- Group stage Group A Group B Group C Group D
- Play-offs - 1st knockout stage 1st-4th place 5th-8th place 9th-12th place
- Play-offs - 2nd knockout stage Final 3rd place 5th place 7th place 9th place 11th place
- Standings
- References
- See also
The 1979 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup, taking place in The Hague, was the sixth edition of Europe's premier field hockey club competition. The format was changed - standings would be determined by a group stage in four triangular groups and subsequent play-offs. It was won by HC Klein Zwitserland in their second participation, becoming the first Dutch team to win the competition in a final match against the Real Club de Polo from Barcelona.[1] Group stageGroup A- {{flagicon|Scotland}} Edinburgh HC
- {{flagicon|England}} Southgate HC
- {{flagicon|Poland}} Lech Poznań
Group B- {{flagicon|West Germany}} Rüsselsheimer RK
- {{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} Slavia Prague
- {{flagicon|Switzerland}} Basler HC 1911
Group C- {{flagicon|Netherlands}} HC Klein Zwitserland
- {{flagicon|England}} Guildford HC
- {{flagicon|France}} Stade Français
Group D- {{flagicon|Spain|1977}} Real Club de Polo, Barcelona
- {{flagicon|Belgium}} Uccle Sport
- {{flagicon|Soviet Union}} Dynamo Almaty
Play-offs - 1st knockout stage1st-4th place- HC Klein Zwitserland 6-0 Edinburgh HC
- Real Club de Polo, Barcelona 1-1 Rüsselsheimer RK (penalty shoot-out: 5-3)
5th-8th place- Southgate HC 4-0 Guidford HC
- Slavia Prague 2-1 Uccle Sport
9th-12th place- Dynamo Almaty 3-0 Basler HC 1911
- Stade Français 2-1 Lech Poznań
Play-offs - 2nd knockout stageFinal- HC Klein Zwitserland 2-1 Real Club de Polo, Barcelona
3rd place- Rüsselsheimer RK 5-1 Edinburgh HC
5th place- Southgate HC 3-1 Slavia Prague
7th place- Uccle Sport 0-0 Guidford HC (penalty shoot-out: 4-2)
9th place- Dynamo Almaty 5-2 Stade Français
11th place- Basler HC 1911 3-0 Lech Poznań
Standings- {{flagicon|Netherlands}} HC Klein Zwitserland
- {{flagicon|Spain|1977}} Real Club de Polo, Barcelona
- {{flagicon|West Germany}} Rüsselsheimer RK
- {{flagicon|Scotland}} Edinburgh HC
- {{flagicon|England}} Southgate HC (defending champions)
- {{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} Slavia Prague
- {{flagicon|Belgium}} Uccle Sport
- {{flagicon|England}} Guildford HC
- {{flagicon|Soviet Union}} Dynamo Almaty
- {{flagicon|France}} Stade Français
- {{flagicon|Switzerland}} Basler HC 1911
- {{flagicon|Poland}} Lech Poznań
References1. ^{{cite web |title=Microsoft Word - 1979_ccc_m_hague.doc |author=Carla2 |url=http://www.eurohockey.org/archive/clubchamp/men/1979_ccc_m_hague.pdf |work= |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/5hLGl4ylC?url=http://www.eurohockey.org/archive/clubchamp/men/1979_ccc_m_hague.pdf |archivedate=2009-06-07 |deadurl=yes |accessdate=2009-06-01 |df= }}
See also- European Hockey Federation
4 : EuroHockey Club Champions Cup|International field hockey competitions hosted by the Netherlands|1979 in field hockey|1979 in Dutch sport |