The qualification group 2 for the 2010 European Men's Handball Championship includes the national teams of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, Faroe Islands, Russia, Serbia and Switzerland.
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification | RUS | SRB | BIH | SUI | ITA | FRO | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Russia | 10 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 339 | 249 | +90 | 18 | Final tournament | — | 35–31 | 37–25 | 35–29 | 38–19 | 37–16 | |
2 | Serbia | 10 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 351 | 272 | +79 | 15 | 35–29 | — | 28–23 | 35–27 | 48–24 | 39–20 | ||
3 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 10 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 298 | 278 | +20 | 13 | 23–29 | 31–28 | — | 34–23 | 31–28 | 45–28 | ||
4 | Switzerland | 10 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 295 | 288 | +7 | 9 | 30–31 | 32–32 | 31–34 | — | 28–20 | 35–21 | ||
5 | Italy | 10 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 251 | 313 | −62 | 5 | 23–34 | 31–34 | 25–25 | 23–30 | — | 30–23 | ||
6 | Faroe Islands | 10 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 212 | 346 | −134 | 0 | 18–34 | 20–41 | 21–27 | 23–30 | 22–28 | — |
October 29, 2008 17:00 CET | Russia | 37 : 25 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Chekhov, Russia Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Gousko & Repkin |
Igropulo (8) | Report | (5) Harmandic | ||
October 29, 2008 19:00 CET | Faroe Islands | 20 : 41 | Serbia | Tórshavn, Faroe Islands Attendance: 700 Referees: Stenrand & Birch |
Hanusarson (5) | Report | (6) Curuvija, Vujin | ||
October 30, 2008 19:00 CET | Italy | 23 : 30 | Switzerland | Brixen, Italy Attendance: 400 Referees: Kostov & Kostov |
Skatar (7) | Report | (10) Liniger | ||
November 1, 2008 14:00 CET | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 45 : 28 | Faroe Islands | Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Attendance: 0 Referees: Chaskis & Tsakonas |
Toromanovic (8) | Report | (9) Hanusarson | ||
November 1, 2008 19:30 CET | Switzerland | 30 : 31 | Russia | Aarau, Switzerland Attendance: 2,200 Referees: Abrahamsen & Kristiansen |
Liniger (12) | Report | (9) Rastvortsev | ||
November 2, 2008 19:00 CET | Serbia | 48 : 24 | Italy | Niš, Serbia Attendance: 3,800 Referees: Horváth & Marton |
Curuvija (8) | Report | (5) Di Maggio | ||
November 26, 2008 17:00 CET | Russia | 37 : 16 | Faroe Islands | Chekhov, Russia Attendance: 1,500 Referees: Erdogan & Özdeniz |
Dibirov (7) | Report | (5) Kragesteen | ||
November 26, 2008 19:30 CET | Switzerland | 32 : 32 | Serbia | Zurich, Switzerland Attendance: 2,500 Referees: Dinu & Din |
Liniger (6) | Report | (7) Vujin | ||
November 27, 2008 19:00 CET | Italy | 25 : 25 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Siracusa, Italy Attendance: 1,000 Referees: Pavel & State |
Ghionea (7) | Report | (8) Terzic | ||
November 29, 2008 20:00 CET | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 34 : 23 | Switzerland | Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Attendance: 1,200 Referees: Lazaar & Reveret |
Hajdarevic (8) | Report | (5) Schmid | ||
November 30, 2008 19:00 CET | Italy | 30 : 23 | Faroe Islands | Agrigento, Italy Attendance: 700 Referees: Leyder & Jung |
Maione (7) | Report | (4) Olsen, Sörensen | ||
November 30, 2008 19:00 CET | Serbia | 35 : 29 | Russia | Niš, Serbia Attendance: 3,800 Referees: Kekes & Kekes |
Ilic (10) | Report | (6) Igropulo | ||
March 18, 2009 19:00 CET | Faroe Islands | 23 : 30 | Switzerland | Tórshavn, Faroe Islands Attendance: 300 Referees: Mäkinen & Jonsson |
