Английская Википедия:European Men's Handball Championship

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox sports league The European Men's Handball Championship is the official competition for senior men's national handball teams of Europe and takes place every two years since 1994, in the even-numbered year between the World Championship. In addition to crowning the European champions, the tournament also serves as a qualifying tournament for the Olympic Games and World Championship. The most successful team is Sweden who have won five titles. Spain, however, have won most medals.

History

In 1946, the International Handball Federation was founded by eight European nations,[1] and though non-European nations competed at the World Championships, the medals had always been taken by European nations.[2] European Handball Federation is founded in 1991. At the same time (1995), the World Championship was changed from a quadrennial to a biannual event, and the European Handball Federation now began its own championship – which also acted as a regional qualifier for the World Championship.[3]

1990s

Шаблон:Main

The first championship was held in Portugal in June 1994.[4] The host nation had not managed to qualify for any World Championship thus far, and they finished 12th and last after losing all six games, including 21–38 to Romania in the 11th-place play-off. Sweden became the first European champion after defeating Russia by 34–21 in the final, Russia's heaviest loss in their international history.[5] Both teams had gone through the tournament without loss, but Sweden's fast breaks became the key in the final; they scored 14 of their 34 goals on fast breaks. Swedish middle back Magnus Andersson was named the event's best player and Russian left back Vasily Kudinov was top scorer with 50 goals.[6]

Two years later, the championship moved to Spain, with the same format. This time, no team went through the group stage without giving up points, but Russia and Sweden were to face off once again; this time in the semi-final, and Russia got revenge with a 24–21 win in front of 650 spectators.[7] In the other semi-final, the hosts beat Yugoslavia 27–23, before 7,500 spectators littered the arena in Sevilla to watch the hosts go down by one goal despite the efforts of Talant Dujshebaev, a Kyrgyz-born[8] back player who had played for Russia in 1994 but who now turned out for Spain.[5] Federal Republic of Yugoslavia participated for the first time and finished third.

In 1998 the Championship was held in Italy, whose appearance at the 1997 World Championship was their first (and to date, only) at the top level of international handball.[2] Spain went through the first six matches of the tournament unbeaten, while their opponents Sweden had won the first four games before becoming the first team to lose to hosts Italy. However, in the final, Sweden were too strong and won by 25–23 after having led by 15–9 at half-time in front of 6,100 spectators in Bolzano.

2000s

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Two years later, the Championship was held in the Croatian cities of Zagreb and Rijeka. By now, the Championship had been moved back to January[9] in the middle of the European handball season. The Championship acted as an Olympic qualifier, and hosts Croatia, who had won the 1996 Olympics, needed to finish in the top five to qualify. They lost to Spain and drew with France in the group stage, which sent them into a fifth-place play-off with neighbours Slovenia. 10,000 spectators watched as Slovenia prevailed by one goal and qualified for the Sydney Games. The two teams who had won European Championships before, Sweden and Russia, qualified for the final – Sweden had won the group stage match 28–25,[9] but Russia took a six-goal lead at half-time. Sweden came back to tie the game at full-time, and two 10-minute extra periods were required before Sweden won 32–31[5] after Magnus Wislander scored the deciding goal.[10]

Three-time champions Sweden were the next to host the European Championship, in 2002. This was the first tournament with 16 teams, an expansion from 12 in the previous four instalments. The Swedes won their first seven matches, and had already qualified for the semi-finals when they lost 26–27 to Denmark, having led 17–11 at half time. In the other main round group, Iceland became the third Nordic team to qualify after defeating Germany in the final match, but both Denmark and Iceland were soundly beaten in the semi-finals – Denmark lost 23–28 to Germany, while Sweden defeated Iceland by 11 goals. Sweden thus qualified for their fourth final in five attempts, and in front of 14,300 spectators in Stockholm Globe, they came back from a one-goal deficit when Staffan Olsson equalised with five seconds to spare. Sweden had substituted their goalkeeper, and Florian Kehrmann replied with a goal in an empty net, but it was disallowed because the referees had not started play after the Swedish goal.[11] In the extra time, Sweden held on, and could celebrate their fourth title.[12]

