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Belarus

Division 1

Standings

Division 1 · 2025

Current Division 1 2025 standings with 9 teams. Meshkov Brest leads the table with 30 points after 16 matches, followed by SKA Minsk on 27 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal Diff
1Meshkov Brest16151590:400+190
2SKA Minsk16132586:455+131
3Masheka16124479:451+28
4Kronon1687558:556+2
5BGUFK-SKA1668521:574-53
6Gomel1668494:518-24
7MRHC1668446:466-20
8Orsha16114461:583-122
9RGUOR-200616015481:613-132

Results

Division 1 · 50
5th place23/05/2026–06/06/2026
Sat 06/06
Match Details
Wed 03/06
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Wed 27/05
Match Details
Sat 23/05
Match Details
Final24/05/2026–03/06/2026
Wed 03/06
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Wed 27/05
Match Details
Sun 24/05
Match Details
3rd Place23/05/2026–30/05/2026
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Wed 27/05
Match Details
Sat 23/05
Match Details
7th-9th places31/01/2026–30/05/2026
Gomel3333Orsha
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Wed 27/05
Match Details
Sat 31/01
Match Details
Losers stage31/01/2026–23/05/2026
Sat 23/05
Match Details
Orsha3335Gomel
Wed 20/05
Match Details
Wed 06/05
Match Details
Sat 02/05
Match Details
MRHC3726Orsha
Sat 28/03
Match Details
Wed 11/03
Match Details
Fri 27/02
Match Details
Orsha2633MRHC
Sat 21/02
Match Details
Sat 31/01
Match Details
Semi-finals25/04/2026
Sat 25/04
Match Details

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 9 teams in the Division 1. Meshkov Brest leads with 15 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonDrawnLostGoals ForGoals Against
Meshkov Brest1161501590400
SKA Minsk2161312586455
Masheka3161204479451
Kronon416817558556
BGUFK-SKA516628521574
Gomel616628494518
MRHC716628446466
Orsha8161114461583
RGUOR-20069160115481613

Past Seasons

Division 1

Browse 5 archived seasons of the Division 1, from 2021 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 19 Mar 2026

Founded1992Preceded bySoviet Men's Handball Championship

The Belarusian Handball Division 1 was established in 1992 as a successor to the Soviet Men's Handball Championship following Belarus's independence. The league initially operated under the framework of the newly formed Handball Federation of Belarus, which was established to govern the sport at both domestic and international levels. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the competition evolved from a regional Soviet-era structure into a modern European professional league. The emergence of HC Meshkov Brest as a dominant force from 2004 onwards transformed the league's competitive landscape, establishing a pattern of dominance that continues to define Belarusian handball. The league has maintained stability with a consistent format of nine clubs competing in a double round-robin system, creating a robust domestic foundation for European club competitions.

  • 1992 — Belarusian Handball Division 1 founded as successor to Soviet championship
  • 2004 — HC Meshkov Brest wins first championship, beginning era of dominance
  • 2014 — Meshkov Brest wins championship after three-year gap, resumes title run
  • 2024 — HC Meshkov Brest captures 16th championship title, most in league history
  • 2025 — SKA Minsk claims 11th title, breaking Meshkov Brest's consecutive dominance

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams9Relegation spots1European spots2

The Belarusian Handball Division 1 operates as a double round-robin format with each of the nine clubs playing every opponent twice—once at home and once away—for a total of 16 matches per team across the season. The championship is awarded to the club with the highest points total at the conclusion of the regular season, with no playoff system employed. Clubs earn two points for a victory and one point for a draw. At the conclusion of the season, the club finishing in last place is relegated to Division 2, while the top two clubs secure berths in European continental competitions, typically the EHF Champions League and EHF European League. This straightforward format emphasizes consistent performance across the entire campaign rather than knockout drama.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesHC Meshkov Brest (16)

The 2023 season recorded 36.31 goals per match on average across all Division 1 fixtures, the highest scoring rate in recent seasons, with 97.7% of matches featuring both teams scoring.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Meshkov Brest continues their pursuit of supremacy in the 2025 season, currently holding 30 points from 16 matches with a commanding 15-1 record and a goal differential of +190. The Brest-based club has demonstrated exceptional consistency, averaging 36.9 goals per match while conceding just 25 goals per contest—a defensive record that underscores their technical superiority. SKA Minsk, the defending champions from the 2024/25 campaign, sit in second place with 27 points from 16 matches, maintaining a 13-2 record but trailing Meshkov Brest by three points. The gap between the top two clubs has widened significantly, with Meshkov Brest's goal differential of +190 compared to SKA Minsk's +131 illustrating the gulf in performance between the two strongest competitors.

The title race has effectively become a two-club affair, with Masheka occupying third place with 24 points from 12 wins and 4 losses. However, Masheka's goal differential of +28 represents a stark contrast to the defensive prowess displayed by the top two clubs, suggesting that their position may be vulnerable as the season progresses. Kronon in fourth place has accumulated 17 points from 8 wins and 7 losses, maintaining mathematical hope for a title push but facing a significant nine-point deficit to the leaders. The middle of the table features BGUFK-SKA, Gomel, and MRHC, each with 14 points from 6 wins and 8 losses, creating a congested midfield where consistency will determine final standings.

The relegation battle has effectively been decided, with Orsha in eighth place holding just 3 points from 1 win and 14 losses, and RGUOR-2006 in ninth position with 1 point from 0 wins and 15 losses. Orsha's goal differential of -122 and RGUOR-2006's -132 demonstrate the vast gulf between the competitive elite and the struggling basement dwellers. The 2025 season has revealed a league increasingly stratified into tiers: the dominant Meshkov Brest, the competitive but secondary SKA Minsk and Masheka, a middle cluster of evenly matched sides, and two teams whose mathematical elimination from contention is merely a formality.

