2019–20 Women's EHF Challenge Cup

The 2019–20 Women's EHF Challenge Cup is the 23rd edition of the European Handball Federation's third-tier competition for women's handball clubs, running from 9 November 2019.[1] On 24 April 2020 EHF announced that the competition would be cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic.[2]

Women's EHF Challenge Cup
2019–20
Tournament information
SportHandball
Dates9 November 201910 May 2020
Teams27
Websiteeurohandball.com
Final positions
Championscancelled
Tournament statistics
Top scorer(s)Spain Ona Vegué
(30 goals)

Overview edit

Team allocation edit

There will be no matches in Round 1 and 2 and 22 teams will start in Round 3 with the first leg scheduled for 10–11 November and second leg for 17–18 November 2019, while 5 teams were directly seeded for the Last 16 round. The European Handball Federation rearranged the Last 16 phase of the Women's Challenge Cup 2019–20 after the Turkish club Ardeşen GSK withdrew from the competition. In order to harmonize the competition after the withdrawal of Ardeşen GSK, the EHF decided to award Aula Alimentos de Valladolid, as the best seeded team in the Women's Challenge Cup 2019–20 a place directly in the Quarterfinals.[3]

Quarterfinals
  Aula Alimentos de Valladolid
Last 16
  RK Lokomotiva Zagreb   JuRo Unirek VZV   HC Naisa Niš
Round 3
  AC Alavarium/Love Tiles   DHB Rotweiss Thun   DHC Sokol Poruba   ŽRK Pelister
  Maccabi Rishon LeZion   HC BNTU-BelAZ Minsk   ACME-Žalgiris Kaunas   WHC Hadžići DG
  HIB Handball Graz   O.F.N. Ionias   SSV Brixen Südtirol   ORK Rudar
  Mecalia Atlético Guardés   ŽRK Bjelovar   Ankara Yenimahalle BSK   ŽRK Zaječar 1949
  SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros   ŽRK Krivaja   A.C. Veria 2017   Ariosto Pallamano Ferrara
  KH-7 BM Granollers   CS Madeira

Round and draw dates edit

All draws were held at the European Handball Federation headquarters in Vienna, Austria.[4][5] On 25 March, the EHF announced that no matches will be played before June due to the coronavirus pandemic.[6]

Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Round 3 16 July 2019 9-10 November 2019 16-17 November 2019
Last 16 19 November 2019 1-2 February 2020 8-9 February 2020
Quarter-final 11 February 2020 29 February-1 March 2020 7-8 March 2020
Semi-finals 4-5 April 2020 11-12 April 2020
Final 14 April 2020 2-3 May 2020 9-10 May 2020

Qualification stage edit

Round 3 edit

There were 22 teams participating in round 3. The draw seeding pots are composed as follows:

Pot 1 Pot 2

Teams listed first played the first leg at home. The first legs were played on 8–10 November and the second legs were played on 16–17 November 2019.[7] Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.[8]

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
O.F.N. Ionias   37–43 1   SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros 19–28 18–15
ORK Rudar   37–50   ACME-Žalgiris Kaunas 19–26 18–24
WHC Hadžići DG   51–65 2   CS Madeira 23–37 28–28
KH-7 BM Granollers   67–61   HC BNTU-BelAZ Minsk 34–29 33–32
A.C. Veria 2017   50–53 3   HIB Handball Graz 23–27 27–26
DHC Sokol Poruba   52–51   Ankara Yenimahalle BSK 34–25 18–26
ŽRK Bjelovar   60–51 4   AC Alavarium/Love Tiles 28–23 32–28
DHB Rotweiss Thun   34–47   Mecalia Atlético Guardés 17–25 17–22
SSV Brixen Südtirol   57–40   Ariosto Pallamano Ferrara 31–18 26–22
ŽRK Krivaja   47–52 5   Maccabi Rishon LeZion 25–21 22–31
ŽRK Zaječar 1949   94–43 6   ŽRK Pelister 50–20 44–23
Notes
1 Both legs were hosted by SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros.
2 Both legs were hosted by CS Madeira.
3 Both legs were hosted by HIB Handball Graz.
4 Both legs were hosted by ŽRK Bjelovar.
5 Both legs were hosted by ŽRK Krivaja.
6 Both legs were hosted by ŽRK Zaječar 1949.

