Fistball European Championships
Fistball European Championships are a competition which has been organized by the International Fistball Association (IFA) since 1965 for men and since 1993 for women.
European Championships - Men
Year | Host | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|
1965 | Linz | West Germany | Austria | East Germany |
1970 | Olten | West Germany | East Germany | Austria |
1974 | Linz | West Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1978 | Offenburg | West Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1981 | Perg | West Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1984 | Binningen | Austria | West Germany | Switzerland |
1988 | Zwettl | West Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
1991 | Olten | Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
1994 | Walldürn | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1996 | Linz | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1998 | Oldenburg | Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
2000 | Freistadt | Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
2002 | Erlangen | Austria | Germany | Switzerland |
2004 | Neuendorf | Austria | Germany | Switzerland |
2006 | Linz | Switzerland | Austria | Germany |
2008 | Stuttgart | Austria | Switzerland | Germany |
2010 | Ermatingen | Austria | Switzerland | Germany |
2012 | Schweinfurt | Switzerland | Austria | Germany |
2014 | Olten | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2016 | Grieskirchen | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
European Championships - Women
Year | Host | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|
1993 | St. Florian (Austria) | Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
1996 | Štěchovice (Czech Republic) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
1999 | Alzenau (Germany) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2000 | Schaffhausen (Switzerland) | Switzerland | Germany | Austria |
2001 | Wigoltingen (Switzerland) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2003 | Arnreit (Austria) | Germany | Austria | Switzerland |
2004 | Seebergen (Germany) | Switzerland | Germany | Austria |
2005 | Rohrbach (Austria) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2007 | Salzburg (Austria) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2008 | Rohrbach (Austria) | Germany | Switzerland | Austria |
2009 | Zofingen (Switzerland) | Switzerland | Austria | Germany |
2011 | Ludwigshafen-Oppau (Germany) | Austria | Germany | Switzerland |
2012 | Diepoldsau (Switzerland) | Austria | Germany | Switzerland |
2013 | Bohdaneč (Czech Republic) | Austria | Germany | Switzerland |
2015 | (Austria) |
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.