2012–13 SEHA League

2012-13 SEHA League season
League SEHA League
Sport Handball
Duration 12 September 2012 -
Number of teams  Bosnia and Herzegovina (3 teams)
 Croatia (2 teams)
 Macedonia (2 teams)
 Montenegro (1 team)
 Slovakia (1 team)
 Belarus (1 team)
Regular season
Final Four

The 2012–13 season is the 2nd season of the SEHA League and 10 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Slovakia and Belarus participate in it.

Team information

Venues and locations

Country Teams Team City Venue (Capacity)
Belarus Belarus 1
Meshkov Brest Brest Universal Sports Complex Victoria (3,740)
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina 3
Izviđač Ljubuški Gradska sportska dvorana Ljubuški (4,000)
Borac Banja Luka Sportska dvorana Borik (3,500)
Sloga Doboj Dvorana srednjoškolskog centra Doboj (700)
Croatia Croatia 2
Zagreb Zagreb Arena Zagreb (15,000)
Nexe Našice Sportska dvorana kralja Tomislava (2,500)
Montenegro Montenegro 1
Lovćen Cetinje Sala RK Lovćen (1,800)
Republic of Macedonia Macedonia 2
Vardar Skopje SRC Kale (2,500)
Metalurg Skopje Avtokomanda (2,000)
Slovakia Slovakia 1
Tatran Prešov City Hall Prešov (4,000)

Regular season

Standings

Team Pld W D L GF GA Diff Pts
1Belarus Meshkov Brest 181314568518+5040
2Republic of Macedonia Metalurg 181305471397+7439
3Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO 181134540462+7836
4Croatia Zagreb 181125516457+5935
5Slovakia Tatran Prešov 181125513471+4235
6Montenegro Lovćen 18927497523–2629
7Croatia Nexe Našice 18819501502-125
8Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja Luka 183213439530–9111
9Bosnia and Herzegovina Izviđač 183015417498–819
10Bosnia and Herzegovina Sloga 181116449553–1044


Qualified for Final four

Pld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.

As of 17 February 2013[1]

Results

In the table below the home teams are listed on the left and the away teams along the top.

Bosnia and Herzegovina BOR Bosnia and Herzegovina IZV Montenegro LOV Republic of Macedonia MET Belarus MES Croatia NEX Bosnia and Herzegovina SLO Slovakia TAT Republic of Macedonia VAR Croatia ZAG
Bosnia and Herzegovina Borac Banja Luka  21–20 28–28 20–30 28–33 19–20 26–25 30-36 22-2826–35
Bosnia and Herzegovina Izviđač 22-29 31–27 19-2727–31 30–2333–2628–31 21-3429–31
Montenegro Lovćen31–27 24–22   22-2429–2928–27 33-3030–2923–2130-28
Republic of Macedonia Metalurg31–1928–1832–19  28-2629–30 28-1830–19 26-2133–26
Belarus Meshkov Brest33–2634–28 33-30 28-26  30-25 38-2834–29 30–27 30–25
Croatia Nexe Našice33–25 27-2529–30 27–28 36–27 27–25 28–2527–2718-28
Bosnia and Herzegovina Sloga 25-25 29-1829–3323–2623–3726–32   29-3127–35 21–27
Slovakia Tatran Prešov29–22 10-0 36-2910–0*40–36 40-3633–26  28-2826–26
Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO36–2541–23 38-2927–2634–27 27-2536–2229–33 26–23
Croatia CO Zagreb 35-2125–23 30–22 25-19 29-3233–3135–1730–2825–25 

Final four

Semifinals

12 April 2013
17:00
Meshkov Belarus 29 – 31 Croatia CO Zagreb Boris Trajkovski Sports Center, Skopje
Attendance: 1,100
Referees: Nachevski, Nikolov (MKD)
(17–16)

12 April 2013
19:00
Metalurg Republic of Macedonia 21 – 22 Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO Boris Trajkovski Sports Center, Skopje
Attendance: 5,350
Referees: Gubica, Milošević (CRO)
(9–12)

Match for third place

13 April 2013
17:00
Meshkov Belarus 21 – 26 Republic of Macedonia Metalurg Boris Trajkovski Sports Center, Skopje
Attendance: 1,500
Referees: A. Konjičanin, D. Konjičanin (BIH)
(8–13)

Final

13 April 2013
19:00
CO Zagreb Croatia 25 – 24 Republic of Macedonia Vardar PRO Boris Trajkovski Sports Center, Skopje
Attendance: 5,500
Referees: Gousko, Repkin (BLR)
(10–11)

References

External links


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