Hanusarson (5) | Report | (11) Liniger | ||
March 18, 2009 20:00 CET | Italy | 23 : 34 | Russia | Trieste, Italy Attendance: 1,200 Referees: Cvetko & Kavalar |
Di Maggio (5) | Report | (7) Filippov | ||
March 19, 2009 20:00 CET | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 31 : 28 | Serbia | Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Attendance: 7,000 Referees: Brunovsky & Canda |
Stojanovic (6) | Report | (7) Ilic | ||
March 21, 2009 19:00 CET | Switzerland | 35 : 21 | Faroe Islands | Appenzell, Switzerland Attendance: 1,100 Referees: Ersan & Akman |
Report | ||||
March 22, 2009 17:00 CET | Russia | 38 : 19 | Italy | Sport Hall "Olimpiyskiy" Chekhov, Chekhov, Russia Attendance: 2,000 Referees: Katsikis & Michailidis |
Chernoivanov (5) | Report [ permanent dead link ] | (4) Costanzo | ||
March 22, 2009 19:00 CET | Serbia | 28 : 23 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Niš, Serbia Attendance: 3,800 Referees: Geipel & Helbig |
Ilic (13) | Report [ permanent dead link ] | (5) Obradovic | ||
June 10, 2009 13:00 CET | Faroe Islands | 18 : 34 | Russia | |
June 10, 2009 13:00 CET | Serbia | 35 : 27 | Switzerland | Zajecar, Serbia Attendance: 2300 Referees: Korres & Migas |
Bojinovic (7) | Report [ permanent dead link ] | (5) Schmid | ||
June 10, 2009 13:00 CET | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 31 : 28 | Italy | |
June 13, 2009 16:00 CET | Switzerland | 31 : 34 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
June 13, 2009 16:00 CET | Faroe Islands | 22 : 28 | Italy | |
June 13, 2009 16:00 CET | Russia | 35 : 31 | Serbia | Sport Hall "Olimpiyskiy" Chekhov, Chekhov, Russia Attendance: 1500 Referees: Buy & Pichon |
Ivanov (8) | Report [ permanent dead link ] | (7) Bojinovic | ||
June 17, 2009 20:00 CET | Switzerland | 28 : 20 | Italy | |
June 17, 2009 20:00 CET | Serbia | 39 : 20 | Faroe Islands | Zajecar, Serbia Attendance: 2300 Referees: Shal & Asgarov |
Vujin (6) | Report [ permanent dead link ] | (4) Joensen, Joensen | ||
June 18, 2009 20:00 CET | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 23 : 29 | Russia | |
June 20, 2009 23:00 CET | Faroe Islands | v | Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
June 20, 2009 23:00 CET | Italy | 31 : 34 | Serbia | Trieste, Italy Referees: Kouz & Zhoba |
Report [ permanent dead link ] | ||||
June 21, 2009 23:00 CET | Russia | v | Switzerland | |
The England men's national football team represents England in men's international football since the first international match in 1872. It is controlled by The Football Association (FA), the governing body for football in England, which is affiliated with UEFA and comes under the global jurisdiction of world football's governing body FIFA. Also known as The Three Lions, England competes in the three major international tournaments contested by European nations; the FIFA World Cup, the UEFA European Championship and the UEFA Nations League. England is one of only eight nations to have been crowned world champions, having won the 1966 edition of the World Cup.
The Portugal national football team has represented Portugal in international men's football competition since 1921. It is controlled by the Portuguese Football Federation, the governing body for football in Portugal.
The Denmark national football team represents Denmark in men's international football competition, and is controlled by the Danish Football Association (DBU), the governing body for the football clubs which are organized under DBU. Denmark's home stadium is Parken Stadium in the Østerbro district of Copenhagen, and their head coach is Kasper Hjulmand.
