Peter Radegast

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Peter Radegast (born August 6, 1970 in Dortmund ) is a German basketball official , coach and former player.

career

Radegast joined the youth department of SVD 49 Dortmund at the age of 15 after playing in the youth team at SG Wellinghofen / Hörde. In 1989 and 1990 he was a member of the Bundeswehr national team and played with the selection at the military world championships in France. In 1992 he was part of the German U22 national team that took part in the European Championship. He played as a 1.98 meter winger for Dortmund (1992/93 season) and for TuS Herten (or the Ruhr Devils ) (1995 to 1998) in the basketball league . In the 1998/99 season he was under contract with the Finnish first division club Luhta Lahti, with whom he also took part in the European club competition Korac Cup  . He then returned to Dortmund and rose to the second Bundesliga with the club in 2000. With one more detour to Herten, Radegast played as a player for Dortmund until the end of his career, from 2003 to 2006 as a player-coach. He led the team in the 2003/04 and 2004/05 seasons to win the WBV Cup and in the 2005/06 season to promotion to the second Bundesliga. Until 2010 he was a coach at SVD. In the 2010/11 season he coached the FC Schalke 04 team in the regional league. In the run-up to the 2018/19 season, he took over the coaching position of the SVD Dortmund men's team, which had made it to the regional league a few months earlier. Before that, Radegast sat on the coaching bench for the second Dortmund team (Oberliga).

In addition to his playing and coaching activities, he completed a degree in spatial planning in Dortmund and, in 2002, entered an employment relationship with the German Basketball Association (DBB). From 2007 Radegast was the managing director of the DBB Federal Academy, which among other things leads the training of basketball coaches, and was responsible for teaching and coaching in the education department at DBB. On July 1, 2010, he became sports director of the German Basketball Federation and remained in office until 2015. In his role as DBB sports director, in 2015 he was part of a top sports committee formed by the German Basketball Federation, the first and second Bundesliga and the regional associations to advise leagues and associations. After retiring as sports director at DBB, Radegast was again managing director of the Federal Academy from October 2015.

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.schoenen-dunk.de/news_a40173_Regionalliga_Peter-Radegast-neuer-Trainer-bei-den-Schalker-Basketballern.htm
  2. Peter Radegast | Korac Cup (1999) | FIBA Europe. Retrieved August 14, 2017 .
  3. ^ SVD 49 Dortmund eV Basketball in Dortmund - Chronicle - SVD 49 Dortmund. Retrieved August 14, 2017 .
  4. https://www.derwesten.de/sport/lokalsport/gelsenkirchen-und-buer/peter-radegast-estand-an-der-linie-id3513400.html
  5. Dernes basketball players benefit from the Hagen waiver . In: RN . ( ruhrnachrichten.de [accessed on August 7, 2018]).
  6. https://www.xing.com/profile/Peter_Radegast
  7. a b Peter Radegast is the new DBB sports director “German Basketball Association. Retrieved August 14, 2017 .
  8. http://www.basketball-bund.de/news/ralph-held-neuer-dbb-sportdirektor-155667
  9. Competence team for the benefit of basketball. German Basketball Federation, accessed on December 29, 2018 .
  10. Punte: Federal Academy. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on August 14, 2017 ; accessed on August 14, 2017 (German). 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 / dbb-trainer.de