Winners | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Germany | 2 | |||
Sweden | 2 | |||
Czech Republic | 1 | |||
Greece | 1 | |||
Belarus | 1 | |||
Belgium | 1 | |||
Great Britain | 1 | |||
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1 | |||
Israel | 1 | |||
Montenegro | 1 | |||
Netherlands | 1 | |||
Slovenia | 1 | |||
Bulgaria | 1 | |||
Promoted to Division A | ||||
Year | Host | Gold (Coach) | Score (MVP) | Silver |
2005 | Druskininkai, Lithuania | Israel | Round-robin group | Bulgaria |
2006 | Druskininkai, Lithuania | Belarus | 66–58 | Serbia and Montenegro |
2007 | Druskininkai, Lithuania | Montenegro | 83–64 | Poland |
2008 | Poznań, Poland | Sweden | 64–60 | Poland |
2009 | Ohrid, Macedonia | Netherlands | 59–53 | Romania |
2010 | Kavadarci, Macedonia | Great Britain | 47–46 | Slovakia |
2011 | Ohrid, Macedonia | Sweden | 64–55 | Portugal |
2012 | Klatovy, Czech Republic | Greece | Round-robin group | Germany |
2013 | Albena, Bulgaria | Belgium | Round-robin group | Czech Republic |
2014 | Sofia, Bulgaria | Germany | Round-robin group | Hungary |
2015 | Podgorica, Montenegro | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Round-robin group | Greece |
2016 | Podgorica, Montenegro | Slovenia | 62–45 | Lithuania |
2017 | Eilat, Israel | Germany | 60–54 | Slovakia |
2018 | Oradea, Romania | Czech Republic | 68–47 | Belarus |
2019 | Pristina, Kosovo | Bulgaria Tatyana Gateva | 80–75 Lotta Vehka (Finland) | Finland |