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Jamilon Mulders is a German Field Hockey coach and former player for the National Team.
As a player, he was part of the team that won the World Cup in 2002. He then retired and transitioned into coaching. He progressed through youth teams, eventually leading national youth teams. He was then an assistant for Markus Weise when the German women won the Gold medal at the Champions trophy. He then started to cosch the German women, with whom he won bronze at the Rio Olympics 2016, before after five years, he went on to coach the Chinese women’s national team. After a break from coaching, he returned as interim Headcoach to the Dutch women's national team, with whom he won the World Cup in 2022, and became 2023 again a world champion as an assistant to the German men's team. A silver medal at the Paris Olympia with the German men was the last medal before transition to become a youth performance manager. He is presently the youth performance manager Dutch federation.
Q: What routines do you have in place to deliver tough messages?
Q: To what extent do you agree with the idea of being a servant to the group as the leader?
Q: Has there been times when you have been ‘blind-spotted’ by a goal?
If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at [email protected] or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Paul Barnett & Jim Woolfrey4.8
2121 ratings
Jamilon Mulders is a German Field Hockey coach and former player for the National Team.
As a player, he was part of the team that won the World Cup in 2002. He then retired and transitioned into coaching. He progressed through youth teams, eventually leading national youth teams. He was then an assistant for Markus Weise when the German women won the Gold medal at the Champions trophy. He then started to cosch the German women, with whom he won bronze at the Rio Olympics 2016, before after five years, he went on to coach the Chinese women’s national team. After a break from coaching, he returned as interim Headcoach to the Dutch women's national team, with whom he won the World Cup in 2022, and became 2023 again a world champion as an assistant to the German men's team. A silver medal at the Paris Olympia with the German men was the last medal before transition to become a youth performance manager. He is presently the youth performance manager Dutch federation.
Q: What routines do you have in place to deliver tough messages?
Q: To what extent do you agree with the idea of being a servant to the group as the leader?
Q: Has there been times when you have been ‘blind-spotted’ by a goal?
If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at [email protected] or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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