2016–17 Women's EHF Champions League

The 2016–17 Women's EHF Champions League was the 24th 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] CSM București were defending champions.

Women's EHF Champions League
2016–17
Tournament information
SportHandball
Dates10 September 2016–7 May 2017
Teams16 (group stage)
22 (qualification)
Websiteehfcl.com
Final positions
Champions Győri ETO
Runner-up HC Vardar
Tournament statistics
Matches played96
Goals scored5110 (53.23 per match)
Attendance295,818 (3,081 per match)
Top scorer(s) Andrea Penezić
(98 goals)

Team allocation

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

Group stage
Team Esbjerg (1st) FC Midtjylland (2nd) Metz Handball (1st) Thüringer HC (1st)
Ferencváros (2nd) Győri ETO (1st) Vardar (1st) Budućnost (1st)
Larvik HK (1st) CSM BucureștiTH (1st) Astrakhanochka (1st) Rostov-Don (2nd)
IK Sävehof (1st)
Qualification tournament
Glassverket IF (2nd) Krim Ljubljana (1st) Selgros Lublin (1st) HC Gomel (1st)
HC Leipzig (2nd) Podravka Koprivnica (1st) Yenimahalle Bld. SK (1st) Indeco Conversano (1st)
Hypo Niederösterreich (1st) Bera Bera (1st) SERCODAK Dalfsen (1st) IUVENTA Michalovce (1st)
  • TH = Title holders

Round and draw dates

The qualification and group stage draw will be held in Glostrup, Denmark.[3]

Phase Draw date
Qualification tournaments 29 June 2016
Group stage 1 July 2016
Knockout stage
Final Four 18 April 2017

Qualification stage

The draw was held on 29 June 2016 at 13:00 in Vienna, Austria. The twelve teams were split in three groups and played a semifinal and final to determine the last participants. Matches were played from 9 to 11 September 2016.[4]

Qualification tournament 1

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
10 September
 
 
Glassverket IF34
 
11 September
 
Yenimahalle Bld. SK23
 
Glassverket IF28
 
10 September
 
Podravka Koprivnica19
 
Podravka Koprivnica30
 
 
SERCODAK Dalfsen17
 
Third place
 
 
11 September
 
 
Yenimahalle Bld. SK31
 
 
SERCODAK Dalfsen22

Qualification tournament 2

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
9 September
 
 
HC Leipzig29
 
10 September
 
HC Gomel18
 
HC Leipzig32
 
9 September
 
Hypo Niederösterreich30
 
Hypo Niederösterreich25
 
 
BM Bera Bera21
 
Third place
 
 
10 September
 
 
HC Gomel20
 
 
BM Bera Bera28

Qualification tournament 3

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
10 September
 
 
Krim28
 
11 September
 
IUVENTA Michalovce22
 
Krim37
 
10 September
 
Indeco Conversano16
 
MKS Selgros Lublin27
 
 
Indeco Conversano28
 
Third place
 
 
11 September
 
 
IUVENTA Michalovce21
 
 
MKS Selgros Lublin33

Group stage

The draw was held on 1 July 2016 at 13:00.[5]

In each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.

Group A

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BUD MET THC GLA
1 Budućnost 6 5 0 1 158 136 +22 10 Main round 21–19 28–19 22–21
2 Metz Handball 6 4 0 2 146 133 +13 8 28–25 25–18 25–19
3 Thüringer HC 6 3 0 3 148 153 5 6 26–32 28–25 24–16
4 Glassverket IF 6 0 0 6 128 158 30 0 23–30 22–24 27–33
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Group B

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification VAR FER AST LEI
1 Vardar 6 5 1 0 220 148 +72 11 Main round 27–27 39–25 41–24
2 FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 6 4 1 1 172 154 +18 9 24–37 32–23 26–22
3 HC Astrakhanochka 6 1 0 5 156 189 33 2[lower-alpha 1] 26–31 28–33 27–24
4 HC Leipzig 6 1 0 5 139 196 57 2[lower-alpha 1] 22–45 17–30 30–27
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. Astrakhanochka 54–54 Leipzig. Astrakhanochka advanced on away goals (27–24)

