2018–19 Women's EHF Champions League

The 2018–19 Women's EHF Champions League was the 26th edition of the Women's EHF Champions League, the competition for top women's clubs of Europe, organized and supervised by the European Handball Federation.[1]

Women's EHF Champions League
2018–19
Tournament information
SportHandball
Dates7 September 2018–12 May 2019
Teams16 (group stage)
8 (qualification)
Websiteehfcl.com
Final positions
ChampionsHungary Győri Audi ETO KC
Runner-upRussia Rostov-Don
Tournament statistics
Matches played96
Goals scored5229 (54.47 per match)
Attendance289,808 (3,019 per match)
Top scorer(s)Norway Linn Jørum Sulland
(89 goals)

Győri Audi ETO KC defended their title by defeating Rostov-Don 25–24 in the final, to win their fifth overall and third straight title.

Competition format edit

16 teams participated in the competition, divided in four groups who played in a round robin, home and away format. The top three teams in each group qualified for the main round.

Main round

The 12 qualified teams were divided in two groups who played in a round robin, home and away format. The points and the goal difference gained against the qualified teams in the first round were carried over. The top four teams in each group qualified for the quarterfinals.

Knockout stage

After the quarterfinals, the culmination of the season, the Women's EHF Final four, continued in its existing format, with the four top teams from the competition competing for the title.

Team allocation edit

14 teams were directly qualified for the group stage.[2]

Group stage
  København Håndbold   Odense Håndbold   Brest Bretagne Handball   Metz Handball
  Thüringer HC   FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria   Győri Audi ETO KC   ŽRK Budućnost
  Larvik HK   Vipers Kristiansand   CSM București   Rostov-Don
  RK Krim   IK Sävehof
Qualification tournaments
  Podravka Koprivnica   SG BBM Bietigheim   Jomi Salerno   MKS Lublin
  SCM Craiova   ŽORK Jagodina   BM Bera Bera   Muratpaşa BSK

Round and draw dates edit

Phase Draw date
Qualification tournaments 27 June 2018
Group stage 29 June 2018
Knockout stage
Final Four
(Budapest)
16 April 2019

Qualification stage edit

The draw was held on 27 June 2018. The two winners of the qualification tournaments advanced to the group stage. The second and third placed teams were translate to the third round of EHF Cup; the fourth places entered in the second round.[3]

Qualification tournament 1 edit

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
8 September
 
 
  SG BBM Bietigheim33
 
9 September
 
  BM Bera Bera27
 
  SG BBM Bietigheim34
 
8 September
 
  MKS Lublin19
 
  MKS Lublin28
 
 
  Jomi Salerno17
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
  BM Bera Bera40
 
 
  Jomi Salerno20

Qualification tournament 2 edit

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
8 September
 
 
  SCM Craiova31
 
9 September
 
  ŽORK Jagodina18
 
  SCM Craiova21
 
8 September
 
  Podravka Koprivnica22
 
  Podravka Koprivnica35
 
 
  Muratpaşa BSK22
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
  ŽORK Jagodina26
 
 
  Muratpaşa BSK24

Group stage edit

The draw was held on 29 June 2018. In each group, teams play against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.[4]

Group A edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MET BUD ODE LAR
1   Metz Handball 6 4 1 1 166 133 +33 9 Main round 25–24 41–26 31–20
2   ŽRK Budućnost 6 4 0 2 152 142 +10 8 23–19 31–28 26–25
3   Odense Håndbold 6 2 1 3 155 165 −10 5 19–19 22–26 27–23
4   Larvik HK 6 1 0 5 137 170 −33 2 EHF Cup 21–31 23–22 25–33
Source: EHF

Group B edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification ROS KOB BRE SÄV
1   Rostov-Don 6 5 1 0 178 146 +32 11 Main round 30–25 30–24 30–21
2   København Håndbold 6 3 1 2 175 157 +18 7 21–27 32–28 33–22
3   Brest Bretagne Handball 6 2 2 2 182 172 +10 6 29–29 28–28 34–26
4   IK Sävehof 6 0 0 6 144 204 −60 0 EHF Cup 26–32 22–36 27–39
Source: EHF

Group C edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification GYO KRI THÜ KOP
1   Győri Audi ETO KC 6 6 0 0 210 140 +70 12 Main round 39–23 31–28 37–17
2   RK Krim 6 2 2 2 153 164 −11 6 23–32 27–20 27–20
3   Thüringer HC 6 1 1 4 153 173 −20 3[a] 22–38 26–26 26–28
4   Podravka Koprivnica 6 1 1 4 142 181 −39 3[a] EHF Cup 27–33 27–27 23–31
Source: EHF
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Thüringer HC 57–51 Podravka Koprivnica

Group D edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BUC KRI FER BIE
1   CSM București 6 4 0 2 185 171 +14 8 Main round 26–31 36–31 32–24
2   Vipers Kristiansand 6 3 1 2 180 162 +18 7 27–29 35–27 27–27
3   FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 6 3 0 3 174 186 −12 6 28–34 27–26 33–30
4   SG BBM Bietigheim 6 1 1 4 162 182 −20 3 EHF Cup 30–28 26–34 25–28
Source: EHF

Main round edit

In each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches. Points against teams from the same group are carried over.

