2027 Men's EuroHockey Championship

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Host countryEngland
DatesSummer 2027
Teams12 (from 1 confederation)
Venue2 (in 1 host city)
2027 Men's EuroHockey Championship
Tournament details
Host countryEngland
DatesSummer 2027
Teams12 (from 1 confederation)
Venue2 (in 1 host city)
2025 (previous) (next) 2029

The 2027 Men's EuroHockey Championship will be the 21st edition of the Men's EuroHockey Championship, the biennial international men's field hockey championship of Europe organised by the European Hockey Federation. This will be the first edition since 2003 with 12 teams participating, it will have a new format.

The tournament will be held alongside the women's tournament at two venues in London, England in the Summer of 2027. The preliminary rounds and the quarter-finals will be held at the Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre and the semi-finals and finals will be held at Twickenham Stoop.[1][2][3] It will be the third time England will host the Men's EuroHockey Championship and the second time it will be held in London. The winner will qualify for the 2028 Summer Olympics.[4]

Original format change

In April 2024, it was announced the EuroHockey Championships would expand from an eight-team to a 12-team tournament, introducing a knock-out format for both men's and women's competitions. This marked the first major format change in over two decades, aimed at increasing competition and inclusivity in European hockey. Under the new format, the teams ranked 5th to 12th competed in an initial knock-out round, with winners advancing to the quarter-finals. The losers of this preliminary round received a second chance, facing off against the top four ranked teams for the remaining quarter-final slots. Quarter-final winners progressed to the semi-finals and then to either the final or the bronze medal match, while quarter-final losers competed for rankings from 5th to 8th place. Teams finishing in the lowest positions played additional matches to determine rankings from 9th to 12th.[5][6]

Final format change

It was decided to scrap the all knock-out matches format because it could have impacted tickets and potential television coverage if a host nation exited early.[7] A group stage was added with four groups of three. The top six nations on the FIH World Ranking following the 2026 World Cup are in Pools A and B, and the remainder are in Pools C and D. The top teams from each pool continue on to the championship round, with the runners-up from each group playing each other in a separate round. The remaining teams play each other to determine ninth through twelfth place. These lower rankings could be later used to determine eligibility for future tournaments.[8]

Qualification

All eight teams from the 2025 edition qualified directly for the expanded edition of the tournament. Then the winner and runner up from the 2025 EuroHockey Championship II qualified with those teams being Ireland and Wales. The winner and runner-up from the 2026 EuroHockey Championship Qualifier I will also qualify.

Qualified teams

Dates Event Location Quotas Qualifiers
27 July – 2 August 2025 2025 EuroHockey Championship II Lousada, Portugal 2  Ireland
 Wales
8–16 August 2025 2025 EuroHockey Championship Mönchengladbach, Germany 8  Austria
 Belgium
 England
 France
 Germany
 Netherlands
 Poland
 Spain
9–12 July 2026 EuroHockey Championship Qualifier I[9] Rome, Italy 2
Total 12

Summary of qualified teams

Team Qualification method Date of qualification Appearance(s) Previous best performance[A] WR[B]
Total First Last Streak
 Belgium 2025 Men's EuroHockey Championship 25 April 2024 20th 1970 2025 18 Champions (2019) TBD
 England 21st 21 Champions (2009) TBD
 France 18th 4 Fourth place (1970, 2025) TBD
 Germany 21st 21 Champions (Nine times)[C] TBD
 Netherlands 21st 21 Champions (1983, 1987, 2007, 2015, 2017, 2021, 2023) TBD
 Spain 21st 21 Champions (1974, 2005) TBD
 Austria 25 August 2024 8th 3 Seventh place (2009, 2017, 2023) TBD
 Poland 15th 2 Fifth place (1974, 1978) TBD
 Wales 2025 EuroHockey Championship II 1 August 2025 12th 2023 1 Sixth place (1978, 1999, 2019) TBD
 Ireland 16th 2019 1 Third place (2015) TBD
EuroHockey Championship Qualifier I 10 July 2026 TBD TBD
TBD TBD

Notes

References

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