2019–20 DHB-Pokal

The 2019–20 DHB-Pokal is the 44th edition of the tournament.

Format

The first round was split in a north and a south part and played in mini tournaments where only the winner advanced to the round of 16. From there on a knockout system will be used to determine the winner. The final four will be played on one weekend in Hamburg.

Round 1

The draw was held on 18 June 2019.[1][2] The matches were played on 17 and 18 August 2019.

Round of 16

The draw was held on 21 August 2019.[3] The matches were played between 25 September and 3 October 2019.

25 September 2019
20:00
TV Bittenfeld 30–26 HC Erlangen Scharrena Stuttgart, Stuttgart
Attendance: 710
Referees: Helbig, Geipel
Lonn 8 (13–12) Sellin 6
  Report  

1 October 2019
19:00
Füchse Berlin 31–30 SC Magdeburg Max-Schmeling-Halle, Berlin
Attendance: 7,692
Referees: Regner, Koppl
Lindberg 7 (15–16) Musche 9
  Report  

1 October 2019
19:00
SC DHfK Leipzig 27–30 MT Melsungen Arena Leipzig, Leipzig
Attendance: 4,342
Referees: Klein, Immel
Roscheck 6 (12–13) Marić 7
  Report   

2 October 2019
19:00
Rhein-Neckar Löwen 36–34 (ET) Frisch Auf Göppingen SAP Arena, Mannheim
Attendance: 3,753
Referees: Loppaschewski, Blümel
Schmid 10 (14–16) Schiller 7
  Report  

FT: 29–29 ET: 7–5


2 October 2019
19:00
TBV Lemgo 27–24 Bergischer HC Lipperlandhalle, Lemgo
Attendance: 2,678
Referees: Baumgart, Wild
Elísson 7 (12–12) three players 4
  Report  

2 October 2019
19:00
ASV Hamm-Westfalen 24–25 TSG Friesenheim Westpress Arena, Hamm
Attendance: 2,012
Referees: Merz, Schilha
three players 4 (14–13) Durak, Müller 6
  Report  

2 October 2019
20:00
HSG Wetzlar 25–26 THW Kiel Rittal Arena Wetzlar, Wetzlar
Attendance: 3,734
Referees: Schulze, Tönnies
Čavor 10 (14–12) Ekberg 6
  Report  

3 October 2019
17:00
SG Flensburg-Handewitt 20–26 TSV Hannover-Burgdorf Flens-Arena, Flensburg
Attendance: 4,855
Referees: Schneider, Hartmann
Gottfridsson 6 (9–15) Kastening, Olsen 5
  Report  

Quarterfinals

The draw was held on 3 October 2019.[4] The matches were played on 3 and 4 December 2019.

3 December 2019
19:00
MT Melsungen 33–30 Füchse Berlin Rothenbach-Halle, Melsungen
Attendance: 4,168
Referees: Baumgart, Wild
Kühn 9 (14–16) Lindberg 12
  Report   

3 December 2019
19:00
TSG Friesenheim 23–26 TBV Lemgo Friedrich-Ebert-Halle, Ludwigshafen
Attendance: 2,350
Referees: Schneider, Hartmann
Falk 8 (9–12) Theuerkauf 6
  Report  

3 December 2019
20:00
TV Bittenfeld 34–35 THW Kiel Scharrena Stuttgart, Stuttgart
Attendance: 2,095
Referees: Zupanovic, Thone
Schmidt 7 (15–18) Ekberg 10
  Report  

4 December 2019
20:00
Rhein-Neckar Löwen 30–31 TSV Hannover-Burgdorf SAP Arena, Mannheim
Attendance: 7,620
Referees: Tönnies, Schulze
Schmid 16 (14–17) Olsen 10
  Report  

Final four

The draw was held on 9 December 2019.[5] The matches would have been played on 4 and 5 April 2020. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic the league postponed the final four on 12 March 2020 and moved it back to after the season.[6][7] On 4 May, the matches were scheduled to 27 and 28 February 2021.[8]

Bracket

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
27 February
 
 
MT Melsungen
 
28 February
 
TSV Hannover-Burgdorf
 
 
 
27 February
 
 
 
TBV Lemgo
 
 
THW Kiel
 

Semifinals

27 February 2021 MT Melsungen v TSV Hannover-Burgdorf Barclaycard Arena, Hamburg
Report

27 February 2021 TBV Lemgo v THW Kiel Barclaycard Arena, Hamburg
Report

Final

28 February 2021 WSF1 v WSF2 Barclaycard Arena, Hamburg
gollark: Maybe HTTP soon because craziness.
gollark: Ingame, I mean.
gollark: Wait, you *actually* made Ethernet?#
gollark: Implement Skynet over UDP over redstone.
gollark: Implement IPv5.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.