2017–18 Superliga (men's handball)

Polish Superliga
Season2017–18
Dates1 September 2017 – 3 June 2018
ChampionsPGE Vive Kielce (15th title)
Champions LeaguePGE Vive Kielce
Orlen Wisła Płock
EHF CupAzoty Puławy
Gwardia Opole
Matches played260
Goals scored14,545 (55.94 per match)
Top goalscorerArkadiusz Moryto (217 goals)

The 2017–18 Superliga was the 62nd season of the Polish Superliga, the top men's handball league in Poland. A total of fourteen teams contested this season's league, which began on 1 September 2017 and concluded on 3 June 2018.

PGE Vive Kielce won their 15th title of the Polish Champions.

Format

The competition format for the 2017–18 season consisted of 2 groups of eight teams each playing a total of 30 matches, half at home and half away, with the top 3 teams of each group qualifying directly for the quarterfinals. The teams ranked 4th and 5th play for a place in the quarterfinals.[1]

Regular season

  • A victory over a team of the same group add 1 extra point.

Grenade Group

Orange Group

Results

Home \ Away AZO GLO KAL OPO LEG ELB KWI ZAB PLO KIE PIO SZC GDY MIE GDA LUB
Azoty Puławy 27–25 27–22 38–35 29–24 30–19 27–18 25–24 26–28 25–30 33–26 33–22 40–25 32–23 36–20 33–26
Chrobry Głogów 24–28 27–26 23–24 30–25 36–29 23–26 19–31 20–29 28–43 30–28 28–19 38–25 26–18 31–26 30–29
Energa MKS Kalisz 30–34 25–29 31–28 27–25 25–21 19–21 24–32 19–27 20–36 25–22 25–16 22–21 30–27 25–24 28–24
Gwardia Opole 29–33 23–28 28–21 26–22 26–19 22–23 27–31 20–32 21–43 31–22 26–22 33–24 37–27 30–28 37–30
KPR Legionowo 22–25 22–31 29–24 26–25 20–25 24–26 18–32 26–41 28–45 27–26 25–27 21–20 31–23 26–31 21–23
Meble Wójcik Elbląg 23–29 28–29 24–26 20–23 29–20 25–24 17–28 18–43 22–38 27–20 21–18 24–23 20–36 18–29 37–30
MMTS Kwidzyn 32–25 28–31 22–23 26–34 27–24 27–21 24–26 24–38 24–37 29–32 32–29 32–27 38–32 24–22 33–29
NMC Górnik Zabrze 36–34 28–26 33–26 36–23 27–20 31–28 38–23 21–27 28–37 27–28 30–21 34–20 37–28 33–25 33–31
Orlen Wisła Płock 31–21 32–23 35–22 29–16 37–25 29–17 32–21 33–25 30–31 26–24 27–21 39–23 37–26 29–25 31–27
PGE Vive Kielce 41–29 46–23 37–21 39–28 40–17 43–25 36–21 33–20 36–30 40–24 40–27 46–27 41–22 41–24 32–24
Piotrkowianin 33–34 29–26 33–26 29–33 23–22 31–26 30–31 26–28 23–31 24–43 30–23 39–32 26–29 21–25 29–26
Sandra SPA Pogoń Szczecin 24–38 28–30 28–17 29–27 28–24 29–24 25–20 20–30 17–33 29–38 30–29 33–27 36–37 22–24 31–30
Spójnia Gdynia 26–43 26–29 27–34 30–37 31–34 32–28 22–32 25–28 22–34 27–46 26–28 24–18 31–35 18–28 19–33
Stal Mielec 26–31 29–17 29–34 40–38 32–28 26–23 37–32 29–35 22–36 22–39 28–29 22–33 40–39 33–25 26–33
Wybrzeże Gdańsk 25–26 24–30 22–32 23–24 28–22 27–22 31–30 21–26 26–31 26–32 29–20 30–25 27–23 28–26 31–30
Zagłębie Lubin 32–36 28–21 32–28 33–34 38–37 30–29 29–33 28–24 21–36 25–39 28–23 35–34 36–26 40–28 36–21
Source: PGNiG Superliga
Legend: Blue = home team win; Red = away team win.

Playoffs

First round

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Wybrzeże Gdańsk 55–53 MMTS Kwidzyn 30–23 25–30
Zagłębie Lubin 51–62 Energa MKS Kalisz 27–26 24–36

Final round

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
               
G1 PGE Vive Kielce 35 43 2
O4 Energa MKS Kalisz 21 22 0
G1 PGE Vive Kielce 37 35 2
O2 Azoty Puławy 27 34 0
G3 Chrobry Głogów 25 24 0
O2 Azoty Puławy 28 24 1
G1 PGE Vive Kielce 33 33 2
O1 Orlen Wisła Płock 28 29 0
G2 NMC Górnik Zabrze 24 25 49
O3 Gwardia Opole 28 23 51
O3 Gwardia Opole 33 21 54 Third place
O1 Orlen Wisła Płock 32 33 65
O5 Wybrzeże Gdańsk 25 32 0 O2 Azoty Puławy 30 31 2
O1 Orlen Wisła Płock 36 37 2 O3 Gwardia Opole 28 26 0

Final standings

Qualified for the 2018–19 EHF Champions League
Qualified for the 2018–19 EHF Cup
Rank Team
1 PGE Vive Kielce
2 Orlen Wisła Płock
3 Azoty Puławy
4 Gwardia Opole
5 NMC Górnik Zabrze
6 Chrobry Głogów
7 Energa MKS Kalisz
8 Wybrzeże Gdańsk
9 MMTS Kwidzyn
10 Zagłębie Lubin
11 Piotrkowianin Piotrków Trybunalski
12 Stal Mielec
13 Sandra SPA Pogoń Szczecin
14 Meble Wójcik Elbląg
15 KPR Legionowo
16 Spójnia Gdynia

References

  1. ^ "Regulamin" (PDF). PGNiG Superliga (in Polish). Retrieved 23 November 2021.