Russia men's national handball team

The Russia national handball team (Russian: Сборная России по гандболу) is controlled by the Handball Federation of Russia. Russia is designated by IHF and EHF.

Russia
Shirt badge/Association crest
Information
AssociationHandball Federation of Russia
(Союз гандболистов России)
CoachVelimir Petković
Assistant coachValentin Buzmakov
Mikhail Izmailov
CaptainDaniil Shishkaryov
Colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
1st
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
2nd
Results
Summer Olympics
Appearances4 (First in 1996)
Best resultGold 1st (2000)
World Championship
Appearances21 (First in 1993)
Best resultGold 1st (1993, 1997)
European Championship
Appearances14 (First in 1994)
Best resultGold 1st (1996)
Last updated on Unknown.
Russia men's national handball team
Medal record
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2000 SydneyTeam
Bronze medal – third place2004 AthensTeam
World Championship
Gold medal – first place1993 Sweden
Gold medal – first place1997 Japan
Silver medal – second place1999 Egypt
European Championship
Gold medal – first place1996 Spain
Silver medal – second place1994 Portugal
Silver medal – second place2000 Croatia

In reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Handball Federation banned Russian and Belarus athletes and officials, and the European Handball Federation suspended the national teams of Russia and Belarus as well as Russian and Belarusian clubs competing in European handball competitions.[1] Referees, officials, and commission members from Russia and Belarus will not be called upon for future activities.[2] And new organisers will be sought for the YAC 16 EHF Beach Handball EURO and the Qualifier Tournaments for the Beach Handball EURO 2023, which were to be held in Moscow.[3]

History

Handball in Russia as one of the sports games appeared approx. in 1909. In the first period of its development the handball in Russia had two forms, 11 players form and 7 players form. In 1955 was set up the All-Union section (federation) of handball. By early 60s was finally approved a single form of handball game – 7 players form.

In reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Handball Federation banned Russian and Belarus athletes and officials, and the European Handball Federation suspended the national teams of Russia and Belarus as well as Russian and Belarusian clubs competing in European handball competitions.[4] Referees, officials, and commission members from Russia and Belarus will not be called upon for future activities.[5] And new organisers will be sought for the YAC 16 EHF Beach Handball EURO and the Qualifier Tournaments for the Beach Handball EURO 2023, which were to be held in Moscow.[6] In addition, it refused to allow competitions to be held in Russia.[7] The Russian Handball Federation failed in its appeal against the decision to exclude Russia's teams from continental competition, which was rejected by the European Handball Federation Court of Handball.[8]

Honours

Competition1st place, gold medalist(s)2nd place, silver medalist(s)3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Total
Olympic Games 1012
World Championship 2103
European Championship 1203
Total4318

Results

Summer Olympics

Year Round Position Pld W D L GS GA
19721988As  Soviet Union
Spain 1992As  Unified Team
United States 1996Preliminary round5th6402165132
Australia 2000Champions1st8701219195
Greece 2004Third place3rd8404214216
China 2008Preliminary round6th8314216214
United Kingdom 2012did not qualify
Brazil 2016
Japan 2020
Total4/71 Title3018111814757

World Championship

1993 Sweden Champions
1995 Iceland 5th place
1997 Japan Champions
1999 Egypt Runners-up
2001 France 6th place
2003 Portugal 5th place
2005 Tunisia 8th place
2007 Germany 6th place
2009 Croatia 16th place
2011 Sweden did not qualify
2013 Spain 7th place
2015 Qatar 19th place
2017 France 12th place
2019 Germany
Denmark
14th place
2021 Egypt 14th place (played as RHF Team)
2023 Poland
Sweden
Disqualified during qualification[lower-alpha 1]
2025 Croatia
Denmark
Norway
TBD
2027 Germany
  1. The EHF excluded Russia because of its invasion of Ukraine as part of the Russo-Ukrainian War.[9]

European Championship

Year Round Position GP W D L GS GA
Portugal 1994Runners-up27601172148
Spain 1996Champions17610172141
Italy 1998Fourth place47313179167
Croatia 2000Runners-up27502189175
Sweden 20025th/6th place57511166144
Slovenia 20045th/6th place57412206190
Switzerland 20065th/6th place67403210202
Norway 2008Preliminary round1430127488
Austria 2010Main round106105177194
Serbia 2012Preliminary round1530128289
Denmark 2014Main round96204168179
Poland 2016Main round96213160161
Croatia 2018did not qualify
Austria Norway Sweden 2020Preliminary round2230037691
Hungary Slovakia 2022Main round97313194190
Germany 2024Disqualified during qualification
Denmark Norway Sweden 2026Future event
Portugal Spain Switzerland 2028
Total14/181 title804153423712289

Team

Current squad

Squad for the 2022 European Men's Handball Championship.