Sweden's row of three successive Championships was broken in Slovenia in 2004, when Germany won despite not being touted as a medal candidate by news agency Deutsche Presse Agentur.[13] Germany suffered an early defeat to Serbia and Montenegro, and qualified for the main round as the third and final team from their group, having drawn with France as well. However, as the favourites beat each other in Germany's main round group, Germany qualified for the semi-finals in first place from the six-team group. In the other group, Croatia, who won the other group, had not lost any of their first seven games, while Denmark also had four successive wins.

Croatia faced hosts Slovenia in the semi-final, and the clash of the two Balkan neighbours saw heightened security measures.[14] 7,000 spectators in the Hall Tivoli saw that the hosts became the first team to beat Croatia in this tournament despite 12 goals from Croatian right winger Mirza Džomba who was reputed to be the best handball player in the world at the time.[15] Denmark, who had reached their second successive semi-final, once again had to bow out at this stage, as they lost 20–22 to Germany in what was described as a "hard-fought victory."[14] Germany won the final more convincingly; a 16–10 lead at half time was never squandered, as Slovenia only got within three goals in the second half, and eventually lost 25–30.[16]

The 2006 tournament was held in Switzerland, in the cities of Basel, Bern, Lucerne, St Gallen and Zürich. France won the tournament, going through with one solitary loss – a 26–29 defeat to Spain in the preliminary round (where France trailed by eight goals at half-time). Defending champions Germany was also in this preliminary group, and this time taking one point through from the group stage would not be enough for Germany. Despite winning all three main round games, so did France and Spain, and those two teams qualified for the semi-finals from Group I. From the other group, Croatia qualified in first place after a 34–30 victory over Serbia and Montenegro in the last match. Later that evening, Denmark beat Russia and qualified for their third successive semi-final, one point behind Croatia. However, the Group II teams were both defeated by Group I teams, causing France and Spain to meet again in the final. In the third-place play-off, Croatia surprisingly lost to Denmark, while the final saw France prevail by eight goals to win their first European Championship

Norway was the host country for the 2008 tournament. Matches were played in Bergen, Drammen, Lillehammer, Stavanger and Trondheim. Croatia, Norway, Hungary and France won their preliminary groups, but two of the teams failed to utilise their advantage; Norway drew with Poland and lost to Slovenia, and needed to beat Croatia in the final match of the group stage. Instead, Ivano Balić scored the 23–22 goal with twenty seconds to spare, and only a late equaliser gave Norway third place in the group.[17] Hungary, Spain and Germany had all gone through with two points from Group C, and Germany sealed their qualification with a two-goal win over Sweden in a match where a draw would have been enough for the Swedes.[18] In the first semifinal Croatia played France in a game dominated by strong defense by both teams, with the Croats achieving a three-goal lead twice, only to see France come back strong. Croatia goalkeeper Mirko Alilović saved a shot from Nikola Karabatic with six seconds to go as Croatia won 24–23. Denmark came back from 7–12 down to beat Germany, despite the Germans equalising within the final minute, as Lars Christiansen slotted home a penalty shot with three seconds remaining. Croatia started off well in the final, scoring the first four goals, but with eight saves more from Denmark's keeper, Kasper Hvidt, Denmark won 24–20 and took their first major trophy.

