Jan Koster | |||||
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Personal information | |||||
Nickname | Jan met de gouden handjes[1] | ||||
Nationality | Dutch | ||||
Born | [2] Assen, Netherlands | 29 June 1943||||
Died | (aged 69) | ||||
Volleyball information | |||||
Position | libero | ||||
Career | |||||
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Jan Koster (29 June 1943 — 3 April 2013) was a Dutch footballer, professional volleyball player, volleyball coach and pub owner. During his playing career he played as a libero for 16 years in the Dutch Volleyball League, being a key person for the teams he played with.
Koster didn’t accept the offer to play for the national team.[2] Although not playing for the national team, Koster was named as one of the best volleyball players of Drenthe in the 1970s[3][4][1] and possibly one of the best ever Dutch libero players.[5]
During his best years he was nicknamed due to his good technique Dutch: Jan met de gouden handjes (translated: Jan with the golden hands)[1] or Dutch: Jan met de fluwelen handjes (translated: Jan with the velvet hands).[2]
Af young age Koster played both volleyball and football. As a footballer he played with Asser Christelijke Voetbalvereniging and made his debut in the first league at the age of 16. Two years later he didn’t want to combine football and volleyball and chose, also because of his friend, for volleyball.[2]
He played a total of 16 seasons in the Dutch volleyball league.[2] He started playing with SUES and he played afterwards with SFC in Assen. Koster was a key person for the team. [6] After Hans Zaaijer and Jelke Smit left the club, Koster also left SFC in 1973 and became player and trainer with Oranje Nassau in Groningen.[7] He also started studying economics in Groningen.[2] The team was very dissatisfied that he left, also because negotiations had already been done with him.[7] However, he returned as coach at SFC for the women’s team. He trained the women’s team for three seasons until 1977. He was successful with the team.[8][9] He stopped because he couldn’t combine it anymore with his job as pub owner.[10] He was from 1981 coach of Lycurgus, replacing Hilbrand Hartlief .[11][12]
During his career Koster played for the national student team and the national militairy team. He was invited, but didn’t accept the offer to play for the main national team.[2]
Koster worked as a gymnastic teacher.[13] Koster took over pub “Havenzicht” in 1975 together with volleyball player Piet Swieter, but short after it became his own cafe. The cafe was a well known meeting place for (known) volleyball players, basketball players and other sportspeople.[14][1] Koster had a room above Havenzicht but lived somewhere else.[15]
Koster died in 3 April 2013.[16] Koster was described after his death by coach of the 1996 Olympic winning team Joop Alberda as “legendary”.[17] After his death, Havenzicht was closed after almost 150 years in July 2020.[15]