2002 European Men's Handball Championship

2002 EHF European Men's Handball Championship
Tournament details
Host country  Sweden
Dates 25 January–3 February
Teams 16 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s) 6 (in 6 host cities)
Final positions
Champions  Sweden (4th title)
Runner-up  Germany
Third place  Denmark
Fourth place  Iceland
Tournament statistics
Top scorer(s)  Ólafur Stefánsson (ISL)
(58 goals)
Next

The 2002 (5th) Men's European Handball Championship took place from 25 January to 3 February 2002 in Sweden.

Teams

Group A Group B Group C Group D
 Czech Republic  Russia  Spain  France
 Poland  Israel   Switzerland  Croatia
 Sweden  Denmark  Iceland  Germany
 Ukraine  Portugal  Slovenia Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia

Venues

Group City Stadium Capacity
A and I Gothenburg Scandinavium 12.000
B Helsingborg Idrottens Hus 2.700
C Skövde Skövde Arena 2.500
D Jönköping Kinnarps Arena 7.000
II Västerås Västeråshallen 5.000
Final Round Stockholm Globen Arena 14.500

Preliminary round

The first three of each group reach the main stage. The remaining teams play one another for positions 13 to 16.

Group A

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Sweden 33008663+236
 Czech Republic 32017782-54
 Ukraine 31027880-22
 Poland 30036783-160
25. January 2002
 Poland 24 – 25  Czech Republic
 Sweden 27 – 21  Ukraine
26. January 2002
 Czech Republic 22 – 31  Sweden
 Ukraine 30 – 23  Poland
27. January 2002
 Ukraine 27 – 30  Czech Republic
 Sweden 28 – 20  Poland

Group B

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Denmark 32108171+105
 Russia 32108070+105
 Portugal 31026570-52
 Israel 30036782-150
25. January 2002
 Portugal 26 – 15  Israel
 Russia 25 – 25  Denmark
26. January 2002
 Israel 26 – 27  Russia
 Denmark 27 – 20  Portugal
27. January 2002
 Russia 28 – 19  Portugal
 Denmark 29 – 26  Israel

Group C

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Iceland 32108871+175
 Spain 32107366+75
 Slovenia 30127990-111
  Switzerland 30127891-131
25. January 2002
 Slovenia 34 – 34   Switzerland
 Spain 24 – 24  Iceland
26. January 2002
 Iceland 31 – 25  Slovenia
  Switzerland 22 – 24  Spain
27. January 2002
 Iceland 33 – 22   Switzerland
 Spain 25 – 20  Slovenia

Group D

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Germany 32106857+115
 France 32106662+45
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia 31027571+42
 Croatia 30037089-190
25. January 2002
 Croatia 22 – 34 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
 France 15 – 15  Germany
26. January 2002
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia 20 – 22  France
 Germany 26 – 21  Croatia
27. January 2002
 Germany 27 – 21 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
 France 29 – 27  Croatia

Second round

The first two from each group play the semifinals.

Group I

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Denmark 5410131113+189
 Sweden 5401141118+238
 Russia 5311139118+217
 Czech Republic 5203126145-194
 Portugal 5104116134-182
 Ukraine 5005112137-250
29. January 2002
 Ukraine 23 – 28  Portugal
 Czech Republic 25 – 31  Denmark
 Sweden 30 – 26  Russia
30. January 2002
 Czech Republic 20 – 29  Russia
 Ukraine 17 – 21  Denmark
 Sweden 27 – 22  Portugal
31. January 2002
 Czech Republic 29 – 27  Portugal
 Ukraine 24 – 31  Russia
 Sweden 26 – 27  Denmark

Group II

Team P W T L GF GA GD Pts.
 Iceland 5320144125+198
 Germany 5311116111+57
 France 5221123109+146
 Spain 5212126122+45
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia 5113126139-133
 Slovenia 5014118147-291
29. January 2002
 Iceland 26 – 26  France
 Slovenia 24 – 24 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
 Spain 18 – 19  Germany
30. January 2002
 Iceland 34 – 26 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
 Slovenia 28 – 31  Germany
 Spain 27 – 24  France
31. January 2002
 Spain 32 – 35 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
 Slovenia 21 – 36  France
 Iceland 29 – 24  Germany

Finals

Semi-finals Final
2. February 2002
   Denmark   23  
   Germany   28  
 
3. February 2002
       Germany   31
     Sweden   33
Bronze-final
2. February 2002 3. February 2002
   Sweden   33    Denmark   29
   Iceland   22      Iceland   22

Final ranking

1.  Sweden
2.  Germany
3.  Denmark
4.  Iceland
5.  Russia
6.  France
7.  Spain
8.  Czech Republic
9.  Portugal
10. Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia
11.  Ukraine
12.  Slovenia
13.   Switzerland
14.  Israel
15.  Poland
16.  Croatia

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.