2018 Women's EuroHockey
Indoor Championship II|
Host country | Belgium |
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City | Brussels |
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Dates | 19–21 January 2018 |
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Teams | 8 (from 1 confederation) |
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Champions | Belgium (1st title) |
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Runner-up | Austria |
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Third place | England |
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Matches played | 20 |
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Goals scored | 111 (5.55 per match) |
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Top scorer(s) | Laurine Delforge (8 goals) |
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Best player | Laurine Delforge |
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The 2018 Women's EuroHockey Indoor Championship II was the 12th edition of the tournament. It was held from 19 to 21 January 2018 in Brussels, Belgium.[1]
Belgium won the tournament for the first time after topping the pool. Along with Belgium, Austria qualified to the 2020 EuroHockey Indoor Nations Championship as the two highest ranked teams.[2]
Qualified Teams
The following teams, shown with pre-tournament world rankings, participated in the 2018 EuroHockey Indoor Championship II.[3]
Results
All times are local (UTC+1).
Preliminary round
Pool A
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
[4]
Umpires: Fanneke ALkemade (NED) Magali Sergeant (BEL)
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Umpires: Abby MacArthur (WAL) Lena McCrae (SCO)
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Umpires: Fanneke Alkemade (NED) Cristina Pérez (ESP)
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Umpires: Montserrat Solórzano (ESP) Magali Sergeant (BEL)
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Umpires: Montserrat Solórzano (ESP) Sophie Bockelmann (GER)
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Umpires: Claire Druijts (NED) Abby MacArthur (WAL)
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Pool B
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
[4]
Umpires: Rachel Williams (ENG) Sophie Bockelmann (GER)
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Umpires: Claire Druijts (NED) Kamile Mockaityte (LTU)
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Umpires: Lena McCrae (SCO) Claire Druijts (NED)
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Umpires: Rachel Williams (ENG) Abby MacArthur (WAL)
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Umpires: Magali Sergeant (BEL) Rachel Williams (ENG)
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Umpires: Lena McCrae (SCO) Kamile Mockaityte (LTU)
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Classification round
Pool C
Pos
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Team
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Pld
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W
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D
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L
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GF
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GA
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GD
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Pts
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1
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Lithuania
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3
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2
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0
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1
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16
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7
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+9
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6
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2
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Sweden
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3
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2
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0
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1
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8
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6
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+2
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6
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3
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Scotland
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3
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1
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0
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2
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9
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7
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+2
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3
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4
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Wales
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3
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1
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0
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2
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3
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16
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−13
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3
|
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
[4]
Lithuania
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9–0
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Wales
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Kartanovic 3' Juodyte 4', 22', 26' Kukliene 6', 15' Caikauskaite 23' Juraite 31' Adomaviciute 32'
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Report
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Umpires: Montserrat Solórzano (ESP) Magali Sergeant (BEL)
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Umpires: Cristina Pérez (ESP) Sophie Bockelmann (GER)
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Umpires: Montserrat Solórzano (ESP) Cristina Pérez (ESP)
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Umpires: Kamile Mockaityte (LTU) Lena McCrae (SCO)
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Pool D
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
[4]
Umpires: Fanneke Alkemade (NED) Kamile Mockaityte (LTU)
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Umpires: Claire Druijts (NED) Rachel Williams (ENG)
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Umpires: Claire Druijts (NED) Fanneke Alkemade (NED)
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Umpires: Rachel Williams (ENG) Abby MacArthur (WAL)
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Awards
Statistics
Final standings
As per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.
Goalscorers
There were 111 goals scored in 20 matches, for an average of 5.55 goals per match.
8 goals
7 goals
6 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
Alexandra Sandner
Lisa Steyrer
Corinna Zerbs
Marie Ronquetti
Ugne Chmeliauskaite
2 goals
Marianna Pulter
Katharina Hefter
Charlotte Englebert
Dolores Peranic
Viktoria Šomin
Esme Burge
Sandra Adomaviciute
Dovile Juriate
Kotryna Kartanovic
Erlanda Nomeikaite
Lena Lindström
Heather Francis
1 goal
Martina Laginja
Stefania Podpera
Lucie Breyne
France de Mot
Emeline Massart
Marijana Franić
Una Litvic
Anamarija Šomin
Lydia MacDonell
Alice Wills
Kotryna Caikauskaite
Louise Campbell
Christina Hernvall
Klara Moberg
Gunaj Zulfiyeva
Megan Lewis-Williams
Source: FIH
References
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Championship | |
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Championship II | |
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Championship III |
- Brescia 2003
- Sofia 2006
- Sheffield 2008
- Alanya 2010
- Gondomar 2012
- Sveti Ivan Zelina 2014
- Vantaa 2016
- Nicosia 2018
- Santander 2020
- Nicosia 2022
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Championship IV | |
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Summer sports & indoor sports | |
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Winter sports | |
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Cue & mind sports | |
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Motor sports | |
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