Last 16 edit

The European Handball Federation has decided 5 teams to proceed directly seeded for the Last 16 round. The European Handball Federation rearranged the Last 16 phase of the Women's Challenge Cup 2019–20 after the Turkish club Ardeşen GSK withdrew from the competition. In order to harmonize the competition after the withdrawal of Ardeşen GSK, the EHF decided to award Aula Alimentos de Valladolid, as the best seeded team in the Women's Challenge Cup 2019–20 a place directly in the Quarterfinals. The draw seeding pots were composed as follows:[9]

Pot 1 Pot 2

The draw for the Last 16 took place at the EHF Office in Vienna on Thursday 19 November 2019.[10]

Teams listed first played the first leg at home. The first legs was played on 1–2 February and the second legs were played on 8–9 February 2020.[11] Some teams agreed to play both matches in the same venue.

Overview edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros   37–60 1   RK Lokomotiva Zagreb 21–33 16–27
CS Madeira   61–33 2   ŽRK Zaječar 1949 37–19 25–14
Mecalia Atlético Guardés   64–57 3   ACME-Žalgiris Kaunas 30–23 34–34
DHC Sokol Poruba   42–72   KH-7 BM Granollers 19–32 23–40
HIB Handball Graz   38–60   HC Naisa Niš 14–30 24–30
JuRo Unirek VZV   55–44   SSV Brixen Südtirol 29–24 26–20
ŽRK Bjelovar   56–46 4   Maccabi Rishon LeZion 23–25 33–21
Notes
1 Both legs were hosted by RK Lokomotiva Zagreb.
2 Both legs were hosted by CS Madeira.
3 Both legs were hosted by Mecalia Atlético Guardés.
4 Both legs were hosted by Maccabi Rishon LeZion.

Matches edit

1 February 2020
18:00
SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros   21–33   RK Lokomotiva Zagreb Dom sportova 2, Zagreb
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Kinnari, Skogberg (FIN)
Ferreira 6 (8–13) Posavec 8
  5×  Report   7× 
2 February 2020
18:00
RK Lokomotiva Zagreb   27–16   SIR 1º de Maio/ADA CJ Barros Dom sportova 2, Zagreb
Attendance: 300
Referees: Kinnari, Skogberg (FIN)
Posavec 6 (9–5) Fernandes 5
  4×  Report   6× 

RK Lokomotiva Zagreb won 60–37 on aggregate.


1 February 2020
18:00
CS Madeira   37–19   ŽRK Zaječar 1949 Pavilhao Bartolomeu Perestrelo, Funchal
Attendance: 600
Referees: Fahner, Kubis (POL)
Gouveia 10 (18–9) Belić 8
  3×  Report   3× 
2 February 2020
18:00
ŽRK Zaječar 1949   14–25   CS Madeira Pavilhao Bartolomeu Perestrelo, Funchal
Attendance: 400
Referees: Fahner, Kubis (POL)
Milošević 6 (7–14) Freitas 6
 3×  Report   1× 

CS Madeira won 61–33 on aggregate.


1 February 2020
19:00
Mecalia Atlético Guardés   30–23   ACME-Žalgiris Kaunas A Sangriña, Pontevedra
Attendance: 400
Referees: Beulakker, Gilis (BEL)
Santiago 6 (14–13) Kniubaite 9
  4×  Report   3× 
2 February 2020
19:00
ACME-Žalgiris Kaunas   34–34   Mecalia Atlético Guardés A Sangriña, Pontevedra
Attendance: 400
Referees: Beulakker, Gilis (BEL)
Kniubaite 12 (15–16) Campos 8
  6×  Report   5× 

Mecalia Atlético Guardés won 64–57 on aggregate.


1 February 2020
18:00
DHC Sokol Poruba   19–32   KH-7 BM Granollers Sportovní hala Ostrava, Moravská Ostrava
Attendance: 550
Referees: Kulović, Škaljić (BIH)
Polášková 8 (14–17) González 7
  4×  Report   3× 
9 February 2020
19:30
KH-7 BM Granollers   40–23   DHC Sokol Poruba Palau d'Esports de Granollers, Granollers
Attendance: 1,200
Referees: Schols (NED), Martens (BEL)
Vegué 8 (16–10) Polášková 6
  2×  Report   3× 

KH-7 BM Granollers won 72–42 on aggregate.