Tournaments

Year Host Final Third place match Teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1994
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Portugal
Шаблон:Hb-big 34–21 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 24–23 Шаблон:Hb-big 12
1996
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Spain
Шаблон:Hb-big 23–22 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 26–25 Шаблон:Hb-big 12
1998
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Italy
Шаблон:Hb-big 25–23 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 30–28 (ET) Шаблон:Hb-big 12
2000
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Croatia
Шаблон:Hb-big 32–31 (2ET) Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 24–23 Шаблон:Hb-big 12
2002
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Sweden
Шаблон:Hb-big 33–31 (ET) Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 29–22 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2004
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Slovenia
Шаблон:Hb-big 30–25 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 31–27 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2006
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Switzerland
Шаблон:Hb-big 31–23 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 32–27 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2008
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Norway
Шаблон:Hb-big 24–20 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 36–26 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2010
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Austria
Шаблон:Hb-big 25–21 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 29–26 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2012
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Serbia
Шаблон:Hb-big 21–19 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 31–27 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2014
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Denmark
Шаблон:Hb-big 41–32 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 29–28 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2016
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Poland
Шаблон:Hb-big 24–17 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 31–24 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2018
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Croatia
Шаблон:Hb-big 29–23 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 32–29 Шаблон:Hb-big 16
2020
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon
Austria / Norway / Sweden
Шаблон:Hb-big 22–20 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 28–20 Шаблон:Hb-big 24
2022
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon
Hungary / Slovakia
Шаблон:Hb-big 27–26 Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 35–32 (ET) Шаблон:Hb-big 24
2024
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon
Germany
Шаблон:Hb-big 33–31 (ET) Шаблон:Hb-big Шаблон:Hb-big 34–31 Шаблон:Hb-big 24
2026
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon
Denmark / Norway / Sweden
24
2028
Details
Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon Шаблон:Flagicon
Spain / Portugal / Switzerland
24

Medal table

Шаблон:Medals table

Statistics

Summary (1994–2022)

Rank Team Шаблон:Tooltip Points Шаблон:Tooltip W D L GF GA GD
1 Шаблон:Hb 15 157 111 75 7 29
2 Шаблон:Hb 15 140 104 65 10 29
3 Шаблон:Hb 15 134 107 62 10 35
4 Шаблон:Hb 14 133 101 63 7 31
5 Шаблон:Hb 14 127 96 60 7 29
6 Шаблон:Hb 14 112 97 49 14 34
7 Шаблон:Hb 14 93 83 42 9 32
8 Шаблон:Hb 12 68 71 29 10 32
9 Шаблон:Hb 10 67 62 30 7 25
10 Шаблон:Hb 13 63 79 27 9 43
11 Шаблон:Hb 12 53 62 23 7 32
12 Шаблон:Hb 13 51 67 20 11 36
13 Шаблон:Hb 10 47 56 21 5 30
14 Шаблон:Hb 11 39 57 17 5 35
15 Шаблон:Hb 7 23 37 11 1 25
16 Шаблон:Hb 7 21 36 10 1 25
17 Шаблон:Hb 7 21 37 8 5 24
18 Шаблон:Hb 5 16 25 7 2 16
19 Шаблон:Hb 2 9 10 4 1 5
20 Шаблон:Hb 6 9 25 4 1 20
21 Шаблон:Hb 2 8 12 4 0 8
22 Шаблон:Hb 7 7 31 3 1 27
23 Шаблон:Hb 4 6 15 2 2 11
24 Шаблон:Hb 2 5 9 2 1 6
25 Шаблон:Hb 1 4 6 2 0 4
26 Шаблон:Hb 4 3 12 1 1 10
27 Шаблон:Hb 2 0 6 0 0 6
28 Шаблон:Hb 1 0 3 0 0 3
29 Шаблон:Hb 1 0 3 0 0 3

Total hosts

Hosts Nations (Year(s)
3 Шаблон:Flag (2008, 2020, 2026)
Шаблон:Flag (2002, 2020, 2026)
2 Шаблон:Flag (2010, 2020)
Шаблон:Flag (2000, 2018)
Шаблон:Flag (2014, 2026)
Шаблон:Flag (1994, 2028)
Шаблон:Flag (1996, 2028)
Шаблон:Flag (2006, 2028)
1 Шаблон:Flag (2024)
Шаблон:Flag (2022)
Шаблон:Flag (1998)
Шаблон:Flag (2016)
Шаблон:Flag (2012)
Шаблон:Flag (2022)
Шаблон:Flag (2004)

Top scorers by tournament

The record-holder for scored goals in a single Euro Championship is Sander Sagosen. He scored 65 goals for Norway at the 2020 European Men's Handball Championship that took place in Austria, Sweden and Norway.

