SC

Swedish Cup

Schweden · Handball

Saison 2025

Swedish CupHeutige Spiele

Live-Ergebnisse, anstehende Anpfiffe und beendete Spiele von heute. Die Daten werden automatisch aktualisiert, damit Sie nichts verpassen.

Swedish CupPlayoffs

1. Runde

HHallby0
YIYstads IF2
29–33,27–36
TTyreso1
AAranas0
41–40,44–44
AHAmo HK2
TTumba0
29–26,36–26
MMalmo0
SSavehof1
32–32,27–35
KKarlskrona1
RRedbergslids0
30–30,33–31
HHammarby2
KKroppskultur0
32–25,45–33
HHelsingborg1
KKristianstad1
28–40,33–32
AAlingsas1
SSkovde1
28–25,25–29

Viertelfinale

SSkovde0
YIYstads IF2
24–29,27–29
AHAmo HK2
TTyreso0
42–37,40–34
KKarlskrona1
SSavehof1
35–39,35–30
HHammarby0
KKristianstad2
32–36,35–36

Swedish CupTabelle

Aktuelle Tabelle der Swedish Cup 2025 mit 32 Teams. Aranas führt mit 6 Punkten nach 3 Spielen, gefolgt von Ystads IF mit 2 Punkten. Die Tabelle zeigt Siege, Niederlagen, Punktzahlen und Siegquote — unverzichtbar für die Wettanalyse.

#Team
Group 1
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 3Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +15
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: +8
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -8
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -15
Group 2
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +17
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +6
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -10
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -13
Group 3
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 3Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +34
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: -1
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -1
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -32
Group 4
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 3Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +14
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +32
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -10
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -36
Group 5
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +9
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +9
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +7
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -25
Group 6
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +8
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +5
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: -1
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -12
Group 7
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 3Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +47
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 1Tordiff.: +7
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: +20
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -74
Group 8
1
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +19
2
Spiele: 3Siege: 2Niederlagen: 0Tordiff.: +16
3
Spiele: 3Siege: 1Niederlagen: 2Tordiff.: -9
4
Spiele: 3Siege: 0Niederlagen: 3Tordiff.: -26

Swedish CupErgebnisse

Die letzten 25 abgeschlossenen Spiele der Swedish Cup. Das torreichste Ergebnis war Aranas 44–44 Tyreso. Aktuelle Ergebnisse zeigen Formtrends, Heimvorteile und Überraschungen — wichtige Grundlage für Ihre nächste Wette.

HeimteamErgebnisAuswärtsteam
Finale
4037
4037
2026-03-29FT
Spiel um Platz 3
3233
3233
2026-03-29FT
Halbfinale
3430
3430
2026-03-28FT
3537
3537
2026-03-28FT
Viertelfinale
2729
2729
2025-11-09FT
3536
3536
2025-11-08FT
4034
4034
2025-11-08FT
3530
3530
2025-11-05FT
3632
3632
2025-10-25FT
3935
3935
2025-10-25FT
3742
3742
2025-10-25FT
2924
2924
2025-10-24FT
3030
3030
2025-09-10FT
3626
3626
2025-09-10FT
2735
2735
2025-09-10FT
2532
2532
2025-09-09FT
2629
2629
2025-09-07FT
2825
2825
2025-09-07FT
4140
4140
2025-09-06FT
3329
3329
2025-09-06FT
4028
4028
2025-09-05FT
3232
3232
2025-09-03FT
Ergebnisse
4444
4444
2025-09-13SO
3331
3331
2025-09-13FT
2736
2736
2025-09-13FT

Swedish CupTeam-Statistiken

Leistungsvergleich aller 32 Teams der Swedish Cup auf einen Blick. Aranas führt mit 3 Siegen diese Saison. Die farbcodierte Heatmap zeigt Siege, Niederlagen, Punktzahlen, Punktedifferenz und Siegquote — so erkennen Sie die stärksten und schwächsten Teams sofort für Ihre Wettanalyse.

Swedish CupWett-Statistiken

Swedish Cup 2025 — wichtige Wettstatistiken aus 75 ausgewerteten Spielen. Im Durchschnitt liegen die Gesamtpunkte bei 63.93 pro Spiel. Heimmannschaften gewinnen 52.0% der Spiele und das häufigste Ergebnis ist 26-32. Nutzen Sie diese Kennzahlen zur Kalibrierung Ihrer Wettstrategie.

