Romania women's national handball team
Romania | |||
---|---|---|---|
Information | |||
Association | Romanian Handball Federation | ||
Coach | Ambros Martín | ||
Most caps | Mariana Tîrcă (335) | ||
Most goals | Mariana Tîrcă (2043) | ||
Ranking | #5 (209 points) | ||
Colours | |||
| |||
Results | |||
Summer Olympics | |||
Appearances | 4 (First in 1976) | ||
Best result | 4th (1976) | ||
World Championship | |||
Appearances | 23 (First in 1957) | ||
Best result | 1st (1962) | ||
European Championship | |||
Appearances | 11 (First in 1994) | ||
Best result | 3rd (2010) | ||
Last updated on Unknown. |
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
World Championship | ||
1956 West Germany | ||
1960 Netherlands | ||
1962 Romania | ||
1973 Yugoslavia | ||
2005 Russia | ||
2015 Denmark | ||
European Championship | ||
2010 Denmark/Norway |
Romanian women's national team is the handball team, supervised by the Romanian Handball Federation and that represents Romania in the international matches.
As of 2017 it is the only team in the world that had qualified for all World Championships.[1]
Results
Olympics
- 1976 Olympics: 4th
- 2000 Olympics: 7th
- 2008 Olympics: 7th
- 2016 Olympics: 9th
World Championship
Handball (outdoor)
Handball (indoor)
- 1957 World Women's Handball Championship: 9th
- 1962 World Women's Handball Championship: Winner
- 1965 World Women's Handball Championship: 6th
- 1971 World Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 1973 World Women's Handball Championship: 2nd
- 1975 World Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 1978 World Women's Handball Championship: 7th
- 1982 World Women's Handball Championship: 5th
- 1986 World Women's Handball Championship: 5th
- 1990 World Women's Handball Championship: 7th
- 1993 World Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 1995 World Women's Handball Championship: 7th
- 1997 World Women's Handball Championship: 12th
- 1999 World Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 2001 World Women's Handball Championship: 17th
- 2003 World Women's Handball Championship: 10th
- 2005 World Women's Handball Championship: 2nd
- 2007 World Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 2009 World Women's Handball Championship: 8th
- 2011 World Women's Handball Championship: 13th
- 2013 World Women's Handball Championship: 10th
- 2015 World Women's Handball Championship: 3rd
- 2017 World Women's Handball Championship: 10th
European Championship
- 1994 European Women's Handball Championship: 10th
- 1996 European Women's Handball Championship: 5th
- 1998 European Women's Handball Championship: 11th
- 2000 European Women's Handball Championship: 4th
- 2002 European Women's Handball Championship: 7th
- 2004 European Women's Handball Championship: 7th
- 2008 European Women's Handball Championship: 5th
- 2010 European Women's Handball Championship: 3rd
- 2012 European Women's Handball Championship: 10th
- 2014 European Women's Handball Championship: 9th
- 2016 European Women's Handball Championship: 5th
- 2018 European Women's Handball Championship: Qualified
GF World Cup
- GF World Cup '05: 4th
- GF World Cup '06: 2nd
- GF World Cup '07: 5th
- GF World Cup '08: 8th
- GF World Cup '09: Winner
- GF World Cup '10: Winner
Team
Current squad
The squad chosen for the preparation before the 2018 European Championship.[2]
Head coach:
|
|
Notable players
Several Romanian players have seen their individual performance recognized at international tournaments.
- All-Star Team
- Irene Nagy-Klimovski, 1956 World Championship; 1960 World Championship;
- Doina Furcoi-Solomonov, 1975 World Championship;
- Mariana Tîrcă, 1995 World Championship;
- Luminiţa Dinu, 2000 European Championship; 2005 World Championship;
- Valentina Ardean-Elisei, 2005 World Championship; 2008 European Championship; 2015 World Championship
- Ionela Stanca, 2007 World Championship;
- Ramona Farcău, 2008 Summer Olympics;
- Cristina Neagu, 2010 European Championship; 2014 European Championship; 2016 European Championship; 2015 World Championship
- Top scorers
- Carmen Amariei, 1999 World Championship (67 goals)
- Simona Gogîrlă, 2000 European Championship (68 goals)
- Ramona Farcău, 2008 Summer Olympics (56 goals)
- Cristina Vărzaru, 2009-2010 EHF Women's Champions League (101 goals)
- Cristina Neagu, 2010 European Championship (53 goals), 2015 World Championship (63 goals), 2014-2015 EHF Women's Champions League (102 goals)
- Others
Results and fixtures
Win Draw Loss
2018
2018 European Women's Handball Championship qualification
Russia |
30-25 | |||
2018 European Women's Handball Championship qualification
Russia |
25-26 | |||
2018 European Women's Handball Championship qualification
Austria |
25-28 | |||
2018 European Women's Handball Championship qualification
Portugal |
28-32 | |||
Friendly
Romania B |
23-32 | |||
Friendly
Poland B |
32-12 | |||
See also
References
- ↑ "Echipa României de handbal feminin, singura echipă din lume calificată la toate edițiile Campionatelor Mondiale" (in Romanian). Retrieved March 8, 2014.
- ↑
External links
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.