Year Player Goals
1994 Шаблон:Flagicon Vasily Kudinov 50
1996 Шаблон:Flagicon Thomas Knorr 41
1998 Шаблон:Flagicon Jan Filip 48
2000 Шаблон:Flagicon Oleg Velyky 46
2002 Шаблон:Flagicon Ólafur Stefánsson 58
2004 Шаблон:Flagicon Mirza Džomba 46
2006 Шаблон:Flagicon Siarhei Rutenka 51
2008 Шаблон:Flagicon Ivano Balić
Шаблон:Flagicon Lars Christiansen
Шаблон:Flagicon Nikola Karabatić
44
2010 Шаблон:Flagicon Filip Jícha 53
2012 Шаблон:Flagicon Kiril Lazarov 61
2014 Шаблон:Flagicon Joan Cañellas 50
2016 Шаблон:Flagicon Valero Rivera 48
2018 Шаблон:Flagicon Ondřej Zdráhala 55
2020 Шаблон:Flagicon Sander Sagosen 65
2022 Шаблон:Flagicon Ómar Ingi Magnússon 59
2024 Шаблон:Flagicon Martim Costa
Шаблон:Flagicon Mathias Gidsel
54

MVPs by tournament

Year Player
1994 Шаблон:Flagicon Magnus Andersson
1996 Шаблон:Flagicon Talant Dujshebaev
1998 Шаблон:Flagicon Daniel Stephan
2000 Шаблон:Flagicon Jackson Richardson
2002 Шаблон:Flagicon Magnus Wislander
2004 Шаблон:Flagicon Ivano Balić
2006 Шаблон:Flagicon Ivano Balić
2008 Шаблон:Flagicon Nikola Karabatić
2010 Шаблон:Flagicon Filip Jícha
2012 Шаблон:Flagicon Momir Ilić
2014 Шаблон:Flagicon Nikola Karabatić
2016 Шаблон:Flagicon Raúl Entrerríos
2018 Шаблон:Flagicon Jim Gottfridsson
2020 Шаблон:Flagicon Domagoj Duvnjak
2022 Шаблон:Flagicon Jim Gottfridsson
2024 Шаблон:Flagicon Nedim Remili

Participating nations

Шаблон:Main National team appearances in the European Men's Handball Championship

Most successful players

The table shows the most successful players at the European Championships. Players listed in bold are still active as of 2022. Players marked with an asterisk (*) have the additional distinction of having been elected championship MVP.

Rank Player Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Nikola Karabatić ** Шаблон:FRA 2006 2024 4 2 6
2 Magnus Andersson * Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
Martin Frändesjö Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
Ola Lindgren Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
Stefan Lövgren Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
Staffan Olsson Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
Magnus Wislander * Шаблон:SWE 1994 2002 4 4
8 Luc Abalo Шаблон:FRA 2006 2018 3 2 5
9 Jérôme Fernandez Шаблон:FRA 2006 2014 3 1 4
Michaël Guigou Шаблон:FRA 2006 2018 3 1 4
Daniel Narcisse Шаблон:FRA 2006 2014 3 1 4
Thierry Omeyer Шаблон:FRA 2006 2014 3 1 4

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:European Men's Handball Championship winners Шаблон:European Men's Handball Championship Шаблон:European Championships Шаблон:International Handball Шаблон:International Handball (Men)

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  6. Шаблон:Cite web
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  14. 14,0 14,1 Шаблон:Cite web
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