EHF Champions League explained

Sport:Handball
EHF Champions League
Teams:16 (Group phase)
Country:EHF members
Confed:EHF (Europe)
Champions: FC Barcelona
(12th title)
Most Champs: FC Barcelona
(12 titles)
Levels:1
Website:ehfcl.eurohandball.com
Upcoming Season:2024–25 EHF Champions League

The EHF Champions League is the most important club handball competition for men's teams in Europe and involves the leading teams from the top European nations. The competition is organised every year by EHF. The official name for the men's competition is the EHF Champions League Men.

The EHF coefficient rank decides which teams have access and in which stage they enter.

Eligibility and qualifying

See also: EHF coefficient rank.

Each year, the EHF publishes a ranking list of its member federations. The first 9 nations are automatically permitted to participate in the tournament with their national champion.[1] The national federation ranked first place in the EHF European League, currently Germany,[2] is awarded a second qualification berth for the domestic runner-up.[3] The remaining six positions are designated through wildcards, with each national federation without two teams already qualified able to submit a single applicant.[3] The wildcards are judged on five criteria: venue, TV, spectators, results in past EHF competitions and product management and digital.[3]

Tournament format

Each year, the EHF publishes a ranking list of its member federations. The first nine nations are allowed to participate in the tournament with their national champion. In addition, the tenth spot is reserved for the best ranked national federation of the EHF European League Men. The national federations are allowed to request upgrades for their teams eligible to play in the EHF European League and based on the criteria list the EHF Executive Committee approves six upgrades.

The EHF Champions League is divided into four stages. All participating teams enter the competition in the group phase.

The current playing system has been introduced before the 2020/21 season.

Group phase

Since the 2020/21 season, the format sees two groups formed, with eight teams each in Group A and B. All the teams in each group play each other twice, in home and away matches (14 rounds in total). The first two teams in Groups A and B advance directly to the quarter-finals, while teams from positions three to six in each of these groups proceed to the playoff. The season is over for the last two teams in each group after the completion of the group phase.

Play off

The pairings for the playoff are decided by the placement of the teams at the end of the group phase (A6 vs B3, B6 vs A3, A5 vs B4 and B5 vs A4). Each pairing is decided via a home and away format, with the aggregate winners over the two legs advancing to the quarter-finals. The higher ranked teams in the group phase have the home right advantage in the second leg.

Quarter-finals

The pairings for the quarter-finals are also decided by the placement in the group phase (Winner of A5/B4 vs A1, Winner B5/A4 vs B1, Winner A6/B3 vs A2, Winner B6/A3 vs B2). The ties are decided through a home and away format, with the four winners over the two legs played in each pairing advancing to the EHF FINAL4. The higher ranked teams in the group phase have the home right advantage in the second leg.

EHF FINAL4

The official name for the men's EHF FINAL4 is the EHF FINAL4 Men. The participating EHF FINAL4 teams are paired for the semifinals through a draw and play the last two matches of the season over a single weekend at one venue. The two semi-finals are played on a Saturday, with the third-place game and final on a Sunday.

Brand Sound

Much like the visual brand identity, the brand sound identity will acoustically connect the various leagues and tournaments which fit under the EHF umbrella. For the EHF Brand Sound, the authors got to the core of "The Sound of Handball" and created a handball sound DNA as the recurring element across all audio-visual applications. The jump shot was identified as the most iconic and defining handball movement.

Through video analysis and motion tracking, the jump shot was extracted into a rhythmic design pattern. There are numerous application opportunities of the brand sound, which will be developed over time. First implementations of the new EHF Brand Sound will be heard in the EHF Champions League. The premium character of this tournament was translated into a modern sound design through a new EHF Champions League sound logo and anthem. Both will come to life in the arena and will consistently complement all audio-visual communications.

The previous anthem for the EHF Champions League is "Hymn of the Champions", used until the end of the 2019/20 season and exclusively written by Austrian film composer Roman Kariolou in 2007. The recording played during the entry ceremony before every game was performed by the Bratislava Symphony Orchestra, conducted by David Hernando.[4]

Winners

European Champions Cup (organised by IHF)

