Andrey Drozdov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrey Drozdov
Born (1988-02-23) February 23, 1988 (age 33)
Team
Curling clubMoskvitch CC,
Moscow, RUS
SkipAlexander Kirikov
ThirdAndrey Drozdov
Second
Lead
AlternateDmitry Abanin
Career
Member Association Russia
World Championship
appearances
1 (2013)
European Championship
appearances
8 (2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015)
Olympic
appearances
1 (2014)
hide
Medal record

Andrey Anatolyevich Drozdov (Russian: Андрей Анатольевич Дроздов; born 23 February 1988) is a Russian curler from Zelenograd. He skips one of the Russian national teams, and is the first Russian men's skip to ever play in the World Championships and first man to skip Russia at the Olympics. He is currently the coach of the Russian women's junior team.[1]

Career[]

In his youth, Drozdov was a swimmer, but was unsuccessful, so he took up curling at age 15.

Drozdov won his first national championship as a skip in 2009. He has represented Russia in six European Curling Championships. In 2007, he placed 14th playing third for Alexander Kirikov. In 2008, he placed 15th as the skip of the Russian team. In 2009, he placed 12th as the team's skip. Drozdov also skipped the Russian team at the 2009 World Junior Curling Championships, placing 7th. In 2010, he placed 9th as skip. In 2011 he played second for Alexey Tselousov and the team had an 11th-place finish. At the 2012 European Curling Championships, Drozdov lead Russia to their best finish, 5th, qualifying for the World Championships for the first time.

Drozdov's lone international medal was a bronze at the 2006 European Mixed Curling Championship.

Drozdov played in his first World Curling Championships for Russia at the 2013 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, where he led Russia to a 10th-place finish.

Drozdov was named skip of the Russian team at the 2014 Winter Olympics. He led the host nation to a 7th-place finish, with a 3-6 record.

References[]

  1. ^ "2002 World Junior Curling Championships: Women's Entry List by Country" (PDF). World Curling Federation. 2020-02-14. Retrieved 2020-02-16.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""