Yelisaveta Ivanovna Tishchenko

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Yelisaveta Ivanovna Tishchenko
portrait
Date of birth 7th February 1975
place of birth Kiev , Soviet Union
size 1.90 m
position Middle block
societies
1990–1995
1995–1997
1997–1999
1999
1999–2004
2004–2005
2007–2008
VK Uralotschka-NTMK
NEC Red Rockets
OK Dubrovnik
Rubiera Sassuolo
VK Uralotschka-NTMK
1. VC Wiesbaden
VBC Cheseaux
National team
1991-2004 A national team
successes
Club:
1991–1995, 2000–2004
1997
1998
1998
National team:
1993, 1997, 1999, 2001
1997, 1999, 2002
1999
2000, 2004

Russian champions
Japanese champions
Champions League winners
Croatian champions

European champions
Grand Prix winners
World Cup winners
Olympic silver

As of September 27, 2010

Jelisaveta Ivanovna Tishchenko ( Russian Елизавета Ивановна Тищенко , English transcription Elizaveta Tishchenko ; born February 7, 1975 in Kiev , Soviet Union ) is a former Russian volleyball player . With her clubs and the national team she won numerous national and international titles.

Career

Tishchenko joined the VK Uralotschka-NTMK club in 1991 as the U20 world champion . In Yekaterinburg she was five times in a row Soviet and Russian champions. With the Russian national team , in which she made her debut in 1991, she won her first international title at the European Championships in Brno in 1993 , which she was able to win again four years later in the same position. In addition to several top placements at the Volleyball World Grand Prix , she was third in the 1994 and 1998 world championships. In 1996 in Atlanta she took part in the Olympic Games for the first time. At club level, she played in Japan and Croatia between 1995 and 1999, where she was national champion with NEC Red Rockets and OK Dubrovnik and in 1998 she also won the Champions League . After a six-month detour to the Italian club Rubiera Sassuolo , she returned to Yekaterinburg for the VK Uralotschka-NTMK, which also dominated the Russian championship from 2000 to 2004. Between two other European Championship titles in 1999 and 2001, Tishchenko reached the 2000 Olympic final with the national team. Her achievements in the Grand Prix victory and the World Championship made her the best attacker of 2002 in the FIVB statistics. Two years later, she led the Russian selection made it back to the Olympic final despite a knee operation three months earlier. After the narrow defeat, she resigned from the national team with a record of more than 470 international matches. However, she continued her club career in the 2004/05 season with the German Bundesliga club 1. VC Wiesbaden . She also supported the organization of Russian beach volleyball activities . In 2007/08 she played for another year in the Swiss league at VBC Cheseaux .

Private

During her time in the Bundesliga, Tishchenko married a Frankfurt personnel consultant on February 12, 2005 in the Wiesbaden City Palace .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Jump up ↑ Women's Volleyball Bundesliga: Russian volleyball star Lisa Tishchenko! (No longer available online.) German Volleyball Association , archived from the original on January 10, 2015 ; Retrieved September 27, 2010 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.volleyball-verband.de
  2. Beach European Championship Tour: Ambitious plans on clay! (No longer available online.) German Volleyball Association , archived from the original on September 28, 2015 ; Retrieved September 27, 2010 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.volleyball-verband.de
  3. ^ Tishchenko married in Wiesbaden. Smash Hamburg, February 9, 2005, accessed on September 27, 2010 .