Meshkov Brest's Dominance and the Shifting Landscape of Belarusian Handball

HC Meshkov Brest's trajectory from their maiden championship in 2004 to their 16 total titles represents one of European handball's most sustained periods of excellence. The club's establishment in 2002 and rapid rise to prominence within just two years demonstrates the organizational sophistication and strategic investment that defined their approach. Between 2004 and 2013, Meshkov Brest captured 10 championships, establishing themselves as the undisputed force in Belarusian handball. After a brief three-year absence from the title, they returned in 2014 and subsequently won every championship from 2015 through 2024—an extraordinary run of consecutive dominance that reshaped the domestic competition.

However, the 2024/25 season marked a significant inflection point in the league's competitive dynamics. SKA Minsk's championship victory represents their 11th title and signals the emergence of a genuine challenger to Meshkov Brest's hegemony. SKA Minsk, with their own distinguished history in European competitions and consistent participation in the EHF Champions League, possesses the organizational infrastructure and player development pathways to sustain competitive pressure on Brest. The current season standings suggest that Meshkov Brest may reclaim the title, but the narrowing gap between the top clubs and the demonstrated ability of SKA Minsk to win championships indicates that the era of unchallenged Meshkov Brest dominance may be concluding.

Scoring Trends and Competitive Balance

The Belarusian Handball Division 1 has exhibited notable volatility in scoring patterns across recent seasons, with profound implications for match dynamics and betting markets. The 2023 season recorded an average of 36.31 goals per match—the highest in the dataset—with 97.7% of matches featuring both teams scoring, indicating an exceptionally open, high-scoring style of play. By contrast, the 2025 season has normalized to 29.89 goals per match, suggesting a reversion toward more defensively organized competition. This 18% reduction in average scoring, combined with a decrease in both-teams-scoring frequency from 97.7% to 95.7%, indicates that teams have implemented more structured defensive systems and disciplined tactical approaches.

The home advantage in Belarusian handball remains moderate but consistent, with home teams winning 55% of matches in the 2025 season compared to 41.7% away victories. This 13.3 percentage-point differential is slightly below the historical five-year average of approximately 22 percentage points, suggesting that away performance has improved relative to historical norms. The clean sheet percentage—matches where one team concedes zero goals—remains exceptionally low at 4.3%, reinforcing the observation that Belarusian handball is characterized by high-scoring, open play rather than defensive stalemates. These statistical patterns indicate that the league continues to prioritize attacking play while gradually implementing more sophisticated defensive structures.

European Competitiveness and International Relevance

The participation of Belarusian clubs in European continental competitions, particularly the EHF Champions League, has elevated the domestic league's profile and created feedback loops that strengthen the overall quality of competition. Meshkov Brest's repeated appearances in the EHF Champions League have exposed the club to elite European opponents and established benchmarks for tactical sophistication and player development. Similarly, SKA Minsk's European participation has contributed to their emergence as a championship contender and reinforced their organizational capabilities.

The European exposure of Belarusian clubs has also attracted international player recruitment, introducing tactical diversity and elevating technical standards throughout the league. Players returning from European competitions bring refined skills and advanced tactical understanding to domestic matches, creating a virtuous cycle of competitive improvement. However, the limited international broadcasting of the Belarusian Handball Division 1 outside Eastern European markets constrains the league's global profile and commercial development compared to Western European competitions. The lack of major international title sponsorships or global broadcast partnerships reflects both the league's regional focus and the limited commercial appeal of Eastern European handball to global audiences.

Structural Format and Tactical Implications

The double round-robin format with nine clubs creates a 16-match season that emphasizes consistency and sustained performance rather than peak performance in knockout stages. The two-point system for victories—rather than the three-point system employed in many modern competitions—reflects the league's historical continuity with traditional handball scoring conventions. This format rewards defensive solidity and match control, as teams cannot accumulate rapid point totals through dominant performances; instead, consistent winning records and minimal losses determine championships.

The relegation of a single club annually maintains competitive pressure throughout the season, as the ninth-place finisher faces definitive elimination from the top tier. The current season demonstrates this dynamic vividly, with Orsha and RGUOR-2006 already effectively eliminated from contention by mid-season. The qualification of the top two clubs for European competitions creates a secondary incentive structure beyond the championship, as clubs competing for European spots face different strategic calculations than those fighting for survival or pure championship ambition. This multi-layered competitive structure generates diverse tactical approaches and prevents the league from devolving into a purely binary championship race.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Belarusian Handball Division 1?

Nine clubs compete in the Belarusian Handball Division 1, each playing 16 matches in a double round-robin format across the season.

Which club has won the most Belarusian Handball Division 1 titles?

HC Meshkov Brest holds the record with 16 championship titles, including the 2024 season, establishing themselves as the most successful club in the league's history.

How does relegation work in the Belarusian Handball Division 1?

The club finishing in last place (ninth position) at the end of the regular season is relegated to the Belarusian Handball Division 2, while the top two clubs qualify for European competitions.

What is the current points system in the Belarusian Handball Division 1?

Clubs earn two points for a victory and one point for a draw. The championship is awarded to the club with the highest points total after all 16 matches are completed.

Do playoff matches determine the Belarusian Handball Division 1 champion?

No, the Belarusian Handball Division 1 does not use a playoff system. The champion is determined by the highest points total accumulated during the regular season.

Which European competitions do Belarusian Division 1 clubs participate in?

The top two finishing clubs in the Division 1 qualify for European continental competitions, typically competing in the EHF Champions League and EHF European League.

API data: 13 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026