Ikast Håndbold

(Redirected from Herning-Ikast Håndbold)

Ikast Håndbold is a Danish professional women's handball club based in Ikast. They have competed in Damehåndboldligaen, Denmark's primary handball league, since 1991.

Ikast Håndbold
Full nameIkast Håndbold
Founded20 June 1970
ArenaIBF Arena
Capacity3,000
PresidentJakob Mølgaard Christensen
Head coachKasper Christensen
CaptainStine Skogrand
LeagueBambusa Kvindeligaen
2023–244th
Club colours   
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away
Website
Official site
Location of HIH
Ikast Håndbold
Ikast Håndbold
Location of Ikast Håndbold

History

edit

The club was founded as Ikast FS Håndboldafdeling on 20 June 1970 as a merger of the handball departments of Ikast DUI and Ikast Skytte Gymnastik Forening. Their breakthrough came in 1991 when they won the Danish Cup and reached the top division, Dame Håndbold Ligaen. They saw success again in 1998 as they won their first and only Danish Championship gold.

At the beginning of November 2008, it was announced that the professional division of Ikast-Brande EH had been taken over by football club FC Midtjylland.[1][2] As a result, the team changed their name to FC Midtjylland Håndbold and switched colors from blue and yellow to red and black. In November 2017, it was announced that FC Midtjylland had sold off the handball team to a group of investors. From the 2018–19 season, they were renamed Herning Ikast Håndbold.[3]

Name

edit
  • 1997–1999: Ikast FS Elitehåndbold
  • 1999–2008: Ikast-Bording Elitehåndbold
  • 2008–2009: Ikast-Brande Elite Håndbold
  • 2009–2018: FC Midtjylland Håndbold
  • 2018–2022: Herning-Ikast Håndbold
  • 2022– : Ikast Håndbold

Results

edit
Ikast Håndbold celebrating their 2022–23 Women's EHF European League final win against Nykøbing Falster Håndboldklub.

Kits

edit

Team

edit

Current squad

edit
Squad for the 2024–25 season

Retired numbers

edit
FC Midtjylland Håndbold
No.PlayerPositionTenure
3 Tonje KjærgaardLine player1992–2004, 2007

Transfers

edit
Transfers for the season 2024–25

Staff members

edit
Current head coach since 2020, Kasper Christensen
  • Head coach: Kasper Christensen
  • Assistant coach: Christian Køhler
  • Team leader: Pernille Mosegaard
  • Team leader: Annelie Mortensen
  • Physiotherapist: Mads Skautrup Jacobsen
  • Physiotherapist: Christian Poulsen

Notable former players

edit

Head coach history

edit
Lars Friis-Hansen[4]1998–2001
Christian Dalmose[5]2001–2003
Morten Fjeldstad2004
Magnus Johansson[6][7]2004–2006
Ole Damgaard[8]2006–2007
Kenneth Jensen[9][10]2007–2011
Ryan Zinglersen[11][12]2011–2012
Helle Thomsen2012–2016
Kristian Kristensen[13][14]2016–2019
Mathias Madsen[15][16]2019–2020
Kasper Christensen[17]2020–present

ALPI Legends

edit

In November 2017, FC Midtjylland Håndbold introduced the ALPI Legends, an award presented annually to players, coaches and staffers who have meant something special to FC Midtjylland Håndbold through the time.[18]

Statistics

edit

Top scorers in the EHF Champions League

edit
Last updated on 24 March 2024[19]
RankNameSeasons

played

Goals
1 Stine Jørgensen4191
2 Veronica Kristiansen3182
3 Trine Østergaard5146
4 Louise Burgaard3117
5 Gro Hammerseng3111
6 Emma Friis3110
7 Markéta Jeřábková1100
8 Trine Troelsen399
9 Nycke Groot398
10 Kristine Andersen391

European record

edit

EHF Champions League

edit
SeasonCompetitionRoundClub1st leg2nd legAggregate
2013–14EHF Champions LeagueGroup stage
(Group B)
ŽRK Budućnost21–1915–221st place
FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria32–2326–25
SPR Lublin SSA37–2622–15
Main round
(Group 1)
ŽRK Vardar24–2822–244th place
Thüringer HC25–2423–24
IK Sävehof25–2429–29
Semifinal Győri ETO26–29
Third-place playoff ŽRK Vardar31–34
2015–16EHF Champions LeagueGroup stage
(Group C)
Győri ETO22–2226–213rd place
ŽRK Vardar15–2524–33
Hypo Niederösterreich33–2133–27
Main round
(Group 2)
ŽRK Budućnost18–2821–275th place
CSM București23–2822–24
IK Sävehof25–2124–32
2016–17EHF Champions LeagueGroup stage
(Group C)
Győri ETO27–2319–313rd place
CSM București24–2120–26
Rostov-Don25–2320–26
Main round
(Group 2)
Larvik HK24–2822–244th place
RK Krim28–1927–21
Team Esbjerg38–2621–22
Quarterfinals ŽRK Vardar26–2824–2650–54
2017–18EHF Champions LeagueGroup stage
(Group B)
Győri ETO24–2716–273rd place
Rostov-Don24–2120-27
Brest Bretagne Handball27–2323–22
Main round
(Group 1)
CSM București26–3124–294th place
Nykøbing Falster Håndboldklub24–2021–21
RK Krim24–2423–24
Quarterfinals ŽRK Vardar23–2425–3248–56
2023–24EHF Champions LeagueGroup stage
Group B
Team Esbjerg34–3534–37
Metz Handball39–3635–34
Vipers Kristiansand30–2632–31
CS Rapid București35–2730–29
Ferencvárosi TC36–3728–28
Zagłębie Lubin41–2935–26
RK Krim Mercator33–3234–28

