Jump to content

1984–85 Women's European Cup (handball)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dicklyon (talk | contribs) at 06:02, 28 December 2022 (case fix (via WP:JWB)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The 1984–85 Women's European Champions Cup was the 24th edition of the Europe's competition for national champions women's handball clubs, running between October 1984 and Spring 1985.[1] Spartak Kyiv defeated defending champion Radnicki Belgrade in the final to win its tenth title.[2]

Qualifying round

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Helsingør IF Denmark 41–33 Iceland Fram 21–15 20–18
Spartak Kyiv Soviet Union Walkover Greece Aris Nikea
SC Leipzig East Germany 83–23 United Kingdom Wakefield Metros 46–11 37–12
Lokomotiva Mostar Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 68–36 Italy Brixen 37–17 31–19
HBC Bascharage Luxembourg 19–53 Netherlands Niloc Amsterdam 11–25 8–28
Arçelik SK Turkey 30–67 Romania Stiinta Bacau 14–37 16–30
Stade Français France 38–30 Switzerland ATV Basel 16–10 22–20
Íber Valencia Spain 40–27 Israel Harazim Ramat Gan 26–14 14–13
Baekkelagets SK Norway 39–43 Poland Slask Wroclaw 23–19 16–24

Round of 16

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Bayer Leverkusen Germany 43–41 Czech Republic Tatran Presov 25–14 18–27
Helsingør IF Denmark 29–65 Soviet Union Spartak Kyiv 18–33 11–32
SC Leipzig East Germany 42–39 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Lokomotiva Mostar 24–15 18–24
Niloc Amsterdam Netherlands 44–54 Bulgaria Georgi Dimitrov 20–23 24–31
Stiinta Bacau Romania 56–53 Hungary Budapesti Spartacus 29–22 27–31
Stade Français France 29–60 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radnički Belgrade 15–27 14–33
Íber Valencia Spain 35–60 Austria Hypo NÖ 20–29 15–31
Stockholmspolisens Sweden 43–40 Poland Slask Wroclaw 21–19 22–21

Quarter-finals

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Bayer Leverkusen Germany 30–45 Soviet Union Spartak Kyiv 14–21 16–24
SC Leipzig East Germany 49–42 Bulgaria Georgi Dimitrov 24–18 25–24
Stiinta Bacau Romania 44–45 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radnički Belgrade 22–19 22–26
Hypo NÖ Austria 61–29 Sweden Stockholmspolisens 28–10 33–19

Semifinals

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Spartak Kyiv Soviet Union 47–35 East Germany SC Leipzig 23–18 24–17
Radnički Belgrade Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 40–37 Austria Hypo NÖ 19–16 21–21

Final

Team #1 Agg. Team #2 1st 2nd
Spartak Kyiv Soviet Union 41–31 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radnički Belgrade 23–16 18–15

References

  1. ^ Results in todor66.com
  2. ^ List of champions in the-sports.org