1981 African Men's Handball Championship
1981 African men's Handball championship
International handball competition
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host country | Tunisia |
Venue(s) | 1 (in 1 host city) |
Dates | 18 July – 1 August |
Teams | 8 (from 1 confederation) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Algeria (1st title) |
Runner-up | Ivory Coast |
Third place | Tunisia |
Fourth place | Egypt |
The 1981 African Men's Handball Championship was the fourth edition of the African Men's Handball Championship, held in Tunis, Tunisia, from 18 July to 1 August 1981. It acted as the African qualifying tournament for the 1982 World Championship in West Germany.[1]
In the final, Algeria won their first title beating Ivory Coast in the final game.
Qualified teams
Venue
Draw
Group A | Group B | Group C |
---|---|---|
Group stage
Team advance to the knockout stage |
Group A
Group B
Knockout stage
Semifinals
Third place game
31 July 1981 | Tunisia | – | Egypt | Tunis |
Final
1 August 1981 | Algeria | 30–25 | Ivory Coast | Tunis |
Final ranking
Team qualified for the 1982 World Championship |
Rank | Team |
---|---|
Algeria | |
Ivory Coast | |
Tunisia | |
4 | Egypt |
5 | Angola |
6 | Nigeria |
7 | Congo |
8 | Guinea |
References
- ^ "Men Handball IV Africa Championship 1981 Tunisia". todor66.com. Todor Krastev. 26 November 2016.
- v
- t
- e
African Handball Championship
- Tunisia 1974
- Algeria 1976
- Congo 1979
- Tunisia 1981
- Egypt 1983
- Tunisia 1985
- Morocco 1987
- Algeria 1989
- Egypt 1991
- Côte d'Ivoire 1992
- Tunisia 1994
- Benin 1996
- South Africa 1998
- Algeria 2000
- Morocco 2002
- Egypt 2004
- Tunisia 2006
- Angola 2008
- Egypt 2010
- Morocco 2012
- Algeria 2014
- Egypt 2016
- Gabon 2018
- Tunisia 2020
- Egypt 2022
- Egypt 2024
- Rwanda 2026
- Tunisia 1974
- Algeria 1976
- Congo 1979
- Tunisia 1981
- Egypt 1983
- Angola 1985
- Morocco 1987
- Algeria 1989
- Egypt 1991
- Côte d'Ivoire 1992
- Tunisia 1994
- Benin 1996
- South Africa 1998
- Algeria 2000
- Morocco 2002
- Egypt 2004
- Tunisia 2006
- Angola 2008
- Egypt 2010
- Morocco 2012
- Algeria 2014
- Angola 2016
- Congo 2018
- Cameroon 2021
- Senegal 2022
- DR Congo 2024