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Historically, the women's Elitserien was dominated by IK Sävehof, with 17 championships. For the 2016–2017 season, the name of the league was changed to Svensk Handbollselit. [2] Until then, it was called Elitserien (English: the Elite League) (Swedish: Elitserien i handboll för damer). For the 2023–2024 season it changed name to ...
LFH Division 1 Féminine, known for sponsorship reasons as Ligue Butagaz Énergie, is the premier women's handball league in France. It is overseen by the Ligue Féminine de Handball (LFH), the governing body of French women's professional handball, under delegation from the French Handball Federation (FFHB). Founded in 1952, it is currently ...
Handbollsligan (literally, "The Handball league") is the highest league in the league system of Swedish handball, and comprises the top 14 Swedish handball teams. The first season began in 1931–32. [1] The season ends with a playoff.
The Sweden women's national handball team (Swedish: Sveriges damlandslag i handboll) is the national team of Sweden. It is governed by the Swedish Handball Federation ( Swedish : Svenska Handbollförbundet ) and takes part in international handball competitions.
The 2024–25 Women's EHF Champions League is the 32nd edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament, running from 7 September 2024 to June 2025. Győri Audi ETO KC are the defending champions.
The EHF Women's Champions League is the competition for the top women's handball clubs in Europe, organised annually by the European Handball Federation (EHF). It is the most prestigious tournament for clubs, with the champions of Europe's top national leagues participating.
Women’s World Cup 2023: Live scores, fixtures, results, tables and top scorers. France put itself in a commanding position to reach the last 16 of the Women’s World Cup after earning a hard ...
France women's national handball team; Medal record Olympic Games; 2020 Tokyo: Team: 2016 Rio de Janeiro: Team: 2024 Paris: Team: World Championship; 2003 Croatia: 2017 Germany: 2023 Denmark/Norway/Sweden: 1999 Denmark/Norway: 2009 China: 2011 Brazil: 2021 Spain: European Championship; 2018 France: 2020 Denmark: 2002 Denmark: 2006 Sweden: 2016 ...