1 February 2020
18:30
HIB Handball Graz   14–30   HC Naisa Niš ASVÖ Multisportive Hall, Graz
Attendance: 121
Referees: Stokes, Bartlett (GBR)
Albek 9 (7–17) Filipović 7
  3×  Report   4× 
8 February 2020
18:30
HC Naisa Niš   30–24   HIB Handball Graz Čair Sports Center, Niš
Attendance: 300
Referees: Fukala, Mohyla (CZE)
Terzić 8 (14–12) Albek 9
  4×  Report   2× 

HC Naisa Niš won 60–38 on aggregate.


1 February 2020
20:00
JuRo Unirek VZV   29–24   SSV Brixen Südtirol Sportcentrum VZV-Sporthal t Zijveld, CG 't Veld
Attendance: 750
Referees: Cipov, Klus (SVK)
Jimmink, Staal 5 (15–14) Tasić 6
  6×  Report   4× 
8 February 2020
19:00
SSV Brixen Südtirol   20–26   JuRo Unirek VZV Sporthalle Sportzone Süd, Brixen
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Duplii, Pobedrina (UKR)
Abfalterer 4 (7-9) Jimmink 7
  3×  Report   7× 

JuRo Unirek VZV won 55–44 on aggregate.


31 January 2020
16:00
ŽRK Bjelovar   23–25   Maccabi Rishon LeZion Beit Maccabi Sport Centre, Rishon LeZion
Attendance: 250
Referees: Antashev, Musatov (RUS)
Mamić 7 (12–12) Levi 6
  5×  Report   4× 
1 February 2020
16:00
Maccabi Rishon LeZion  21–33   ŽRK Bjelovar Beit Maccabi Sport Centre, Rishon LeZion
Attendance: 200
Referees: Antashev, Musatov (RUS)
Bertaut 6 (9–19) Mamić 13
  7×  Report   6× 

ŽRK Bjelovar won 56–46 on aggregate.

Quarterfinals edit

For the quarter-finals, there was no seeding as all eight teams will be drawn from the same pot one after another. There was also no country protection applied in the draw. The semi-final draw followed using the quarter-final pairings.[12]

Qualified teams

The draw event was held at the EHF Office in Vienna on Tuesday 11 February 2020. The draw determined the quarter-final and also the semi-final pairings.[13] Teams listed first will play the first leg at home.

The first legs were played on 29 February–1 March and the second legs were played on 7–8 March 2020.

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Aula Alimentos de Valladolid   49–45   Mecalia Atlético Guardés 26–22 23–23
CS Madeira   40–60 1   HC Naisa Niš 19–33 21–27
JuRo Unirek VZV   56–61   KH-7 BM Granollers 26–25 30–36
RK Lokomotiva Zagreb   58–44   ŽRK Bjelovar 30–23 28–21
Notes
1 Both legs were hosted by CS Madeira.

Matches edit

1 March 2020
12:00
Aula Alimentos de Valladolid   26–22   Mecalia Atlético Guardés Polideportivo Huerta del Rey, Valladolid
Attendance: 1,600
Referees: Kull, Tint (EST)
three players 4 (11–10) Buforn 6
  3×  1×  Report   2× 
8 March 2020
19:00
Mecalia Atlético Guardés   23–23   Aula Alimentos de Valladolid A Sangriña, Pontevedra
Attendance: 550
Referees: Capoccia, Jucker (SUI)
Campos 7 (10–8) Álvarez 8
  3×  Report   5× 

Aula Alimentos de Valladolid won 49–45 on aggregate.


