Natalia Bamber-Laskowska

Natalia Bamber-Laskowska (born 24 February 1982) is a female Polish volleyball player, a member of Poland women's national volleyball team and Polish club BKS Stal Bielsko-Biała, European Champion 2005), bronze medalist of the European Championship 2009, Polish Champion (2006, 2010).

Natalia Bamber-Laskowska
Personal information
Full nameNatalia Bamber-Laskowska
NationalityPolish
Born (1982-02-24) 24 February 1982
Sulechów, Poland
Height1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight69 kg (152 lb)
Spike311 cm (122 in)
Block288 cm (113 in)
Volleyball information
PositionMiddle blocker/Opposite
Current club BKS Stal Bielsko-Biała
Number9
Career
YearsTeams



2005–2007
2007–2012
2014–
Zawisza Sulechów
SMS PZPS Sosnowiec
Gwardia Wrocław
Muszynianka Muszyna
BKS Stal Bielsko-Biała
BKS Stal Bielsko-Biała
National team
2002–2009 Poland
Last updated: 11 June 2015

Personal life

On 19 June 2011 she married to Jacek Laskowski - sports commentator. In 2014, she gave birth to their first child.

Career

National team

In 2005 Bamber achieved title of European Champion, but she did not play because of injury.[1] In October 2009 she won with team mates bronze medal of European Championship 2009 after winning match against Germany.[2]

Sporting achievements

National team

  • 2005 CEV European Championship
  • 2009 CEV European Championship

State awards

gollark: I didn't say it was proof, just that it wasn't disproof.
gollark: <@221827050892296192> Those are just maths. There are no *actual* circles to infinite precision in the real world. We just know that the abstract idea of circles and whatnot follows those rules, and matches real-world ones fairly well in most situations.
gollark: Good short story about that: https://qntm.org/responsibility
gollark: I think it's not very productive to try and reason about the desires of the hypothetical simulation-running beings when they're not (necessarily) anything like humans and when the only information we have to work with is our universe.
gollark: <@498244879894315027> It's unfalsifiable. You can't prove we're *not* in a simulation.

References


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