Jump to content

2017–18 Handball-Bundesliga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kante4 (talk | contribs) at 07:34, 22 April 2018. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Handball-Bundesliga
Season2017–18
Matches played257
Goals scored4,405 (17.14 per match)
Top goalscorerCasper Ulrich Mortensen
(190 goals)
2018–19
All statistics correct as of 21 April 2018.

The 2017–18 Handball-Bundesliga is the 53rd season of the Handball-Bundesliga, Germany's premier handball league and the 41st season consisting of only one league. It runs from 24 August 2017 to 3 June 2018.

Teams

A total of 18 teams will be participating in this year's edition of the Bundesliga. Of these, 15 sides qualified directly from the 2016–17 season and the top three sides were directly promoted from the 2. Bundesliga: TuS Nettelstedt-Lübbecke, the champions; TV Hüttenberg, the runners-up; and the third-place finisher, TSG Friesenheim.

Team Location Arena Capacity
Füchse Berlin Berlin Max-Schmeling-Halle 9,000
TV Bittenfeld Bittenfeld Scharrena Stuttgart
Porsche-Arena
2,251
6,211
HC Erlangen Erlangen Arena Nürnberger Versicherung 8,308
SG Flensburg-Handewitt Flensburg Flens-Arena 6,300
TSG Friesenheim Ludwigshafen Friedrich-Ebert-Halle 2,250
Frisch Auf Göppingen Göppingen EWS Arena 5,600
VfL Gummersbach Gummersbach Schwalbe-Arena
Lanxess Arena
4,132
19,500
TSV Hannover-Burgdorf Hannover TUI Arena
Swiss Life Hall
9,850
4,150
TV Hüttenberg Hüttenberg Sporthalle Gießen-Ost 4,003
THW Kiel Kiel Sparkassen-Arena 10,285
SC DHfK Leipzig Leipzig Arena Leipzig 6,327
TBV Lemgo Lemgo Lipperlandhalle 4,790
TuS Nettelstedt-Lübbecke Lübbecke Merkur Arena 3,250
SC Magdeburg Magdeburg GETEC Arena 6,800
MT Melsungen Melsungen Rothenbach-Halle 4,300
GWD Minden Minden Kampa-Halle 4,059
Rhein-Neckar Löwen Mannheim SAP Arena 13,200
HSG Wetzlar Wetzlar Rittal Arena Wetzlar 4,421

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Rhein-Neckar Löwen 28 24 0 4 876 680 +196 48 Qualification to Champions League
2 SG Flensburg-Handewitt 29 22 2 5 856 730 +126 46
3 Füchse Berlin 28 20 3 5 805 728 +77 43 Qualification to EHF Cup
4 SC Magdeburg 28 20 2 6 837 749 +88 42
5 THW Kiel 29 20 1 8 842 732 +110 41
6 TSV Hannover-Burgdorf 29 19 3 7 813 766 +47 41
7 MT Melsungen 28 15 4 9 775 728 +47 34
8 SC DHfK Leipzig 29 15 3 11 755 720 +35 33
9 Frisch Auf Göppingen 30 10 7 13 774 791 −17 27
10 HSG Wetzlar 28 11 3 14 734 727 +7 25
11 TBV Lemgo 28 9 7 12 747 800 −53 25
12 GWD Minden 28 7 8 13 741 793 −52 22
13 HC Erlangen 29 7 7 15 713 789 −76 21
14 TV Bittenfeld 28 7 4 17 694 783 −89 18
15 VfL Gummersbach 28 7 0 21 730 827 −97 14
16 TuS Nettelstedt-Lübbecke 29 3 6 20 641 730 −89 12
17 TV Hüttenberg 29 3 6 20 717 844 −127 12 Relegation to 2. Bundesliga
18 TSG Friesenheim 29 4 3 22 688 791 −103 11
Updated to match(es) played on 21 April 2018. Source: DKB
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored.

