Women's EuroHockey Championship explained

Women's EuroHockey Championship
Current Season:2023 Women's EuroHockey Nations Championship
Last Season:2021 Women's EuroHockey Nations Championship
Upcoming Season:2025 Women's EuroHockey Nations Championship
Inaugural:1984
Sport:Field hockey
Teams:8
Level:1
Continent:EHF (Europe)
Champion: (12th title)
Champ Season:2023
Most Champs: (12 titles)
Pyramid:EuroHockey Nations Challenge

The Women's EuroHockey Nations Championship is an international women's field hockey competition organized by the European Hockey Federation (EHF) for the top eight European national teams. It is the top division of the EuroHockey Championships. The inaugural tournament took place in 1984. When the tournament is held close to the Summer Olympic games or the Women's Hockey World Cup, the winner of the tournament is awarded a place in those competitions.

Format

The tournament is played in Divisions normally consisting of eight teams. The top division, containing the eight best national teams, is called the EuroHockey Nations Championship, below which there is the EuroHockey Championship II, then the EuroHockey Championship III, then the EuroHockey Championship IV, and so on.

Qualification

National teams qualify for a division based on their performance in the previous competition. Each time the competition is held, it is with each division's previous top two teams promoted (assuming there is a higher division), and its previous bottom two teams demoted (assuming there is a lower division).

  1. 1984-2003 + 2023: Qualification Tournament
  2. 2005-Ongoing: Via Women's EuroHockey Championship II and Women's EuroHockey Championship III

Summary

Assuming divisions consisting of the standard 8 teams, the teams are separated into two pools of four teams. In each pool (pool A and B) the teams play one match against each of the other teams in their pool (three in total). The teams then go on to play classification matches based on their relative ranking from these pool matches to determine their final tournament position.

Details

In each pool, A and B, all the teams play each other once, with points awarded as follows:

Upon completion of these matches, each team in the pool is ranked according to the number of points each has accumulated. If any teams in the pool have the same rank, then these teams are ranked:

Once the relative ranking of the teams in pools A and B is settled, the semi-finals proceed with two games as follows:

The winners of these matches then play a match against each other for 1st and 2nd places (the final) and the losing teams play a match against each other for 3rd and 4th places (Bronze medal match).

The third and fourth placed teams in each pool are placed in Pool C (the Relegation Pool) in order to determine fifth to eighth places. Each team plays one match against the two teams that they did not previously play. The results from those games and from the game that was previously played against the other team in their original pool are used to rank each team according to the ranking procedure used in Pool A and B.

Results

Summaries

YearHostwidth=1% rowspan=19Finalwidth=1% rowspan=19Third place matchwidth=1% rowspan=19width=5% rowspan=2Number of teams
width=14%Winnerwidth=10%Scorewidth=14%Runner-upwidth=14%Third placewidth=10%Scorewidth=14%Fourth place
1984
Details
Lille, France2–01–012
1987
Details
London, England2–2 (a.e.t.)
(3–1 p.s.)
2–112
1991
Details
Brussels, Belgium2–13–212
1995
Details
Amsterdam, Netherlands2–2 (a.e.t.)
(4–1 p.s.)
1–012
1999
Details
Cologne, Germany2–15–012
2003
Details
Barcelona, Spain5–03–112
2005
Details
Dublin, Ireland2–14–08
2007
Details
Manchester, England2–03–28
2009
Details
Amstelveen, Netherlands3–22–18
2011
Details
Mönchengladbach, Germany3–02–18
2013
Details
Boom, Belgium4–4
(2–0 p.s.o.)
3–18
2015
Details
London, England2–2
(3–1 p.s.o.)
5–18
2017
Details
Amstelveen, Netherlands3–02–08
2019
Details
Antwerp, Belgium2–01–1
(3–2 p.s.o.)
8
2021
Details
Amstelveen, Netherlands2–03–18
2023
Details
Mönchengladbach, Germany3–13–08
2025
Details
Mönchengladbach, Germany8

Top four statistics

TeamChampionsRunners-upThird-placeFourth-place
style=background:#FFF68Fstyle=background:#FFF68F12 (1984, 1987, 1995*, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2009*, 2011, 2017*, 2019, 2021*, 2023)2 (2007, 2015)1 (2013)1 (1991)
style=background:#FFF68Fstyle=background:#FFF68F2 (2007, 2013)7 (1991, 1999*, 2005, 2009, 2011*, 2019, 2021)5 (1984, 1995, 2003, 2015, 2023*)2 (1987, 2017)
style=background:#FFF68Fstyle=background:#FFF68F2 (1991, 2015*)2 (1987*, 2013)6 (1999, 2005, 2007*, 2009, 2011, 2017)5 (1984, 1995, 2003, 2019, 2023)
2 (1995, 2003*)1 (2019)6 (2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2021)
2 (2017, 2023)1 (2021)1 (2013*)
1 (1984)2 (1987, 1991)
1 (1999)

* = host

Team appearances

Team
1984

1987

1991

1995

1999

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

2013

2015

2017

2019

2021

2023

2025
Total
11th12th12th3
9th5th6th7th4
Part of the Soviet Union8th8th2
8th9th7th11th11th5th4th5thbgcolor=silver2nd6th3rdbgcolor=silver2ndQ13
Part of Czechoslovakia10th12th7th3
9thDefunct1
4thbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1st4th3rd4th3rd3rd3rd3rdbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1st3rd4th5th4thQ17
10th10th10th7th10th8th8th7
3rd4thbgcolor=silver2nd3rdbgcolor=silver2nd3rdbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1st3rd4thbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=silver2nd3rdQ17
5th7th8th8th9th6th5th6th5th6th7th6th5th6th5thQ16
12th11th11th9th11th7th8th7th8th8th10
8th1
bgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1st4thbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1st3rdbgcolor=silver2ndbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stQ17
8th1
Part of the Soviet Union5th4th10th7th7th5
6th6th5th6th6th7th7th8th6th6th8th7th7th13
bgcolor=silver2nd3rd3rdDefunct3
7th5th6thbgcolor=silver2nd5thbgcolor=silver2nd4th4th4th4th5th4th5th3rd4th6thQ17
12th1
Part of the Soviet Union7th5th6th8th4
8th9th12th3
Total 12121212121288888888888[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Competitions Archive . 25 August 2018 . 20.