Group 1 edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification MET ROS BUD ODE KOB BRE
1   Metz Handball 10 7 1 2 299 242 +57 15[a] Quarterfinals 29–25 25–24 41–26 36–24 39–26
2   Rostov-Don 10 7 1 2 261 241 +20 15[a] 18–26 24–22 25–19 30–25 30–24
3   ŽRK Budućnost 10 5 1 4 245 248 −3 11 23–19 20–23 31–28 29–27 28–27
4   Odense Håndbold 10 3 2 5 246 267 −21 8[b] 19–19 26–30 22–26 25–23 28–24
5   København Håndbold 10 3 2 5 271 280 −9 8[b] 36–33 21–27 31–20 24–24 32–28
6   Brest Bretagne Handball 10 0 3 7 253 297 −44 3 21–32 29–29 22–22 24–29 28–28
Source: EHF
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Metz Handball 55–43 Rostov-Don
  2. ^ a b Odense Håndbold 49–47 København Håndbold

Group 2 edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification GYO VIP FER BUC KRI THÜ
1   Győri Audi ETO KC 10 8 2 0 333 267 +66 18 Quarterfinals 33–29 32–32 36–27 39–23 31–28
2   Vipers Kristiansand 10 6 0 4 288 265 +23 12[a] 26–33 35–27 27–29 29–21 31–24
3   FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 10 5 2 3 298 306 −8 12[a] 32–32 27–26 28–34 31–27 30–29
4   CSM București 10 5 1 4 292 282 +10 11 25–27 26–31 36–31 32–26 23–23
5   RK Krim 10 2 1 7 243 281 −38 5 23–32 24–25 23–25 23–22 27–20
6   Thüringer HC 10 0 2 8 255 308 −53 2 22–38 21–29 32–35 30–38 26–26
Source: EHF
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Vipers Kristiansand 61–54 FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria

Knockout stage edit

The top four placed teams from each of the two main round groups advanced to the knockout stage.

Quarterfinals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
CSM București   48–54   Metz Handball 26–31 22–23
Odense Håndbold   49–62   Győri Audi ETO KC 28–29 21–33
FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria   48–62   Rostov-Don 26–29 22–33
ŽRK Budućnost   37–49   Vipers Kristiansand 19–24 18–25

Final four edit

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
11 May
 
 
  Vipers Kristiansand22
 
12 May
 
  Győri Audi ETO KC31
 
  Győri Audi ETO KC25
 
11 May
 
  Rostov-Don24
 
  Metz Handball25
 
 
  Rostov-Don27
 
Third place
 
 
12 May
 
 
  Vipers Kristiansand31
 
 
  Metz Handball30

Final edit

12 May 2019
18:00
Rostov-Don   24–25   Győri Audi ETO KC László Papp Budapest Sports Arena, Budapest
Attendance: 12,000
Referees: Brehmer, Skowronek (POL)
Abbingh 7 (11–15) Amorim 7
  6×  Report   6×  2× 

Awards and statistics edit

All-Star Team edit

The all-star team and awards were announced on 10 May 2019.[5]

Other awards edit

Top goalscorers edit

Rank Player Club Goals[6]
1   Linn Jørum Sulland   Vipers Kristiansand 89
2   Noémi Háfra   FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 80
  Jovanka Radičević   CSM București
4   Ana Gros   Brest Bretagne Handball 76
5   Andrea Lekić   CSM București 73
  Nycke Groot   Győri Audi ETO KC
7   Iveta Luzumová   Thüringer HC 71
  Henny Reistad   Vipers Kristiansand
  Grâce Zaadi   Metz Handball
10   Nerea Pena   FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 69

References edit

  1. ^ "EHF receives 26 registrations for the 26th season of Women's EHF Champions League". ehfcl.com. 7 June 2018.
  2. ^ "EXEC confirms participants for the 2018/19 season". ehfcl.com. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
  3. ^ "Draw opens road to group matches". ehfcl.com. 27 June 2018.
  4. ^ "Defending champions in group with Thüringer, Krim and qualifier 2". ehfcl.com. 29 June 2018.
  5. ^ "All-Star team gets fresh look in 2019". eurohandball.com. 10 May 2019.
  6. ^ "Goalscorers". Archived from the original on 2020-02-06. Retrieved 2018-11-18.

External links edit