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2019 World Men's Handball Championship squads
International basketball competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article displays the squads for the 2019 World Men's Handball Championship. Each team consisted of 16 players.
Main article: 2019 World Men's Handball Championship
Age, club, appearances and goals correct as of 10 January 2019.
Group A
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Brazil
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[1] A 20-player squad was revealed on 16 December 2018.[2] The final squad was announced on 3 January 2019.[3]
Head coach: Washington Nunes
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France
A 20-player squad was revealed on 10 December 2018.[4] The final squad was revealed on 8 January 2019.[5]
Head coach: Didier Dinart
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Germany
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[6] A 18-player squad was revealed on 21 December 2018.[7] The final squad was revealed on 6 January, Tobias Reichmann and Tim Suton were excluded from the squad.[8]
Head coach: Christian Prokop
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Korea
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[9] The final team was announced on 18 December 2018, with sixteen players from South Korea and four North Korean players joined the team on 22 December 2018 and formed a single team with a total of 20 players.[10][11]
Head coach: Cho Young-shin
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Russia
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[12] A 21-player squad was revealed on 24 December 2018.[13] On 3 January the squad was reduced to 19 players.[14] The final squad was announced on 9 January 2019.[15]
Head coach: Eduard Koksharov
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Serbia
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[16] A 21-player squad was revealed on 31 December 2018.[17] The final squad was revealed on 8 January 2019.[18] Nemanja Zelenović and Vladimir Cupara were replaced by Milan Milić and Dejan Milosavljev on 14 January 2019.[19]
Head coach: Nenad Peruničić
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Group B
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Bahrain
A 18-player squad was announced on 27 December 2018.[20] On 7 January, Ali Abdulqader was excluded from the squad due to an injury.[21]
Head coach: Aron Kristjánsson
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Croatia
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[22] A 19-player squad was revealed on 17 December 2018.[23] On 1 January 2019, four players were excluded and five players were added.[24] On 2 January, Josip Božić Pavletić was replaced by Ivan Vida due to an injury.[25] On 5 January Damir Bičanić was added to the squad.[26] On 6 January Filip Ivić and Luka Šebetić were excluded from the squad.[27] The final squad wes announced on 8 January 2019.[28]
Head coach: Lino Červar
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Iceland
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[29] A 21-player squad was revealed on 20 December 2018.[30] On 1 January the squad was reduced to 17 players.[31] On 9 January the final squad was revealed, Guðjón Valur Sigurðsson was excluded from the squad due to injury and replaced with Bjarki Már Elísson.[32][33]
Head coach: Guðmundur Guðmundsson
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Japan
A 21-player squad was revealed on 11 December 2018.[34] The final squad was announced on 17 December 2019.[35] Motoki Sakai was replaced by Ryosuke Sasaki on 26 December.[36][37]
Head coach: Dagur Sigurðsson
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Macedonia
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[38] A 22-player team was revealed on 22 December 2018.[39] On 30 December 2018 Tomislav Jagurinovski and Lasko Andonovski were excluded and the squad was reduced to 20 players.[40] The final squad was announced on 9 January 2019.[41]
Head coach: Raúl González
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Spain
A 19-player squad was announced on 17 December 2018.[42] On 29 December 2018, Abel Serdio and Sergey Hernández were discarded from the squad.[43]
Head coach: Jordi Ribera
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Group C
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Austria
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[44] A 18-player squad was revealed on 27 December 2018.[45] On 6 January, Alexander Hermann was excluded from the squad due to an injury.[46]
Head coach: Patrekur Jóhannesson
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Chile
The final squad was announced on 31 December 2018.[47]
Head coach: Mateo Garralda
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Denmark
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[48] The final squad was announced on 19 December 2018.[49] On 21 December 2018 Niclas Kirkeløkke was replaced by Martin Larsen because of an injury.[50] On 2 January Hans Lindberg was replaced by Jóhan Hansen because of an injury.[51] The same change was made on 12 January.[52]
Head coach: Nikolaj Jacobsen
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Norway
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[53] The squad was reduced to 18 players on 14 December 2018.[54] On 4 January 2019, it was announced that Kent Robin Tønnesen had to withdraw from the squad due to an injury, and was replaced by Harald Reinkind.[55] On 14 January, Henrik Jakobsen replaced Petter Øverby in the squad. On 21 January, Øverby was added back in the squad and replaced Kevin Gulliksen.
Head coach: Christian Berge
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Saudi Arabia
A 22-player squad was announced on 27 November 2018.[56] The final squad was announced on 2 January 2019.[57]
Head coach: Boris Denič
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Tunisia
A 18-player squad was revealed on 12 December 2018.[58] A 17-player squad was revealed on 21 December 2018.[59] The final squad was announced on 31 December 2018.[60]
Head coach: Antonio Gerona
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Group D
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Angola
A 19-player squad was announced on 20 November 2018.[61] The final squad was announced on 28 December 2018.[62]
Head coach: Filipe Cruz
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Argentina
The final squad was announced on 28 December 2018.[63]
Head coach: Manolo Cadenas
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Egypt
A 17-player squad was revealed on 28 November 2018.[64] The final squad was announced on 7 January 2019.[65]
Head coach: David Davis
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Hungary
A 28-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[66] A 21-player squad was revealed on 18 December 2018.[67] It was reduced to 18 players on 30 December 2018.[68] The final squad was announced on 8 January 2019.[69]
Head coach: István Csoknyai
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Qatar
A 19-player squad was revealed on 18 December 2018.[70] The final squad was announced on 5 January 2019.[71]
Head coach: Valero Rivera
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Sweden
A 18-player squad was announced on 10 December 2018.[72][73] On 27 December 2018 the squad was reduced to 17 players because Philip Henningsson was excluded from the squad due to injury.[74] Hampus Wanne was included on 14 January 2019.[75]
Head coach: Kristján Andrésson
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Coaches representation by country
Coaches in bold represented their own country.
More information Nº, Country ...
Nº | Country | Coaches |
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7 | ![]() | Manolo Cadenas (Argentina), David Davis (Egypt), Mateo Garralda (Chile), Toni Gerona (Tunisia), Raúl González (Macedonia), Jordi Ribera, Valero Rivera (Qatar), |
5 | ![]() | Kristján Andrésson (Sweden), Guðmundur Guðmundsson, Patrekur Jóhannesson (Austria), Aron Kristjánsson (Bahrain), Dagur Sigurðsson (Japan) |
1 | ![]() | Filipe Cruz |
![]() | Washington Nunes | |
![]() | Lino Červar | |
![]() | Nikolaj Jacobsen | |
![]() | Didier Dinart | |
![]() | Christian Prokop | |
![]() | István Csoknyai | |
![]() | Cho Young-shin | |
![]() | Christian Berge | |
![]() | Eduard Koksharov | |
![]() | Nenad Peruničić | |
![]() | Boris Denič (Saudi Arabia) |
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References
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