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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