63.93Scoring / Spiel
100.0%Beide Treffen %
52.0%Heim Siege %
44.0%Auswärts Siege %
0.0%Zu-null %
+18.70Heimvorteil

Swedish CupSaison-Trends

Saisonvergleich über 2 Spielzeiten der Swedish Cup, wobei 2025 hervorgehoben ist. In der aktuellen Saison liegt der Durchschnitt bei 63.93 Gesamtpunkten pro Spiel bei 75 ausgetragenen Partien. Die Spalten umfassen Heimsieg-% und Auswärtssieg-% — nutzen Sie die Jahresvergleiche, um Trends zu erkennen und Ihre Wettstrategie anzupassen.

Blau hervorgehobene Zeilen = aktuelle Saison

Beste Torschützen-Teams

32 Teams der Swedish Cup in der Saison 2025 nach Siegen sortiert. Aranas führt mit 3 Siegen. Ihr Durchschnitt über 4 Saisons liegt bei 1.8 Siegen pro Saison. Kroppskultur zeigt die größte Verbesserung dieser Saison mit 2 mehr Siegen als ihr bisheriger Durchschnitt. Vergleichen Sie die aktuelle Form mit historischen Durchschnittswerten, um aufsteigende und absteigende Teams zu erkennen — nützlich für Ergebnis- und Siegerwetten.

1AAranas3Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore103Gegentore88Ø S1.8Ø N1.3
2SSkovde3Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore121Gegentore87Ø S2.5Ø N0.5
3AHAmo HK3Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore97Gegentore83Ø S2.0Ø N1.0
4HHammarby3Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore123Gegentore76Ø S2.8Ø N0.3
5KKristianstad2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore94Gegentore77Ø S2.3Ø N0.8
6RRedbergslids2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore91Gegentore85Ø S1.5Ø N1.5
7MMalmo2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore110Gegentore111Ø S1.8Ø N1.0
8KKarlskrona2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore111Gegentore79Ø S1.8Ø N1.0
9HHelsingborg2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore103Gegentore94Ø S2.0Ø N1.0
10KKroppskultur2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore81Gegentore72Ø S0.0Ø N3.0
11OOnnereds2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore105Gegentore98Ø S2.0Ø N0.8
12SSavehof2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore101Gegentore93Ø S2.8Ø N0.3
13TTyreso2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore98Gegentore93Ø S1.3Ø N1.7
14GGuif2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore98Gegentore99Ø S2.5Ø N0.5
15TTumba2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen1Tore106Gegentore99Ø S0.0Ø N3.0
16HHallby2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore112Gegentore93Ø S1.8Ø N1.3
17AAlingsas2Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen0Tore105Gegentore89Ø S2.3Ø N0.3
18YIYstads IF1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore94Gegentore86Ø S2.5Ø N0.3
19IYIFK Ystads1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore79Gegentore87Ø S2.0Ø N1.0
20VVinslovs1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore83Gegentore98Ø S1.3Ø N1.5
21VVarberg1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore77Gegentore87Ø S1.8Ø N1.0
22LLund1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore76Gegentore89Ø S1.0Ø N2.0
23TTorslanda1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore104Gegentore105Ø S0.8Ø N2.0
24DDrott1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore86Gegentore96Ø S1.0Ø N2.0
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore98Gegentore78Ø S1.0Ø N1.8
26SSkanela1Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen2Tore98Gegentore107Ø S1.5Ø N1.5
27LLagan0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore86Gegentore118Ø S1.0Ø N2.0
28LLinkoping0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore74Gegentore110Ø SØ N
29KKarra0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore78Gegentore103Ø S1.0Ø N2.0
30HHuddinge0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore87Gegentore99Ø SØ N
31HHarnosands0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore59Gegentore133Ø SØ N
32TTaby0Siege
Spiele3Niederlagen3Tore91Gegentore117Ø SØ N

Swedish CupVergangene Saisons

Durchsuchen Sie 5 archivierte Saisons der Swedish Cup, von 2021 bis 2025. Jede Saisonseite enthält vollständige Tabellen, Torschützen und Ergebnisse — ideal zum Vergleich historischer Leistungen und zur Erkennung langfristiger Wettmuster.

