Men's EuroHockey Championship II

European field hockey competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Men's EuroHockey Championship II, formerly known as the Men's EuroHockey Nations Trophy, is a competition for European national field hockey teams. It is the second level of European field hockey Championships for national teams.

FormerlyMen's EuroHockey Nations Trophy
Founded2005; 21 years ago (2005)
First season2005
Quick facts Formerly, Sport ...
Men's EuroHockey Championship II
Most recent season or competition:
2025 Men's EuroHockey Championship II
FormerlyMen's EuroHockey Nations Trophy
SportField hockey
Founded2005; 21 years ago (2005)
First season2005
No. of teams8
ConfederationEHF (Europe)
Most recent
champion
 Wales (1st title)
(2025)
Most titles Ireland (3 titles)
Level on pyramid2
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Underneath the Championship II there exists at least one division of the EuroHockey Nations Challenge, like European Championship III. There is promotion and relegation.[1] The two first ranked teams qualify for the next EuroHockey Nations Championship and are replaced by the two lowest-ranked teams from that tournament. The teams finishing in seventh and eighth positions are relegated to the EuroHockey Championship III and replaced by the two highest-ranked from that tournament.

The tournament has been won by eight different teams: Ireland has the most titles with three, Poland follows with two and Austria, the Czech Republic, France, Russia, Scotland and Wales have all won the tournament once. The most recent edition was held in Lousada, Portugal and was won by Wales.

Results

More information Year, Host ...
Year Host Final Third place match Number of teams
Winner Score Runner-up Third place Score Fourth place
2005
Details
Rome, Italy
Ireland
4–2
Czech Republic

Wales
2–1
Austria
8
2007
Details
Lisbon, Portugal
Poland
4–3
Austria

Scotland
4–3 (a.e.t)
Switzerland
8
2009
Details
Wrexham, Wales
Ireland
2–1
Russia

Wales
5–2
Czech Republic
8
2011
Details
Vinnytsia, Ukraine
Czech Republic
1–1
(2–1 s.o.)

Poland

Scotland
4–3
Austria
8
2013
Details
Vienna, Austria
Russia
0–0
(5–4 s.o.)

France

Austria
6–1
Azerbaijan
8
2015
Details
Prague, Czech Republic
Poland
3–1
Austria

Scotland
5–1
Czech Republic
8
2017
Details
Glasgow, Scotland
Scotland
2–1
Wales

France
5–4
Russia
8
2019
Details
Cambrai, France
France
4–0
Russia

Austria
4–1
Poland
8
2021
Details
Gniezno, Poland
Austria
1–1
(7–6 s.o.)

Scotland

Ireland
4–2
Poland
8
2023
Details
Dublin, Ireland
Ireland
5–2
Ukraine

Scotland
4–1
Italy
8
2025
Details
Lousada, Portugal
Wales
1–1
(3–1 s.o.)

Ireland

Scotland
5–2
Italy
8
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Summary

More information Team, Winners ...
Team Winners Runners-up Third place Fourth place
 Ireland 3 (2005, 2009, 2023*) 1 (2025) 1 (2021)
 Poland 2 (2007, 2015) 1 (2011) 2 (2019, 2021*)
 Austria 1 (2021) 2 (2007, 2015) 2 (2013*, 2019) 2 (2005, 2011)
 Russia 1 (2013) 2 (2009, 2019) 1 (2017)
 Scotland 1 (2017*) 1 (2021) 5 (2007, 2011, 2015, 2023, 2025)
 Wales 1 (2025) 1 (2017) 2 (2005, 2009*)
 France 1 (2019*) 1 (2013) 1 (2017)
 Czech Republic 1 (2011) 1 (2005) 2 (2009, 2015*)
 Ukraine 1 (2023)
 Italy 2 (2023, 2025)
 Azerbaijan 1 (2013)
  Switzerland 1 (2007)
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* = host nation

Team appearances

More information Team, Total ...
Team Italy
2005
Portugal
2007
Wales
2009
Ukraine
2011
Austria
2013
Czech Republic
2015
Scotland
2017
France
2019
Poland
2021
Republic of Ireland
2023
Portugal
2025
Total
 Austria 4th2nd4th3rd2nd3rd1st7
 Azerbaijan 4th5th2
 Belarus 7th6th8th8th4
 Croatia 8th8th7th3
 Czech Republic 2nd4th1st4th6th7th5th5th8
 France 2nd3rd1st3
 Ireland 1st1st3rd1st2nd5
 Italy 5th6th7th8th5th5th4th4th8
 Poland 1st2nd1st4th4th5
 Portugal 7th8th7th8th4
 Russia 8th2nd1st4th2nd5
 Scotland 3rd5th3rd6th3rd1st2nd3rd3rd9
 Sweden 7th1
  Switzerland 6th4th8th7th7th7th6th6th8
 Turkey 8th1
 Ukraine 8th5th5th6th5th6th6th2ndWD8
 Wales 3rd5th3rd6th7th2nd1st7
Total88888888888[2]
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See also

References

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