Men's EuroHockey Championship
The Men's EuroHockey Championship is an international men's field hockey competition organised by the European Hockey Federation for the top eight European national teams. It is the top division of the EuroHockey Championships. The tournament started in 1970. When the tournament is held close to the Summer Olympic games or the Men's FIH Hockey World Cup, the winner of the tournament is awarded a place in those competitions.
The tournament has been won by five different national teams: Germany has the most titles with nine, the Netherlands follow with seven, Spain has two wins and England and Belgium have one title each.
The most recent edition, held in Mönchengladbach, Germany, was won by the Germany who won their ninth title by defeating the Netherlands 4–1 in the shoot-out in the final.
Format
Since 2005 the tournament is played in Divisions, normally consisting of 8 teams. The top division, containing the eight best national teams, is called the EuroHockey Championship, below which there is the Men's EuroHockey Championship II, then the Men's EuroHockey Championship III, then the EuroHockey Championship IV.Qualification
National teams qualify for a division based on their performance in the previous competition. Each time the competition is held, it is with each division's previous top two teams promoted, and its previous bottom two teams demoted.- 1970–1974: No Qualification
- 1978–2003 and 2023–present: Qualification tournament
- 2005–2021: Via Men's EuroHockey Championship II and Men's EuroHockey Championship III and EuroHockey Championship IV
Summary
Assuming divisions consisting of the standard 8 teams, the teams are separated into two pools of four teams. In each pool the teams play one match against each of the other teams in their pool. The teams then go on to play classification matches based on their relative ranking from these pool matches to determine their final tournament position.Details
In each pool, A, and B, all the teams play each other once, with points awarded as follows:- 3 points for a win
- 1 point for a draw
- 0 points for a loss
- According to the number of matches they won, or else, if equal
- According to respective goal difference, or else
- According to 'goals for', or else
- If only two teams are involved, according to the result of the match played between those teams, or else
- According to the results of a penalty stroke competition between those teams, or else
- This procedure is repeated using the penalty stroke result until the teams can be ranked
- Second Pool A v first Pool B
- First Pool A v Second Pool B
The third and fourth placed teams in each pool are placed in Pool C in order to determine fifth to eighth places. Each team plays one match against the two teams that they did not previously play. The results from those games and from the game that was previously played against the other team in their original pool are used to rank each team according to the ranking procedure used in Pool A and B.