7 March 2020
18:00
CS Madeira   19–33   HC Naisa Niš Pavilhao Bartolomeu Perestrelo, Funchal
Attendance: 500
Referees: Hannes, Hannes (GER)
Freitas 6 (7–14) Milojević 8
  4×  Report   6× 
8 March 2020
18:00
HC Naisa Niš   27–21   CS Madeira Pavilhao Bartolomeu Perestrelo, Funchal
Attendance: 400
Referees: Hannes, Hannes (GER)
Terzić 6 (14–13) Leça 6
  4×  Report   5× 

HC Naisa Niš won 60–40 on aggregate.


29 February 2020
20:00
JuRo Unirek VZV   26–25   KH-7 BM Granollers Sportcentrum VZV-Sporthal t Zijveld, CG 't Veld
Attendance: 750
Referees: Jaškins, Žabko (LAT)
Kolken 8 (12–16) Vegué 7
  2×  Report   2× 
8 March 2020
12:30
KH-7 BM Granollers   36–30   JuRo Unirek VZV Palau d'Esports de Granollers, Granollers
Attendance: 2,500
Referees: Nygaard, Pedersen (DEN)
Vegué 9 (18–14) Trabelsi 7
  Report   1× 

KH-7 BM Granollers won 61–56 on aggregate.


29 February 2020
18:30
RK Lokomotiva Zagreb   30–23   ŽRK Bjelovar Športska dvorana Trešnjevka, Zagreb
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Hofer, Schmidhuber (AUT)
Prkačin 8 (17–12) Borković 6
  2×  Report   1× 
7 March 2020
19:00
ŽRK Bjelovar   21–28   RK Lokomotiva Zagreb Dvorana Europskih Prvaka, Bjelovar
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Butskevich, Butskevich (BLR)
Borković 7 (9–15) Posavec 7
  6×  1×  Report   4× 

RK Lokomotiva Zagreb won 58–44 on aggregate.

Final four edit

The first legs were scheduled to 4–5 April and the second legs were scheduled to 11–12 April 2020, but the European Handball Federation announced on 13 March 2020, that the Semi-final matches will not be held as scheduled due to the ongoing developments in the spread of COVID-19 across Europe.[14] On 25 March, the EHF announced that no matches will be played before June due to the coronavirus pandemic and Women's Challenge Cup is foreseen to be played in an EHF FINAL4 format in one venue over two playing days.[6] On 24 April 2020 the matches were cancelled.[2]

Bracket edit

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Semifinals edit

RK Lokomotiva Zagreb   Cancelled   HC Naisa Niš

Aula Alimentos de Valladolid   Cancelled   KH-7 BM Granollers

Third place game edit

LSF1 Cancelled LSF2

Final edit

WSF1 Cancelled WSF2

Top goalscorers edit

As of 8 March 2020
Rank Player Club Goals[15]
1   Ona Vegué   KH-7 BM Granollers 30
2   Stela Posavec   RK Lokomotiva Zagreb 28
3   Carmen Campos   Mecalia Atlético Guardés 24

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "27 teams on the Women's Challenge Cup starting grid". European Handball Federation. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Information on the future of the European handball season 2019/20". eurohandball.com. 24 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Valladolid receives bye to the quarter-finals". EHF European cup. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  4. ^ "European Cup draw to take place on 16 July". EHF European cup. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  5. ^ "Season overview" (PDF). European Handball Federation. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  6. ^ a b "EHF presents feasibility study for potential re-start of European handball". eurohandball.com. 25 March 2020.
  7. ^ "Italian derby in Women's Challenge Cup round 3". Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Women's EHF Challenge Cup round 3". Archived from the original on 2019-07-12. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  9. ^ "14 teams await Women's Challenge Cup draw". European Handball Federation. Retrieved 18 November 2019.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "2007 champions Nis take on the newcomers". Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  11. ^ "Women's EHF Challenge Cup Last 16". Archived from the original on 2019-07-12. Retrieved 2019-07-12.
  12. ^ "Two draws in the Women's Challenge Cup set". European Handball Federation. Archived from the original on 13 February 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  13. ^ "Croatian and Spanish derbies highlight quarter-final". European Handball Federation. Archived from the original on 13 February 2020. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
  14. ^ "Information on EHF competition matches in March and April". eurohandball.com. 13 March 2020. Archived from the original on 30 March 2020. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  15. ^ "Goalscorers". Archived from the original on 2020-02-03. Retrieved 2020-02-01.

External links edit