The Oceania Continent Handball Federation (OCHF) is the governing body for the Olympic sport of Handball in Oceania. It was founded in 2014 and is affiliated to the International Handball Federation (IHF) and Asian Handball Federation (AHF).[2]
Predecessor | Oceania Handball Federation (1993 — 2011) |
---|---|
Formation | 23 October 2014 |
Founded at | Guam |
Type | Continental Sport Federation |
Headquarters | Guam |
Region served | Oceania |
Membership | 17 Full Members 3 Associated Members |
Official language | English |
President | Ricardo Blas |
Secretary General | Makiroa Mitchell-John |
Vice-President | Carl Sagapolutele Floor[1] |
Affiliations | International Handball Federation Oceania National Olympic Committees |
The OCHF is administered by an executive committee elected annually by its members. The OCHF members are the local governing Handball federations in countries within the Oceania region that are also members of the IHF and AHF.
History
editThe first Oceania Handball Federation (OHF) was founded on 9 July 1993, by Mr. Alexander Dimitric in Sydney, Australia. In 2009, the Oceania Handball Federation was disbanded.
OCHF Presidents
editS. No. | Name | Country | Term |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Ricardo Blas | Guam | 23 October 2014 – present |
OCHF Members
edit- Full Members
✝ means non-active member
- Associated Members
Tournaments
editNations
edit- Indoor
- Oceania Men's Handball Nations Cup
- Oceania Women's Handball Nations Cup
- Oceania Handball Challenge Trophy - Under 21s
- Oceania Youth Handball Championship - Under 19s
- Pacific Handball Cup
- French Pacific Handball Championship
- Beach
- Oceania Beach Handball Championship
- Oceania Junior Beach Handball Championship - Under 19's
- Oceania Youth Beach Handball Championship - Under 17's
Clubs
editReferences
edit- ^ "Facing Outrage Over Bikini Rule, Handball Federation Signals 'Likely' Change". New York Times. 12 August 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
- ^ "Ricardo Blas elected as President of the Oceania Continent Handball Federation". IHF. 23 October 2014. Retrieved 14 December 2021.