Oliver Venno

Oliver Venno (born 23 May 1990) is an Estonian volleyball player currently playing for Police SC Qatar of the Qatari Volleyball League.[1] He mostly plays at the opposite hitter position but has also played at the outside hitter position on numerous occasions.

Oliver Venno
Personal information
NationalityEstonian
Born (1990-05-23) 23 May 1990
Tartu, Estonia
Height2.10 m (6 ft 11 in)
Weight110 kg (243 lb)
Spike355 cm (140 in)
Block330 cm (130 in)
Volleyball information
PositionOpposite hitter / Outside hitter
Current clubPolice SC Qatar
Career
YearsTeams
2006–2009
2009–2010
2010–2012
2012
2012–2013
2013–2014
2014–2015
2015–2016
2016–2018
2018–2020
2020–
Pere Leib Tartu
ACH Volley Bled
VfB Friedrichshafen
Budvanska Rivijera Budva
Rennes Volley 35
Prikamye Perm
Hypo Tirol Innsbruck
Ziraat Bankası Ankara
Maliye Milli Piyango
Galatasaray İstanbul
Police SC Qatar
National team
2008– Estonia
Last updated: 29 June 2020

Club career

Venno was born in Tartu, and started his career in hometown club Pere Leib Tartu at the age of 16. In addition to three Estonian League silver medals he won the Estonian Cup in 2008 with the and reached the finals of the Baltic League twice. Venno was named the Best Young Estonian Volleyball Player in 2008 and 2009. In summer of 2009 Venno signed with ACH Volley Bled of Slovenia.[2] With the Bled team Venno won the Slovenian League, the Slovenian Cup and the MEVZA Cup. They also reached the Final Four of the 2009–10 CEV Champions League making Venno the first Estonian to play in the semi-finals of the Champions League. In 2010 and 2011 Venno won the Estonian Volleyball Player of the Year award. From 2010 to 2012 he played in Germany for VfB Friedrichshafen and won the German League and the German Cup once. Venno started the 2012–13 season in the Montenegrin top team Budvanska Rivijera Budva.[3] He left the team in December and joined his compatriots Raimo Pajusalu and Keith Pupart in the French team Rennes Volley 35.[4]

For the 2013–14 season Venno signed with Prikamye Perm of the Russian Volleyball Super League.[5] In June 2014 Venno moved to Austria and signed a deal with local powerhouse Hypo Tirol Innsbruck.[6] With Hypo Tirol team he won the Austrian League without losing a single game during the season. He also added a second MEVZA Cup win to his account. In July 2015 Venno signed with Ziraat Bankası Ankara of the Turkish Men's Volleyball League.[7] For the next season he moved to another Ankara-based team Maliye Milli Piyango.[8] Venno was the top scorer of the league and helped his team to 5th-place finish. Venno stayed with the team for another season and helped Maliye Piyango to the final of the Turkish Cup for the first time in the club's history as they lost to Halkbank Ankara with the score 2–3. Venno and Maliye Piyango also reached to the semi-finals of the 2017–18 CEV Challenge Cup where they lost to eventual winner Bunge Ravenna in the golden set.[9]

In May 2018 Venno signed with one of the top Turkish teams, Galatasaray İstanbul.[10] Venno and Galatasaray played in the final of the 2018–19 CEV Cup where they lost to Italian team Diatec Trentino.[11] Venno was the Best Scorer of the competition totaling 190 points in 10 matches. He stayed with Galatasaray for the next season and started off with the Turkish Super Cup title. However, the season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which forced to cancel all competitions. After five years in Turkey Venno signed with Police SC Qatar playing in the Qatari Volleyball League.

National team

Oliver Venno represented the Estonian youth teams in the U16, U18 and U20 level. He is a member of the Estonian national team since 2008 and has represented his country at the 2009, 2011, 2015 and 2017 Men's European Volleyball Championships. With the national team Venno also won the 2016[12] and 2018[13] European Volleyball League titles.

Venno has also successfully represented Estonia in beach volleyball. Together with Kristo Kollo he won the U18 Beach European Championship in 2007[14] and U19 Beach World Championship in 2008.[15]

Sporting achievements

Clubs

CEV Cup
MEVZA Cup
Baltic League
National championship
National cup

National team

Individual

  • 2008 Young Estonian Volleyball Player of the Year
  • 2009 Young Estonian Volleyball Player of the Year
  • 2010 Estonian Volleyball Player of the Year
  • 2011 Estonian Volleyball Player of the Year
  • 2018 European League – Best Outside Hitter
  • 2019 CEV Cup – Best Scorer
gollark: So maybe it could try and copy a simplified ShutdownOS if there's no internet connection!
gollark: Web download would be easy but then it'd not work on some embedded systems.
gollark: If I can somehow fit a CC emulator (or code to decompress one, or download it from the web...) into 4KB, it'd make a great EEProm.
gollark: By providing implementations for literally every java-side API.
gollark: Because fully emulating CC is *probably* about as easy as making potatOS work.

References

  1. "Oliver Venno karjäär jätkub Aasia rahaliigas" (in Estonian). Võrkpall24. 22 June 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  2. "ÕL: Oliver Venno võtab Sloveenia klubi hea hüppelauana" SPORT.ERR.EE (06.09.2009). Retrieved on 11.06.2012. (in Estonian)
  3. "Venno liitub Meistrite liiga klubiga" Sport | ERR (15.09.2012). Retrieved on 15.09.2012. (in Estonian)
  4. "Oliver Venno liitub Prantsusmaa eestlastega" volley.ee (14.12.2012). Retrieved on 08.01.2013. (in Estonian)
  5. "Venno liitub Venemaa Superliigasse kuuluva võistkonnaga" Sport | ERR (04.08.2013). Retrieved on 06.09.2013. (in Estonian)
  6. "Venemaal mänginud Oliver Venno lahkub Venemaalt ja suundub Austriasse!" Delfi Sport (16.07.2014). Retrieved on 23.09.2014. (in Estonian)
  7. "Venno siirdub Türki, Teppan Venno asemele Austriasse" Sport | ERR (27.07.2015). Retrieved on 27.07.2015. (in Estonian)
  8. "Oliver Venno karjäär jätkub Euroopa tippliigas" sport.err.ee (02.06.2016). Retrieved on 02.06.2016. (in Estonian)
  9. "Bunge RAVENNA and Olympiacos PIRAEUS to fight for the CEV Challenge Cup title" CEV (21.03.2018). Retrieved on 18.04.2018.
  10. "Oliver Venno liitus Türgi suurklubiga" ERR Sport (02.05.2018). Retrieved on 02.05.2018.(in Estonian)
  11. "TRENTINO banish demons to claim #CEVCupM crown" CEV (26.03.2019). Retrieved on 27.03.2019.
  12. "Estonia rise to the occasion to win historic European League title". CEV. 2 July 2016. Archived from the original on 17 May 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  13. "Estonia claim second #EuroLeagueM crown after dispatching Czechs in three sets". CEV. 14 June 2018. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  14. "Kristo Kollo ja Oliver Venno tulid U-18 rannavõrkpalli Euroopa meistriks!" EVF (21.07.2007). Retrieved on 22.04.2011. (in Estonian)
  15. "Under-19 MEN World Championships" FIVB. Retrieved on 22.04.2011.
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