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EHF European League

Standings

EHF European League · 2025

Current EHF European League 2025 standings with 32 teams. Flensburg-H. leads the table with 12 points after 6 matches, followed by CD Bidasoa Irun on 6 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffForm
Group A
1Flensburg-H.660218:180+38
WWWWW
2CD Bidasoa Irun633201:194+7
LWWLL
3St. Raphael633195:182+13
WLLWW
4Potaissa Turda606166:224-58
LLLLL
Group B
1Kiel660196:146+50
WWWWW
2Montpellier642195:168+27
LWWWW
3Ostrow Wielkopolski614157:198-41
DLLLL
4Bern605170:206-36
DLLLL
Group C
1Skanderborg AGF651214:168+46
WLWWW
2Granollers632169:175-6
WWLWD
3Slovan624181:189-8
LLWLL
4Minaur Baia Mare614162:194-32
LWLLD
Group D
1Porto651228:168+60
WWLWW
2Elverum642198:179+19
WWWLW
3HC Kriens633199:213-14
LLWWL
4Fram606165:230-65
LLLLL
Group E
1MT Melsungen660180:163+17
WWWWW
2Benfica633191:181+10
LLWWW
3Ferencvaros633173:190-17
WWLLL
4Karlskrona606184:194-10
LLLLL
Group F
1Vardar 1961651203:176+27
WWWLW
2Kristianstad641186:179+7
WWLWD
3Sesvete623181:195-14
LLWWD
4Toulouse606178:198-20
LLLLL
Group G
1Hannover-Burgdorf651196:173+23
WLWWW
2Fredericia632193:181+12
LWWWD
3Savehof622178:173+5
WWLLD
4Presov605172:212-40
LLLLL
Group H
1Nexe632175:169+6
WLWLD
2Kadetten Schaffhausen633176:161+15
WLLWL
3Partizan633147:162-15
LWLWW
4Ademar623155:161-6
LWWLD

Results

EHF European League · 50
Final31/05/2026
Sun 31/05
Match Details
3rd Place31/05/2026
Sun 31/05
Match Details
Semi-finals30/05/2026
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Sat 30/05
Match Details
Quarter-finals28/04/2026–05/05/2026
Tue 05/05
Match Details
Tue 05/05
Match Details
Kiel3429SONexe
Tue 05/05
Match Details
Tue 05/05
Match Details
Wed 29/04
Match Details
Tue 28/04
Match Details
Tue 28/04
Match Details
Nexe3330Kiel
Tue 28/04
Match Details
Group stage10/03/2026–07/04/2026
Tue 07/04
Match Details
Tue 07/04
Match Details
Tue 07/04
Match Details
Tue 07/04
Match Details
Tue 31/03
Match Details
Tue 31/03
Match Details
Tue 31/03
Match Details
Tue 31/03
Match Details
Tue 10/03
Match Details
Tue 10/03
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Tue 10/03
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Tue 10/03
Match Details
Tue 10/03
Match Details

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 32 teams in the EHF European League. Flensburg-H. leads with 6 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
Flensburg-H.16600218180
CD Bidasoa Irun26303201194
St. Raphael36303195182
Potaissa Turda46006166224
Kiel56600196146
Montpellier66402195168
Ostrow Wielkopolski76114157198
Bern86015170206
Skanderborg AGF96501214168
Granollers106312169175
Slovan116204181189
Minaur Baia Mare126114162194
Porto136501228168
Elverum146402198179
HC Kriens156303199213
Fram166006165230
MT Melsungen176600180163
Benfica186303191181
Ferencvaros196303173190
Karlskrona206006184194
Vardar 1961216501203176
Kristianstad226411186179
Sesvete236213181195
Toulouse246006178198
Hannover-Burgdorf256501196173
Fredericia266312193181
Savehof276222178173
Presov286015172212
Nexe296312175169
Kadetten Schaffhausen306303176161
Partizan316303147162
Ademar326213155161

Past Seasons

EHF European League

Browse 5 archived seasons of the EHF European League, 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 16 Mar 2025

Founded1981Preceded byIHF Cup

The competition was established in 1981 as the IHF Cup, serving as the second-tier European handball tournament below the European Cup (now Champions League). In 1993, it was rebranded as the EHF Cup under the newly formed European Handball Federation's governance. The competition underwent significant structural evolution, particularly in the 2000s when group stage formats were introduced and expanded. The most transformative change occurred in 2020/21 when the EHF Cup was rebranded as the EHF European League to better reflect its status as Europe's primary secondary competition and to enhance its commercial appeal. This rebranding coincided with an expansion of the competition format, increasing team participation and creating a more robust group-stage structure. The league has grown from a straightforward knockout format to a sophisticated multi-stage competition, now featuring qualification rounds, five regional groups, and a knockout phase that determines champions through a final tournament. German clubs have dominated the modern era, with SC Magdeburg, Frisch Auf Göppingen, and THW Kiel each winning four titles, while SG Flensburg-Handewitt has established itself as the current powerhouse with three consecutive titles in recent seasons.

