2018–19 World Skate Europe Cup

The 2018–19 World Skate Europe Cup was the 39th season of the World Skate Europe Cup, the first one with the new name of the formerly known as CERS Cup, Europe's second club roller hockey competition organized by World Skate Europe. Lleida Llista Blava won its second title in a row.

2018–19 WS Europe Cup
Tournament details
Teams28 (from 7 associations)
Final positions
Champions Lleida Llista Blava (2nd title)
Runners-up Sarzana
Tournament statistics
Matches played47
Goals scored403 (8.57 per match)
Top scorer(s) Massimo Tataranni (15 goals)

Teams

28 teams from seven national associations qualified for the competition. League positions of the previous season shown in parentheses.

Participating teams
Mérignac (3rd) Darmstadt (4th) Caldes (9th) Uttigen (4th)
Noisy le Grand (4th) Iserlohn (5th) Barcelos (6th) Uri (5th)
Nantes (5th) Walsum (6th) Juventude Viana (7th) Viareggio (4th)
Coutras (6th) Lleida Llista Blava TH (5th) Sporting Tomar (8th) Valdagno (7th)
La Vendéenne (7th) Igualada (6th) Turquel (9th) Sarzana (9th)
Düsseldorf-Nord (2nd) Girona (7th) Biasca (2nd) Dornbirn (1st)
Remscheid (3rd) Voltregà (8th) Diessbach (3rd) Wolfurt (2nd)

Bracket

The draw was held at World Skate Europe headquarters in Lisbon, Portugal.[1]

 
Round of 32Round of 16QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal
 
                            
 
 
 
 
Sarzana8311
 
 
 
Noisy le Grand23 5
 
Sarzana639
 
 
 
Sporting Tomar44 8
 
Sporting Tomar448
 
 
 
Caldes24 6
 
Sarzana538
 
 
 
Igualada43 7
 
Igualada71320
 
 
 
Uri11 2
 
Igualada448
 
 
 
Diessbach13 4
 
Diessbach6511
 
 
 
La Vendéenne61 7
 
Sarzana (a.e.t.)4
 
 
 
Valdagno2
 
Walsum448
 
 
 
Turquel45 9
 
Turquel246
 
 
Viareggio54 9
 
 
 
 
 
Viareggio538
 
 
 
Valdagno54 9
 
Iserlohn437
 
 
 
Biasca57 12
 
Biasca5611
 
 
 
Valdagno69 15
 
Valdagno11718
 
 
 
Düsseldorf-Nord22 4
 
Sarzana 3
 
 
 
Lleida Llista Blava6
 
Barcelos505
 
 
 
Nantes410 14
 
Nantes4610
 
 
 
Coutras27 9
 
Coutras448
 
 
 
Remscheid33 6
 
Nantes336
 
 
 
Lleida Llista Blava58 13
 
Darmstadt112
 
 
 
Girona67 13
 
Girona156
 
 
Lleida Llista Blava66 12
 
 
 
 
 
Lleida Llista Blava5
 
 
 
Voltregà2
 
Wolfurt51015
 
 
 
Uttigen448
 
Wolfurt10212
 
 
Mérignac04 4
 
 
 
 
 
Wolfurt134
 
 
 
Voltregà87 15
 
Dornbirn202
 
 
 
Juventude Viana510 15
 
Juventude Viana224
 
 
Voltregà24 6
 
 
 
 

Round of 32

The first leg was played on 20 October and the second leg on 17 November 2018.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Dornbirn 2–15 Juventude Viana 2–5 0–10[lower-alpha 1]
Walsum 8–9 Turquel 4–4 4–5
Igualada 20–2 Uri 7–1 13–1
Barcelos 5–14 Nantes 5–4 0–10[lower-alpha 2]
Sarzana 11–5 Noisy le Grand 8–2 3–3
Diessbach 11–7 La Vendéenne 6–6 5–1
Valdagno 18–4 Düsseldorf-Nord 11–2 7–2
Darmstadt 2–13 Girona 1–6 1–7
Wolfurt 15–8 Uttigen 5–4 10–4
Iserlohn 7–12 Biasca 4–5 3–7
Sporting Tomar 8–6 Caldes 4–2 4–4
Coutras 8–6 Remscheid 4–3 4–3 (a.e.t.)
  1. Dornbirn lost by forfeit due to lack of delegate in the bench.
  2. Barcelos lost by forfeit due to lack of coach in the bench.

Round of 16

The first leg was played on 1 December 2018 and the second leg on 19 January 2019.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Wolfurt 10–0 Mérignac 10–0[lower-alpha 1] w/o
Juventude Viana 4–6 Voltregà 2–2 2–4
Biasca 11–15 Valdagno 5–6 6–9
Girona 6–12 Lleida Llista Blava 1–6 5–6
Nantes 9–9 (p) Coutras 4–2 5–7 (a.e.t.)
Sarzana 9–7 Sporting Tomar 6–2 3–5
Turquel 6–9 Viareggio 2–5 4–4
Igualada 8–4 Diessbach 4–1 4–3
  1. Mérignac lost by forfeit due to lack of coach in the bench.

Quarterfinals

The first leg was played on 16 February and the second leg on 9 March 2019 (with exception Valdagno-Viareggio on 16 March).

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Nantes 6–13 Lleida Llista Blava 3–5 3–8
Sarzana 8–7 Igualada 5–4 3–3 (a.e.t.)
Wolfurt 4–15 Voltregà 1–8 3–7
Viareggio 8–9 Valdagno 5–5 3–4

Final Four

The Final Four was played on 27 and 28 April in Lleida, Spain.

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
Sarzana (a.e.t.)4
 
 
 
Valdagno2
 
Sarzana3
 
 
 
Lleida Llista Blava 6
 
Lleida Llista Blava5
 
 
Voltregà2
 

See also

References

  1. "Competition format" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-09-04. Retrieved 2018-09-07.
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