Sweden men's national handball team

The Sweden men's national handball team (Swedish: Sveriges herrlandslag i handboll) is controlled by the Swedish Handball Association. Its most successful periods were under coaches Curt Wadmark (1948–1967) and Bengt Johansson (1988–2004). The team under Bengt Johansson, nicknamed Bengan Boys in Sweden, is regarded as one of the finest national teams in the history of the sport with players like Tomas Svensson, Staffan Olsson, Magnus Wislander and Stefan Lövgren. From 1990 through 2002 the team reached the medal round in every championship (6 World Championships, 5 European Championships and 3 Olympic Games, earning 13 medals in total) and qualified for a record 8 championship finals in a row 1996–2002.

Sweden
Information
AssociationSwedish Handball Association
(Svenska Handbollförbundet)
CoachGlenn Solberg
Assistant coachMichael Apelgren
Most capsMagnus Wislander (386)
Most goalsMagnus Wislander (1191)
Colours
1st
2nd
Results
Summer Olympics
Appearances8 (First in 1972)
Best result 2nd (1992, 1996, 2000, 2012)
World Championship
Appearances26 (First in 1938)
Best result 1st (1954, 1958, 1990, 1999)
European Championship
Appearances15 (First in 1994)
Best result 1st (1994, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2022)
Last updated on Unknown.
Sweden men's national handball team
Medal record
Olympic Games
1992 BarcelonaTeam
1996 AtlantaTeam
2000 SydneyTeam
2012 LondonTeam
World Championship
1954 Sweden
1958 East Germany
1990 Czechoslovakia
1999 Egypt
1964 Czechoslovakia
1997 Japan
2001 France
2021 Egypt
1938 Germany
1961 West Germany
1993 Sweden
1995 Iceland
European Championship
1994 Portugal
1998 Italy
2000 Croatia
2002 Sweden
2022 Hungary/Slovakia
2018 Croatia
2024 Germany
World Outdoor Championship
1948 France
1952 Switzerland
1959 Austria

Sweden is the most successful nation at the European Men's Handball Championship with 5 titles, and has won the most medals in the history of the World Men's Handball Championship with a total tally of 12 medals (as of 2023, this is a record shared with France). Conversely, Sweden has yet to win an Olympic title despite participating in 4 finals (Sweden participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics in a demonstration match, defeating Denmark 19–11). The team has also won the World Cup 3 times, the Supercup 2 times, and were Intercontinental Cup winners in 2000.

Honours

CompetitionTotal
Olympic Games 0404
World Championship 44412
European Championship 5117
Total99523

Competitive record

  Champions    Runners-up    Third place    Fourth place  

Olympic Games

Games Round Position Pld W D L GF GA GD
1936 Berlin did not enter
Not held from 1948 to 1968
1972 Munich Match for 7th place 7th of 16 6 2 2 2 82 87 −5
1976 Montreal did not qualify
1980 Moscow
1984 Los Angeles Match for 5th place 5th of 12 6 4 0 2 145 134 +11
1988 Seoul Match for 5th place 5th of 12 6 4 0 2 133 109 +24
1992 Barcelona Runners-up 2nd of 12 7 6 0 1 165 130 +35
1996 Atlanta Runners-up 2nd of 12 7 6 0 1 182 141 +41
2000 Sydney Runners-up 2nd of 12 8 7 0 1 240 197 +43
2004 Athens did not qualify
2008 Beijing
2012 London Runners-up 2nd of 12 8 5 0 3 228 186 +42
2016 Rio de Janeiro Group stage 11th of 12 5 1 0 4 132 131 +1
2020 Tokyo Quarterfinals 5th of 12 6 4 0 2 177 176 +1
2024 Paris qualified
2028 Los Angeles to be determined
2032 Brisbane
Total 10/17 0 Titles 59 39 2 18 1484 1291 +193