  • 1981 — IHF Cup launched as Europe's second-tier handball tournament
  • 1993 — Competition rebranded as EHF Cup under newly formed European Handball Federation
  • 2000 — Group stage format introduced, expanding competition structure
  • 2020/21 — Rebranded as EHF European League with expanded 42-team format
  • 2023/24 — SG Flensburg-Handewitt wins first EHF European League title
  • 2024/25 — Flensburg achieves historic back-to-back championship victory

Competition Format 16 Mar 2025

Teams42

The EHF European League operates through a sophisticated multi-stage format designed to determine the champion through competitive group play followed by knockout rounds. The competition begins with a qualification round for lower-ranked teams, followed by a group stage where 42 teams are divided into five regional groups of 8-9 teams each. Teams play home-and-away matches within their group, earning 2 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. The top two teams from each group advance to a quarter-final playoff round, where 12 teams compete in a knockout format. The four surviving teams then contest the Final Four tournament, played over a single weekend at a neutral venue, where semi-finals determine the finalists competing for the championship title. This format ensures competitive balance while maintaining the tournament's prestige as Europe's premier secondary club handball competition.

Records 16 Mar 2025

Most titlesFrisch Auf Göppingen (4)All-time top scorerOdinn Thor Rikhardsson (110 goals in 2022/23 season)

The 2024/25 season produced the biggest victory margin in EHF European League Final history, with Flensburg's 7-goal triumph over Montpellier establishing a new standard for championship dominance.

Analysis 16 Mar 2025

Current Season Analysis

The Flensburg-H. has been dominated by CD Bidasoa Irun, who have cemented their status as Europe's premier secondary competition force. The German powerhouse completed an unprecedented back-to-back championship achievement, defeating Montpellier Handball 32–25 in a commanding Final Four performance that showcased both defensive intensity and attacking precision. Flensburg's victory margin of 7 goals represents the largest winning margin in EHF European League Finals history, demonstrating their comprehensive superiority throughout the tournament. With 6 points from 6 group stage matches, Flensburg topped Group 1 with a perfect 6–0 record, accumulating 189 goals while conceding just 157, establishing a +38 goal difference that reflected their dominance.

The title race featured compelling competition across all five groups, with THW Kiel and Hannover-Burgdorf emerging as strong contenders from the German contingent. Kiel matched Flensburg's perfect 6–0 group stage record in Group 1, though both teams ultimately faced the Final Four tournament format. Vardar 1961 from North Macedonia proved a significant challenger, leading Group 3 with 12 points and demonstrating that non-German clubs remain competitive at Europe's secondary level. Porto and Elverum both secured 8-point finishes in Group 2, establishing themselves as strong European performers, while Hannover-Burgdorf accumulated 8 points in Group 4 with a +18 goal difference, showcasing consistent excellence.

The relegation picture remained relatively stable, with CD Bidasoa Irun struggling significantly in Group 1, finishing with 0 wins from 6 matches and a -23 goal difference, indicating potential structural challenges. Granollers (Group 2) and Kadetten Schaffhausen (Group 4) similarly faced difficulties, securing only 2 and 4 points respectively, though the EHF European League's expanded format provides multiple pathways for competitive recovery through the playoff structure.

Ian Barrufet of MT Melsungen emerged as the season's leading individual scorer with 81 goals, though his team finished with a 3–3 record in the group stage. This scoring achievement highlights the tournament's capacity to showcase elite individual talent, even when team success remains elusive. The standout performer narrative extended to goalkeeper Kevin Møller of Flensburg, whose exceptional shot-stopping prowess throughout the Final Four tournament and particularly in the final match earned him recognition as the Finals MVP, exemplifying how championship success derives from comprehensive excellence across all positional groups.

The 2024/25 season's unexpected storyline centered on Montpellier's remarkable Final Four progression, where the French club emerged as finalists despite navigating a competitive group stage. Montpellier finished Group 1 with a 3–3 record and -6 goal difference, yet their playoff performances demonstrated championship pedigree and tactical sophistication. Their final appearance against Flensburg, despite the 7-goal deficit, represented a significant achievement for French handball and suggested that the competitive hierarchy extends beyond the traditional German dominance narrative, with clubs from France, Portugal, and Scandinavia establishing themselves as credible European challengers capable of sustained tournament runs.