Geschichte 19. März 2026

Gegründet1967

The Swedish Cup was originally established in 1967 as a knockout tournament for Swedish handball clubs, running through 1971 before being discontinued. The competition resumed from 1979 to 1990 before a lengthy suspension. In 2021, the Swedish Handball Federation reintroduced the cup in a modern format, creating a new era with expanded participation and a group-stage structure followed by knockout rounds. The revival in 2021 was driven by the desire to provide additional competitive opportunities for clubs and increase domestic cup competition prestige. The competition is now sponsored by ATG (Aktiebolaget Trav och Galopp), Sweden's state-owned gambling company, and carries the official name ATG Svenska Cupen.

  • 1967 — Swedish Cup established as knockout tournament for handball clubs
  • 1971 — Original competition format suspended
  • 1979 — Swedish Cup restarted with expanded format
  • 1990 — Competition discontinued following 11 years of operation
  • 2021 — Swedish Cup revived with modern group-stage and knockout format
  • 2022 — IK Sävehof wins inaugural modern-era title
  • 2024 — Ystads IF defeats Hammarby 33–32 in thrilling final

Wettbewerbsformat 19. März 2026

Teams16

The Swedish Cup features 16 teams divided into eight regional groups of four clubs each, competing in a home-and-away round-robin format during the group stage. Teams earn 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. The top team from each group advances directly to the quarter-finals, while the second-placed teams compete in play-off matches to determine the remaining quarter-final spots. From the quarter-finals onwards, the competition follows a single-elimination knockout format with semi-finals and a grand final. The tournament typically runs from August through March, with the final contested in early spring.

Rekorde 19. März 2026

Meiste TitelYstads IF (2)

In the modern era (2021–present), Ystads IF has won the most titles with victories in 2023/24 and 2024/25, establishing themselves as the competition's dominant force.

Analyse 19. März 2026

Analyse der aktuellen Saison

The 2024/25 Swedish Cup season showcases the depth and competitive balance of Swedish handball, with eight regional groups producing compelling contests across the country. Hammarby leads Group 7 with a perfect 3–0 record and an impressive +47 goal difference, scoring 123 goals while conceding just 76, demonstrating dominant offensive prowess. Skovde similarly commands Group 3 with three victories and a +34 goal differential, whilst Aranas tops Group 1 with an unblemished record. The competition features 16 elite clubs competing for regional supremacy, with the group stage serving as a crucial proving ground for teams preparing for the knockout phases.

The title race remains wide open, with several clubs emerging as strong contenders for the final in spring. Hammarby, Skovde, and Aranas have established themselves as early favourites through their dominant group performances, though the unpredictability of knockout handball means any of the eight group winners could realistically contest the final. Kristianstad and Amo HK, both leading their respective groups with 6 points from three matches, represent formidable threats. The regional group structure ensures that clubs from across Sweden—from Helsingborg in the south to Hammarby in Stockholm—have genuine opportunities to reach the latter stages.

Standout performers this season include Hammarby's high-scoring attack, which has proven nearly unstoppable in early competition, and Skovde's consistent all-around excellence. The gap between group leaders and lower-placed teams remains substantial, with several clubs already eliminated from playoff contention after poor starts. Notably, Harnosands in Group 7 suffered a devastating 133–59 defeat to Hammarby, highlighting the gulf in quality between elite and mid-tier Swedish clubs in this competition.

The 2024/25 season continues the modern era's tradition of competitive excellence established since the cup's 2021 revival. Unlike the league championship, which rewards consistency over a long season, the cup format introduces an element of knockout drama that has captivated Swedish handball fans. The group stage serves as a genuine competition rather than a formality, with every match carrying weight for final standings and playoff positioning. Teams must balance their Handbollsligan commitments with cup ambitions, making the competition a true test of squad depth and tactical flexibility.

