HC Kuban Krasnodar

   
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HC Kuban Krasnodar is a Russian women's handball team from Krasnodar competing in the Russian Super League.

Kuban enjoyed its golden era in the late 1980s, winning two Cup Winners' Cups in 1987 and 1988 by beating TSC Berlin and Vasas Budapest in the final, and reaching the 1990 European Cup's final, lost to Hypo Niederösterreich, after winning the 1989 Soviet Championship. Kuban also played a third unsuccessful Cup Winners' Cup final in 1989.[1]

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union Kuban won the transitional CIS Championship, but it hasn't been able to win the new Russian Super League to date. Between 1997 and 2000 the team was second to Istochnik Rostov and Aqva Volgograd, its best results. In 2000 it also reached its fourth Cup Winners' Cup's final, losing to Mar Valencia.[2]

In reaction to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Handball Federation banned Russian athletes, and the European Handball Federation suspended the Russian clubs from competing in European handball competitions.[3]

Kits

HOME

2020-
AWAY

2020-

Titles

European record

Season Competition Round Club 1st leg 2nd leg Aggregate
2016–17 EHF Cup R1 Greece Nea Ionia 36–24 31–24 67–48
R2 Switzerland Spono Eagles 35–23 38–28 73–51
R3 Austria Hypo Niederösterreich 29–23 32–26 61–49
Group B Hungary Alba Fehérvár 31–26 31–24 1st place
France Brest Bretagne 25–20 21–27
Germany Leipzig 32–24 34–21
1/4 Germany Bietigheim 26–33 31–26 57–59

Team

Current squad

Squad for the 2021–22 season.[4]
Goalkeepers
  • 16 Russia Veronika Chipula
  • 78 Azerbaijan Mariya Molyavskaya
Wingers
LW
  • 04 Russia Alexandra Davidenko
  • 08 Russia Iana Savinova
  • 94 Russia Sofia Panasovskaya
RW
  • 05 Russia Valeriia Vaykum
  • 07 Russia Diana Golub
  • 24 Russia Anna Efimkova
  • 33 Russia Milana Rzaeva
Line players
  • 32 Russia Kristina Suchalkina
  • 10 Russia Kseniia Trukhina
  • 87 Russia Mariya Gafonova
Back players
LB
CB
  • 18 Russia Sofiia Penzeva
  • 50 Russia Sofia Porshina
  • 71 Russia Ekaterina Levchina
RB
  • 62 Russia Arina Sergienko
  • 63 Russia Ekaterina Bobina
  • 77 Russia Viktoriia Shershkova
  • 93 Russia Anna Bogdasheva

References

  1. ^ List of champions of EHF competitions in the-sports.org
  2. ^ Record and profile in European Handball Federation's website
  3. ^ "Russia and Belarus suspended by EHF". Handball Planet. 1 March 2022.
  4. ^ "ОСНОВНОЙ СОСТАВ". whckuban.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 22 November 2021.