World Championship

World Championship record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA GD
1938 Germany Third place 3rd of 4 3 1 0 2 8 13 −5
1954 Sweden Champions 1st of 6 3 3 0 0 56 36 +20
1958 East Germany Champions 1st of 16 6 6 0 0 138 74 +64
1961 West Germany Third place 3rd of 12 6 5 0 1 89 73 +16
1964 Czechoslovakia Runners-up 2nd of 16 6 3 0 3 104 90 +14
1967 Sweden Match for 5th place 5th of 16 6 4 0 2 118 112 +6
1970 France Match for 5th place 6th of 16 6 3 0 3 69 68 +1
1974 East Germany Preliminary round 10th of 16 6 3 0 3 111 113 −2
1978 Denmark Second round 8th of 16 6 2 0 4 121 125 −4
1982 West Germany Second round 11th of 16 7 2 1 4 159 157 +2
1986 Switzerland Fourth place 4th of 16 7 5 0 2 174 153 +21
1990 Czechoslovakia Champions 1st of 16 7 6 0 1 177 143 +34
1993 Sweden Third place 3rd of 16 7 6 0 1 166 136 +30
1995 Iceland Third place 3rd of 24 9 8 0 1 251 201 +50
1997 Japan Runners-up 2nd of 24 9 7 0 2 253 187 +66
1999 Egypt Champions 1st of 24 9 8 1 0 282 202 +80
2001 France Runners-up 2nd of 24 9 8 0 1 263 207 +56
2003 Portugal Second round 13th of 24 7 5 0 2 204 191 +13
2005 Tunisia Main round 11th of 24 9 4 1 4 275 234 +41
2007 Germanydid not qualify
2009 Croatia Main round 7th of 24 9 6 0 3 277 232 +45
2011 Sweden Fourth place 4th of 24 10 6 0 4 272 241 +31
2013 Spaindid not qualify
2015 Qatar Round of 16 10th of 24 6 3 1 2 157 133 +24
2017 France Quarter-finals 6th of 24 7 5 0 2 233 166 +67
2019 Denmark/Germany Main round 5th of 24 9 7 0 2 273 222 +51
2021 Egypt Runners-up 2nd of 32 9 6 2 1 276 218 +58
2023 Poland/Sweden Fourth place 4th of 32 9 7 0 2 299 237 +62
2025 Croatia/Denmark/NorwayQualified
2027 GermanyTo be determined
2029 France/Germany
// 2031 Denmark/Iceland/Norway
Total27/324 Titles18712965248033964+839

European Championship

European Championship record
Year Round Position Pld W D L GF GA GD
1994 Portugal Champions 1st of 12 7 7 0 0 172 133 +39
1996 Spain Fourth place 4th of 12 7 4 0 3 170 156 +14
1998 Italy Champions 1st of 12 7 6 0 1 182 158 +24
2000 Croatia Champions 1st of 12 7 7 0 0 198 167 +31
2002 Sweden Champions 1st of 16 8 7 0 1 235 191 +44
2004 Slovenia Main round 7th of 16 7 4 0 3 211 203 +8
2006 Switzerlanddid not qualify
2008 Norway Match for 5th place 5th of 16 7 4 1 2 208 190 +18
2010 Austria Preliminary round 15th of 16 3 0 0 3 78 84 −6
2012 Serbia Main round 12th of 16 6 1 2 3 157 168 −11
2014 Denmark Main round 7th of 16 6 4 0 2 166 158  +8
2016 Poland Match for 7th place 8th of 16 7 2 2 3 173 168 +5
2018 Croatia Runners-up 2nd of 16 8 4 0 4 218 216 +2
2020 Austria/Norway/Sweden Main round 7th of 24 7 4 0 3 182 169 +13
2022 Hungary/Slovakia Champions 1st of 24 9 7 1 1 252 221 +31
2024 Germany Third place 3rd of 24 9 6 0 3 282 255 +27
2026 Denmark/Norway/SwedenQualified as co-host
2028 Portugal/Spain/SwitzerlandTo be determined
Total15/165 titles1056763228842637+247
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty throws.
**Gold background color indicates that the tournament was won. Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Team

Current squad

Squad for the 2024 European Championship.[1][2]

Appearances and goals correct as of 7 January 2024.