YearFinalSemi-final losers
ChampionScoreSecond place
1956–57
Details

Dukla Prague
21–13
Örebro SK

HG Kopenhagen

Paris UC
1958–59
Details

Redbergslids IK
18–13
Frisch Auf Göppingen

Helsingør IF

Dinamo București
1959–60
Details

Frisch Auf Göppingen
18–13
Aarhus GF

Dinamo București

Paris UC
1961–62
Details

Frisch Auf Göppingen
13–11
Partizan Bjelovar

Dukla Prague

IK Skovbakken
1962–63
Details

Dukla Prague
15–13
Dinamo București

Frisch Auf Göppingen

Ajax København
1964–65
Details

Dinamo București
13–11
Medveščak Zagreb

Grasshopper

Ajax København
1965–66
Details

SC DHfK Leipzig
16–14
Budapest Honvéd

Dukla Prague

Aarhus GF
1966–67
Details

VfL Gummersbach
17–13
Dukla Prague

SK Cuncevo

Dinamo București
1967–68
Details

Steaua București
13–11
Dukla Prague

Dynamo Berlin

Partizan Bjelovar
1969–70
Details

VfL Gummersbach
14–11
Dynamo Berlin

Steaua București

RK Crvenka
1970–71
Details

VfL Gummersbach
17–16
Steaua București

Sporting CP

Partizan Bjelovar
1971–72
Details

Partizan Bjelovar
19–14
VfL Gummersbach

MAI Moskva

Tatran Prešov
1972–73
Details

MAI Moskva
26–23
Partizan Bjelovar

SC Leipzig

SoIK Hellas
1973–74
Details

VfL Gummersbach
19–17
MAI Moskva

Oppsal IF Oslo

Červená Hviezda Bratislava
1974–75
Details

ASK Frankfurt/Oder
19–17
Borac Banja Luka

VfL Gummersbach

Steaua București
1975–76
Details

Borac Banja Luka
17–15
Fredericia KFUM

VfL Gummersbach

Fredensborg/Ski
1976–77
Details

Steaua București
21–20
CSKA Moscow

Fredericia KFUM

VfL Gummersbach
1977–78
Details

Magdeburg
28–22
Śląsk Wrocław

Honvéd

Calpisa
1978–79
Details

TV Großwallstadt
30–28
(14–10 / 18–16)

Empor Rostock

Budapest Honvéd

Dinamo București
1979–80
Details

TV Großwallstadt
21–12
Valur

Dukla Prague

Atlético de Madrid
1980–81
Details

Magdeburg
52–43
(25–23 / 29–18)

Slovan Ljubljana

LUGI HF

CSKA Moscow
1981–82
Details

Budapest Honvéd
49–34
(25–16 / 18–24)

TSV St. Otmar St. Gallen

Helsingør IF

TV Großwallstadt
1982–83
Details

VfL Gummersbach
32–29
(15–19 / 13–14)

CSKA Moscow

Barcelona

Metaloplastika
1983–84
Details

Dukla Prague
38–38
(21–17 / 21–17)

Metaloplastika

VfL Gummersbach

Budapest Honvéd
1984–85
Details

Metaloplastika
49–32
(19–12 / 20–30)

Atlético de Madrid

FH

Dukla Prague
1985–86
Details

Metaloplastika
54–52
(29–24 / 30–23)

Wybrzeże Gdańsk

Steaua București

Atlético de Madrid
1986–87
Details

SKA Minsk
62–49
(32–24 / 25–30)

Wybrzeże Gdańsk

TUSEM Essen

Metaloplastika
1987–88
Details

CSKA Moscow
36–36
(18–15 / 21–18)

TUSEM Essen

Metaloplastika

Elgorriaga Bidasoa
1988–89
Details

SKA Minsk
61–53
(30–24 / 37–23)

Steaua București

SC Magdeburg

HK Drott
1989–90
Details

SKA Minsk
53–50
(26–21 / 29–27)

Barcelona

TUSEM Essen

US Créteil Handball
1990–91
Details

Barcelona
41–40
(23–21 / 20–17)

Proleter Zrenjanin

ETİ Bisküvi

Dinamo Astrakhan
1991–92
Details

Zagreb
50–38
(22–20 / 18–28)

TEKA Santander

Kolding IF

Barcelona
1992–93
Details

Zagreb
40–39
(22–17 / 22–18)

SG Wallau-Massenheim

Vénissieux Handball

Barcelona

EHF Champions League

YearFinalSemi-final losers
width=15%Championwidth=10%Scorewidth=15%Second placewidth=15%Third placewidth=15%
1993–94
Details

TEKA Santander
45–43
(22–22 / 23–21)

ABC Braga

UHK West Wien

USAM Nîmes
1994–95
Details

Elgorriaga Bidasoa
56–47
(30–20 / 27–26)

Zagreb

THW Kiel

Cantabria Santander
1995–96
Details

Barcelona
46–38
(23–15 / 23–23)

Elgorriaga Bidasoa

Pfadi Winterthur

THW Kiel
1996–97
Details

Barcelona
61–45
(31–22 / 23–30)

Zagreb

RK Celje

THW Kiel
1997–98
Details

Barcelona
56–40
(28–18 / 22–28)