No. Pos. Name Date of birth (age) Height App. Goals Club
1 GK Artyom Grushko (1993-06-20)20 June 1993 (aged 28) 1.93 m 2 0 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
3 LB Dmitrii Santalov (1996-04-07)7 April 1996 (aged 25) 1.96 m 37 105 Belarus Meshkov Brest
6 RW Daniil Shishkaryov (1988-07-06)6 July 1988 (aged 33) 1.90 m 145 356 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
10 CB Valentin Vorobev (1995-05-27)27 May 1995 (aged 26) 1.90 m 4 6 Russia CSKA Moscow
17 RB Alexander Kotov (1994-07-11)11 July 1994 (aged 27) 1.98 m 41 49 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
20 LB Mikhail Vinogradov (1997-04-04)4 April 1997 (aged 24) 1.94 m 10 6 Austria Bregenz Handball
23 LW Roman Ostashchenko (1992-09-26)26 September 1992 (aged 29) 1.87 m 48 46 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
24 RW Dmitry Kornev (1992-06-16)16 June 1992 (aged 29) 1.86 m 26 39 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
25 LB Evgenij Dzemin (1997-08-30)30 August 1997 (aged 24) 2.07 m 0 0 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
30 P Aleksandr Ermakov (1996-01-14)14 January 1996 (aged 25) 1.95 m 26 39 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
32 GK Andrei Vereshchagin (1997-01-22)22 January 1997 (aged 24) 1.98 m 2 0 Russia Permskie Medvedi
44 LW Igor Soroka (1991-05-27)27 May 1991 (aged 30) 1.80 m 74 211 Russia CSKA Moscow
76 P Radomir Vrachevich (1999-05-19)19 May 1999 (aged 22) 1.96 m 0 0 Russia Dinamo Viktor Stavropol
78 P Pavel Andreev (1992-07-19)19 July 1992 (aged 29) 1.97 m 28 59 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
87 GK Viktor Kireyev (1987-05-05)5 May 1987 (aged 34) 1.90 m 89 1 Russia CSKA Moscow
89 CB Dmitry Zhitnikov (1989-11-20)20 November 1989 (aged 32) 1.97 m 147 383 Poland Orlen Wisła Płock
98 RB Nikita Kamenev (1998-04-14)14 April 1998 (aged 23) 1.98 m 2 4 Russia Chekhovskiye Medvedi
99 LB Sergei Kosorotov (1999-06-16)16 June 1999 (aged 22) 2.00 m 43 118 Poland Orlen Wisła Płock

Coaching staff

HUR Management Personnel:Andrey Lavrov
Head Coach:Velimir Petković
Coaches:Valentin Buzmakov / Mikhail Izmailov
Videooperator:Andrei Seregin

Notable players

Statistics

Most capped players

Player Games Position Years
Andrey Lavrov320GK
Vyacheslav Atavin288OB
Vyacheslav Gorpishin270?
Alexey Rastvortsev251OB
Vitali Ivanov236CB
Eduard Koksharov226W
Dmitri Torgovanov219P
Dmitry Kovalyov213W
Timur Dibirov212W
Mikhail Chipurin208P
Vasily Kudinov196OB
Sergey Pogorelov194OB
Dmitry Filippov160+CB, W
Denis Krivoshlykov158W
Oleg Grams150GK
Pavel Sukosyan145GK
Talant Duyshebaev140CB
Egor Evdokimov132P
Alexey Kostygov131GK
Stanislav Kulinchenko125CB
Daniil Shishkarev122W
Dmitry Zhitnikov119CB
Alexander Chernoivanov116P
Samvel Aslanyan111OB
Konstantin Igropulo110OB
Pavel Atman107CB
Vasily Filippov101CB
Valery Gopin100+W
Oleg Kiselyov100+CB, OB
Oleg Grebnev100+P

Top scorers

Player Goals Average Position Years
Eduard Koksharov11104.91W
Alexey Rastvortsev8983.58OB
Talant Duyshebaev726+CB
Dmitri Torgovanov6893.15P
Vyacheslav Atavin600+OB
Timur Dibirov600W
Vitali Ivanov5222.21CB
Konstantin Igropulo505OB
Mikhail Chipurin505P
Denis Krivoshlykov4482.84W
Sergey Pogorelov4462.30OB
Dmitry Kovalyov439W
Vasily Kudinov300+OB
Dmitry Filippov300+CB, W
Aleksandr Tuchkin2993.25OB

References

  1. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  2. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  3. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  4. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  5. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  6. "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  7. "EHF Court of Handball rejects Russia appeal against ban".
  8. "EHF Court of Handball rejects Russia appeal against ban".
  9. "EHF decision on current competition structures". eurohandball.com. EHF. 4 March 2022. Retrieved 4 March 2022.
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