Group C

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification GYO BUC MID ROS
1 Győri ETO 6 5 0 1 174 147 +27 10 Main round 33–25 31–19 32–25
2 CSM Bucharest 6 3 0 3 142 145 3 6[lower-alpha 1] 24–27 26–20 24–21
3 Midtjylland 6 3 0 3 135 150 15 6[lower-alpha 1] 27–23 24–21 25–23
4 Rostov-Don 6 1 0 5 142 151 9 2 27–28 20–22 26–20
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. Bucharest 47–44 Midtjylland

Group D

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification KRI LAR ESB SAV
1 Krim 6 4 0 2 168 165 +3 8 Main round 24–22 27–22 32–29
2 Larvik HK 6 3 0 3 174 170 +4 6[lower-alpha 1] 31–36 30–29 22–25
3 Team Esbjerg 6 3 0 3 164 151 +13 6[lower-alpha 1] 35–25 24–31 29–18
4 IK Sävehof 6 2 0 4 150 170 20 4 26–24 32–38 20–25
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. Larvik 61–53 Esbjerg

Main round

The top three teams of each preliminary group advanced. Points obtained against qualified teams from the same group were carried over.

In each group, teams played against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.

Group 1

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification VAR FER BUD MET THC AST
1 Vardar 10 7 1 2 311 279 +32 15 Quarterfinals 27–27 28–31 23–21 36–26 39–25
2 FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 10 6 2 2 290 265 +25 14[lower-alpha 1] 24–37 23–24 29–23 32–24 32–23
3 Budućnost 10 7 0 3 286 248 +38 14[lower-alpha 1] 28–31 25–33 21–19 28–19 38–20
4 Metz Handball 10 5 0 5 273 238 +35 10 42–28 25–28 28–25 25–18 37–18
5 Thüringer HC 10 2 1 7 257 286 29 5 29–31 29–29 26–32 28–25 34–22
6 HC Astrakhanochka 10 1 0 9 229 330 101 2 26–31 28–33 21–34 20–28 26–24
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: See Tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 56–49 Budućnost

Group 2

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification GYO LAR BUC MID KRI ESB
1 Győri ETO 10 8 1 1 305 234 +71 17 Quarterfinals 27–27 33–25 31–19 39–22 33–22
2 Larvik HK 10 5 2 3 279 271 +8 12 25–26 35–33 24–22 31–36 30–29
3 CSM Bucharest 10 5 1 4 265 257 +8 11 24–27 26–26 26–20 28–26 33–25
4 Midtjylland 10 5 0 5 250 241 +9 10 27–23 24–28 24–21 28–19 38–26
5 Krim 10 3 0 7 238 290 52 6 17–34 24–22 21–24 21–27 27–22
6 Team Esbjerg 10 2 0 8 251 295 44 4 26–32 24–31 20–25 22–21 35–25
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: See Tiebreakers

Knockout stage

The first four placed teams from the main round qualified for the knockout stage.

Quarterfinals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Midtjylland 50–54 Vardar 26–28 24–26
Metz Handball 54–59 Győri ETO 32–31 22–28
CSM Bucharest 57–51 FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria 30–25 27–26
Buducnost 66–47 Larvik HK 31–17 35–30

Final four

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
6 May
 
 
Budućnost20
 
7 May
 
Győri ETO26
 
Győri ETO (OT)31
 
6 May
 
Vardar30
 
CSM Bucharest33
 
 
Vardar38
 
Third place
 
 
7 May
 
 
Budućnost20
 
 
CSM Bucharest26

Final

7 May 2017
17:45
Győri ETO 31–30 (ET) Vardar László Papp Budapest Sports Arena, Budapest
Attendance: 12,000
Referees: Christiansen, Hansen (DEN)
Görbicz 7 (15–12) Althaus, Lacrabère 6
  Report  

FT: 26–26 ET: 5-4

Awards and statistics

All-Star Team

The all-star team and awards were announced on 5 May 2017.[7]

Other awards

References

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