László Marosi
László Marosi | |||
---|---|---|---|
Personal information | |||
Full name | László Marosi | ||
Born |
Kisbér, Hungary | 26 November 1962||
Nationality | Hungarian | ||
Height | 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) | ||
Playing position | Left Back, Left Winger | ||
Club information | |||
Current club | Retired | ||
Youth career | |||
Years | Team | ||
–1977 | Kisbéri Gimnázium | ||
1978–1980 | Tatabányai Bányász SC | ||
Senior clubs | |||
Years | Team | ||
1981–1990 | Tatabányai Bányász SC | ||
1990–1999 | TBV Lemgo | ||
1999–2000 | Dunaferr SE | ||
National team | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1983–1992 | Hungary | 171 | (710) |
Medal record |
László Marosi (born 26 November 1962 in Kisbér)[1] is a Hungarian former handball player, currently the president of the Tatabánya KC club. He participated at the 1988 Summer Olympics, where the Hungarian national team placed fourth, and at the 1992 Summer Olympics, where the team placed seventh.[1] He also represented Hungary on two World Championships in 1986 and 1990 and won a silver medal on the first one.[2]
Career
[edit]Club
[edit]He was born in Kisbér, located about forty kilometers from Tatabánya, but from an early age he visited Tatabánya with his family, whose handball team represented an increasingly important player in the Hungarian championship in the 1970s, winning the Nemzeti Bajnokság I in 1974. The club celebrated its next league title 4 years later, when the 15-year-old László was already playing handball in the club's reserves. In 1983, in addition to the championship gold medal, he won his first top scorer title in Nemzeti Bajnokság I, which he then defended five times, something that no one else in the league has been able to do since then. In Hungary, he was selected the best of the year twice handball player: in 1987 and 1988. In 1990, he followed Lajos Mocsai to the German TBV Lemgo team, where he stayed for a decade and with whom he won the Handball-Bundesliga (1997), the DHB-Pokal twice (1995, 1997) and the EHF Cup Winner's Cup once (1996). The German he played 260 times in the league, 311 of his 1213 goals were seven-meter goals, he became a legend in TBV Lemgo, and his number 6 jersey was retired. After a decade of legionnaires in Germany, he returned home to Hungary in 1999, and since Tatabánya KC had just been relegated, he transferred to the Dunaferr SE team at the age of 37, with which he immediately won another Hungarian championship, pouring in the goals, for example, finding the back of the opponent's goal 11 times in the match against SC Pick Szeged. In January 2000, an Achilles tendon injury ended his career.
National team
[edit]In 1983, at the age of twenty, he was invited to the Hungary men's national handball team, but due to spinal surgery, he was unable to travel to the Friendship Games in Moscow, which were held instead of the Los Angeles Olympics. László was originally a left back, but was led by Lajos Mocsai he played a lot in the Hungary men's national handball team as a left winger, the original not just anyone played in his position: Péter Kovács. Its key role was in the 1986 World Championship silver medal, Iceland and Romania thanks to his goals scored in the last minute the Hungarian national team won. In 1988, he finished in 4th place at the Seoul Olympics with the national team, and was also elected the tournament's best left back. In the Hungary men's national handball team he made a total of 171 appearances and scored 710 goals.
Honours
[edit]National team
[edit]- World Championship:
- Silver: 1986
Club
[edit]- Tatabányai Bányász
- Nemzeti Bajnokság I
- Gold: 1984
- Silver: 1982
- Bronze: 1981
- Magyar Kupa
- Silver: 1981, 1983 jan., 1984, 1988-89
- Bronze: 1982
- TBV Lemgo
- Handball-Bundesliga
- Gold: 1997
- DHB-Pokal
- Gold: 1995, 1997
- DHB-Supercup
- Gold: 1997
- EHF Cup Winners' Cup
- Gold: 1996
- Dunaferr SE
- Nemzeti Bajnokság I
- Gold: 2000
- EHF Cup Winners' Cup
- Silver: 2000
Individual
[edit]- Hungarian Handballer of the Year: 1987, 1988
- Nemzeti Bajnokság I Top Scorer: 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990
- Best left back of the 1988 Olympic Games[3]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "László Marosi". Sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ^ "Magyarok a férfi világbajnokságokon, érmesek" (in Hungarian). Nemzeti Sport Online. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
- ^ « The olympic top scorers and Olympic all-star teams 1988-2012 », World handball magazine n°3/2016, March 2016.
- 1962 births
- Living people
- People from Kisbér
- Handball-Bundesliga players with retired numbers
- Hungarian male handball players
- Hungarian expatriate handball players in Germany
- Olympic handball players for Hungary
- Handball players at the 1988 Summer Olympics
- Handball players at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Tatabánya KC players
- Sportspeople from Komárom-Esztergom County
- TBV Lemgo players
- 20th-century Hungarian sportsmen