Women's EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup

The Women's EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup is an annual indoor hockey club competition organised by the EHF. It is the premier club tournament of Europe for indoor hockey and contested by the women's champions of the eight strongest EHF national associations.

Women's EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup
Most recent season or competition:
2020 Women's EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup
FormerlyWomen's EuroHockey Club Champions Cup
SportIndoor hockey
Founded1990 (1990)
Inaugural season1990
No. of teams8
ConfederationEHF (Europe)
Most recent
champion(s)
Düsseldorfer HC (2nd title)
(2020)
Most titles Rüsselsheimer RK (15 titles)
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toEuroHockey Indoor Club Trophy

Format

A total of eight teams competes in the EuroHockey Indoor Club Cup, the champions of those nations ranked one to six in the previous year's Cup and the champions of those 2 nations promoted from the previous year's Trophy, the second level.[1]

The eight teams are divided into two groups and play each other once. If a game is won, the winning team receives 5 points. A draw results in both teams receiving 2 points. A loss gives the losing team 1 point unless the losing team lost by 3 or more goals, then they receive 0 points.[1] The top two teams advance to the semi-finals and the bottom two teams will be placed in pool C, the relegation pool. Each team in Pool C will carry forward the result of the match against that other team in their original pool (A or B) who also goes forward with them into Pool C. Each team will play the other 2 teams in Pool C once. The bottom two teams in pool C are relegated.[1]

Summaries

Year Host Final Third Place Playoff
Winner Score Runner-up Third Place Score Fourth Place
1990
Details
Groningen, Netherlands
Brandenburg
4–3
Slough

Groningen
5–2
Glasgow Western
1991
Details
Amiens, France
Rüsselsheimer RK

Ipswich

Glasgow Western

Amiens
1992
Details
Rüsselsheim am Main, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Atlético Madrid

Glasgow Western

Groningen
1993
Details
Berlin, Germany
Berliner HC

Rüsselsheimer RK

Hightown

Glasgow Western
1994
Details
Rüsselsheim am Main, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Berliner HC

Edinburgh

Hightown
1995
Details
Rüsselsheim am Main, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Slough

Valdeluz

Eurovil
1996
Details
Bratislava, Slovakia
Rüsselsheimer RK

Berliner HC

Hightown

Valdeluz
1997
Details
Amiens, France
Rüsselsheimer RK

Berliner HC

Club de Campo

Slough
1998
Details
Rüsselsheim am Main, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Eintracht Frankfurt

Club de Campo

Slough
1999
Details
Glasgow, Scotland
Rüsselsheimer RK

Slough

Real Sociedad

Siauliai
2000
Details
Cambrai, France
Rüsselsheimer RK

Klipper Hamburg

Grodno

Siauliai
2001
Details
Angers, France
Rüsselsheimer RK

Berliner HC

Glasgow Western

Siauliai
2002
Details
Hamburg, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Klipper Hamburg

Grodno

Rotterdam
2003
Details
Cambrai, France
Rüsselsheimer RK

Grodno

Den Bosch

Slough
2004
Details
Rüsselsheim am Main, Germany
Rüsselsheimer RK

Grodno

Vienna Neudorf

Siauiai Gintra
2005
Details
Prague, Czech Republic
Rüsselsheimer RK

Grodno

HGC

Cambrai
2006
Details
Sant Cugat del Vallès, Spain
Rüsselsheimer RK

Grodno

Cambrai

Junior
2007
Details
Hamburg, Germany
Club an der Alster

Grodno

Kampong

HFTC
2008
Details
Prague, Czech Republic
Harvestehude

Club de Campo

Grodno

Sumchanka
2009
Details
Madrid, Spain
Club an der Alster

Sumchanka

Laren

Club de Campo
2010
Details
Sumy, Ukraine
Club an der Alster

Club de Campo

Kampong

Sumchanka
2011
Details
Mannheim, Germany
TSV Mannheim

Victorya Smolevichi

Kampong

Gintra Streke UNI HC
2012
Details
Vienna, Austria
Berliner HC

Grodno

Kampong

Club de Campo
2013
Details
Vienna, Austria
Den Bosch

Club de Campo

Rot-Weiss Köln

Slavia Praha
2014
Details
Cambrai, France
Berliner HC

Club de Campo

Slava Praha

Amsterdam
2015
Details
Šiauliai, Lithuania
UHC Hamburg
8–0
Club de Campo

Sumchanka
4–4
(2–1 (s.o.)

Slavia Praha
2016
Details
Minsk, Belarus
Düsseldorfer HC
2–0
Club de Campo

Slavia Praha
2–0
Arminen
2017
Details
Wettingen, Switzerland
Mannheimer HC
5–3
Minsk

Rotweiss Wettingen
3–2
Club de Campo
2018
Details
Dundee, Scotland
UHC Hamburg
6–2
Club de Campo

Amsterdam
1–1
(2–1 s.o.)

Sumchanka
2019
Details
Hamburg, Germany
Laren
3–1
Dinamo Elektrostal

Club an der Alster
7–0
Club de Campo
2020
Details
The Hague, Netherlands
Düsseldorfer HC
4–2
hdm

Sumchanka
6–5
Minsk
2021
Details
Almere, Netherlands Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Cancelled

Source[2]

Records and statistics

Performances by club

Medal table by club
RankClubGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Rüsselsheimer RK151016
2 Berliner HC3407
3 Club an der Alster3014
4 Düsseldorfer HC2002
UHC Hamburg2002
6 Den Bosch1012
Laren1012
8 Brandenburg1001
Harvestehude1001
Mannheimer HC1001
TSV Mannheim1001
12 Club de Campo0729
13 Grodno0639
14 Slough0303
15 Klipper Hamburg0202
16 Sumchanka0123
17 Atlético Madrid0101
Dinamo Elektrostal0101
Eintracht Frankfurt0101
Ipswich0101
21–37Remaining032124
Totals (37 clubs)31313193

Performances by nation

Medal table by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany (GER)[lower-alpha 1]298239
2 Netherlands (NED)21912
3 Spain (ESP)08412
4 Belarus (BLR)08311
5 England (ENG)0426
6 Ukraine (UKR)0123
7 Russia (RUS)0101
8 Scotland (SCO)0044
9 Czech Republic (CZE)0022
10 Austria (AUT)0011
 France (FRA)0011
  Switzerland (SUI)0011
Totals (12 nations)31313193

See also

Notes

  1. Includes results from West German clubs in 1990

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.