Clever Geek Handbook
📜 ⬆️ ⬇️

Bychkov, Yuri Mikhailovich


Yuri Mikhailovich Bychkov (born November 28, 1939 ) - Soviet and Russian sportsman, Honored Trainer of Russia and the USSR , Honored Worker of Physical Culture of the Russian Federation , USSR Master of Sports , President of the Russian Fencing Federation ( 1992 - 2000 ) [1] .

Yuri Mikhailovich Bychkov
Date of BirthNovember 28, 1939 ( 1939-11-28 ) (aged 79)
Place of BirthOmsk
RSFSR , USSR
Citizenship USSR → Russia
Occupationtrainer , fencer
Awards and prizes
Order of HonorOrder of Friendship
Silver Olympic Order
Honored Worker of Physical Culture of the Russian Federation.jpgBadge "Honored Coach of Russia" (until 2006)Honored Coach of the USSRMaster of Sports of the USSR.png

He was the head coach of the Russian fencing team at several Olympic games . Doctor of Pedagogical Sciences , Professor [2] , is the author of more than 30 scientific and methodological works.

Bychkov trained and educated many masters of sports, Olympic gold, silver and gold medalists, among them V. Bazhenov , V. Pavlenko, A. Alshan and many others. Yuri Mikhailovich made a great contribution to the development of fencing as a sport in the USSR , Russia and Iran .

Content

Biography

Born November 28, 1939 in Omsk . He entered the Omsk Institute of Physical Culture , graduated in 1962 .

After graduation, he began working at the Omsk Institute of Physical Culture, became a teacher in the fencing department. In 1967 he became a senior teacher.

In 1974 he was sent by the USSR Sports Committee to Iran as a coach of the national fencing team. His services to Iran’s sport were awarded national honors.

In 1977 he became the head coach of the RSFSR saber fencing team, since 1981 - the head coach of the national team. At the same time, he worked as a coach of a youth sports school at the Mayak sports base ( Khimki ), where the Russian fencing team constantly trained.

In 1985, he was appointed deputy head of the Main Directorate of the RSFSR Sports Committee for Work with Reserves. In 1989, he became the head coach of the USSR fencing trade union team.

In 1992, he was elected at the All-Russian Conference as the President of the Russian Fencing Federation and the head coach of the Russian fencing team. He was the head coach of the Russian team at the 1996 Olympics and 2000 Olympics . Thanks to his efforts, the team won 7 gold medals.

Since 1998 - Head of the Department of Fencing ( Russian State University of Physical Culture, Sports, Youth and Tourism ). 2000 - Vice President of the Fencing Federation of Russia. Until 2009, he was chairman of the Regional Development Commission.

Awards and honors

  • Order of Honor
  • Order of Friendship
  • Silver Olympic Order ( 2003 ) [3]
  • Honored Worker of Physical Culture of the Russian Federation
  • Honored Coach of Russia
  • Honored Coach of the USSR
  • USSR Master of Sports
  • Medal of the State Committee for Physical Culture and Sports
  • other awards, a number of honorary signs

Notes

  1. ↑ Bychkov Yuri Mikhailovich: Fencing Federation of Russia (Neopr.) (Unavailable link) . Date of treatment August 14, 2013. Archived May 1, 2012.
  2. ↑ Bychkov, Yuri Mikhailovich // Human Rights Defender.ru Archival copy of July 6, 2013 on the Wayback Machine
  3. ↑ From sports victories to the revival of Russia // Sports Russia

Links

  • Bychkov, Yuri Mikhailovich (unavailable link from 06/14/2016 [1160 days]) - Yandex.Dictionaries
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bychkov ,_Yuri_Mikhailovich&oldid = 95037288


More articles:

  • Neplyuev, Ivan Nikolaevich
  • Michael Tong
  • Burj Al Alam
  • Teder Indrek
  • Fedorovskiy, Peter Fedorovich
  • March on Drina
  • Gerasimov, Denis Andreevich
  • Mylinka (station)
  • Crama Rule
  • Vruda (Leningrad Oblast)

All articles

Clever Geek | 2019