Bettine Vriesekoop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bettine Vriesekoop (born August 13, 1961 in Hazerswoude, Zuid-Holland) is a former table tennis player from the Netherlands, who became European Champion in 1982 and 1992.

Vriesekoop started playing table tennis in 1972. From 1977 until 2002 she played at top-level. She won the European Championship twice, and was a Dutch Champion fourteen times in the singles, and sixteen times in the doubles. Until 1989 she worked with coach Gerard Bakker. After that she worked successfully with coach Jan Vlieg.

She studied Chinese and philosophy. Since June 2006 Vriesekoop works as a freelance correspondent for the Dutch daily quality-newspaper NRC Handelsblad in China.

[edit] Career highlights

Summer Olympic Games
1988, Seoul, women's singles, 7th
1988, Seoul, women's doubles, 7th
1992, Barcelona, women's singles, last 16
1992, Barcelona, women's doubles, quarter final
1996, Atlanta, women's singles, 1st round
1996, Atlanta, women's doubles, 1st round
World Championships
1979, Pyongyang, women's singles, last 16
1979, Pyongyang, women's doubles, last 16
1979, Pyongyang, mixed doubles, last 16
1981, Novi Sad, women's singles, last 16
1983, Tokyo, women's singles, last 16
1983, Tokyo, women's doubles, last 16
1983, Tokyo, mixed doubles, quarter final
1983, Tokyo, team competition, 8th
1985, Gothenburg, women's singles, last 16
1985, Gothenburg, women's doubles, last 16
1985, Gothenburg, team competition, 4th
1987, New Delhi, team competition, 4th
1995, Tianjin, women's doubles, last 16
World Doubles Cup:
1992, Las Vegas, women's singles, quarter final
World Team Cup:
1994, Nimes, 3rd
Pro Tour Grand Finals
1996, Tianjin, women's singles, last 16
Pro Tour Meetings
1996, Kettering, women's singles, quarter final
1996, Kitaku-Shu, women's singles, quarter final
1996, Kitaku-Shu, women's doubles, quarter final
1998, Beirut, women's doubles, quarter final
European Championships
1980, Bern, women's singles, semi final
1982, Budapest, women's singles, winner
1982, Budapest, women's doubles, runner-up
1982, Budapest, mixed doubles, winner
1984, Moscow, women's singles, quarter final
1984, Moscow, women's doubles, semi final
1984, Moscow, mixed doubles, semi final
1986, Prague, women's singles, quarter final
1986, Prague, women's doubles, runner-up
1988, Paris, mixed doubles, runner-up
1990, Gothenburg, women's doubles, quarter final
1992, Stuttgart, women's singles, winner
1992, Stuttgart, women's doubles, semi final
1992, Stuttgart, team competition, 2nd
1996, Bratislava, women's doubles, runner-up
1998, Eindhoven, women's singels, quarter final
European Youth Championships
1977, Vichy, women's singles, winner (juniors)
1978, Barcelona, women's singles, semi final (juniors)
1979, Rome, women's singles, winner (juniors)
European Top-12 Championships
1978, Prague, 2nd
1979, Kristianstad, 8th
1980, Munich, 2nd
1981, Miskolc, 2nd
1982, Nantes, 1st
1983, Cleveland, 3rd,
1984, Bratislava, 2nd
1985, Barcelona, 1st
1986, Sodertalje, 5th
1987, Basel, 4th
1988, Ljubljana, 2nd
1991, Den Bosch, 3rd
1992, Vienna, 9th
1993, Copenhagen, 5th
1994, Arezzo, 7th
1995, Dijon, 5th
1996, Charleroi, 3rd
1997, Eindhoven, 5th
1999, Split, 11th
Awards
Preceded by
Annie Borckink
Dutch Sportswoman of the Year
1981
Succeeded by
Annemarie Verstappen
Preceded by
Ria Stalman
Dutch Sportswoman of the Year
1985
Succeeded by
Nelli Cooman

[edit] External links

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