Lydia Haase

Lydia Haase (born 7 September 1986)[1] is a former German field hockey player, who played as a forward.[2]

Lydia Haase
Personal information
Born (1986-09-07) 7 September 1986
Leipzig, Germany
Height 164 cm (5 ft 5 in)
Weight 60 kg (132 lb)
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current club Mannheimer HC
National team
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2005–2007 Germany U–21 49 (9)
2009–2016 Germany 173 (41)

Personal life

Lydia Haase was born and raised in Leipzig.[3]

Haase works as a teacher at Baulandschule Hettingen, an elementary school in Buchen.[4][5]

Career

Under–21

In 2006, Haase was a member of the Germany U–21 team at the EuroHockey Junior Championship in Catania. At the tournament, Germany won a gold medal.[2][4]

Die Danas

Haase made her senior debut for Germany in 2009, during a test match in South Africa.[2] Later that year she also represented the team at 2009 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy in Sydney.[6]

Throughout her career, Haase appeared represented Germany at four European Championships. She medalled in each tournament, winning a gold medal in 2013,[7] silver in 2009 and 2011,[2] as well as bronze in 2015.[8]

gollark: `UseLinux`
gollark: The functional programming discord.
gollark: No, Go is. It broke containment.
gollark: ```Little known fact: GHC compiles code by literally emailing it to the sixth circle of Hell, so no one knows how it works, not even the Type-level Deacons and other curators of scripture. The email address was revealed to the Haskell committee one moonless night when they sacrificed Simon Peyton Jones in an unholy ritual that they reenact every year at the monadic.party. The present-day SPJ is actually a decoy hired by FP Complete to preserve the illusion that anyone in the community even has a clue as to how to build working software.```
gollark: Well, things with more *features* might be slower.

References

  1. "Team Details – Germany". tms.fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  2. "Lydia Haase". hockey.de (in German). Deutscher Hockey-Bund. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  3. "Lydia Haase". au.eurosport.com. Eurosport. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  4. "Team Rio – Lydia Haase Hockey Sturm". rio.team-tokio-mrn.de (in German). Team Rio. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  5. "Lydia Haase". 2015.tk-hockey.com. TK Hockey. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  6. "HAASE Lydia". tms.fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  7. "England take silver as Germany win EuroHockey2013". englandhockey.co.uk. England Hockey. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  8. "England are the Unibet EuroHockey Champions". archive.eurohockey.org. European Hockey Federation. Retrieved 5 February 2020.


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