Fixtures

EHF - Eurocupa 11/06 18:00 1 Norvegia vs Suedia - View
EHF - Eurocupa 11/09 18:00 2 Suedia vs Franta - View
EHF - Eurocupa 03/12 18:00 3 Suedia vs Danemarca - View
EHF - Eurocupa 05/07 18:00 4 Suedia vs Norvegia - View
EHF - Eurocupa 05/11 18:00 5 Franta vs Suedia - View
EHF - Eurocupa 05/15 18:00 6 Danemarca vs Suedia - View

Results

Campionatul European 01/28 14:00 50 [1] Suedia v Germania [2] W 34-31
Campionatul European 01/26 16:45 2 Franta v Suedia L 34-30
Campionatul European 01/23 19:30 4 [5] Norvegia v Suedia [1] L 33-23
Campionatul European 01/21 17:00 3 [1] Suedia v Portugalia [2] W 40-33
Campionatul European 01/19 19:30 2 Danemarca v Suedia L 28-27
Campionatul European 01/17 19:30 1 [3] Slovenia v Suedia [1] W 22-28
Campionatul European 01/15 19:30 3 [1] Suedia v Olanda [2] W 29-28
Campionatul European 01/13 19:30 2 [3] Georgia v Suedia [2] W 26-42
Campionatul European 01/11 19:30 1 [2] Suedia v Bosnia & Hertegovina [2] W 29-20
International 01/07 15:00 - Suedia v Japonia W 43-23
International 01/05 15:00 - Suedia v Japonia W 42-30
International 11/02 17:30 - Suedia v Ucraina W 46-26

The Sweden men's national handball team (Swedish: Sveriges herrlandslag i handboll) is controlled by the Swedish Handball Association. Its most successful periods were under coaches Curt Wadmark (1948–1967) and Bengt Johansson (1988–2004). The team under Bengt Johansson, nicknamed Bengan Boys in Sweden, is regarded as one of the finest national teams in the history of the sport with players like Tomas Svensson, Staffan Olsson, Magnus Wislander and Stefan Lövgren. From 1990 through 2002 the team reached the medal round in every championship (6 World Championships, 5 European Championships and 3 Olympic Games, earning 13 medals in total) and qualified for a record 8 championship finals in a row 1996–2002.

Sweden is the most successful nation at the European Men's Handball Championship with 5 titles, and has won the most medals in the history of the World Men's Handball Championship with a total tally of 12 medals (as of 2023, this is a record shared with France). Conversely, Sweden has yet to win an Olympic title despite participating in 4 finals (Sweden participated in the 1952 Summer Olympics in a demonstration match, defeating Denmark 19–11). The team has also won the World Cup 3 times, the Supercup 2 times, and were Intercontinental Cup winners in 2000.