2013–14 SEHA League

2013-14 SEHA League season
League SEHA League
Sport Handball
Duration 5 September 2013 - 24 March 2014
Number of teams  Bosnia and Herzegovina (1 team)
 Croatia (2 teams)
 Macedonia (2 teams)
 Montenegro (1 team)
 Slovakia (1 team)
 Serbia (2 teams)
 Belarus (1 team)
Regular season
Season champions Slovakia Tatran Prešov
Top scorer Timur Dibirov (110 goals)
Final Four
Finals champions Republic of Macedonia Vardar
  Runners-up Belarus Meshkov Brest

The 2013–14 season is the third season of the SEHA League and 10 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Slovakia, Serbia and Belarus participate in it.

Team information

Venues and locations

CountryTeamsTeamCityVenue (Capacity)
Belarus Belarus1
Meshkov BrestBrestUniversal Sports Complex Victoria (3,740)
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina1
BoracBanja LukaSportska dvorana Borik (3,500)
Croatia Croatia2
ZagrebZagrebArena Zagreb (16,800)
NašiceNašiceSportska dvorana kralja Tomislava (2,500)
Republic of Macedonia Macedonia2
MetalurgSkopjeAvtokomanda (2,000)
VardarSkopjeSRC Kale (2.500)
Montenegro Montenegro1
LovćenCetinjeSala RK Lovćen (2,020)
Serbia Serbia2
PartizanBeogradSC Banjica (2,500)
VojvodinaNovi SadSC Slana Bara (4,000)
Slovakia Slovakia1
TatranPrešovCity Hall Prešov (4,000)

Regular season

Standings

Team Pld W D L GF GA Diff Pts
1Slovakia Tatran Prešov181503605493+21245
2Croatia Zagreb181314567496+7140
3Republic of Macedonia Vardar Skopje181215530458+7237
4Belarus Meshkov Brest181215496461+3537
5Republic of Macedonia Metalurg Skopje18846462441+1928
6Croatia Nexe Našice18738511499+1224
7Serbia Vojvodina Novi Sad187011460497-3721
8Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja Luka185013428528–10015
9Montenegro Lovćen Cetinje183213459554–9511
10Serbia Partizan Belgrade182017430521–916

Results

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

Bosnia and Herzegovina BOR Republic of Macedonia VAR Serbia VOJ Croatia ZAG Montenegro LOV Republic of Macedonia MET Belarus MES Croatia NEX Serbia PAR Slovakia TAT
Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja LukaXXX20:2628:2724:2526:3322:2624:3231:2726:2127:29
Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO28:24XXX23:2533:2436:1921:2229:2429:2733:2634:37
Serbia Vojvodina22:2621:30XXX27:2930:2324:3024:3128:2421:2024:25
Croatia CO Zagreb44:2030:2940:29XXX38:2725:2926:2037:3036:2442:34
Montenegro Lovćen27:2322:4225:2834:35XXX23:2924:3024:3331:2822:39
Republic of Macedonia Metalurg36:1828:2829:2727:2719:19XXX25:2624:2426:2123:32
Belarus Meshkov Brest31:2723:2732:2321:1934:2827:24XXX26:2033:2828:30
Republic of Macedonia Nexe Našice33:1932:2522:2927:3126:2627:2329:29XXX29:1834:32
Serbia Partizan20:2227:2823:2530:3126:2323:2223:2725:30XXX28:32
Slovakia Tatran Prešov41:2127:2937:2631:2832:2927:2031:2243:3746:19XXX

Final four

Semifinals

11 April 2014
18:00
CO Zagreb Croatia 22 : 30 Republic of Macedonia Vardar SPENS, Novi Sad
Attendance: 2500
Referees: Ivan Mošorinski, Aleksandar Pandžić (SRB)
(10 : 12)

11 April 2014
20:30
Tatran Prešov Slovakia 30 : 31 Belarus Meshkov Brest SPENS, Novi Sad
Attendance: 4150
Referees: Nenad Nikolić, Dušan Stojković (SRB)
(16 : 14)

Match for third place

13 April 2014
16:00
Tatran Prešov Slovakia 28 : 36 Croatia CO Zagreb SPENS, Novi Sad
Attendance: 3900
Referees: Gjorgi Načevski, Slave Nikolov (MKD)
(12 : 18)

Finals

13 April 2014
18:30
Vardar Republic of Macedonia 29 : 27 Belarus Meshkov Brest SPENS, Novi Sad
Attendance: 5160
Referees: Matija Gubica, Boris Milošević (CRO)
(14 : 15)

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.