Jacek Będzikowski
Jacek Będzikowski (2013) |
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Player information | |
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birthday | October 22, 1972 |
place of birth | Legnica , Poland |
citizenship | Polish |
height | 1.93 m |
Playing position | Back left |
Throwing hand | right |
Clubs as active | |
from ... to | society |
-1998 | WKS Śląsk Wrocław |
1998-2001 | TSV Bayer Dormagen |
2001-2005 | TV Großwallstadt |
2005-2008 | Wilhelmshaven HV |
2008-2011 | TSV Hannover-Burgdorf |
National team | |
Debut on | 1993 |
Games (goals) | |
Poland (1993-2005) | 104 (283) |
Clubs as coaches | |
from ... to | society |
2010-2011 | TSV Hannover-Burgdorf (assistant coach) |
2011–2012 | Zagłębie Lubin |
2012-2016 | Poland (assistant coach) |
2016-2018 | KS Meble Wójcik Elbląg |
2018– | LHC Cottbus |
Status: national team December 31, 2005 |
Jacek Będzikowski (born October 22, 1972 in Legnica / Poland ) is a former Polish handball player and coach. His body length is 1.93 m.
Most recently he played for the German club TSV Hannover-Burgdorf (shirt number 21) and previously also for the Polish men's national handball team .
Career
Jacek Będzikowski made his debut for WKS Śląsk Wrocław in the Polish first division. With the Breslau team he won the Polish championship in 1996 and the runner-up in 1997, in 1996 Będzikowski was voted Poland's handball player of the year. In 1998 he was looking for a new challenge and moved to the German second division TSV Bayer Dormagen , with whom he was promoted to the 1st German handball Bundesliga in 1999. A year later, Będzikowski went to TV Großwallstadt . He stayed there for four years before moving on to the Wilhelmshaven HV . With the North Sea townspeople, he managed to stay in the league twice; However, he could not prevent relegation in 2008. In the summer of 2008 Będzikowski moved to the second division TSV Hannover-Burgdorf. With the club he rose to the 1st Bundesliga in 2009, where he scored the last decisive goal, literally in the last second, in the relegation second leg, which Burgdorf still needed to move up. In the 2010/11 season he also worked as an assistant coach.
Będzikowski took over the coaching position from the Polish first division club Zagłębie Lubin in 2011. After only 11 points in 18 season games, he was released from his duties in February 2012. In October 2012, Będzikowski took the post of assistant coach of the Polish national team. In 2016, Będzikowski gave up this post and took over the Polish first division club KS Meble Wójcik Elbląg . After Elbląg did not receive a license for the 2018/19 season, Będzikowski took over the A-youth from LHC Cottbus as well as the post of regional coach at the Cottbus performance base.
Jacek Będzikowski has so far played 104 international matches for the Polish national team (1993-2005), 283 goals. At the 2007 men's handball world championship in Germany, he was no longer in his country's squad.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Będzikowski in the TSV Bayer Dormagen squad
- ↑ Będzikowski in the squad of the TV Großwallstadt
- ↑ Będzikowski in the squad of the Wilhelmshaven HV
- ↑ Skarb kibica mistrzostw Europy w piłce ręcznej mężczyzn - Polska 2016, Przegląd Sportowy (January 15, 2015)
- ↑ sportowefakty.wp.pl: Jacek Będzikowski trenerem Zagłębia , accessed on April 17, 2018
- ↑ Jerzy Szafraniec nowym trenerem szczypiornistów Zagłębia Lubin , accessed on October 13, 2012
- ↑ Bedzikowski is assistant coach of Biegler in Poland retrieved on October 13, 2012
- ↑ sportowefakty.wp.pl: Jacek Będzikowski poprowadzi Meble Wójcik Elbląg! , accessed on August 9, 2018
- ↑ handball-world.news: Jacek Bedzikowski as coach back in Germany , accessed on August 9, 2018
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Będzikowski, Jacek |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Polish handball player and coach |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 22, 1972 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Legnica , Poland |