Zagreb

TBV Lemgo

RK Celje
1998–99
Details

Barcelona
51–40
(22–22 / 29–18)

Zagreb

RK Celje

Portland San Antonio
1999–00
Details

Barcelona
54–52
(28–25 / 29–24)

THW Kiel

RK Celje

Zagreb
2000–01
Details

Portland San Antonio
52–49
(30–24 / 25–22)

Barcelona

RK Celje

THW Kiel
2001–02
Details

SC Magdeburg
51–48
(23–21 / 30–25)

Veszprém

Kolding IF

Portland San Antonio
2002–03
Details

Montpellier
50–46
(27–19 / 31–19)

Portland San Antonio

RD Prule 67

Veszprém
2003–04
Details

RK Celje
62–58
(34–28 / 30–28)

Flensburg-Handewitt

Ciudad Real

SC Magdeburg
2004–05
Details

Barcelona
56–55
(28–27 / 29–27)

Ciudad Real

RK Celje

Montpellier
2005–06
Details

Ciudad Real
62–47
(19–25 / 37–28)

Portland San Antonio

Flensburg-Handewitt

Veszprém
2006–07
Details

THW Kiel
57–55
(28–28 / 29–27)

Flensburg-Handewitt

Portland San Antonio

Valladolid
2007–08
Details

Ciudad Real
58–54
(27–29 / 25–31)

THW Kiel

HSV Hamburg

Barcelona
2008–09
Details

Ciudad Real
67–66
(39–34 / 33–27)

THW Kiel

HSV Hamburg

Rhein-Neckar Löwen
New Qualifying Format + Third Place Match
2009–10
Details

THW Kiel
36–34
Barcelona

Ciudad Real

Chekhovskiye Medvedi
2010–11
Details

Barcelona
27–24
Ciudad Real

Rhein-Neckar Löwen

HSV Hamburg
2011–12
Details

THW Kiel
26–21
Atlético de Madrid

AG København

Füchse Berlin
2012–13
Details

HSV Hamburg
30–29
Barcelona

Vive Kielce

THW Kiel
2013–14
Details

Flensburg-Handewitt
30–28
THW Kiel

Barcelona

Veszprém
2014–15
Details

Barcelona
28–23
Veszprém

Vive Kielce

THW Kiel
2015–16
Details

Vive Kielce
39–38
Veszprém

Paris Saint-Germain

THW Kiel
2016–17
Details

RK Vardar
24–23
Paris Saint-Germain

Veszprém

Barcelona
2017–18
Details

Montpellier
32–26
HBC Nantes

Paris Saint-Germain

RK Vardar
2018–19
Details

RK Vardar
27–24
Veszprém

Barcelona

Vive Kielce
2019–20
Details

THW Kiel
33–28
Barcelona

Paris Saint-Germain

Veszprém
2020–21
Details

Barcelona
36–23
Aalborg Håndbold

Paris Saint-Germain

HBC Nantes
2021–22
Details

Barcelona
37–35
Vive Kielce

THW Kiel

Veszprém
2022–23
Details

SC Magdeburg
30–29
Vive Kielce

Barcelona

Paris Saint-Germain
2023–24
Details

Barcelona
31–30
Aalborg Håndbold

THW Kiel

SC Magdeburg

Notes:
Bold : Aggregate
Bold-italic : Winner's goals

Records and statistics

See main article: article and European Cup and EHF Champions League records and statistics.

Performance by country (1957-2024)

width=50RankCountrywidth=80Winnerswidth=80Runners-upwidth=80Semi-finalswidth=80Total
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Total 64 64 128 256

Notes

All-time top scorers

RankPlayerGoalsSeasons
1 Kiril Lazarov136320[5]
2 Nikola Karabatić121118[6]
3 Mikkel Hansen119417[7]
4 Timur Dibirov116420[8]
5 Momir Ilić96914[9]
6 Marko Vujin86114[10]
7 Ivan Čupić84317[11]
8 Siarhei Rutenka83813[12]
9 Alex Dujshebaev82912[13]
10 László Nagy80617[14]
11 Niclas Ekberg78512[15]
12 Zlatko Horvat72918[16]
13 Domagoj Duvnjak72517[17]
14 Víctor Tomás71717[18]
15 Uwe Gensheimer71510[19]
16 Jonas Källman69417[20]
17 Vid Kavtičnik68315[21]
18 Guðjón Valur Sigurðsson67614[22]
19 Gašper Marguč66713[23]
20 Igor Karačić66313[24]

All-time Final Four top scorers

RankPlayerGoals
1 Mikkel Hansen818
2 Aleix Gómez746
3 Kiril Lazarov687
4 Aron Pálmarsson599
5 Momir Ilić588
6 Niclas Ekberg577
7 Filip Jícha566
Dika Mem567
9 László Nagy557
10 Timothey N'Guessan526
11 Domagoj Duvnjak516
12 Ivan Čupić497
13 Siarhei Rutenka474
Víctor Tomás477
Luka Cindrić477
16 Juanín García444
17 Nedim Remili434
18 Alex Dujshebaev424
19 Nikola Karabatić397
20 Jesper Nøddesbo386

Goals scored in the Final Four by nations

All the goals (3573) scored in the Final Four by the nationality of the players.

