Rob Short

Rob Short
Personal information
Born August 11, 1972

Rob ("Shorty") Short (born August 11, 1972 in Maidstone, England) is a Canadian field hockey player.

Career

Short played his first international senior tournament in 1995, at the Pan American Games in Mar del Plata. Highlights include the 1998 World Cup in The Netherlands where the Canadian team finished 8th with Rob scoring 4 goals in the 7 games. In 2000 he competed with the national hockey team of Canada at the Summer Olympics in Sydney, where the team finished 10th. A recent win (over Argentina in strokes) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the Pan American Games meant Rob competed in his second Olympic Games in Beijing in the summer of 2008.

Short now plays club hockey at the highest level in the Netherlands since 1999; 3 years with HC Rotterdam, 2 years at Laren and is currently playing his 9th year with HGC. Last year with HGC, Rob won the EHL (Euro Hockey League) and took home the MVP of the European competition and with it 5000 Euro.

Both Rob and his older brother Mark are fantastic Poker players who play tournaments both online with PokerStars.com and occasionally in casinos around the world.

Alongside hockey Rob is also a business owner owning Mantis Hockey, Voodoo America & Omatas Sports which all distribute field hockey sticks and equipment across North America.

Rob currently splits time between Amsterdam and his family in Tsawwassen, British Columbia.

International Senior Competitions

Education

Rob graduated from UVIC (University of Victoria) with a Bachelor's Degree in Geography. He has also since residing in Europe achieved a diploma at BCIT (British Columbia Institute of Technology) in Web Technologies. Rob looks forward to coaching hockey both Internationally and at the club level in the future and to progress in that career in 2011 he completed a Masters in International Coaching at the Johan Cruyff Institute in Sport at Amsterdam.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.