2013–14 EHF Champions League qualifying

This article describes the qualifying for the 2013–14 EHF Champions League.

Format

A total of 14 teams will take part in the qualification tournaments. The clubs will be drawn into three groups of four and play a semifinal and the final. The winner of the qualification groups advance to the group stage, while the eliminated clubs will go to the EHF Cup. Matches will be played at 31 August–1 September 2013. The draw took place on 27 June, at 14:00 local time at Vienna, Austria.[1][2]

Seedings

Two remaining teams played a knock-out match, the winner went into the group stage.

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4
Belarus HC Dinamo-Minsk
Bosnia and Herzegovina RK Borac Banja Luka
Romania H.C.M. Constanţa
Serbia RK Vojvodina
Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov
Portugal F.C. Porto
Austria Alpla HC Hard
Norway Elverum Håndball
Turkey Beşiktaş J.K.
Ukraine HC Zaporozhye
Greece AEK Athens H.C.
Netherlands HV KRAS/Volendam

Qualification tournament 1

HT Tatran Prešov organized the tournament.[3]

Semi-finals Final
31 August 2013
 Belarus HC Dinamo-Minsk  25  
 Greece AEK Athens H.C.  21  
 
1 September 2013
     Belarus HC Dinamo-Minsk  29
   Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov  27
Third place
31 August 2013 1 September 2013
 Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov  32  Greece AEK Athens H.C.  34
 Turkey Beşiktaş J.K.  30    Turkey Beşiktaş J.K.  30

Semifinals

31 August 2013
15:30
HC Dinamo-Minsk Belarus 25 – 21 Greece AEK Athens H.C. City Hall Prešov, Prešov
Attendance: 822
Referees: Pavićević, Ražnatović (MNE)
Nikulenkau 6 (11–13) Rakčević 6
  Report  

31 August 2013
18:00
HT Tatran Prešov Slovakia 32 – 30 Turkey Beşiktaş J.K. City Hall Prešov, Prešov
Attendance: 1,723
Referees: Lorente, Serradilla (ESP)
Antl 6 (17–12) Döne, Rašić 6
  Report   Red card

Third place game

1 September 2013
15:30
AEK Athens H.C. Greece 34 – 30 Turkey Beşiktaş J.K. City Hall Prešov, Prešov
Attendance: 538
Referees: Pavićević, Ražnatović (MNE)
Bakaoukas 13 (21–14) Döne 9
  Report

Final

1 September 2013
18:00
HC Dinamo-Minsk Belarus 29 – 27 Slovakia HT Tatran Prešov City Hall Prešov, Prešov
Attendance: 3,072
Referees: Lorente, Serradilla (ESP)
Doborac 7 (14–13) Urban 7
  Report  

Qualification tournament 2

RK Vojvodina organized the tournament.[3]

Semi-finals Final
31 August 2013
 Bosnia and Herzegovina RK Borac Banja Luka  18  
 Ukraine HC Motor Zaporozhye  40  
 
1 September 2013
     Ukraine HC Motor Zaporozhye  36
   Serbia RK Vojvodina  24
Third place
31 August 2013 1 September 2013
 Serbia RK Vojvodina  27  Bosnia and Herzegovina RK Borac Banja Luka  17
 Austria Alpla HC Hard  26    Austria Alpla HC Hard  25

Semifinals

31 August 2013
17:00
RK Borac Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina 18 – 40 Ukraine HC Motor Zaporozhye Spens Sports Center, Novi Sad
Attendance: 500
Referees: Kaveshnikov, Plotnikov (RUS)
Bezbradica 6 (8–20) Skopintsev 6
  Report  

31 August 2013
19:30
RK Vojvodina Serbia 27 – 26 Austria Alpla HC Hard Spens Sports Center, Novi Sad
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Cohen, Peretz (ISR)
Elezović 8 (10–12) Jochum 7
  Report  

Third place game

1 September 2013
17:00
RK Borac Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina 17 – 25 Austria Alpla HC Hard Spens Sports Center, Novi Sad
Attendance: 200
Referees: Kaveshnikov, Plotnikov (RUS)
Trivundza 5 (7–12) Tanasković 5
  Report  

Final

1 September 2013
19:30
HC Motor Zaporozhye Ukraine 36 – 24 Serbia RK Vojvodina Spens Sports Center, Novi Sad
Attendance: 1,200
Referees: Cohen, Peretz (ISR)
Ostroushko 11 (17–11) Elezović 5
  Red card Report  

Qualification tournament 3

F.C. Porto organized the tournament.[3]

Semi-finals Final
31 August 2013
 Portugal F.C. Porto  29  
 Norway Elverum Håndball  28  
 
1 September 2013
     Portugal F.C. Porto  26
   Romania H.C.M. Constanţa  22
Third place
31 August 2013 1 September 2013
 Romania H.C.M. Constanţa  34  Norway Elverum Håndball  32
 Netherlands HV KRAS/Volendam  25    Netherlands HV KRAS/Volendam  24

