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2000–01 EHF Women's Champions League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1999–2000 EHF Women's Champions League was the eighth edition of the modern era of the EHF's premier competition for women's handball clubs, running from 7 October 2000 to 23 May 2001. Krim Ljubljana defeated Viborg HK in the final to become the first Slovenian team to win the competition,[1] with Budućnost Podgorica and Ferencvárosi TC also reaching the semifinals. Defending champion Hypo Niederösterreich didn't make it past the que group stage.[2]

1st qualifying round

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Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Spartak Kyiv Ukraine 61–36 Bosnia and Herzegovina Interinvest Mostar 32–21 29–15
Agrotel Plovdiv Bulgaria 35–69 Croatia Podravka Koprivnica 17–38 18–31
BGPA Minsk Belarus 48–65 Poland Montex Lublin 24–33 24–32
Madeira Portugal 53–49 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radnički Beograd 27–24 26–25
Spono Nottwil Switzerland 52–53 Greece Anagennisi Artas 25–26 27–27
Akva Volgograd Russia 70–35 Turkey TMO Ankara 34–19 36–16
VOC Amsterdam Netherlands 43–44 Lithuania Egle Vilnius 25–23 18–21
Slovan Duslo Sala Slovakia 71–36 Italy Siracusa 40–17 31–19

2nd qualifying round

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Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Leipzig Germany 61–62 Ukraine Spartak Kyiv 33–27 28–35
Podravka Koprivnica Croatia 37–40 Romania Oltchim Rm. Valcea 18–19 19–21
Győri Graboplast Hungary 45–44 Poland Montex Lublin 23–19 22–25
Madeira Portugal 39–68 Norway Baekkelagets 22–31 17–37
Olimpija Ljubljana Slovenia 51–52 Greece Anagennisi Artas 31–27 20–25
Akva Volgograd Russia 40–36 France Metz 25–20 15–16
Amadeo Tortajada Spain 61–45 Lithuania Egle Vilnius 31–23 30–22
Slovan Duslo Sala Slovakia 53–55 Denmark Frederiksberg 29–27 24–28

Group stage

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Group A

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Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Budućnost Podgorica 6 3 2 1 171 149 8
Russia Akva Volgograd 6 3 1 2 148 126 7
Austria Hypo Niederösterreich 6 3 0 3 158 162 6
Denmark Frederiksberg 6 1 1 4 132 172 3

Group B

[edit]
Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Hungary Herz Ferencvárosi TC 6 4 0 2 175 142 8
Norway Baekkelagets 6 3 2 1 148 147 8
Spain Amadeo Tortajada 6 2 2 2 154 160 6
Germany Lützellinden 6 1 0 5 149 177 2

Group C

[edit]
Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Denmark Viborg 6 5 0 1 170 145 10
Norway Larvik 6 4 0 2 152 132 8
Romania Oltchim Rm. Valcea 6 3 0 3 159 150 6
Greece Anagennisi Artas 6 0 0 6 139 193 0

Group D

[edit]
Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Slovenia Krim Ljubljana 6 3 2 1 153 140 8
Spain Milar Valencia 6 4 0 2 160 159 8
Ukraine Spartak Kyiv 6 2 0 4 169 171 4
Hungary Győri Graboplast 6 1 2 3 156 168 4

Quarter-finals

[edit]
Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Milar Valencia Spain 48–53 Denmark Viborg 25–19 23–34
Akva Volgograd Russia 44–47 Hungary Herz Ferencvárosi TC 22–17 22–30
Larvik Norway 41–49 Slovenia Krim Ljubljana 24–20 17–29
Baekkelagets Norway 44–46 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Budućnost Podgorica 24–26 20–20

Semi-finals

[edit]
Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Viborg Denmark 46–42 Hungary Herz Ferencvárosi TC 24–21 22–21
Krim Ljubljana Slovenia 53–48 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Budućnost Podgorica 28–21 25–27

Final

[edit]
Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Viborg Denmark 41–47 Slovenia Krim Ljubljana 22–22 19–25

References

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  1. ^ List of champions in the-sports.org
  2. ^ Results Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine in the European Handball Federation's website