2019_Men's_EuroHockey_Championship_II

2019 Men's EuroHockey Championship II

2019 Men's EuroHockey Championship II

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The 2019 Men's EuroHockey Championship II was the 8th edition of the Men's EuroHockey Championship II, the second level of the European field hockey championships organized by the European Hockey Federation. It was held from 28 July until 3 August 2019 in Cambrai, France.[1] The tournament also served as a direct qualifier for the 2021 EuroHockey Championship, with the winner France and runner-up Russia qualifying.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Host country ...

The hosts France won their first EuroHockey Championship II title by defeating Russia 4–0 in the final. Austria won the bronze medal by defeating Poland 4–1.[2]

Qualified teams

The following eight teams, shown with pre-tournament world rankings, competed in this tournament.[3]

More information Dates, Event ...

Format

The eight teams were split into two groups of four teams. The top two teams advanced to the semi-finals to determine the winner in a knockout system. The bottom two teams played in a new group with the teams they did not play against in the group stage. The last two teams were relegated to the EuroHockey Championship III.

Results

All times are local, CEST (UTC+2).

Preliminary round

Pool A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) matches won; 3) goal difference; 4) goals for; 5) head-to-head result; 6) field goals for.[4]
More information Russia, 3–1 ...
More information Austria, 2–0 ...

More information Ukraine, 3–5 ...
More information Russia, 2–2 ...

More information Austria, 2–0 ...
More information Ukraine, 3–5 ...

Pool B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) matches won; 3) goal difference; 4) goals for; 5) head-to-head result; 6) field goals for.[4]
(H) Hosts
More information Poland, 4–0 ...
More information France, 7–0 ...

More information Czech Republic, 1–1 ...
More information Poland, 1–2 ...

More information Czech Republic, 0–0 ...
More information France, 3–1 ...

Fifth to eighth place classification

Pool C

The points obtained in the preliminary round against the other team are taken over.

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) matches won; 3) goal difference; 4) goals for; 5) head-to-head result; 6) field goals for.[4]
More information Ukraine, 1–0 ...
More information Italy, 1–1 ...

More information Italy, 3–2 ...
More information Czech Republic, 1–6 ...

First to fourth place classification

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
2 August
 
 
 Russia2
 
3 August
 
 Poland0
 
 Russia0
 
2 August
 
 France4
 
 France (s.o.)1 (4)
 
 
 Austria1 (3)
 
Third place
 
 
3 August
 
 
 Poland1
 
 
 Austria4

Semi-finals

More information Russia, 2–0 ...

More information France, 1–1 ...

Third and fourth place

More information Poland, 1–4 ...

Final

More information Russia, 0–4 ...

Statistics

Final standings

More information Rank, Team ...

  Qualified for the 2021 EuroHockey Championship

  Relegated to the EuroHockey Championship III

Goalscorers

There were 76 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 3.8 goals per match.

7 goals

5 goals

  • Ukraine Andrii Koshelenko

4 goals

  • Italy Agustin Nunez

3 goals

  • Austria Alexander Bele
  • Austria Michael Körper
  • Italy Julien Dallons
  • Russia Marat Khairullin
  • Ukraine Oleh Polishchuk

2 goals

  • France Theophile Ponthieu
  • France Blaise Rogeau
  • Poland Maciej Janiszewski
  • Russia Sergey Lepeshkin
  • Russia Alexey Sobolevskiy

1 goal

  • Austria Bernhard Schmidt
  • Austria Benjamin Stanzl
  • Austria Florian Steyrer
  • Austria Leon Thörnblom
  • Austria Fabian Unterkircher
  • Belarus Uladzislau Belavusau
  • Belarus Illia Krysiuk
  • Belarus Ivan Lutsevich
  • Belarus Yauheni Mikheichyk
  • Czech Republic Kryštof Bodnár
  • Czech Republic Lukáš Plochý
  • Czech Republic Martin Seeman
  • France Maximilien Branicki
  • France Simon Martin Brisac
  • France Victor Charlet
  • France Hugo Genestet
  • France Charles Masson
  • France Etienne Tynevez
  • Italy Fabio Blom
  • Italy Pietro Lago
  • Italy Julian Montone
  • Poland Mateusz Hulbój
  • Poland Michał Kasprzyk
  • Poland Adrian Krokosz
  • Poland Jacek Kurowski
  • Russia Georgii Arusiia
  • Russia Pavel Golubev
  • Russia Andrey Kuraev
  • Russia Mikhail Proskuriakov
  • Russia Alexander Skiperskiy
  • Ukraine Bohdan Kovalenko
  • Ukraine Maksym Onofriiuk
  • Ukraine Viacheslav Paziuk
  • Ukraine Oleh Polishchuk
  • Ukraine Vitalii Shevchuk

Source: FIH

See also


References

  1. "EUROHOCKEY CHAMPIONSHIP II, MEN". eurohockey.org. 22 March 2018. Archived from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  2. "France Claims the EuroHockey Championship II, Men". eurohockey.org. European Hockey Federation. 3 August 2019. Archived from the original on 9 August 2019. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  3. "Teams". tms.fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 20 December 2018.

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