Jegor Iwanowitsch Wjalzew – Wikipedia

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Jegor Iwanowitsch Wjalzew ( Russian Egor Ivanovich Vyaltsev ; * October 10, 1985 in Woronech, RSFSR) is a Russian basketball player. Wjalzew played as a junior for the dominant Russian basketball team PBK ZSKA from Moscow and also won the Russian championship with this team. After acting for various other Russian clubs, he has been playing for VTB winner and Russian runner-up BK Chimki since the 2011/12 season. With the Russian national team, Wjalzew took part in the 2009 European Basketball Championship.

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Wjalzew was a member of the respective Russian youth selection teams in his age groups and in 2002 moved to the European U18 European Championship from the association Pulko From Saint Petersburg to the Junior team of ZSKA Moscow. After ZSKA could not win the Russian championship title twice earlier, which they otherwise all won since 1990, they became Russian champion again in 2003. Afterwards Wjalzew was also used in the first men’s team in the 2003/04 season. He was also allowed to participate in four games in the highest European club competition Euroleague 2003/04. After ZSKA was able to defend his title, Wjalzew changed from the “Arme Sport Club” ZSKA To the “Air Force Sports Club” ZSK WWS to Samara. Here he was already after almost half of the season Ural Great Borrowed from Perm, who won the only two other two Russian championship titles in 2001 & 2002, which were not won by ZSKA. After Wjalzew won the title at the 2005 U20 European Championship with the Russian junior selection [first] he was regularly signed by Ural Great for the following two seasons. With his team comrades, among which the 14 -year -old former vice world champion Wassili Karassjow was, he won the smaller European club competition Fiba Eurocup Challenge in the final series against the Ukrainian Association in 2006 Chemical from juschne. In the Russian championship, Ural Great had already had the best times and left in 2006 as a year earlier in the first play-off round of the Russian championship. In 2007 the play-offs were missed under the new trainer Rimas Kurdinaitis and Wjalzew moved back to the Moscow area Triumph from Ljuberzy, which succeeds the association Dynamo Oblast Moscow had started.

With Triumph Ljuberzy, Wjalzew resigned in the first play-off round in 2008 against Dynamo from the city of Moscow. Also in the following two seasons was the first round of the Russian championship play-offs after defeats against Unics Kazan. For Wjalzew personally, things went better. After he was previously only used by national coach David Blatt in qualification and friendship games, he called him in 2009 for the final round squad of the Russian national team at the 2009 basketball championship. However, the Russian team as the defending champion was difficult and only won that in the preliminary round Opening game. After winning all three games in the newly introduced intermediate round, you lost the quarter -finals against the later finalist Serbia and ended up seventh. Wjalzew himself was only used in four out of nine games at the final round and in these not more than three minutes per game. In 2010, a new highest division was formed in Russia. For Triumph, the first season in the Professalnaja Basketbolnaja League was disappointing when one was the bottom of the table of ten teams at the end of the season. For the 2011/12 season, Wjalzew moved to another Moscow suburban club, the Russian runner -up and title holder of VTB United League 2011 from Chimki, where he is again trained by Rima’s Kurinaitis. With BK Chimki, a little surprisingly died out in the qualification for the Euroleague 2011/12 and therefore plays internationally in the Eurocup 2011/12, which was won at the end of the season as the host of the Final Four tournament. In 2015 he won the Eurocup with Chimki a second time.

  • Jegor – Player profile on the ULEB (English) website)
  1. Russia / U20 European Championship Men 2005. Fiba Europe, Retrieved on November 4, 2011 (English, overview with team constellation).

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