Susanne Petersen

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Susanne Petersen
Player information
Nickname "Suse"
birthday November 29, 1974
place of birth Weißenfels , GDR
citizenship GermanGerman German
height 1.67 m
Playing position Left winger
  Circular rotor
Throwing hand right
Club information
society Career ended
Clubs in the youth
from ... to society
0000-0000 Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR SV Weißenfels
0000- Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR SC Leipzig
Clubs as active
from ... to society
1993-1996 GermanyGermany TSV North Harrislee
1996-1998 GermanyGermany TuS Walle Bremen
1998-1999 GermanyGermany SG Hessen Hersfeld
1999-2011 GermanyGermany Buxtehuder SV
National team
Debut on February 19, 1999
against PolandPoland Poland
  Games (goals)
GermanyGermany Germany 87 (193)

Status: October 15, 2015

Susanne Petersen (born November 29, 1974 in Weißenfels ; born Susanne Henze ) is a former German handball player who last played for Bundesliga club Buxtehuder SV .

Petersen began playing handball at the age of six at SV Weißenfels. Later she attended the sports school in Leipzig. She played in the Bundesliga for the first time with TSV Nord Harrislee . In 1999 she came to Buxtehuder SV via the TuS Walle Bremen and SG Hessen Hersfeld stations . With the BSV she was in the final of the EHF Challenge Cup in 2002 and became German runner-up in 2003. Due to her pregnancy, she paused in the 2008/09 season. In 2010 she won the EHF Challenge Cup with the BSV. A year later Petersen ended her career as a handball player.

The right-hander made her international debut for Germany on February 19, 1999 in Marpingen against Poland. In her international career, which she ended on April 9, 2006, she scored 193 goals in 87 internationals.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Munzinger - Susanne Henze
  2. dhb.de: National players , accessed on September 16, 2015
  3. Hamburger Abendblatt of October 18, 2002, Susanne Henze: Strong BSV goalscorer
  4. handball-world.com from May 30th 2011, emotional farewell for Susanne Petersen
  5. Hamburger Abendblatt of April 8, 2006, Henze says goodbye to the four-country tournament