1995–96 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1995–96 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup was the twentieth edition of EHF's competition for women's handball national cup champions. It ran from October 6, 1995, to May 12, 1996. Latvia made its debut, while Yugoslavia returned after 3 seasons of exclusion. Yugoslavia's faced Croatia's Kras Zagreb in the same week the Croatian War ended, with the Croats making it to the quarterfinals.[1]

The final confronted the 1991 European Cup and champions. TV Lützellinden, which had lost the final in the previous season, defeated Kras Zagreb to win its second Cup Winners' Cup and the last of its three European trophies. As of 2013 it remains the last German champion of the competition.

Results[]

Round of 32
October 6–15, 1995
Round of 16
November 10–19, 1995
Quarterfinals
January 14–21, 1996
Semifinals
March 23–30, 1996
Final
May 4–12, 1996
Lithuania Eglė Vilnius 15 23 38
Russia Rostselmash Rostov 24 30 54 Russia Rostselmash Rostov 24 27 51
Belarus 23 24 47 North Macedonia Pelister Bitola 14 23 37
North Macedonia Pelister Bitola 25 31 56 Russia Rostselmash Rostov 24 14 38
Denmark Ikast FS 31 13 44 Hungary Vasas Budapest (a) 17 21 38
Hungary Vasas Budapest 20 27 47 Hungary Vasas Budapest 30 16 46
Italy w/o Italy 17 14 31
Georgia (country) Hungary Vasas Budapest 25 11 36
Portugal 14 11 25 Croatia Kras Zagreb 19 18 37
Hungary Dunaferr Dunaújváros 34 31 65 Hungary Dunaferr Dunaújváros 34 35 69
Austria 18 20 38 Israel 9 15 24
Israel 21 24 45 Hungary Dunaferr Dunaújváros 26 19 45
Turkey 20 16 36 Croatia Kras Zagreb 20 28 48
Serbia and Montenegro 33 32 65 Serbia and Montenegro 22 19 41
Croatia Kras Zagreb 28 15 43 Croatia Kras Zagreb 19 23 42
Romania Rulmentul Brașov 14 24 38 Croatia Kras Zagreb 19 22 43
Slovenia Branik Maribor 19 22 41 Germany TV Lützellinden 28 22 50
Norway Byåsen IL 32 25 57 Norway Byåsen IL 30 27 57
Iceland 19 24 43 Iceland 14 18 32
Belgium 19 18 37 Norway Byåsen IL 24 22 46
Latvia 18 16 34 Ukraine Spartak Kyiv 19 26 45
Ukraine Spartak Kyiv 38 42 80 Ukraine Spartak Kyiv 30 29 59
Bulgaria 20 17 37 Spain 15 14 29
Spain 26 36 62 Norway Byåsen IL 18 23 41
Slovakia Jaspol Partizánske 15 17 32 Germany TV Lützellinden 27 31 58
Germany TV Lützellinden 29 25 54 Germany TV Lützellinden 37 39 76
Luxembourg 13 15 28 Greece 10 13 23
Greece 15 27 42 Germany TV Lützellinden 28 28 56
Netherlands 26 21 47 France 19 19 38
France 24 26 50 France 19 25 44
Poland 23 23 46 Poland 20 18 38
Switzerland 20 22 42

References[]

  1. ^ Results Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine in EHF's website
Retrieved from ""