Head coach: Glenn Solberg

No. Pos. Name Date of birth (age) Height App. Goals Club
2 LB Jonathan Carlsbogård (1995-04-19) 19 April 1995 1.95 m 59 112 Barça
5 P Max Darj (1991-09-27) 27 September 1991 1.91 m 110 121 Füchse Berlin
11 RW Daniel Pettersson (1992-05-06) 6 May 1992 1.79 m 79 188 SC Magdeburg
12 GK Andreas Palicka (1986-07-10) 10 July 1986 1.89 m 150 16 Paris Saint-Germain
13 RW Sebastian Karlsson (1995-01-21) 21 January 1995 1.78 m 4 15 Montpellier Handball
15 LW Hampus Wanne (1993-12-10) 10 December 1993 1.85 m 85 347 Barça
16 GK Tobias Thulin (1995-07-05) 5 July 1995 1.98 m 49 0 GOG Håndbold
19 CB Felix Claar (1997-01-05) 5 January 1997 1.92 m 63 152 SC Magdeburg
22 LW Lucas Pellas (1995-08-28) 28 August 1995 1.83 m 60 191 Montpellier Handball
23 RB Albin Lagergren (1992-09-11) 11 September 1992 1.86 m 100 296 SC Magdeburg
24 CB Jim Gottfridsson (1992-09-02) 2 September 1992 1.92 m 144 465 SG Flensburg-Handewitt
28 CB Jonathan Edvardsson (1997-04-07) 7 April 1997 1.86 m 17 7 TSV Hannover-Burgdorf
30 GK Simon Möller (2000-07-02) 2 July 2000 1.90 m 2 0 IK Sävehof
32 P Oscar Bergendahl (1995-03-08) 8 March 1995 1.92 m 45 72 SC Magdeburg
33 RB Lukas Sandell (1997-02-03) 3 February 1997 1.91 m 47 106 Telekom Veszprém
35 P Andreas Nilsson (1990-04-12) 12 April 1990 1.96 m 145 344 Telekom Veszprém
42 LB Eric Johansson (2000-06-28) 28 June 2000 1.97 m 29 89 THW Kiel
49 LB Karl Wallinius (1999-01-14) 14 January 1999 1.99 m 19 21 THW Kiel

Notable players

Coaches

# Coaches Period
1 Herbert Johansson1938–1948
2 Curt Wadmark1948–1967
3 Roland Mattsson1967–1974
4 Bertil Andersén1974–1979
5 Ingemar Eriksson1979–1980
6 Caj-Åke Andersson1980–1982
7 Roger "Ragge" Carlsson1982–1988
8 Bengt "Bengan" Johansson1988–2004
9 Ingemar Linnéll2004–2008
10 Ola Lindgren & Staffan Olsson2008–2016
11 Kristján Andrésson2016–2020
12 Glenn Solberg2020–

World & European Records

World Records

  • Longest undefeated streak in international championships (25 matches, Euro 1998 - 2000 Olympic Games).
  • Longest medal round streak in major championships (14 tournaments, 1990-2002).
  • Longest medal round streak in the World Championships (7 tournaments, 1986-2001).
  • 8 consecutive finals in international championships (1996-2002).
  • Most World Championship finals (8 - shared with France).
  • 3 consecutive World Championship finals (1997, 1999, 2001 - shared with Denmark).

European Records

  • Most finals reached in international championships (18).
  • Most medals in international competition (23 - shared with France).
  • 3 consecutive gold medals at the European championship (1998, 2000, 2002).

Other merits

  • First European nation to win a major championship title three times in a row (Euro 1998, Euro 2000, Euro 2002).
  • 3 x winners of the World Cup (1992, 1996, 2004)
  • 2 x winners of the Supercup (1993, 2005)
  • 1 x winners of the Intercontinental Cup (2000)
  • The first IHF World Champion (1954 - indoor handball) (Germany's 1938 victory was under the IAHF).
  • The first EHF European Champion (1994).
  • Defeated Denmark 18-12 in Copenhagen in the first ever international indoor handball game (8 March 1935).

Kit supplier

From 2004 to 2015 Sweden's kits were supplied by Adidas, and 2016-2019 by Kempa. The current supplier is Craft.

See also

References

  1. "Stark och rutinerad EM-trupp" (in Swedish). handbollslandslaget.se. 10 December 2023. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  2. "Team roster: Sweden". res.ehf.eu. 12 January 2024. Retrieved 12 January 2024.
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