2017–18 | |
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Sport | Handball |
Teams | 28 (group stage) 31 (qualification) |
Website | ehfcl.com |
|
The 2017–18 EHF Champions League will be the 58th edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament and the 25th edition under the current EHF Champions League format. RK Vardar are the defending champions.
Twenty-eight teams will participate in the competition, divided in four groups. Groups A and B will be played with eight teams each, in a round robin, home and away format. The top team in each group will qualify directly for the quarter-finals, the bottom two in each group drop out of the competition and the remaining 10 teams qualify for the first knock-out phase.
In groups C and D, six teams will play in each group in a round robin format, playing both home and away. The top two teams in each group will then meet in a ‘semi-final’ play-off, with the two winners going through to the first knock-out phase. The remaining teams drop out of the competition.
12 teams will play home and away in the first knock-out phase, with the 10 teams qualified from groups A and B and the two teams qualified from groups C and D.
The six winners of the matches in the first knock-out phase will join with the winners of groups A and B to play home and away for the right to play in the VELUX EHF FINAL4.
The culmination of the season, the VELUX EHF FINAL4, will continue in its existing format, with the four top teams from the competition competing for the title.
28 teams were directly qualified for the group stage.
The qualification draw was held in Vienna, Austria and the group stage draw in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
The four teams play a semifinal and final to determine the last participant. Matches will be played on 2 and 3 September 2017.
Tatran Prešov will host the tournament.
The draw for the group stage was held on 30 June 2017 at 21:00 in the Ljubljana castle. The 28 teams were drawn into four groups, two containing eight teams (Groups A and B) and two containing six teams (Groups C and D). The only restriction is that teams from the same national association could not face each other in the same group. Since Germany qualified three teams, the lowest seeded side (Kiel) were drawn with one of the other two.
In each group, teams play against each other in a double round-robin format, with home and away matches.