Yevgeny Paschutin as a teammate and, after a semi-final defeat against Italy, achieved the bronze medal in the "small final" against Greece . For the 1998/99 basketball Bundesliga , Schakulin returned to Oberelchingen, which this time made it into the play-offs as a penalty in the main round table. After a rather surprising series success in the qualifying round over promoted DJK Würzburg, they were eliminated in the quarter-finals against Rhöndorfer TV . This was followed by another station for Schakulin in Israel with Maccabi from Rishon LeZion in the 1999/2000 season, before he ended his active career with Spartak from Saint Petersburg in the 2000/01 season.

Trainer (since 2003)

Since 2003, Schakulin has been a member of the coaching staff of his old club, Dynamo Moscow, which was reactivated in 2001 and was back in the Russian Superleague Russia . After the resignation of Valdemaras Chomičius in November 2003, Schakulin was also head coach of the professional senior team for the first time on an interim basis before the new coach Zvi Sherf took up his position. In the following season with Dynamo's new head coach Valeri Tichonenko , he was primarily responsible for the youth division and also assisted Yevgeny Paschutin when he won the title at a European Championship finals with the Russian U20 national team for the first time after the end of the Soviet Union in 2005. He then worked in Moscow Oblast for the suburb Dynamo from Lyubertsy . Here he had to step in again as head coach in 2007 when coach Paulauskas announced his resignation in February 2007. However, he could not prevent Dynamo in the quarter-finals of the FIBA EuroCup 2006/07 against CB Estudiantes Madrid . For the following season, the suburb Dynamo changed its name to Triumph, but Schakulin moved to another suburb to Chimki as an assistant to Kęstutis Kemzūra . In 2007 and 2008 he was again assistant at the finals of the U20 Junior European Championships, in which the Russian selection, however, could not build on the successes at the 2005 finals in their own country.

After Yevgeny Paschutin 2008 gave up his longtime assistant job at CSKA Moscow and head coach of Spartak St. Petersburg, followed him Schakulin to the post at the Russian champions after which under coach Ettore Messina previously for the second time the title of the highest European club competition ULEB Euro League had won . With the dominating Russian club CSKA, Schakulin subsequently also won all Russian championship titles, but had to step in as head coach for this team in November 2010 after Duško Vujošević had been dismissed. He worked in this position until the end of February 2011, without being able to give the team decisive impulses on an international level, and was finally replaced as head coach by Jonas Kazlauskas . In addition, Schakulin has been working as assistant to national coach David Blatt , who won the bronze medal at the European Championships in 2011 and the 2012 Olympic Games with the Russian national team, since 2009 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dynamo Moscow Coach Khomichus Resigns. FIBA Europa , November 4, 2003, accessed May 5, 2013 .
  2. a b Баскетбол: Шакулин стал помощником Мессины в ЦСКА. Sportbox.ru, July 2, 2008, accessed May 5, 2013 (Russian).
  3. ^ Paulauskas Quits As Dynamo Moscow Region Coach. FIBA Europa, February 7, 2007, accessed May 5, 2013 .
  4. CSKA, coach Vujosevic part ways. ULEB , November 25, 2010, accessed May 5, 2013 .