Robert Andersson (handball player)

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Robert Andersson
Player information
Nickname "Knirr"
birthday November 24, 1969
place of birth Ystad , Sweden
citizenship SwedeSwede Swedish
height 1.91 m
Playing position Back right
Throwing hand Left
Clubs as active
from ... to society
0000-1990 SwedenSweden IFK Ystad HK
1990-1992 SwedenSweden Ystad's IF HF
1992-1995 GermanyGermany TSV Bayer Dormagen
1995-1996 SwitzerlandSwitzerland RTV 1879 Basel
1996-1 / 1998 GermanyGermany OSC Rheinhausen
1 / 1998-1 / 2003 GermanyGermany HSG Nordhorn
1 / 2003-2004 GermanyGermany TuS N-Lübbecke
2004-2008 SwedenSweden LUGI HF
2008-2008 SwedenSweden Ystad's IF HF
National team
Debut on 1992
  Games (goals)
SwedenSweden Sweden 139 (259)
Clubs as coaches
from ... to society
2009-2013 SwedenSweden IFK Ystad HK
2013–3 / 2015 SwedenSweden H 43 Lund
3 / 2015–10 / 2017 GermanyGermany HC Erlangen
2018-2020 SwedenSweden HIF Karlskrona
2020– GermanyGermany TuS Ferndorf

Status: July 3, 2020

Robert Andersson (born November 24, 1969 in Ystad ) is a Swedish handball coach and former handball player .

Career

Robert Andersson played in Sweden for IFK Ystad HK and Ystads IF HF . In the 1991/92 season he won the Swedish championship with Ystads IF and was the top scorer in the Elitserien . The 1.91 meter tall back player then moved to the German Bundesliga club TSV Bayer Dormagen , and in the summer of 1995 went to Switzerland to RTV 1879 Basel . From 1996 he played again in Germany at OSC Rheinhausen . After the Rheinhausener had to withdraw from the Bundesliga at the end of 1997 due to financial difficulties, Andersson was under contract with the second division HSG Nordhorn from January 1998 . With Nordhorn he rose to the first division in 1999, was German runner-up in the 2001/02 season and took part in the Final Four of the DHB Cup in 2001 and 2002 . After his contract, which ran until the end of the 2003 season, was not to be extended, he moved to TuS N-Lübbecke in January 2003 , where he signed a contract until 2004. For the 2004/05 season he moved back to his home country to LUGI HF . In summer 2008 he returned to Ystads IF, where he had to end his career in November 2008 due to a shoulder injury.

Robert Andersson played 139 caps for the Swedish national team , in which he scored 259 goals. He became European champion with Sweden in 1994 and 1998 and won the silver medal at the 1992 and 1996 Olympic Games .

After the end of his playing career, Andersson was coach at IFK Ystad HK from 2009, from where he moved to first division promoted H 43 Lund in 2013 . In March 2015, he was hired by the German Bundesliga club HC Erlangen as the successor to the dismissed Frank Bergemann . He was released from his duties in October 2017. For the 2018/19 season he took over the Swedish first division club HIF Karlskrona . Since summer 2020 he has been training the German club TuS Ferndorf .

Others

His son Julius Lindskog Andersson also plays handball.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c www.ystadsallehanda.se: "Knirrs" karriär över , accessed on November 12, 2013
  2. a b c d e "Knirr" tar över i H 43 ( Memento from November 12, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  3. a b Samtliga Internationals (PDF; 287 kB), accessed on November 12, 2013
  4. Statistics of the Swedish Handball Federation , accessed on July 16, 2017
  5. a b thw-handball.de: Opponents OSC Rheinhausen season 1997/98 , accessed on November 12, 2013
  6. netzeitung.de: Andersson moves to Lübbecke ( memento from November 12, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) from January 8, 2003, accessed on November 12, 2013
  7. thw-handball.de: TuS N-Lübbecke season 2004/2005 opponents , accessed on November 12, 2013
  8. www.skanskan.se: "Knirr" pekas ut som ny tränare i IFK Ystad , accessed on November 12, 2013
  9. handball-world.com: Erlangen presents successor for Bergemann from March 2, 2015, accessed on March 3, 2015
  10. handball-world.news: Second coach change of the season: Erlangen separates from Andersson on October 7, 2017, accessed on October 7, 2017
  11. hifkarlskrona.se: Ny tränare: “Knirr” Andersson of April 27, 2018, accessed on October 24, 2018
  12. tus-ferndorf.de: Former European champion will be the new trainer at TuS Ferndorf on February 11, 2020, accessed on February 11, 2020
  13. hl-live.de: Handball: VfL sign Julius Andersson , accessed on February 19, 2020