Bjerringbro-Silkeborg Håndbold

Bjerringbro-Silkeborg Håndbold is a handball club, based in the two Danish cities of Bjerringbro and Silkeborg. Currently, Bjerringbro-Silkeborg competes in the men's Danish Handball League. The home arena of the team is JYSK Arena.

Bjerringbro-Silkeborg
Full nameBjerringbro-Silkeborg Håndbold
Short nameBSH
Founded2005; 19 years ago (2005)
ArenaJYSK Arena
Capacity3,000
PresidentFrank Lajer
Head coachPatrick Westerholm
LeagueHåndboldligaen
2021–22Håndboldligaen, 3rd of 15
Club colours   
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away
Website
Official site
Location of Bjerringbro-Silkeborg
BSV
BSV
Location of Bjerringbro-Silkeborg

History edit

The club was founded in 2005, when Bjerringbro FH and Silkeborg-Voel KFUM merged their first teams to create the new club. The mother club Bjerringbro FH won the silver medal of the Danish Handball League in 2002.

Results edit

Kits edit

Team edit

Current squad edit

Squad for the 2023–24 season[1]

Technical staff edit

Transfers edit

Transfers for the 2023–24 season
Transfers for the 2024–25 season

European Handball edit

EHF Champions League edit

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2010–11 Qualification
Wild Card Round

  CB Ademar León 27–26 2nd
  Rhein-Neckar Löwen 26–31
  RK Gorenje 31–28
2011–12 Group Stage
Group B

  Atlético Madrid BM 27–30 31–27 6th place
  Vive Targi Kielce 26–37 29–37
  Füchse Berlin 25–30 27–28
  MKB Veszprém KC 19–25 25–32
  Chekhovskiye Medvedi 25–35 30–23
2012–13 Group Stage
Group C

  Vive Targi Kielce 25–34 26–35 4th place
  Chambéry Savoie Handball 25–23 26–29
  RK Metalurg Skopje 23–26 32–18
  RK Gorenje 27–26 23–31
  Saint Petersburg HC 31–22 35–23
Last 16   FC Barcelona 26–32 24–26 50–58
2016–17 Group Stage
Group A

  Barcelona 23–27 19–34 6th place
  Paris Saint-Germain 30–36 27–32
  MVM Veszprém 24–29 29–30
  Flensburg-Handewitt 19–25 24–26
  THW Kiel 25–28 24–21
  Orlen Wisła Płock 33–24 25–28
  Kadetten Schaffhausen 37–32 25–24
Round of 16   Pick Szeged 24–26 24–33 48–59
2018–19 Group Stage
Group C

  Sporting CP 29–28 35–32 1st place
  Tatran Prešov 29–30 24–26
  Chekhovskiye Medvedi 39–28 30–24
  Beşiktaş 34–27 37–24
  Metalurg Skopje 33–25 33–29
Playoff   Wisła Płock 26–22 20–27 46–49

EHF Cup edit

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2002–03 Round 3   IFK Ystad HK 27–23 26–26 53–49
Round 4   Sandefjord TIF 25–21 25–22 50–43
1/4 Final   BM Altea 20–24 23–24 43–48
2008–09 Round 3   HC Lokomotive Warna 39–26 32–22 71–48
1/8 Final   TBV Lemgo 26–23 25–28 51–51
1/4 Final   RK Gorenje 24–25 26–27 50–52
2010–11 Round 3   Drammen HK 38–28 31–21 69–49
Last 16   TV Grosswallstadt 22–22 27–29 49–51
2015–16 Round 3   Talent M.A.T Plzeň 35–23 31–28 66–51
Group Stage
Group C

  Saint-Raphael Var Handball 31–26 25–23 1st place
  Pfadi Winterthur 27–27 28–25
  SKA Minsk 32–26 25–28
1/4 Final   Fraikin BM Granollers 32–26 24–30 56–56
2017–18 Round 3   HK Malmö 36–25 23–25 59–50
Group Stage
Group A

  SC Magdeburg 27–26 26–33 2nd place
  Tatran Prešov 27–19 28–32
  SKA Minsk 32–30 26–27

EHF Cup Winners' Cup edit

Season Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2006–07 Round 2   Komlói BKS-Fűtőerőmű 35–24 23–23 58–47
Round 3   RK Medveščak Zagreb 31–20 29–30 60–50
1/8 Final   Kadetten Schaffhausen 30–20 28–30 58–50
1/4 Final   CB Ademar León 30–36 27–28 57–64

Notable former players edit

Men

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The team 2014/2015" (in Danish). BSV Handball official website. Retrieved 13 March 2015.

External links edit