German Dominance and the Modern EHF European League Landscape

The contemporary EHF European League reflects a pronounced competitive asymmetry, with German clubs establishing unprecedented dominance across the modern era. Since the competition's rebranding as the EHF European League in 2020/21, German teams have captured every championship title: SC Magdeburg (2020/21), SL Benfica's anomalous 2021/22 victory excepted, Flensburg-Handewitt (2023/24, 2024/25), and multiple German finalists across all seasons. This concentration of success stems from multiple structural factors: Germany's domestic Bundesliga maintains the world's highest attendance figures and most competitive club ecosystem, providing elite training environments and financial resources unavailable to most European competitors. The depth of German handball talent—evidenced by consistent representation of multiple German clubs in the Final Four—creates a self-reinforcing cycle where domestic competition drives excellence that translates to European dominance.

The 2024/25 season exemplified this phenomenon, with four German clubs (Flensburg, Kiel, Hannover-Burgdorf, and Melsungen) occupying prominent positions across multiple groups. Flensburg's back-to-back titles represent an achievement unmatched since the competition's modern rebranding, establishing them as the defining force in secondary European handball. However, the presence of strong Portuguese (Porto, Benfica), French (Montpellier), Norwegian (Elverum), and Scandinavian (Skanderborg AGF, Kristianstad) performers indicates that the competitive structure remains sufficiently robust to enable non-German progression, particularly for clubs with elite European pedigree and sustained investment in player development.

Structural Evolution and Competitive Format Innovation

The EHF European League's transformation from the traditional EHF Cup format to the modern league structure represents a deliberate strategic decision to enhance competitive integrity while expanding commercial appeal. The introduction of five regional groups—rather than the previous continental structure—creates geographic coherence that reduces travel burdens while maintaining competitive balance. The 42-team participation level establishes a substantial competitive tier below the 18-team EHF Champions League, creating a meaningful pathway for ambitious clubs seeking European competition without the financial and competitive barriers of the elite competition. This tiered structure mirrors successful models in other European sports, where second-tier competitions provide both financial viability and competitive opportunity for clubs operating below the absolute elite level.

The playoff system, culminating in a single-weekend Final Four tournament, generates concentrated competitive drama and media interest comparable to championship tournaments in other sports. This format innovation has enhanced the EHF European League's commercial profile, attracting broadcast partnerships across Europe's major markets and establishing digital viewership through EHFTV's platform, which reports 1 million+ annual viewers and 400,000+ unique users. The Final Four format also creates unpredictability—as demonstrated by Montpellier's 2024/25 final appearance despite a modest group stage record—ensuring that tournament momentum and tactical innovation can overcome regular-season performance metrics.

International Representation and Competitive Diversity

The EHF European League's 42-team structure encompasses representation from 20+ European nations, establishing it as a genuinely pan-European competition reflecting continental handball diversity. The 2024/25 season featured competitors from Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, North Macedonia, Croatia, Poland, Switzerland, Iceland, Hungary, and Slovenia, among others. This geographic distribution ensures that the competition serves as a development platform for handball nations operating outside the traditional elite (Germany, France, Spain, Scandinavia), providing clubs from emerging handball markets with European competitive exposure and financial benefits from EHF revenue distribution.

Portuguese clubs have emerged as consistent performers, with both Benfica and Porto establishing themselves as Final Four contenders across multiple seasons. Benfica's 2021/22 championship victory broke German dominance and demonstrated that non-traditional powers could achieve continental success through sustained investment and elite coaching. The presence of Spanish clubs (Granollers, CD Bidasoa Irun, Ademar) reflects Spain's historical handball tradition, though Spanish representation in the final stages has diminished relative to German and Portuguese competitors. Scandinavian clubs from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden continue to provide competitive opposition, drawing on strong domestic leagues and player development systems that feed talent into European competition.

Commercial Trajectory and Broadcasting Expansion

The EHF European League's commercial development reflects strategic positioning as Europe's premium secondary handball competition. The multi-territory broadcast deals spanning 2020–2030 establish a 10-year commitment from EHF partners, providing financial stability and guaranteed exposure across Europe's major markets. Free-to-air broadcast availability in Austria, Spain, Germany, Turkey, and the United Kingdom ensures public accessibility, while pay-TV partnerships with Viaplay (Scandinavia), Eurosport (France, Poland), and other regional broadcasters establish premium positioning within subscription sports packages. This dual-platform approach—combining free-to-air accessibility with premium pay-TV positioning—maximizes audience reach while generating differentiated revenue streams.

