Ján Filc

* 1953

  • "When a person wanted to receive a gift, he had to recite or sing something to Ded Moroz or Saint Nicholas, so it was the condition that children began to show in some way what they can remember and what they can do even under stress and under scared of the devil to say. And later, after that they were already on the second stage, they were theater one-act plays or pieces, I still have photos of me playing in the Women's Act. That was so interesting, because I was looking forward to it, and also to the exams, because we really ate the sausage, we didn't fake it, so they were like that... Or when we had those, every year the school organized some kind of bigger celebration, it was in autumn term, I don't remember what it was called exactly, it was, we were the presenters, that is, we gave the conference ourselves, we put the text together with the teachers, and our classmates actually took turns in such different skits and dance parts and singing. This was, I think, a space for the children to be able to express themselves in the environment in which they worked, among their friends, but in a little bit more complex, demanding conditions. Not every kid could make it, but it was an opportunity."

  • "In particular, we, as a group, went and dismantled the street signs so that the people of Šalgovič would have more trouble finding those streets, we painted the road with white paint and with some slogans like "zachvátčiki damoj" and the like, because we used some of the Russian potential. Well, when my father saw me on the overpass on Baikalska, when we were trying to somehow convince the Russians to let them go home, I almost got a headache then. Because we somehow didn't perceive the danger as big as it really was. Because it was mainly in the center that it took place, basically, the shooting and the like in that period. So I remember this very well, and it actually carried over to the beginning in high school, because right away, a strike was declared by the students, and since I was the president of the class at the time when the team was being put together, so we intervened in some strike process expressing our opposition. And somehow I never changed my opinion, and to this day I am convinced that it should not have happened and that it was a huge mistake of that period."

  • "And I feel some kind of relaxation, that maybe the direction is also due to the influence of Perestroika, that it already indicated that maybe things will start to change a little differently. Then the culmination happened in November, which we all experienced very emotionally and we believed that it would be something very positive and special for society for a long time and especially for our offspring. And that's how we got really good at it, if I had to say so. Yes. How we all liked each other back then, how we somehow knew how to forgive each other and so on. And it was a beautiful period, I'm very happy about it... until now, when I see some of those pictures, pictures from that period, I get such a chill down my spine that how those things appeared then, how everything started to relax then and how we started to feel like we are important again, that we are not just some puppets somewhere on that chessboard."

  • "During that summer, we wanted to prepare some kind of joint training camp for those players, which would allow them to somehow train here during August and at the same time get to know each other better, because they were overseas then players of different generations. There were many of them who had not had the opportunity to meet before. They only met sporadically on the ice, when they exchanged hands and the like. And here, Ernest Bokroš, an expert on our Slovak hockey, who was my assistant, Dušan, who was an expert on the overseas environment, helped me a lot, and we actually put the team together. But what happened was what I was afraid of, that actually the players, as if right before they were supposed to meet, actually started to vote out somehow, had various other duties and so on, until finally we were left somewhere alone in that space. And I realized that this is probably not the way, that we will have to look for another way of communication, which meant for me that during October – November, during that autumn, I traveled overseas and tried to to meet those players, when they played in those clubs and similar, to talk, to explain to them what we want to achieve, how we want to achieve it. And maybe it hit a fertile ground for some of them - whether it was mainly Miro Šatan, who was then also the captain of the national team, it was Mišo Handzuš, who reacted to it in the way we needed, Zdeno Chára. These guys actually helped in that first moment to create a team that succeeded in St. Petersburg and then later was actually the basis for the next decade or so of successful performances of our national team."

  • "We were aware that the Russians have very fast wing forwards, that they simply started causing us a lot of problems, especially in our defensive zone. The lesser experience of the defenders and perhaps even the physical disposition towards the end of the tournament was probably not at the required level, so a few mistakes were made there, which the Russians were able to punish, and as a result, they drew it to 3:3, so it flowed to us shoe. And I also tried to guide the players on that substitution so that we could last until the end of the regular playing time, so that we would then make the plan for the extra time that we would play, and with that I sent the quality of the players to the ice , which we had. Well, what actually happened was that when I was drawing attention to how we must devote ourselves to the defense, the Russians made a mistake somewhere on the blue line, and our offense, led by the pair of Stumpel... Žigo Pálffy and Bondra, was actually able up until then the great catcher Sokolov, who was declared the best goalkeeper of the tournament – they probably didn't credit him with this goal, in the whole thing – so they were able to overcome him, with that shot by Peter on the bar, and that was actually what brought us the gold."

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    Bratislava, 28.08.2024

    (audio)
    duration: 02:15:52
    media recorded in project Tipsport for Legends
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Treat people the way you want them to treat you

Ján Filc during the recording of the interview
Ján Filc during the recording of the interview
photo: Photo by Dominik Janovský

Ján Filc was born on February 19, 1953 in Bratislava. In 1959, he started attending elementary school. In the years 1968 – 1971, he studied at the Secondary General Education School on Metodova Street in Bratislava. In addition to his studies, he was actively involved in hockey. He started in Slovan Bratislava as a goalkeeper. In the 1968/1969 season, he got the opportunity to play in the Czechoslovak youth team. A year later, he already represented Czechoslovakia at the EC in ice hockey for under-19 players. In 1971, he won a bronze medal at the European Under-19 Championship in Prešov. In 1972, he brought bronze from the European Championship in Sweden. Between 1971 and 1976 he studied at the Faculty of Physical Education and Sports in Bratislava. In 1976, he started working as an assistant professor at the Faculty of Education in Nitra. His hockey club was Plastika Nitra, where he worked as a goalkeeper in the team. After leaving the Faculty of Education, he started coaching. In 1986, he and his family moved back to Bratislava. He taught at the Physical Education School in Bratislava and later worked as an assistant at the Games Department of the Faculty of Physical Education. In 1992, he left the world of academia and hockey and moved to the business sphere, where he worked until 2008. At the World Cup for players under 20 years of age in Winnipeg, Canada, in 1999, the Slovak national team under his leadership won a bronze medal. After this success, Ján started to train the “A” representative team of Slovakia and from the WC in 2000 in St. Petersburg, his charges brought home silver medals. At the WC in Gothenburg, Sweden in 2002, Slovak hockey players won a gold medal under his leadership. In 2010, he led the Slovakian ice hockey team at the Winter Olympics in Canada. Until 2011, he worked in the Slovak Ice Hockey Association. For three years, he also devoted himself to youth as the founder and director of the Private School for Sports in Piešťany. Ján is currently retired, enjoying his time with his wife Anna. Both of their children live with their families in Canada. Despite the great distance that separates them, they are very close as a family and enjoy mutual love and understanding.