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Chinilin, Anatoly Ivanovich

Anatoly Ivanovich Chinilin ( August 21, 1913 , village of Izheslavl, Ryazan Region - 1984 , Moscow ) - Soviet volleyball player and coach, sports organizer, one of the founders of the national school of volleyball. Four - time champion of the USSR . Senior coach of the USSR men's team (1950-1952). Honored Master of Sports of the USSR (1944). Honored Trainer of the USSR (1956). Judge of the international category (1955). Honored Worker of Physical Culture of the RSFSR .

Anatoly Ivanovich Chinilin
Anatoly Chinilin.jpg
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Awards and medals

Order of the Red Banner of Labor Order of the Badge of Honor

Content

Biography

Started playing volleyball in Moscow . He honed his skills on the volleyball courts of the Central Park of Culture and Rest named after Gorky , which in the early 1930s became the center of volleyball life in the capital of the USSR. He played for the Moscow team “Medic” and “Spartak”. As part of the Moscow team, he became the four-time champion of the USSR (1933-1936). Silver (1939) and bronze (1938) medalist of the Allied Championships (as part of Spartak). One of the strongest attackers of the USSR of the 30s-40s.

Member of World War II . In 1943, in the battles near Poltava he was seriously wounded, lost his arm. He was awarded military orders and medals. [one]

In 1950-1952, he was the head coach of the USSR men's team , which led to victory at the 1952 World Championships and the 1950 and 1951 European Championships .

In 1946-1979, A. I. Chinilin worked as a volleyball referee. He judged the USSR Championships (1946-1979), the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the USSR (1956-1971), the World Championships (1956-1962), the Olympic Volleyball Tournaments of 1964 and 1968. He directed the Volleyball Directorate of the 1980 Olympic Games . For more than 20 years he worked in the Moscow Committee for Physical Culture and Sports in the department of sports games. The author of the book Volleyball (1951).

A.I. Chinilin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor . Cavalier of the FIVB Grand Silver Medal.

 
Chinilin’s grave at the Kuntsevsky cemetery in Moscow.

He died in Moscow in 1984 . He was buried at Kuntsevsky cemetery .

In memory of Anatoly Ivanovich Chinilin in 1987-1990, the USSR Volleyball Federation held Chinilin Memorials with the participation of the strongest women's volleyball teams.

Notes

  1. ↑ Feat of the people

Literature

  • Chinilin, Anatoly Ivanovich - article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  • Volleyball. Encyclopedia / Comp. V.L. Sviridov, O.S. Chekhov. Tomsk: Yanson Company - 2001.
  • Obituary // Soviet Sport December 26, 1984

Links

  • Sports Necropolis (link not available)
  • Famous people of Moscow
  • 100 years since the birth of Anatoly Ivanovich Chinilin
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chinilin__Anatoly_Ivanovich&oldid=100759995


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