Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/19 09:00 1 Vladimir Samsonov v Chia-Hung Sun W 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/18 16:06 - Vladimir Samsonov v Viktor Yefimov W 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/18 10:39 - Vladimir Samsonov v Viacheslav Burov W 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/17 15:30 1 Vladimir Samsonov v Tomasz Lewandowski W 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/17 09:00 1 Vladimir Samsonov v Guillermo Martinez W 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 03/10 19:26 - Patrick Franziska v Vladimir Samsonov W 1-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused 02/23 15:30 5 Mattias Karlsson v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-2
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 02/16 14:15 5 Asuka Sakai v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 02/10 14:02 - Vladimir Samsonov v Robert Svensson L 2-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 02/03 19:30 3 Vladimir Samsonov v Lei Kou L 0-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 02/03 15:00 2 Vladimir Samsonov v Tiago Apolonia L 1-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 02/03 10:30 1 Vladimir Samsonov v Emmanuel Lebesson L 2-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 01/27 19:17 - Daniel Kosiba v Vladimir Samsonov W 1-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 01/21 10:45 3 Vladimir Samsonov v Kun Shang L 2-4
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 01/20 15:30 4 Vladimir Samsonov v Jakub Dyjas W 4-1
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 01/19 14:00 5 Vladimir Samsonov v Quentin Robinot W 4-1
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 12/08 11:00 4 Yuto Muramatsu v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 12/02 16:04 - Vladimir Samsonov v Yuto Muramatsu W 3-1
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 11/25 19:45 - Christophe Legout v Vladimir Samsonov W 0-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 11/04 14:02 - Vladimir Samsonov v Claus Nielsen W 3-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/27 18:14 - Jakub Dyjas v Vladimir Samsonov W 2-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/22 12:45 4 Robert Gardos v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-3
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/21 18:00 5 Mattias Karlsson v Vladimir Samsonov W 2-4
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/20 19:00 6 Elia Schmid v Vladimir Samsonov W 1-4
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/06 12:48 - Vladimir Samsonov v Jens Lundquist W 3-1
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 10/02 12:30 4 Sangsu Lee v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-1
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 09/17 09:40 3 Long Ma v Vladimir Samsonov L 4-0
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 09/17 03:40 4 Minseok Kim v Vladimir Samsonov W 0-4
Katari lahtised meistrivõistlused – naised 09/16 05:00 5 Muhamad Ashraf Haiqal v Vladimir Samsonov W 0-4
Saksamaa lahtised meistrivõistlused 03/28 18:45 5 Vladimir Samsonov v Joao Geraldo W 4-0

Wikipedia - Vladimir Samsonov

Vladimir Samsonov or Uladzimir Samsonau (Belarusian: Уладзімір Віктаравіч Самсонаў, Russian: Владимир Викторович Самсонов, born 17 April 1976) is a Belarusian former professional table tennis player. He is known in China as the "Tai Chi Master" because of his superb all-around style, both offensive and defensive. Samsonov competed at six consecutive Olympics between 1996 and 2016, placing fourth individually in 2016, in addition to equal fifth in 1996 and 2000.

History

Samsonov is also known as Mr. ECL (European Champions League), for winning a record 13 ECL titles (including two of its predecessor, European Club Cup of Champions) – three with Borussia (1997, 1998, 2000), and five each with Charleroi (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007) and Fakel Orenburg (2012, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019). His 13 titles are not only the most ever by an athlete in table tennis, but also more than any male or female athlete has ever won in European Champions Leagues in all sports. He started playing for European top division clubs in 1994, when he signed with Borussia Düsseldorf, then six years later joined Royal Charleroi in Belgium. In 2008, he moved to Spain to play for SuperDivision club Cajagranada, but left after only one season to join the Russian Premier League club Fakel Orenburg, where he finished his career twelve years later.

Samsonov is famous for being a top-10 player spanning over a decade. He first joined the top-10 in 1996, then climbed to the top position in 1998. He stayed in the top-10 for 15 years until November 2011. His highest ranking was No. 1 in December 1999. He used to hold the distinction of being the player with most ITTF Pro/World Tour titles (27) until Ma Long surpassed him (28). He was runner-up in the 1997 World championships, and is also a three-time European champion (1998, 2003, 2005) and three-time World Cup winner (1999, 2001, 2009).

Samsonov was awarded the Richard Bergmann Fair Play Trophy at the world championships a record three times, in 2003, 2007 and 2013.

In 2021, despite qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics, his seventh time qualifying for the Olympics, Samsonov withdrew from the tournament and shortly after announced his retirement.