The EHFTV digital platform represents a significant innovation in handball media distribution, providing direct-to-consumer streaming that circumvents traditional broadcast intermediaries. The platform's reported 1 million+ annual viewers and 400,000+ unique users indicate substantial digital engagement, particularly among younger demographics and international audiences in territories without traditional handball television presence. This digital strategy positions the EHF European League advantageously within the evolving media landscape, where streaming platforms increasingly compete with traditional broadcasters for sports rights and audience attention.

Statistical Excellence and Individual Performance Benchmarks

The 2024/25 season's statistical records establish new performance benchmarks across multiple categories. Odinn Thor Rikhardsson's 110-goal achievement in the 2022/23 season remains the all-time single-season scoring record, establishing an elite performance standard that has not been matched despite subsequent seasons featuring equally competitive play. The 2024/25 season's top scorer, Ian Barrufet with 81 goals, demonstrates sustained excellence in offensive production, though the 29-goal differential from Rikhardsson's record suggests that individual scoring environments vary based on team composition, playing time, and tactical systems. Goalkeeper performance has emerged as increasingly significant, with Kevin Møller's Final MVP recognition highlighting elite shot-stopping as a championship determinant, particularly in high-pressure knockout scenarios where defensive intensity and goalkeeper excellence prove decisive.

The competitive points distribution across the 2024/25 group stage—with group leaders accumulating 8–12 points from 6 matches—reflects the expected outcome distribution under the 2-points-for-win system. Flensburg's 12-point perfect record and their +32 goal difference established them as statistical outliers, suggesting that championship-caliber teams maintain both consistency (perfect win record) and dominance (significant goal differential), characteristics that persist through the playoff stages and Final Four tournament. The presence of teams with 0 points (CD Bidasoa Irun) and minimal point accumulation (Granollers with 2 points) indicates that competitive stratification remains substantial, with elite and developing clubs occupying distinctly different performance tiers within the same competition.

Conclusion: The EHF European League's Established Position in European Handball

The EHF European League has successfully established itself as Europe's premier secondary handball competition, occupying a distinctive competitive position between the elite EHF Champions League and national domestic leagues. The 2024/25 season's achievements—particularly Flensburg's historic back-to-back championship and the record-setting 7-goal final victory margin—demonstrate that the competition maintains sufficient quality and prestige to attract elite European clubs and showcase championship-caliber handball. The continued German dominance, balanced against meaningful competition from Portuguese, French, and Scandinavian clubs, establishes a competitive hierarchy that rewards sustained excellence while remaining accessible to ambitious clubs from secondary handball nations.

The competition's evolution from the traditional EHF Cup format to the modern EHF European League structure reflects strategic positioning for the contemporary sports media landscape, where geographic group structures, concentrated playoff tournaments, and digital streaming accessibility drive both competitive integrity and commercial appeal. With 44 seasons of continuous operation, established broadcast partnerships spanning 2020–2030, and an expanding international audience, the EHF European League has secured its position as an indispensable component of European handball's competitive ecosystem, providing financial opportunities, international exposure, and championship aspirations for clubs operating at the secondary tier of continental competition.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the EHF European League?

The EHF European League features 42 teams divided into five regional groups of 8-9 teams each. Teams qualify through their national federations based on their domestic league standings and previous European performance.

Who has won the most EHF European League titles?

Frisch Auf Göppingen, SC Magdeburg, and THW Kiel each hold the record with 4 titles. SG Flensburg-Handewitt is the current dominant force with 3 consecutive titles, including back-to-back championships in 2023/24 and 2024/25.

What is the format of the EHF European League?

The competition begins with qualification rounds, followed by a group stage where teams play home-and-away matches within regional groups. The top 12 teams advance to quarter-finals, with the Final Four tournament determining the champion through semi-finals and a championship match.

When was the EHF European League founded?

The competition was founded in 1981 as the IHF Cup, rebranded as the EHF Cup in 1993, and renamed the EHF European League in 2020/21. It has operated continuously for 44 seasons as Europe's second-tier handball tournament.

How many European spots does the EHF European League winner receive?

The EHF European League winner qualifies directly for the EHF Champions League group stage the following season. Other top finishers and the runner-up also receive European competition berths depending on their domestic league standings and EHF rankings.

What is the biggest win in EHF European League history?

SG Flensburg-Handewitt defeated Montpellier Handball 32–25 in the 2024/25 final, establishing a 7-goal victory margin that represents the largest winning margin in EHF European League Finals history.

API data: 13 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 16 Mar 2025