With an average of 61.1 goals per game – the highest in the history of the competition – the preliminary round of the M18 EHF EURO 2022 concluded Sunday in Podgorica.
While powerhouses like Spain, Croatia, Germany, Sweden and Denmark all made it through, some high-profile teams like France and Slovenia failed to make the cut, after losing all their three matches.
- boasting the best attack in the competition with 116 goals in three matches, Spain won their group D following a 40:33 win against Sweden in the last match
- after conceding a loss in the first match in group A, Germany qualified for the main round with a crucial 35:31 win against Iceland, which eliminated the latter team
- with their 25:24 win against Croatia, Portugal finished No. 1 in group B, having started a M18 EHF EURO for the first time in history with three straight wins
- 17-year-old left back Oli Mittun scored 13 goals in Faroe Islands’ historic 29:24 win against France, improving his overall tally in the tournament to 37 goals in three matches
- all three medallists from last year’s M19 EHF EURO – Germany, Croatia and Spain – made it to the main round, but the finalists Germany and Croatia will start with zero points
- the two main round groups are as follows:
- M1: Hungary (2 points), Portugal (2); Croatia (0), Germany (0)
- M2: Spain (2), Norway (2), Denmark (0), Sweden (0)
Four teams start the main round with two points
One team from the eight that are still in the hunt for the gold medal has never won a M18 EHF EURO medal before: Norway. In fact, Norway and Denmark are the only two nations that have not won the competition in the past, though Denmark appeared in three finals, most recently in 2008. This time, Norway have swept their opponents – Denmark, Serbia and Slovenia – in the preliminary round and will start the main round with two points, but face Spain and Sweden next.
The four group winners – Hungary, Portugal, Norway, and Spain – are all riding three-game winning streaks before the start of the main round, as they are looking to secure a semi-finals berth over the next two matches.
Four sides – Poland, Italy, Slovenia and, most surprisingly, France – ended the preliminary round losing all three matches. Champions in 2014 and 2016, France have become the most unexpected casualty of the preliminary round as they conceded 104 goals, the second largest amount in the competition, with the loss against the Faroe Islands especially painful.