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- Q929348 description "Hungarian handball player and coach".
- Q929348 description "Hungarian handball player and coach".
- Q929348 subject Q1706791.
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- Q929348 subject Q7135291.
- Q929348 subject Q7389779.
- Q929348 subject Q8528089.
- Q929348 subject Q8528090.
- Q929348 subject Q8528115.
- Q929348 abstract "Bódog Török (2 November 1923 – 16 October 2012 in Budapest) was a Hungarian handball player, coach and sports official. He was the longest serving and the most successful coach in the history of the Hungarian women's national team.Török was born and died in Budapest. He began his playing career with Dunai Repülőgépgyár in 1943. In 1945 he switched to MÁV Északi Főműhely and a year later to Rendőrség. From 1947 until his retirement in 1965 he played for Kistext.Beside playing he also took the head coaching position of the Hungarian women's national team. He led Hungary on nine major tournaments between 1956 and 1978 and won a medal on seven occasions. First, yet with the field handball team, he obtained the bronze medal on the 1956 World Championship held in West Germany. In the next year, Hungary finished runners-up in the first official team handball World Championship.In 1962 they experienced a setback, finishing only fifth in the World Championship. However, they bounced back at the next tournament in 1965, where Hungary went undefeated to win their first, and so far only, World title. This was followed by a long bronze-era, as Hungary ended up in the third position in three World Championships (1971, 1975, 1978) and on the Olympics in 1976. They only missed out the podium finish on the 1973 World Championship, where the Soviet Union proved to be too strong for Hungary in the bronze final. Török led the national team in a total of 307 matches.From 1979 to 1987 he was a member of the Board of Hungarian Handball Federation, and between 1983 and 1987 he was the editor of Kézilabdázás, a specialist handball journal.".
- Q929348 birthDate "1923-11-02".
- Q929348 birthPlace Q1781.
- Q929348 birthYear "1923".
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q1402543.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q1706791.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q1781.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q521856.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647258.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q7135291.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q7389779.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q8418.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q8528089.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q8528090.
- Q929348 wikiPageWikiLink Q8528115.
- Q929348 dateOfBirth "1923-11-02".
- Q929348 name "Torok, Bodog".
- Q929348 placeOfBirth "Budapest, Hungary".
- Q929348 shortDescription "Hungarian handball player and coach".
- Q929348 type Person.
- Q929348 type Agent.
- Q929348 type Person.
- Q929348 type Agent.
- Q929348 type NaturalPerson.
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- Q929348 type Q215627.
- Q929348 type Q5.
- Q929348 type Person.
- Q929348 comment "Bódog Török (2 November 1923 – 16 October 2012 in Budapest) was a Hungarian handball player, coach and sports official. He was the longest serving and the most successful coach in the history of the Hungarian women's national team.Török was born and died in Budapest. He began his playing career with Dunai Repülőgépgyár in 1943. In 1945 he switched to MÁV Északi Főműhely and a year later to Rendőrség.".
- Q929348 label "Bódog Török".
- Q929348 givenName "Bodog".
- Q929348 name "Bodog Torok".
- Q929348 name "Torok, Bodog".
- Q929348 surname "Torok".