Radostin Stoychev
Radostin Stoychev | |||||||
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Personal information | |||||||
Full name | Radostin Stojčev | ||||||
Nationality | Bulgarian | ||||||
Born |
Sofia, Bulgaria | September 25, 1969||||||
Coaching information | |||||||
Current team | Trentino Volley | ||||||
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Volleyball information | |||||||
Position | Setter | ||||||
Career | |||||||
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National team | |||||||
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Last updated: May 13, 2015 |
Radostin Svetoslavov Stoychev (Bulgarian: Радостин Светославов Стойчев;[1])(born September 25, 1969) is a former Bulgarian volleyball player, head coach of Italian club Trentino Volley.
Personal life
Radostin Stoychev was born in the Bulgarian capital Sofia to the family of volleyball coach Svetoslav Stoychev, whose achievements include a world championship title with the junior Bulgarian national team.
Career as player
As a player, Radostin Stoychev represented CSKA Sofia, Minyor Buhovo (with whom he won the national title) as well as teams from Portugal, Spain, Austria, Serbia and France (Tours VB). He played as a setter.
Career as coach
Stoychev's managerial career began at Slavia Sofia, whom he coached from 2003 to 2005, winning the Bulgarian Volleyball Cup in 2003. From 2005 to 2007, Stoychev was with VC Dynamo Moscow as their assistant manager. In Russia, he won the national championship in 2006 and the national cup in 2007.
In 2007, Stoychev was appointed the manager of Trento-based Italian Volleyball League team Trentino Volley. Stoychev attracted several of Bulgaria's top volleyball players to the club, such as Matey Kaziyski, Vladimir Nikolov, Smilen Mlyakov. In his debut 2007–08 season, he won the Italian national championship, an achievement comparable to the feats of Julio Velasco and Paulo Roberto de Freitas. In the following 2008–09 season, Trentino Volley's first season in the CEV Champions League, Stoychev led the club to the title in Europe's premier volleyball competition.
In 2011, Radostin Stoychev replaced Silvano Prandi and became head coach of the Bulgarian national team.[2] He was released from his duties in May 2012, following a 1:3 loss against Germany during one of the qualification tournaments for the 2012 Summer Olympics. Nevertheless, Stoychev was reinstated as head coach a few days later following a heavily publicized media cross-fire between him, also supported by several of the team's star players, and the Bulgarian Volleyball Federation's Administration, which prompted the personal involvement of Boyko Borisov himself, the then Prime Minister of Bulgaria, in order to resolve the critical situation.[3] Stoychev succeeded in qualifying the team for the 2012 London Olympics on his second attempt, but subsequently decided to step down due to a conflict of interest with the Bulgarian Volleyball Federation.
- 2005 Bulgarian Cup, with Slavia Sofia
- 2006 Russian Cup, with VC Dynamo Moscow
- 2006 Russian Championship - with VC Dynamo Moscow
- 2009 CEV Champions League - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2009 Italian Championship, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2009 FIVB Club World Championship - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2010 CEV Champions League - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2010 Italian Cup Serie A, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2010 Italian Championship, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2010 FIVB Club World Championship - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2011 CEV Champions League - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2011 Italian Championship, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2011 FIVB Club World Championship - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2012 CEV Champions League - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2012 Italian Cup Serie A, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2012 Italian Championship, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2012 FIVB Club World Championship - with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2013 Italian Cup Serie A, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2013 Italian Championship, with Itas Diates Trentino
- 2014 Turkish SuperCup 2013, with Halkbank Ankara
- 2014 Turkish Cup, with Halkbank Ankara
- 2014 Turkish Championship, with Halkbank Ankara
- 2015 Italian Cup Serie A, with Trentino Volley
- 2015 Italian Championship, with Trentino Volley
References
- ↑ Family name also transliterated as Stoytchev or Stojčev.
- ↑ Bulgaria’s Radostin Stoychev to Coach National Volleyball Team - novinite.com - 23-11-2010
- ↑ Stoychev Snubs Bulgarian PM, Says He Won't Come Back as National Coach - novinite.com - 16-05-2012
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