Handball at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's tournament

2000 Men's Olympic handball tournament
Tournament details
Host country  Australia
Dates 16–30 September
Teams 12 (from 5 confederations)
Venue(s) 1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions  Russia
Runner-up  Sweden
Third place  Spain
Fourth place  Yugoslavia
Next

The men's handball competition, one of two events of handball at the 2000 Summer Olympics, in Sydney, took place at The Dome (Sydney Olympic Park) during the preliminary round, quarter-finals, semi-finals and medal matches. A total of 180 players, distributed among twelve national teams, participated in this tournament.

Medalists

Gold Silver Bronze
 Russia (RUS)

Dmitry Filippov
Vyacheslav Gorpishin
Oleg Khodkov
Eduard Koksharov
Denis Krivoshlykov
Vasily Kudinov
Stanislav Kulinchenko
Dmitry Kuzelev
Andrey Lavrov
Igor Lavrov
Sergey Pogorelov
Pavel Sukosyan
Dmitri Torgovanov
Aleksandr Tuchkin
Lev Voronin

 Sweden (SWE)

Magnus Andersson
Martin Boquist
Martin Frändesjö
Mathias Franzén
Peter Gentzel
Andreas Larsson
Ola Lindgren
Stefan Lövgren
Staffan Olsson
Johan Petersson
Tomas Svensson
Tomas Sivertsson
Pierre Thorsson
Ljubomir Vranjes
Magnus Wislander

 Spain (ESP)

David Barrufet
Talant Duyshebaev
Mateo Garralda
Rafael Guijosa
Demetrio Lozano
Enric Masip
Jordi Núñez
Jesús Olalla
Juan Pérez
Xavier O'Callaghan
Antonio Carlos Ortega
Antonio Ugalde
Iñaki Urdangarín
Alberto Urdiales
Andrei Xepkin

Preliminary round

For the preliminary round, the twelve teams were distributed into two groups of six teams. Each team played against each of its five group opponents for a total of five matches. The four best-scoring teams advanced to the quarter-finals.

Group A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Points
 Russia5401129121+88
 Germany5311128113+157
 Yugoslavia5302130127+36
 Egypt5302122115+76
 South Korea5113128131–33
 Cuba5005128158–300
September 16, 2000
Germany 30 – 22 Cuba
Yugoslavia 25 – 24 South Korea
Russia 22 – 21 Egypt
September 18, 2000
South Korea 24 – 24 Germany
Egypt 22 – 25 Yugoslavia
Cuba 26 – 31 Russia
September 20, 2000
Russia 26 – 24 South Korea
Egypt 29 – 26 Cuba
Yugoslavia 22 – 28 Germany
September 22, 2000
South Korea 21 – 28 Egypt
Yugoslavia 33 – 26 Cuba
Germany 25 – 23 Russia
September 24, 2000
Cuba 28 – 35 South Korea
Germany 21 – 22 Egypt
Russia 27 – 25 Yugoslavia

Group B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Points
 Sweden5500155121+3410
 France5311120104+167
 Spain5302144126+186
 Slovenia5212137127+105
 Tunisia5104111117–62
 Australia5005106178–720
September 16, 2000
France 24 – 24 Slovenia
Spain 24 – 22 Tunisia
Sweden 44 – 23 Australia
September 18, 2000
Tunisia 17 – 20 France
Australia 23 – 39 Spain
Slovenia 30 – 32 Sweden
September 20, 2000
Sweden 27 – 18 Tunisia
Australia 20 – 33 Slovenia
Spain 23 – 25 France
September 22, 2000
Tunisia 34 – 24 Australia
Spain 31 – 28 Slovenia
France 23 – 24 Sweden
September 24, 2000
Slovenia 22 – 20 Tunisia
France 28 – 16 Australia
Sweden 28 – 27 Spain

Knockout stage

In this single-elimination stage, the first- and second-placed teams of one group played against the other group's fourth- and third-placed teams, respectively, to contest the quarter-final round. The winners advanced to the semi-finals, with the losing semi-finalists playing for the bronze medal match on the following day, and the final being played two days later.

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsGold medal final
 
          
 
 
 
 
 Russia33
 
 
 
 Slovenia22
 
 Russia29
 
 
 
 Serbia and Montenegro26
 
 France21
 
 
 
 Serbia and Montenegro26
 
 Russia28
 
 
 
 Sweden26
 
 Germany26
 
 
 
 Spain27
 
 Spain25
 
 
 
 Sweden32 Bronze medal final
 
 Sweden27
 
 
 
 Egypt23
 
 Serbia and Montenegro22
 
 
 Spain26
 

Classification playoffs

5th – 8th place

 
5th–8th place matches5th place match
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Slovenia27
 
 
 
 France29
 
 France22
 
 
 
 Germany25
 
 Germany24
 
 
 Egypt18
 
7th place match
 
 
 
 
 
 Slovenia28
 
 
 Egypt34

9th / 10th place

South Korea South Korea24–19Tunisia Tunisia

11th / 12th place

Cuba Cuba26–24Australia Australia

Rankings and statistics

Rank Team
1st, gold medalist(s) Russia
2nd, silver medalist(s) Sweden
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Spain
4 Yugoslavia
5 Germany
6 France
7 Egypt
8 Slovenia
9 South Korea
10 Tunisia
11 Cuba
12 Australia
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