The Slovakia national football team represents Slovakia in men's international football competition and it is governed by the Slovak Football Association (SFZ), the governing body for football in Slovakia. Slovakia's home stadium from 2019 is the reconstructed Tehelné pole in Bratislava. Their head coach is Štefan Tarkovič. Slovakia is one of the newest national football teams in the world, having split from the Czechoslovakia national team after the dissolution of the unified state in 1993. Slovakia maintains its own national side that competes in all major tournaments since.
EuroBasket, also commonly referred to as the European Basketball Championship, is the main international basketball competition that is contested quadrennially, by the senior men's national teams that are governed by FIBA Europe, which is the European zone within the International Basketball Federation.
The Iceland national football team represents Iceland in men's international football. The team is controlled by the Football Association of Iceland, and have been a FIFA member since 1947 and an UEFA member since 1957. The team's nickname is Strákarnir okkar, which means Our Boys in Icelandic.
The Serbia national football team represents Serbia in men's international football competition. It is controlled by the Football Association of Serbia, the governing body for football in Serbia.
The Kazakhstan national football team represents Kazakhstan in men's international football and it is governed by the Football Federation of Kazakhstan. They split from the Soviet Union national football team after independence in 1991 and joined the Asian Football Confederation's Central Asian Football Federation. After failing to qualify for the 1998 and 2002 FIFA World Cups, they joined UEFA, but are yet to qualify for a FIFA World Cup or a UEFA European Championship.
The UEFA European Under-21 Championship is a biennial football competition contested by the European men's under-21 national teams of the UEFA member associations. Since 1992, the competition also serve as the UEFA qualification tournament for the Summer Olympics.
The Portugal national basketball team represents Portugal in men's international basketball competition. They are controlled by the Portuguese Basketball Federation. The national team has never had great success in the past at the international level, but they have qualified for the EuroBasket three times, most recently at EuroBasket 2011. Although, Portugal has yet to qualify for global tournaments such as the FIBA World Cup or the Summer Olympics.
The Serbia national basketball team represents Serbia in international basketball competition and is controlled by the Basketball Federation of Serbia. Serbia is currently ranked fifth in the FIBA World Rankings.
The Slovakia men's national basketball team represents Slovakia in international basketball competition. The supervising body is the Slovak Basketball Association (SBA).
The Iceland men's national under-21 football team is a national under-21 football team of Iceland and is controlled by the Football Association of Iceland. The team is considered to be the feeder team for the senior Icelandic men's national football team. Since the establishment of the UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship in 1978, the team has reached the Euro Championship finals on two occasions, most recently in 2021. In the 2011 tournament they were knocked out in the group stages.
The 2010 European Men's Handball Championship qualification matches took place from October 2008 to June 2009. In a new format approved by the European Handball Federation (EHF), only Austria and Denmark qualified automatically for the final tournament, while all other national teams had to play the qualification round to reach the European Championship.
The 2010 EHF European Men's Handball Championship was held in Austria from 19–31 January, in the cities of Vienna, Graz, Innsbruck, Linz and Wiener Neustadt.
This article describes the qualification for the 2012 European Men's Handball Championship.
The 2014 European Women's Handball Championship was the eleventh continental tournament for women's national teams, organized by the European Handball Federation. The second jointly hosted edition in the competition's history took place in Hungary and Croatia from 7 to 21 December 2014.
The 2022 European Men's Handball Championship qualification is a handball competition organised by the European Handball Federation (EHF) to determine 20 of the 24 men's national teams competing in the 2022 European Men's Handball Championship final tournament. They will join the other four teams already qualified: Hungary and Slovakia, as final tournament co-hosts, and Spain and Croatia, who finished in the top two positions in the previous championship.
The Men's EuroHockey Junior Championship is a men's international under-21 field hockey tournament organized by the European Hockey Federation. The tournament has been held since 1977 and serves as a qualification tournament for the Men's FIH Hockey Junior World Cup.