Last updated after the 2023/24 season.

RankNationGoals
1 France550
2 Spain539
3 Denmark311
4 Germany306
5 Croatia255
6 Sweden218
7 Poland189
8 Iceland167
9 Serbia159
10 Slovenia157
11 Hungary123
RankNationGoals
12 Belarus85
13 Russia78
14 North Macedonia76
15 Norway76
16 Czech Republic56
17 Netherlands35
18 Montenegro33
19 Latvia32
20 Brazil25
21 Egypt25
22 Austria17
RankNationGoals
23 Portugal17
24 Ukraine11
25 Tunisia9
26 Argentina7
27 Lithuania4
28 Switzerland4
29 Bosnia and Hercegovina3
30 Italy3
31 Iran2
32 Slovakia2
33 Faroe Islands1

Coaches with most titles

CoachTitlesClubs
List
61 Barcelona 1991, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000
42 Ciudad Real 2006, 2008, 2009, Kielce 2016
31 Barcelona 2011, 2015, 2021
32 Magdeburg 2002, Kiel 2010, 2012
31 SKA Minsk 1987, 1989, 1990

As Player and Coach combined

Player/CoachTitlesas Playeras Coach
ListList
86 Barcelona 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 20052 Barcelona 2022, 2024
62 CSKA Moscow 1988, Teka Santander 19944 Ciudad Real 2006, 2008, 2009, Kielce 2016
32 Ciudad Real 2008, 20091 Vardar 2019
32 THW Kiel 2010, 20121 THW Kiel 2020

Sponsorship

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EHF releases place distribution for 2021/22 European club competitions.
  2. Web site: 22 clubs vying for a place in the new EHF Champions League Men season.
  3. Web site: REGULATIONS EHF CHAMPIONS LEAGUE MEN SEASON 2021/22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210710205742/https://ehfel.eurohandball.com/media/yftjtgfe/5_ehf-champions-league-men-2021_22-regulations.pdf . 10 July 2021 . live .
  4. http://www.nuorat.se/default.asp?pageid=39604 eurohandball.com Hymn of the Champions
  5. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/501618/KirilLazarov Kiril Lazarov
  6. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/512194/NikolaKarabatic Nikola Karabatić
  7. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/527073/Hansen+Mikkel Mikkel Hansen
  8. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/523016/Dibirov+Timur Timur Dibirov
  9. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2017-18/player/522690/MomirIlic Momir Ilić
  10. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/518452/MarkoVujin Marko Vujin
  11. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/518560/IvanCupic Ivan Čupić
  12. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2014-15/player/507569/SiarheiRutenka Siarhei Rutenka
  13. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2021-22/player/540036/Dujshebaev+Dovichebaeva+Alex Alex Dujshebaev
  14. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/500459/L%c3%a1szl%c3%b3+Zolt%c3%a1nNagy László Nagy
  15. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2021-22/player/530733/Ekberg+Niclas Niclas Ekberg
  16. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2018-19/player/518316/ZlatkoHorvat Zlatko Horvat
  17. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/527539/DomagojDuvnjak Domagoj Duvnjak
  18. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2017-18/player/518536/VictorTomas+Gonzalez Víctor Tomás
  19. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2018-19/player/527535/UweGensheimer Uwe Gensheimer
  20. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2020-21/player/512071/JonasK%c3%a4llman Jonas Källman
  21. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2017-18/player/515712/VidKavticnik Vid Kavtičnik
  22. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2019-20/player/514047/Gudjon+ValurSigurdsson Guðjón Valur Sigurðsson
  23. http://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2022-23/player/535138/GasperMarguc Gašper Marguč
  24. https://history.eurohandball.com/ec/cl/men/2023-24/player/531532/IgorKaracic Igor Karačić
  25. Web site: Leseprobe – VFL Gummersbach. Die Chronik by Verlag die Werkstatt - Issuu . 19 November 2015 .
  26. Web site: Men Handball European Champions Cup 1971 Winner VFL Gummersbach (FRG) .
  27. Web site: EHF and EHF Marketing strike four-year deal with hummel. 2020-07-03. www.eurohandball.com. en.