Zsolt-Georg Böhm
Zsolt-Georg Böhm (born 17 April 1962) is a Hungarian table tennis player,[1][2] writer,[3] teacher and computer scientist. Early yearsZsolt György Böhm was born in Szalacs, in the northern part of Bihor County, in present Romania. Both parents were doctors.[4] His father, whose ancestors emigrated from Swabia to Hungary in 1735, played table tennis in the Romanian 1st league.[5] Böhm attended Hungarian-language schools. He started playing table tennis competitively at the age of seven under his father's guidance. As a teenager, he moved to Cluj Napoca with his brother József Böhm, also a table tennis player, who is two years older than him, and became a disciple of Farkas Paneth.[1][6] Böhm won a total of 25 table tennis titles in Romania. In 1978, he won the European Youth Championships in the doubles and mixed competition as well the Romanian Championships in the men's single competition, in which he defeated his brother. With him Böhm topped the podium in doubles.[7] In 1979, he became national champion again. At the 1979 World Championships in Pyongyang, he defeated the Hungarian world champion, Gábor Gergely. New beginning in GermanyAfter the 1980 European Table Tennis Championships in Bern, Böhm fled to Germany, where he moved to Mörfelden-Walldorf, near Frankfurt am Main.[8] Böhm became the best player of the decade on German national scale, winning 6 titles in the men single competition alone. For many years, he belonged to the top-ranked players in the world. With his brother he became national champion in doubles in 1984. He beat the Hungarian István Jónyer and Tibor Klampár. In 1988 he participated in the XXIV Summer Olympics in Seoul. He won the silver medal with the German national team at the 1990 European Championships in Gothenburg. In the final of the team competition he defeated Jan-Ove Waldner. Between 1982 and 1993 he played in 102 international matches for Germany. The authorIn 2013, his autobiography Mein Wunder von Bern was published.[2] In 2018, Böhm wrote his novel Die Pontifex-Botschaft which is accompanied by two book trailer in German and English.[9] In 2021, a sequel to his autobiography, Offene Veränderung, has been published.[10] Outstanding achievementsOutstanding individual achievementsWorld Cup
European TOP-12
International Championships
Balkan Championships
European Veterans Championships
World Veterans Championships
Outstanding team results
Bibliography
Resources
References
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