Results

Home \ Away BER BIT ERL FLE FRI GÖP GUM HAN HÜT KIE LEM LEI LÜB MAG MEL MIN RNL WET
Füchse Berlin 26–24 31–25 26–30 31–24 33–19 31–24 25–25 36–23 24–20 23–23 32–29 40–31 29–24
TV Bittenfeld 24–24 29–31 25–22 22–26 26–33 30–30 24–36 22–27 28–29 31–32 29–27 27–27 23–29
HC Erlangen 23–27 25–29 20–29 22–22 28–29 25–22 34–28 26–26 20–31 24–28 27–26 22–22 23–23 26–26
SG Flensburg-Handewitt 29–21 28–17 29–21 32–29 34–22 27–27 27–35 25–22 30–27 37–23 29–24 33–29 27–22 34–27
TSG Friesenheim 19–25 24–25 24–30 25–32 28–24 21–27 38–23 21–25 24–21 21–35 23–23 23–26 21–21 18–26 31–29
Frisch Auf Göppingen 32–38 21–23 25–28 28–28 32–28 30–19 28–17 22–29 27–27 20–20 24–19 31–32 29–28 28–26 28–25
VfL Gummersbach 29–31 25–26 24–29 25–29 31–26 28–27 28–25 31–27 30–37 29–24 22–30 17–25 26–29 22–33
TSV Hannover-Burgdorf 33–27 27–20 25–19 32–29 28–28 28–22 32–25 28–27 27–25 28–26 32–30 26–23 36–29 23–26 29–27
TV Hüttenberg 28–30 23–28 24–27 23–30 28–27 19–29 25–37 20–24 24–22 27–28 26–30 23–36 22–22
THW Kiel 25–20 29–24 28–21 28–23 29–23 29–31 33–24 29–19 29–26 29–19 34–32 32–31 30–27 27–22 25–26
TBV Lemgo 22–25 24–21 24–24 23–32 29–25 29–27 27–29 31–30 33–29 27–27 26–26 26–26 24–26 28–26
SC DHfK Leipzig 30–31 24–24 34–24 25–22 23–20 33–28 27–24 25–23 26–25 26–19 26–26 22–23 30–27 20–17 23–29
TuS Nettelstedt-Lübbecke 21–29 24–21 27–27 28–29 25–25 26–27 21–25 26–26 21–33 22–25 20–31 19–22 29–22 28–38 17–23
SC Magdeburg 26–30 34–26 28–22 29–23 30–26 30–27 30–24 33–26 31–26 35–28 37–31 34–24 34–25 29–32 31–29
MT Melsungen 33–24 25–30 25–19 27–30 25–23 31–29 26–28 29–25 33–33 28–20 27–16 29–27 31–27 29–26 29–22
GWD Minden 29–37 33–22 30–34 29–26 26–26 29–24 29–29 35–28 24–24 26–29 21–18 26–30 24–35 26–24
Rhein-Neckar Löwen 37–23 33–23 33–22 32–27 31–20 36–26 35–23 31–21 30–28 38–17 36–27 27–22 34–25
HSG Wetzlar 29–23 26–23 19–24 30–21 34–27 30–25 29–26 23–23 30–22 22–23 25–20 27–29 24–24 24–31
Updated to match(es) played on 21 April 2018. Source: DKB
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top goalscorers

As of 22 February 2018[1]
Rank Player Team Goals
1 Denmark Casper Ulrich Mortensen TSV Hannover-Burgdorf 157
2 Germany Julius Kühn MT Melsungen 140
3 Switzerland Andy Schmid Rhein-Neckar Löwen 129
4 Austria Robert Weber SC Magdeburg 127
5 Germany Marcel Schiller Frisch Auf Göppingen 125
6 Denmark Rasmus Lauge Schmidt SG Flensburg-Handewitt 123
7 Sweden Niclas Ekberg THW Kiel 120
8 Germany Kai Häfner TSV Hannover-Burgdorf 115
9 Germany Holger Glandorf SG Flensburg-Handewitt 111
10 Denmark Michael Damgaard SC Magdeburg 108

References

  1. ^ "DKB Handball Bundesliga – Feldspieler". dkb-handball-bundesliga.de. Handball-Bundesliga. 27 December 2017. Retrieved 24 January 2018.