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The World Championship in team handball for men has been organized by the International Handball Federation since 1938.

History


In 1938, the first field handball world championship was played in Germany.

In 1946, at the initiative and invitation of Denmark and Sweden, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Sweden and Switzerland founded the International Handball Federation (IHF). The IHF's official birthday is 11 July.

Five months after the IHF was founded, the first official international match was played under its aegis, with Sweden beating Denmark 9-7 in Gothenburg on 6 November, 1946. In those days, the classic eleven-a-side outdoor game of field handball, so dear to the central Europeans, and the still-up-and-coming sport of seven-a-side handball, played indoors on a small court the form preferred in Scandinavia, were equally popular. Both disciplines had their fans: in 1955, 50,000 spectators watched the final of the field handball World Championships between Germany and Switzerland (25-13) in Berlin, but the indoor final between Sweden and Czechoslovakia in East Berlin in 1958, which ended 22-12, was also played in a packed hall in front of 6,500 spectators. The dominating nations at that time were Sweden, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Denmark.

The first official Handball Championship

The first World Championship took place in Germany in 1938, involving 10 teams from Europe. Throughout their history, the World Championships were dominated by teams from the former Soviet Union and Germany, with Romania and Yugoslavia third and fourth in this hall of fame.

Over the years, the organisation of the World Championships has changed. Initially, there were group games in both the preliminary and main rounds, but more recently a ruthless knockout system has been applied after the preliminary round, leaving 50 per cent of the teams out in the cold before the final.

The World Champions

{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="2"|World Champions Year  4 title  Sweden 1954*, 1958, 1990, 1999 Romania 1961, 1964, 1970, 1974 2 title West Germany 1938*, 1978 France 1995, 2001* Russia 1993, 1997 1 title Croatia 2003 Yugoslavia 1986 Czechoslovakia 1967 Spain 2005 Soviet Union 1982 *Winner in their own homeland.

Championships



Germany
Austria
Sweden
Denmark
Sweden
West Germany
Czechoslovakia
Switzerland
Sweden
Czechoslovakia
West Germany
Denmark
Romania
Czechoslovakia
Sweden
West Germany
Romania
Sweden
Czechoslovakia
West Germany
Czechoslovakia
Denmark
Romania
Soviet Union
Romania
East Germany
Yugoslavia
Denmark
Romania
East Germany
Yugoslavia
Poland
West Germany
Soviet Union
East Germany
Denmark
Soviet Union
Yugoslavia
Poland
Denmark
Yugoslavia
Hungary
East Germany
Sweden
Sweden
Soviet Union
Romania
Yugoslavia
Russia
France
Sweden
Switzerland
France
Croatia
Sweden
Germany
Russia
Sweden
France
Hungary
Sweden
Russia
Serbia and Montenegro
Spanien
France
Sweden
Serbia and Montenegro
Egypt
Croatia
Germany
France
Spain
Spain
Croatia
France
Tunisia
Year Host Final Third Place Match
Winner Score Runner-up 3rd Place Score 4th Place
1938
Details
Germany - -
1954
Details
Sweden 17-14 24-11
1958
Details
East Germany 22-12 16-13
1961
Details
West Germany 9-8
after extra time
17-14
1964
Details
Czechoslovakia 25-22 22-15
1967
Details
Sweden 14-11 21-19
after extra time
1970
Details
France 13-12
after extra time
29-12
1974
Details
East Germany 14-12 18-16
1978
Details
Denmark 20-19 19-15
1982
Details
West Germany 30-27
after extra time
23-22
1986
Details
Switzerland 24-22 24-23
1990
Details
Czechoslovakia 27-23 27-21
1993
Details
Sweden 28-19 26-19
1995
Details
Iceland 23-19 26-20
1997
Details
Japan 23-21 28-27
1999
Details
Egypt 25-24 27-24
2001
Details
France 28-25 27-17
2003
Details
Portugal 34-31 34-31
2005
Details
Tunisia 40-34 26-25
2007 Details Germany

External link


Team handball

VM i håndbold (mænd) | Handball-Weltmeisterschaft | Championnat du monde de handball masculin | Campionato mondiale di pallamano | Wereldkampioenschap Handbal Mannen | 世界男子ハンドボール選手権 | VM i handboll

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "World Men's Handball Championship".

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