WHIL Women | 05/27 16:00 | 50 | SSK Presov Women v HK Slavia Partizanske Women | L | 33-26 | |
WHIL Women | 05/20 16:00 | 50 | HK Slavia Partizanske Women v Bemaco Presov Women | L | 16-25 | |
MOL Liga Women | 05/05 15:00 | 2 | Slavia Partizanske Women v Iuventa Michalovce Women | L | 22-27 | |
WHIL Women | 04/30 08:30 | 2 | Iuventa Michalovce Women v Danlog Partizánske Women | L | 33-27 | |
WHIL Women | 04/29 15:30 | 2 | Iuventa Michalovce Women v HK Slavia Partizanske Women | L | 27-20 | |
WHIL Women | 04/22 16:00 | 26 | HK Slavia Partizanske Women v Bemaco Presov Women | L | 12-19 | |
WHIL Women | 04/12 15:30 | 25 | Michalovce Women v HK Slavia Partizanske Women | L | 38-23 | |
MOL Liga Women | 04/08 16:00 | 24 | Slavia Partizanske Women v DHK Olomouc Women | L | 22-26 | |
MOL Liga Women | 04/01 10:15 | 23 | DHK Banik Most Women v Slavia Partizanske Women | L | 29-20 | |
MOL Liga Women | 03/25 17:00 | 22 | Slavia Partizanske Women v Sokol Poruba Women | L | 27-31 | |
WHIL Women | 03/10 17:00 | 21 | Sokol Pisek Women v HK Slavia Partizanske Women | W | 22-30 | |
MOL Liga Women | 02/25 15:00 | 19 | Slavia Partizanske Women v HK Trencin Women | D | 25-25 |
HK Slávia Partizánske, also known as Danlog Partizánske for sponsorship reasons, is a Slovak women's handball club from Partizánske. Founded in 1965 as TJ Iskra Partizánske, it took its current name in 1997. It currently competes in the WHIL.
After debuting in the Czechoslovak Championship in 1975, Iskra rose to the top between 1979 and 1981, winning in this period two championships, one national cup and most notably the 1980 IHF Cup Winners' Cup, beating Lokomotiva Zagreb in the final on penalties. As of 2013 it remains the only EHF women's trophy won by a Slovak team, as well as the only Cup Winners' Cup won by a team from former Czechoslovakia. Iskra won two more Czechoslovak championships in 1985 and 1988, and in 1992 it reached the IHF Cup's final, lost to HC Leipzig.
Following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the team won its only Slovak championship to date in 1994, followed by two national cups in 1995 and 1999. The following decade wasn't successful and Slávia's fourth cup came in 2011. The following year it made it into the Slovak championship's three top teams for the first time since 1996.