Historischer Kontext and Modern Revival

The Swedish Cup has undergone a remarkable transformation since its 2021 revival. Originally established in 1967, the competition ran for five years before being discontinued in 1972. It returned in 1979 and continued until 1990, when it was suspended again—leaving a 31-year gap before the Swedish Handball Federation reintroduced it in 2021. The modern format differs significantly from its predecessors, incorporating a group-stage structure that ensures broader participation and more matches for competing clubs. This evolution reflects contemporary approaches to cup competitions across European handball, balancing tradition with commercial and competitive considerations.

The reintroduction of the cup has proven successful, generating strong fan engagement and providing clubs with a secondary domestic objective beyond the gruelling Handbollsligan season. IK Sävehof won the inaugural modern-era title in 2021/22, followed by IK Kristianstad's victory in 2022/23 and Ystads IF's dramatic 33–32 defeat of Hammarby in the 2023/24 final. This sequence demonstrates the competitive balance among Sweden's elite clubs, with no single team establishing dominance. The cup's revival has also enhanced opportunities for clubs from outside the traditional powerhouse regions to compete for major honours, contributing to the overall health and competitiveness of Swedish handball.

The Format's Strategic Implications

The eight-group structure of the modern Swedish Cup creates distinct regional competitions that reflect Sweden's geographic spread and club distribution. Clubs compete against three others in their region, meaning every match carries significant weight—a loss in the group stage can prove fatal to knockout ambitions. The top team from each group receives a bye to the quarter-finals, while second-placed teams must navigate a play-off stage, adding jeopardy and unpredictability to the competition. This format encourages attacking handball and decisive victories, as goal difference serves as a tiebreaker when clubs finish level on points.

The regional grouping system also reflects practical considerations regarding travel and scheduling, allowing clubs to minimize time away from their home bases whilst maintaining competitive integrity. Clubs in Group 1 (southern Sweden) face different opponents than those in northern groups, creating eight separate micro-competitions that eventually converge in the knockout stages. This structure has proven popular with clubs and supporters alike, offering meaningful competition throughout the autumn and winter months before the intensity of the Handbollsligan play-offs.

Club Ambitions and European Implications

Whilst the Swedish Cup does not directly provide European qualification—that honour belongs exclusively to the Handbollsligan—success in the cup carries significant prestige and momentum. Clubs winning the Swedish Cup join an elite group of Swedish handball champions and gain a confidence boost heading into the crucial league play-off phase. The tournament has also become important for squad rotation and player development, allowing clubs to give match time to squad players who might otherwise struggle for opportunities in the fiercely competitive league.

For ambitious clubs like Hammarby, Skovde, and Kristianstad, the cup represents an achievable second domestic honour that, combined with a strong league finish, constitutes a successful season. The competition's knockout format also provides opportunities for surprise packages—clubs that build momentum through the group stage can upset favourites in single-elimination matches, as demonstrated by various underdog runs in recent seasons. This unpredictability makes the Swedish Cup compelling viewing and ensures that, despite the dominance of certain clubs in the league, the cup competition remains genuinely open.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

How many teams compete in the Swedish Cup?

16 teams compete in the Swedish Cup, divided into eight regional groups of four clubs each during the group stage, with the top finishers advancing to knockout rounds.

Who has won the most Swedish Cup titles?

In the modern era (2021–present), Ystads IF has won the most titles with two victories: 2023/24 and 2024/25.

How does the Swedish Cup format work?

The competition uses a group-stage format with eight regional groups, followed by quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. Group winners advance directly to the quarter-finals, while second-placed teams compete in play-off matches.

When was the Swedish Cup revived?

The Swedish Cup was revived in 2021 after a 31-year suspension (last held in 1990). The modern format began with the 2021/22 season.

Who sponsors the Swedish Cup?

ATG (Aktiebolaget Trav och Galopp), Sweden's state-owned gambling company, is the title sponsor of the competition, which is officially known as ATG Svenska Cupen.

What is the prize for winning the Swedish Cup?

Winners of the Swedish Cup gain significant prestige as holders of Sweden's premier domestic cup competition, alongside the Handbollsligan championship as the country's two major domestic honours.

API-Daten: 27. Apr. 2026 · Statistiken aktualisiert: 21. Apr. 2026 · Inhalt aktualisiert: 19. März 2026