Badminton Austria – Official Website

“Learn to Play: Children’s training with beginners”

Photo: BadmintonPhoto

The Austrian Badminton Association (ÖBV) has been given the opportunity by the Bavarian Badminton Association (BBV) to fill three places for clubs from Austria in the “Learn to Play: Children’s Training with Beginners” training course.

The training takes place on June 6th – 7th. June 2026 in Landshut and is aimed at trainers and club leaders who want to build children’s training in a meaningful, age-appropriate and motivating way right from the start.

Content & focus

The focus is on practical ideas and directly implementable training approaches for everyday club life – including these questions:

  • How do I design meaningful children’s training in large groups?
  • How does the club create a training culture in which learning and training are fun – for children and the coach?
  • What content do I convey to children who are coming to training for the first time – and how?

A highlight is an example unit with children with concrete observation tasks and joint evaluation based on the DBV’s framework training concept (RTK).

Speakers

The training is led by the two A-trainers Katja Holenz and Michael Clemens, who, among other things, look after the state squad U13/U15 and apply their experience from the youth sector in a practical manner.

Registration

Registration for ÖBV participants takes place exclusively via the ÖBV and not according to the procedure described in the BBV invitation.

Register by email to: office@badminton.at
Please specify:

Award: First come, first serve (3 places)
Registration deadline: 27.03.2026

In addition you will find here the website report and here the announcement of the Bavarian Badminton Association.

” Back Print version

James Whitfield

James Whitfield is Archysport's racket sports and golf specialist, bringing a global perspective to tennis, badminton, and golf coverage. Based between London and Singapore, James has covered Grand Slam tournaments, BWF World Tour events, and major golf championships on five continents. His reporting combines on-the-ground access with deep knowledge of the technical and strategic elements that separate elite athletes from the rest of the field. James is fluent in English, French, and Mandarin, giving him unique access to athletes across the global tennis and badminton circuits.

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