EHF Cup Winners' Cup

edit
SeasonCompetitionRoundClub1st leg2nd legAggregate
2014–15EHF Cup Winners' CupRound 3 HC Kuban Krasnodar34–2331–1765–40
Round of 16 HCM Roman24–2029–2153–41
Quarterfinals SPR Lublin SSA35–2530–1865–43
Semifinals FTC-Rail Cargo Hungaria30–2331–2961–52
Finals Fleury Loiret22–2324–1946–42

EHF European League (EHF Cup)

edit
SeasonCompetitionRoundClub1st leg2nd legAggregate
2010–11EHF CupRound of 32 HC Naisa31–2331–2662–49
Round of 16 Le Havre28–1424–2352–37
Quarterfinals Team Esbjerg27–2124–2951–50
Semifinals VfL Oldenburg27–1925–2952–48
Final Team Tvis Holstebro24–2628–2152–47
2012–13EHF CupSecond qualifying round BM Alcobendas37–1437–1874–32
Round of 16 RK Zagorje31–2828–2259–50
Quarterfinals HC Kuban Krasnodar39–2126–2265–43
Semifinals Team Tvis Holstebro22–2924–1846–47
2018–19EHF CupRound 3 SCM Râmnicu Vâlcea22–1621–1943–35
Group B IK Sävehof29–2233–232nd place
Siófok KC22–3421–25
TusSies Metzingen31–2828–25
Quarterfinals RK Podravka Koprivnica34–2618–2452–50
Semifinals Team Esbjerg20–2316–3036–53
2019–20EHF CupRound 2 HC Gomel33–2121–2554–46
Round 3 Nykøbing Falster31–2623–2349–44
Group D SG BBM Bietigheim33–2526–261st place
HC Lada28–3825–20
Storhamar HE34–2724–26
Quarterfinals CS Gloria 2018 Bistrița-Năsăud28–2629–2657–52
Semi-finals RK Podravka KoprivnicaCancelled
2020–21EHF European LeagueGroup A Váci NKSE39–2938–261st place
Zvezda Zvenigorod34–2539–31
Paris 9225–2323–26
Quarterfinals HC Lada28–2531–2959–54
Semi-final (F4) Siófok KC34–36
Third place match (F4) Minaur Baia Mare31–33
2021–22EHF European LeagueRound 3 MTK Budapest34–2934–2768–56
Group C HC Lada34–2727–241st
Măgura Cisnădie31–2834–31
Storhamar HE32–2435–27
Quarterfinals SCM Râmnicu Vâlcea33–2839–3372–61
Semi-final (F4) SG BBM Bietigheim33–34
Third place match (F4) CS Minaur Baia Mare29–28
2022–23EHF European League
Winner
Group B Motherson Mosonmagyaróvár28–2634–261st
Neptunes de Nantes30–2033–28
Fana29–2335–24
Quarterfinals Siófok KC31–2130–2061–41
Semi-final (F4) Thüringer HC31–26
Final (F4) Nykøbing Falster Håndbold31–24

Kit manufacturers

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Peter Bruun (7 November 2008). "Changes in Ikast". European Handball Federation. Retrieved 30 December 2008.
  2. ^ "Official: FCM buys Ikast-Brande" (in Danish). TV 2 SPORT. 5 November 2008. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2008.
  3. ^ "Dansk storklub er blevet solgt og skifter navn" (in Danish). BT. 7 November 2017. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
  4. ^ "LARS FRIIS-HANSEN". www.nordjyske.dk (in Danish). 2002-11-17. Archived from the original on 2021-05-03. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  5. ^ "Ikast/Bording smider Christian Dalmose på porten". www.bt.dk (in Danish). 2003-12-31. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  6. ^ "Ikast-Bordings træner stopper før tid". www.bt.dk (in Danish). 2005-11-08. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  7. ^ "Tidligere Ikast-Bording-træner bliver cheftræner i norsk håndbold". Håndbold nyheder om dansk og udenlandsk håndbold, VM og EM (in Danish). 2019-10-02. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  8. ^ "Ole Damgaard overtager Ikast-Bording". Berlingske.dk (in Danish). 2005-12-28. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  9. ^ "Kenneth Jensen som spilleragent". Ikast-BrandeNyt (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  10. ^ "Ikast valgte Kenneth Jensen". TV2 Nord (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  11. ^ Austria, EHF MARKETING GmbH, Vienna. "Mix of talent and experience". championsleague.eurohandball.com. Retrieved 2021-05-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ "FCM dropper Ryan Zinglersen". Ikast-BrandeNyt (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  13. ^ "New name but Herning-Ikast Handbold remain strong". www.eurohandball.com. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  14. ^ "Herning-Ikast Håndbold har fundet sin nye cheftræner". TV MIDTVEST (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  15. ^ "Mathias Madsen stopper som cheftræner i HIH". www.herningikasthaandbold.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  16. ^ "Mathias Madsen bliver ny cheftræner i Herning-Ikast Håndbold". www.herningikasthaandbold.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  17. ^ "KASPER CHRISTENSEN - Career & Statistics | EHF". www.eurohandball.com. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  18. ^ "ALPI Legends: Ny pris skal hylde midtjyske håndbold-legender gennem tiderne" (in Danish). FC Midtjylland Håndbold. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
  19. ^ "European Handball Federation - Ikast Handbold". European Handball Federation.
General
edit