2011–12 SEHA League

2011-12 SEHA League season
League SEHA League
Sport Handball
Duration 10 September 2011 - 15 April 2012
Number of teams  Bosnia and Herzegovina (3 teams)
 Croatia (2 teams)
 Serbia (2 teams)
 Montenegro (2 teams)
 Macedonia (2 teams)
 Slovakia (1 team)
Regular season
Final Four

The 2011–12 season is the 1st inaugural season of the SEHA League and 12 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia and Slovakia participate in it.[1]

Team information

Venues and locations

Country Teams Team City Venue (Capacity) 2010-11 result
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 3
Bosna BH Gas Sarajevo KSC Skenderija (5,000) Bosnian league, 1st
Izviđač Mi Grupa Ljubuški Gradska sportska dvorana Ljubuški (4,000) Bosnian league, 3rd
Borac m:tel Banja Luka Sportska dvorana Borik (5,000) Bosnian league, 2nd
 Croatia 2
CO Zagreb Zagreb Arena Zagreb (15,200) Croatian league, 1st
Nexe Našice Našice Sportska dvorana kralja Tomislava (2,500) Croatian league, 2nd
 Serbia 2
Crvena zvezda Beograd SC Šumice (2,000) Serbian league, 2nd
Metaloplastika Šabac Dvorana Zorka (3,000) Serbian league, 4th
 Montenegro 2
Lovćen Cetinje Sala RK Lovćen (1,500) Montenegrin league, 2nd
Sutjeska Nikšić Dvorana SRC Nikšić (2,600) Montenegrin league, 3rd
 Macedonia 2
Vardar PRO Skopje SRC Kale (2,500) Macedonian league, 2nd
Metalurg Skopje Hala Avtokomanda (2,000) Macedonian league, 1st
 Slovakia 1
Tatran Prešov Prešov City Hall Presov (3,850) Slovak league, 1st


RK Partizan (Serbian league, 1st) and RK Mojkovac (Montenegrin league, 1st) declined participation.

Location of teams in the SEHA League 2011–12

Regular season

Standings

Team Pld W D L GF GA Diff Pts
1Croatia CO Zagreb (Q) 221723698542+15653
2Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO (Q) 221723579507+7253
3Slovakia Tatran Prešov (Q) 221714695577+11852
4Republic of Macedonia Metalurg (Q) 221435514430+8445
5Croatia Nexe Našice 221237628569+5939
6Montenegro Lovćen 2212010547562–1536
7Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja Luka 221129620576+4435
8Serbia Metaloplastika 226214493535–4220
9Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosna Sarajevo 226115407547–14019
10Bosnia and Herzegovina Izviđač 224117514589–7513
11Serbia Crvena zvezda 224018466567–10112
12Montenegro Sutjeska 223118474604–13010


Qualified for Final four

Pld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.

As of 6 April 2012[2]

Results

In the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.

Bosnia and Herzegovina BOR Bosnia and Herzegovina BOS Serbia CZV Bosnia and Herzegovina IZV Montenegro LOV Serbia MPL Republic of Macedonia MET Croatia NEX Montenegro SUT Slovakia TAT Republic of Macedonia VAR Croatia ZAG
Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja Luka 36–1435–2531–2625–2432–2226–3122–2223–2024–3337–2924–29
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosna Sarajevo24–23 10-010-018–2810-019–31126–2330–2428–3819–3225–392
Serbia Crvena zvezda20–2410-0 24–2610-023–2710-032–3720–2129–4022–2625–502
Bosnia and Herzegovina Izviđač20–2310-029–31 26–3033–2721–2626–2729–2727–3627–2824–29
Montenegro Lovćen31–3029–2526–2027–19 28–2220–2124–2231–2225–3724–2927–25
Serbia Metaloplastika28–2825–2233–2328–2221–25 17–2526–2910-027–2722–2322–31
Republic of Macedonia Metalurg26–2536–1128–1831–1632–1721–19 26–2631–2332–2418–1819–19
Croatia Nexe Našice28–2340–2132–2935–3432–2131–2329–27 32–1935–3621–2720–20
Montenegro Sutjeska22–3223–1729–2219–1920–2620–2222–2817–32 20–2624–2930–33
Slovakia Tatran Prešov31–3536–2536–2939–3034–3127–2010-028–2642–22 29–2032–31
Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO34–3026–2635–2426–2134–2927–2510-026–2533–2326–25 10-0
Croatia CO Zagreb37–32 38–2732–1935–2938–2428–2730–2536–2437–2735–2936–31 

Final four

Semifinals

14 April 2012
15:30
Metalurg Republic of Macedonia 26 – 25 Slovakia Tatran Prešov Arena Zagreb, Zagreb
Attendance: 500
Referees: Gubica, Milošević (CRO)
Marković 6 (15–11) Krištopāns 9

14 April 2012
18:00
CO Zagreb Croatia 29 – 30 Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO Arena Zagreb, Zagreb
Attendance: 2,500
Referees: Brunovsky, Canda (SVK)
Horvat 7 (14–13) Doder 6
  Report  

Match for third place

15 April 2012
15:30
CO Zagreb Croatia 31 – 29 Slovakia Tatran Prešov Arena Zagreb, Zagreb
Attendance: 1,000
Referees: Načevski, Nikolov (MKD)
Horvat 10 (14–11) Kopco 8
  Report  

Final

15 April 2012
18:00
Metalurg Republic of Macedonia 18 – 21 Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO Arena Zagreb, Zagreb
Attendance: 1,500
Referees: Gubica, Milošević (CRO)
Marković 7 (12–10) Sobol 6
  Report  

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.