1997–98 EHF Women's Champions League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 188.124.204.113 (talk) at 01:25, 4 July 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The 1997–98 EHF Women's Champions League was the fifth edition of the modern era of the 1961-founded competition for European national champions women's handball clubs, running from 4 October 1997 to 16 May 1998. Hypo Niederösterreich defeated defending champion Mar Valencia in the final[1] to win its seventh title.[2]

Qualifying Round

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Madeira Portugal 32–74 Poland Lublin 13–36 19–38
Viborg Denmark 56–48 Lithuania Egle Vilnius 30–22 26–26
Hapoel Petah Tikva Israel 31–95 Croatia Podravka Koprivnica 18–50 13–45
Giessen-Lützellinden Germany 35–47 Ukraine Motor Zaporizhia 25–20 10–27
Fémina Vise Belgium 34–70 Romania Oltchim Ramnicu Valcea 18–32 16–38
Budućnost Podgorica Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 66–58 Czech Republic Ostrava 34–26 32–32
Gjorce Petrov North Macedonia 77–48 Slovakia Slovan Duslo Sala 40–22 37–26
Rimini Portugal 43–43 Greece Anagennisi Artas 22–18 21–25
Swift Roermond Netherlands 40–53 Russia Istochnik Rostov 21–25 19–28
Brühl Switzerland 46–62 Norway Larvik 25–30 21–32
Krim Ljubljana Slovenia 67–52 Turkey Istanbul 33–27 34–25
Politechnik Minsk Belarus 41–53 Spain Amadeo Tortajada 24–32 17–21
Metz Portugal 71–29 Bulgaria Volan Sofia 36–15 35–14
Kefalovrysos Kythreas Cyprus 16–151 Hungary Ferencvárosi 7–69 9–82

Group Stage

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
Croatia Podravka Koprivnica 6 6 0 0 170 134 +36 12
Ukraine Motor Zaporizhia 6 2 1 3 127 142 −15 5
Poland Lublin 6 2 0 4 156 163 −7 4
Russia Istochnik Rostov 6 1 1 4 135 149 −14 3

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
Spain Mar Valencia 6 6 0 0 189 138 +51 12
Slovenia Krim Ljubljana 6 3 0 3 162 170 −8 6
Hungary Ferencvárosi 6 1 1 4 147 159 −12 3
France Metz 6 1 1 4 135 166 −31 3

Group C

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
North Macedonia Gjorce Petrov 6 5 0 1 178 149 +29 10
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Budućnost Podgorica 6 4 0 2 172 169 +3 8
Norway Larvik 6 3 0 3 165 150 +15 6
Spain Amadeo Tortajada 6 0 0 6 131 178 −47 0

Group D

Team Pld W D L GF GA GDorg Pts
Denmark Viborg 6 4 0 2 141 121 +20 8
Austria Niederösterreich 6 4 0 2 141 125 +16 8
Romania Oltchim Ramnicu Valcea 6 3 0 3 138 124 +14 6
Italy Rimini 6 1 0 5 121 171 −50 2

Quarter-finals

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Krim Ljubljana Slovenia 48–48 Croatia Podravka Koprivnica 28–23 20–25
Niederösterreich Austria 40–33 North Macedonia Gjorce Petrov 26–12 14–21
Budućnost Podgorica Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 66–57 Denmark Viborg 39–30 27–27
Motor Zaporozhia Ukraine 47–65 Spain Mar Valencia 21–33 26–32

Semifinals

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Podravka Koprivnica Croatia 36–38 Austria Niederösterreich 17–18 19–20
Budućnost Podgorica Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 54–79 Spain Mar Valencia 26–40 28–39

Final

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Niederösterreich Austria 56–47 Spain Mar Sagunto 28–21 28–26

References

  1. ^ Results in the European Handball Federation's website
  2. ^ List of finals in the-sports.org