2022–23 EHF Champions League

Handball tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2022–23 EHF Champions League was the 63rd edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament and the 30th edition under the current EHF Champions League format. It ran from 14 September 2022 to 18 June 2023.

LocationLanxess Arena (FINAL4)
Dates14 September 2022–18 June 2023
Teams16
Quick facts Tournament information, Sport ...
EHF Champions League
2022–23
Tournament information
SportHandball
LocationLanxess Arena (FINAL4)
Dates14 September 2022–18 June 2023
Teams16
Websiteehfcl.com
Final positions
ChampionsGermany SC Magdeburg
Runner-upPoland Barlinek Industria Kielce
Tournament statistics
Matches played132
Goals scored8230 (62.35 per match)
Attendance587,183 (4,448 per match)
Top scorer(s)Denmark Emil Wernsdorf Madsen
(107 goals)
Close

SC Magdeburg defeated Barlinek Industria Kielce 30–29 in the final to capture their fourth title.[1]

Format

The tournament used the same format as the previous two seasons. The competition began with a group stage featuring sixteen teams divided into two groups. Matches were played in a double round-robin system with home-and-away fixtures, fourteen in total for each team. In Groups A and B, the top two teams automatically qualified for the quarter-finals, with teams ranked 3rd to 6th entered the playoff round.

The knockout stage included four rounds: the playoffs, quarter-finals, and a final-four tournament comprising two semifinals and the final. In the playoffs, eight teams were paired against each other in two-legged home-and-away matches (third-placed in group A plays sixth-placed group B; fourth-placed group A plays fifth-placed group B, etc.). The four aggregate winners of the playoffs advanced to the quarterfinals, joining the top-two teams of Groups A and B. The eight quarterfinalist teams were paired against each other in two-legged home-and-away matches, with the four aggregate winners qualifying to the final-four tournament.

In the final four tournament, the semifinals and the final were played as single matches at a pre-selected host venue. For this tournament, it was the Lanxess Arena.

Teams

Location of teams of the 2022–23 EHF Champions League group stage.
Red: Group A; Blue: Group B.

There were ten guaranteed places, with the six additional spots being awarded as wildcards by the EHF. The league winners of Germany, France, Spain, Hungary, Denmark, North Macedonia, Poland, Portugal and Romania qualified for the group stage automatically.[2][3] 22 teams applied for a place.[4] Teams which have qualified for the 2022–23 EHF European League will have the opportunity to apply for an upgrade to the EHF Champions League. The final list was announced in June 2022.[5]

Participating teams
Germany SC Magdeburg (1st) Spain Barça (1st) France Paris Saint-Germain (1st) Hungary OTP Bank - Pick Szeged (1st)
Denmark GOG Håndbold (1st) Poland Barlinek Industria Kielce (1st) Portugal FC Porto (1st) Romania Dinamo București (1st)
Germany THW Kiel (2nd) France HBC Nantes (WC) Hungary Telekom Veszprém (WC) Denmark Aalborg Håndbold (WC)
Poland Orlen Wisła Płock (WC) Croatia PPD Zagreb (WC) Slovenia Celje Pivovarna Laško (WC) Norway Elverum Håndball (WC)
Wildcard rejection
Spain BM Granollers Portugal Sporting CP Romania CS Minaur Baia Mare Switzerland Kadetten Schaffhausen
Sweden Ystads IF Ukraine HC Motor Zaporizhzhia

Group stage

The draw for the group stage was held on 1 July 2022.[5][7] The 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four. From each pot, two teams were drawn into Group A and the other two in Group B. Teams from the same national association will not drawn into the same group.[8]

A total of 11 national associations were represented in the group stage.

Group A

More information Pos, Pld ...
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification PAR MAG VES GOG BUC PLO ZAG POR
1 France Paris Saint-Germain 14 12 0 2 492 439 +53 24 Quarterfinals 33–37 37–35 41–36 33–26 37–33 40–31 32–30
2 Germany SC Magdeburg 14 9 2 3 453 419 +34 20 22–29 32–25 36–34 34–33 33–27 35–25 41–36
3 Hungary Telekom Veszprém 14 8 2 4 449 429 +20 18 Playoffs 36–35 35–35 36–37 33–30 32–22 32–28 32–30
4 Denmark GOG Håndbold 14 7 1 6 459 454 +5 15 30–35 33–32 30–31 38–38 31–24 33–29 34–33
5 Romania Dinamo București 14 5 3 6 416 429 13 13 29–36 28–30 31–31 30–27 32–27 27–27 32–27
6 Poland Orlen Wisła Płock 14 4 1 9 374 412 38 9 26–32 25–24 26–30 31–27 26–28 26–30 27–23
7 Croatia PPD Zagreb 14 3 2 9 390 420 30 8 30–33 25–31 29–26 27–31 28–29 26–26 29–23
8 Portugal FC Porto 14 2 1 11 407 438 31 5 33–35 31–31 28–35 26–33 32–23 27–28 28–26
Close
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers

Group B

More information Pos, Pld ...
Close
Source: EHF
Rules for classification: Tiebreakers
Notes:
  1. Nantes 71–67 Kiel

Knockout stage

Playoffs

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...
Close

Quarterfinals

More information Team 1, Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score ...
Close

Final four

The final four was held at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, Germany on 17 and 18 June 2023.

Bracket

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
17 June
 
 
Germany SC Magdeburg (pen.)38 (2)
 
18 June
 
Spain Barça38 (1)
 
Germany SC Magdeburg (ET)30
 
17 June
 
Poland Barlinek Industria Kielce29
 
France Paris Saint-Germain24
 
 
Poland Barlinek Industria Kielce25
 
Third place
 
 
18 June
 
 
Spain Barça37
 
 
France Paris Saint-Germain31

Final

18 June 2023
18:00
SC Magdeburg Germany 30–29 (ET) Poland Barlinek Industria Kielce Lanxess Arena, Cologne
Attendance: 19,750
Referees: Lah, Sok (SLO)
Smits 8 (13–15) A. Dujshebaev 8
Yellow card number 2 in light blue rounded square Red card Report Yellow card number 2 in light blue rounded square

FT: 26–26 ET: 4–3

Top goalscorers

More information Rank, Player ...
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI