Inal Sharipovich Aflitulin

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Inal Sharipovich Aflitulin ( Russian Иналь Шарипович Афлитулин ; born March 22, 1988 in Astrakhan , Soviet Union ) is a Russian handball player who is mostly used on the back center .

The 1.82 m tall and 82 kg heavy right-handed player began playing handball in his hometown near Dinamo Astrakhan . In the 2008/09 season he played for the Russian series champion Medvedi Chekhov , with whom he won another championship. He then ran for the team at the Russian State University of Physical Culture, Sports and Tourism (РГУФК) in Moscow. From 2011 to 2015 he played for the Ukrainian club HK Motor Zaporizhzhya , with whom he became champions in 2013 and 2014 and cup winners in 2013. Internationally, he reached the quarter-finals in the 2011/12 EHF European Cup Winners' Cup and the last sixteen in the 2013/14 EHF Champions League . At the beginning of the 2015/16 season, Aflitulin joined the Romanian club HC Minaur Baia Mare . In November 2015 he moved to the German Bundesliga club Bergischer HC . For the 2016/17 season he joined the top Hungarian club Telekom Veszprém . In January 2017 he moved to the Hungarian club Eger SBS Eszterházy. In the summer of 2018, Aflitulin moved to the Russian first division club GK Spartak Moscow .

Inal Aflitulin took part in the 2014 European Championship with the Russian national team and finished in 9th place. So far, he has played 15 international matches in which he scored 18 goals. (As of December 10, 2018)

At the Men's 19 European Open Championship 2007, Aflitulin was chosen as the best backcourt center to be the most valuable player of the tournament.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. handball-world.com: BHC announces signing of the Russian national player on November 26, 2015, accessed on November 26, 2015
  2. handball-world.com Ex-BHC player joins Veszprem on August 2, 2016, accessed on August 2, 2016
  3. handballeger.hu Hétről-hétre bizonyíthat of January 3, 2017, accessed on May 25, 2017
  4. heol.hu Szabó Péter: igazgató és elnök egyben , accessed on December 28, 2018
  5. handball.sportresult.com Cumulative Statistics Russia (PDF, 150 kB) accessed on March 10, 2014
  6. ihf.info: Russia , accessed on December 27, 2018
  7. www.eurohandball.com EHF News 98 (PDF, 44 kB) from July 9, 2007, accessed on March 10, 2014