Semifinals

31 August 2013
14:00
F.C. Porto Portugal 29 – 28 Norway Elverum Håndball Dragão Caixa, Porto
Attendance: 1,460
Referees: Horváth, Márton (HUN)
Davyes, Duarte 6 (13–13) Toft 6
  Report  

31 August 2013
16:30
H.C.M. Constanţa Romania 34 – 25 Netherlands HV KRAS/Volendam Dragão Caixa, Porto
Attendance: 530
Referees: Elíasson, Pálsson (ISL)
Şimicu 7 (19–14) Adams 10
  Red card Report   Red card

Third place game

1 September 2013
16:30
HV KRAS/Volendam Netherlands 24 – 32 Norway Elverum Håndball Dragão Caixa, Porto
Attendance: 150
Referees: Horváth, Márton (HUN)
Beemsterboer, Smits 4 (13–18) Aanestad 6
  Report  

Final

1 September 2013
14:00
H.C.M. Constanţa Romania 22 – 26 Portugal F.C. Porto Dragão Caixa, Porto
Attendance: 1,704
Referees: Elíasson, Pálsson (ISL)
Sadoveac 6 (9–12) Spinola 9
  Red card Report   Red card

Playoff

The winner advanced to the group stage.

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Handball Esch Luxembourg 44–63 Sweden HK Drott 30–26 14–37

First leg

24 August 2013
18:00
Handball Esch Luxembourg 30 – 26 Sweden HK Drott d'Coque, Luxembourg City
Attendance: 500
Referees: Konjičanin, Konjičanin (BIH)
Kohl 10 (17–15) Persson 7
  Report  

Second leg

31 August 2013
16:00
HK Drott Sweden 37 – 14 Luxembourg Handball Esch Halmstad Arena, Halmstad
Attendance: 1,185
Referees: Erdoğan, Özdeniz (TUR)
Persson 7 (19–8) Kohl, Schmidt 3
  Report  

HK Drott won 63–44 on aggregate.

Wildcard matches

The winners advanced to the group stage. The schedule and qualifying criteria was changed after Atlético Madrid withdrew.[4]

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Füchse Berlin Germany 56–57 Germany HSV Hamburg 30–30 26–27
HC Metalurg Republic of Macedonia 45–39 Hungary SC Pick Szeged 26–16 19–23
Montpellier France 52–55 Poland Wisła Płock 29–27 23–28

Match 1

First leg

28 August 2013
19:00
HC Metalurg Republic of Macedonia 26 – 16 Hungary SC Pick Szeged Avtokomanda, Skopje
Attendance: 5,000
Referees: Mažeika, Gatelis (LTU)
Manaskov 6 (13–11) Ancsin 5
  Report  

Second leg

1 September 2013
19:00
SC Pick Szeged Hungary 23 – 19 Republic of Macedonia HC Metalurg Városi Sportcsarnok, Szeged
Attendance: 3,200
Referees: Schulze, Tönnies (GER)
Šulc 7 (11–7) Atman 5
  Report  

HC Metalurg won 45–39 on aggregate.

Match 2

First leg

29 August 2013
19:00
Montpellier France 29 – 27 Poland Wisła Płock Arena Montpellier, Montpellier
Attendance: 3,000
Referees: Caçador, Nicolau (POR)
Accambray 8 (11–15) Ghionea 9
  Report  

Second leg

1 September 2013
16:00
Wisła Płock Poland 28 – 23 France Montpellier Orlen Arena, Płock
Attendance: 5,000
Referees: Jurinović, Mrvica (CRO)
Ghionea 8 (13–10) Guigou 5
  Report  

Wisła Płock won 55–52 on aggregate.

Match 3

A draw decided that Berlin played the first leg at home.[5]

First leg

21 August 2013
19:00
Füchse Berlin Germany 30 – 30 Germany HSV Hamburg Max-Schmeling-Halle, Berlin
Attendance: 7,128
Referees: Gousko, Repkin (BLR)
Horák, Igropulo 6 (18–15) Lindberg 6
  Report  

Second leg

23 August 2013
19:00
HSV Hamburg Germany 27 – 26 Germany Füchse Berlin O² World, Hamburg
Attendance: 6,220
Referees: Stark, Stefan (ROU)
Pfahl 6 (10–14) Petersen 8
  Report  

HSV Hamburg won 57–56 on aggregate.

References

  1. "Pots for the Qualification and the Group Phase draw confirmed". ehfcl.com. 2013-06-21.
  2. "Qualification groups determined". ehfcl.com. 2013-06-27.
  3. 1 2 3 "Qualification tournaments organisers announced". ehfcl.com. 10 July 2013. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  4. "New format announced for wild card qualification". ehfcl.com. 16 July 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  5. "Berlin to host the first leg of the Wild Card KO match". ehfcl.com. 2013-06-28.

External links

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