Sergey Shlyapnikov

Sergey Konstantinovich Shlyapnikov (Russian: Сергей Константинович Шляпников; born 7 May 1961) is a Russian volleyball coach who coached the Russia men's national volleyball team at the 2015 European Games in Baku where the team won a bronze medal.[1]

Sergey Shlyapnikov
Shlyapnikov in 2018
Personal information
NationalityRussian
Born (1961-05-07) 7 May 1961

Since 2017 he has been coaching the national men's team. Shlyapnikov is a Merited Master of Sports in Volleyball and Merited Coach of Russia.

Coaching career

Shlyapnikov successfully coached the U19 men's national team, winning with them the 1999 U19 World Championships, as well as the 1999 and 2003 European Championships. For his success the International Olympic Committee awarded him the title "World's Best Boys' Coach".[2]

He then coached the U21 men's junior team. Shlyapnikov helped the team to become 2011 U21 World Champions. He also coached the 2001 U21 World runners-up team. In U21 European Championships Shlyapnikov made his team winning in 2000, 2004, 2010 and 2014. At the 2013 Summer Universiade, he coached the future champion team. Then he also coached the national team at the 2015 European Games, winning bronze there. Since 2015 to 2016 he worked for Italian basketball team, Avellino but he returned in Russia after the won of European.

Shlyapnikov brought his team to the final of the 2017 Men's European Volleyball Championship, winning the championship title there.

gollark: The space between the mouths is greater than the space between them in flatspace mayne?
gollark: Look at the datahoarder subreddit on reddit for advice on storing horrendously large amounts of datæ.
gollark: $170 or so for 10TB if they're on sale.
gollark: I think the most cost-effective internal HDDs right now are 10TB ones pulled from a certain brand of external hard drives... the mystical WD EasyStore.
gollark: Also, if you have an NVMe SSD, though, those are usually in the M.2 form factor, which means they use a few of the (usually one to three) M.2 slots on the board itself, and sometimes take away bandwidth from regular SATA ports.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.