1999–2000 EHF Women's Champions League

The 1999–2000 EHF Women's Champions League was the seventh edition of the modern era of the premier competition for European national champions women's handball clubs, running from 1 October 1999 to 27 May 2000. Hypo Niederösterreich defeated Macedonia's Gjorce Petrov in the final to win its eighth title,[1] with Budućnost Podgorica (which defeated defending champion Dunaferr NK in the quarter-finals) and Dynamo Volgograd also reaching the semifinals.[2]

Qualifying round edit

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Politechnik Minsk   45–70   HC Leipzig 29–32 16–38
Westfriesland   35–74   Metz Handball 16–33 19–41
Gjorce Petrov   73–24   HBC Bascharage 41–11 32–13
Baekkelagets   54–37   Slavia Prague 25–19 29–18
HC Motor Zaporizhzhia   76–19   Kefalovrysos Kythreas 39–11 37–8
SPR Lublin   73–43   Sävsjö HK 37–21 36–22
Hypo NÖ   90–45   De Gasperi 42–16 48–29
Anadolu   32–56   Krim Ljubljana 17–26 15–33
Fémina Visé   31–80   Viborg HK 19–39 12–41
Martve Tbilisi   20–97   Budućnost Podgorica 10–52 10–45
Anagennisi Artas   62–53   Madeira 34–24 28–29
Dynamo Volgograd   48–45   Oltchim Ramnicu Valcea 26–26 22–19
TSV St. Otmar St. Gallen   31–85   Ferencvárosi TC 17–39 14–46
Podravka Koprivnica   37–36   Banska Bystrica 22–18 15–18

Group stage edit

Group A edit

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
  Gjorce Petrov 6 3 1 2 141 146 −5 7
  Ferencvárosi TC 6 3 0 3 156 149 +7 6
  Metz Handball 6 3 0 3 130 121 +9 6
  Viborg HK 6 2 1 3 138 149 −11 5

Group B edit

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
  Hypo NÖ 6 5 1 0 177 143 +34 7
  Baekkelagets 6 3 0 3 151 148 +3 6
  Krim Ljubljana 6 2 1 3 153 146 +7 5
  HC Motor Zaporizhzhia 6 1 0 5 119 163 −44 2

Group C edit

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
  Budućnost Podgorica 6 4 0 2 172 159 +13 8
  Dynamo Volgograd 6 4 0 2 164 149 +156 8
  HC Leipzig 6 3 1 2 162 15 +6 7
  CBF Elda 6 0 1 5 143 176 −33 1

Group D edit

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
  SPR Lublin 6 5 0 1 172 148 +24 10
  Dunaferr NK 6 4 0 2 177 138 +39 8
  Podravka Koprivnica 6 3 0 3 144 144 0 6
  Anagennisi Artas 6 0 0 6 134 197 −63 0

Quarter-finals edit

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Dunaferr NK   58–60   Budućnost Podgorica 33–33 25–27
Ferencvárosi TC   48–52   Hypo NÖ 27–23 21–29
Baekkelagets   41–57   Gjorce Petrov 23–27 18–30
Dynamo Volgograd   56–49   SPR Lublin 28–21 28–28

Semifinals edit

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Budućnost Podgorica   55–57   Hypo NÖ 28–28 27–29
Gjorce Petrov   45–44   Dynamo Volgograd 23–18 22–26

Final edit

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Hypo NÖ   52–45   Gjorce Petrov 32–23 20–22

References edit

  1. ^ List of champions in the-sports.org
  2. ^ Results Archived 2017-06-18 at the Wayback Machine in the European Handball Federation's website