LEN Women's Euro Cup
Current season, competition or edition: 2023–24 LEN Women's Euro Cup | |
Sport | Water polo |
---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
President | Paolo Barelli |
Country | LEN members |
Continent | Europe |
Most recent champion(s) | UVSE Budapest (2nd title) |
Most titles | Gifa Palermo Ortigia Racing Roma Shturm 2002 Imperia Ethnikos UVSE (2 titles each) |
Level on pyramid | 2nd Tier (Europe) |
Official website | LEN Trophy |
The LEN Women's Euro Cup, formerly the Women's LEN Trophy, is LEN's second-tier competition for women's water polo clubs. It was first held in 2000 as the LEN Women's Cup Winners' Cup. It was contested for many seasons by around 15 teams, which could qualify for it either directly due to high ranking in their domestic league or by being eliminated at certain stages of the Champions' Cup. After the last reformations in the European competitions system by LEN, only four teams contesting for the trophy, coming after elimination at that season's LEN Euro League quarterfinals stage. Italy's Gifa Palermo, Ortigia, Racing Roma, Imperia, Russia's Shturm Ruza, and Greece's Ethnikos are the most successful clubs in the competition with two titles each.[1]
Title holders
- 1999–00: Gifa Palermo
- 2000–01: SKIF Moscow
- 2001–02: Gifa Palermo
- 2002–03: Vouliagmeni
- 2003–04: Ortigia
- 2004–05: Ortigia
- 2005–06: Honvéd
- 2006–07: Racing Roma
- 2007–08: Racing Roma
- 2008–09: Shturm Chekhov
- 2009–10: Ethnikos
- 2010–11: Rapallo
- 2011–12: Imperia
- 2012–13: Shturm 2002
- 2013–14: Olympiacos
- 2014–15: Imperia
- 2015–16: Mataró
- 2016–17: UVSE Budapest
- 2017–18: Dunaújváros
- 2018–19: Orizzonte Catania
- 2019–20: Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
- 2020–21: Kinef Kirishi
- 2021–22: Ethnikos
- 2022–23: UVSE Budapest
Finals
Source: LEN (from 2000 to 2016).[4]
Titles by club
Rank | Club | Titles | Runner-up | Champion Years | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | UVSE Budapest | 2 | 1 | 2016–17, 2022–23 | |
2. | Gifa Palermo | 2 | 1999–00, 2001–02 | ||
Ortigia | 2 | 2003–04, 2004–05 | |||
Racing Roma | 2 | 2006–07, 2007–08 | |||
Shturm | 2 | 2008–09, 2012–13 | |||
Imperia | 2 | 2011–12, 2014–15 | |||
Ethnikos | 2 | 2009–10, 2021–22 | |||
8. | SKIF | 1 | 3 | 2000–01 | |
Vouliagmeni | 1 | 3 | 2002–03 | ||
Dunaújváros | 1 | 3 | 2017–18 | ||
11. | Olympiacos | 1 | 2 | 2013–14 | |
12. | Mataró | 1 | 1 | 2015–16 | |
13. | Honvéd | 1 | 2005–06 | ||
Rapallo | 1 | 2010–11 | |||
Orizzonte Catania | 1 | 2018–19 | |||
Kinef Kirishi | 1 | 2020–21 | |||
17. | Yugra | 2 | |||
Plebiscito Padova | 2 | ||||
19. | Het Ravijn | 1 | |||
Uralochka Zlatoust | 1 | ||||
Glyfada | 1 | ||||
Nereus | 1 | ||||
Firenze | 1 | ||||
FTC Telekom Budapest | 1 |
Titles by nation
Rank | Country | Titles | Runners-up |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Italy | 10 | 3 |
2. | Russia | 4 | 6 |
Greece | 4 | 6 | |
4. | Hungary | 4 | 5 |
5. | Spain | 1 | 1 |
6. | Netherlands | 2 |
See also
- LEN Champions League
- LEN Euro Cup
- LEN Challenger Cup
- LEN Super Cup
- LEN Women's Champions League
- LEN Women's Challenger Cup
- LEN Women's Super Cup
References
- ^ List of champions in all competitions.com
- ^ "LEN Trophy, UVSE clinches historical first win". LEN. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
- ^ "Dunaujvaros joins the winners' circle". LEN. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
- ^ "Euro League Women - Book of Champions 2017" (PDF). LEN. p. 48 (section 4.1 'Women's LEN Trophy'). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2018.