The Helvetia Cup or European B Team Championships was a European mixed team championship in badminton. The first Helvetia Cup tournament took place in Zurich, Switzerland in 1962, when it was still known as the Nations Cup (German: Nationen Cup im Badminton).[1] The tournament took place every two years from 1971 until 2007, after which it was dissolved. 
 Past winners
     | Year  |  Host  |    |  Final  |    |  Third Place  | 
  | Winner  |  Score  |  Runner-up  |  Third Place  |  Score  |  Fourth Place  | 
  | 1962  |  Zürich, Switzerland  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Austria  |    |      Belgium  | 
  | 1963  |  Munich, Germany  |      West Germany  |    |      Austria  |      Belgium  |    |      Netherlands  | 
  | 1964  |  Haarlem, Netherlands  |      West Germany  |    |      Belgium  |      Netherlands  |    |      Austria  | 
  | 1965  |  Graz, Austria  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Austria  |    |      Belgium  | 
  | 1966  |  Brussels, Belgium  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Austria  |    |      Belgium  | 
  | 1967  |  Lausanne, Switzerland  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Austria  |    |      Belgium  | 
  | 1968  |  Oslo, Norway  |      West Germany  |    |      Norway  |      Netherlands  |    |      Austria  | 
  | 1969  |  Prague, Czechoslovakia  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Austria  |    |      Czechoslovakia  | 
  | 1970  |  Neuss, Germany  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Wales  |    |      Norway  | 
  | 1971  |  Heerlen, Netherlands  |      West Germany  |    |      Netherlands  |      Belgium  |    |      Austria  | 
  | 1973  |  Graz, Austria  |      Czechoslovakia  |    |      Norway  |      Austria  |    |      Yugoslavia  | 
  | 1975  |  Antwerp, Belgium  |      Norway  |    |      Yugoslavia  |      Austria  |    |      Ireland  | 
  | 1977  |  Leningrad, Russia  |      USSR  |    |      Ireland  |      East Germany  |    |      Czechoslovakia  | 
  | 1979  |  Klagenfurt, Austria  |      USSR  |    |      Ireland  |      Norway  |    |      Wales  | 
  | 1981  |  Sandefjord, Norway  |      Ireland  |    |      Norway  |      Wales  |    |      Poland  | 
  | 1983  |  Basel, Switzerland  |      West Germany  |    |      Wales  |      Ireland  |    |      Austria  | 
  | 1985  |  Warsaw, Poland  |      Netherlands  |    |      Wales  |      Poland  |    |      Belgium  | 
  | 1987  |  Belfast, Northern Ireland  |      West Germany  |    |      Wales  |      Ireland  |    |      Austria  | 
  | 1989  |  Budapest, Hungary  |      Poland  |    |      Finland  |      Ireland  |    |      Wales  | 
  | 1991  |  Varna, Bulgaria  |      Poland  |    |      Ireland  |      Austria  |    |      Wales  | 
  | 1993  |  Pressbaum, Austria  |      Austria  |    |      Poland  |      Ireland  |    |      Ukraine  | 
  | 1995  |  Nicosia, Cyprus  |      Ukraine  |    |      Bulgaria  |      Ireland  |    |      Switzerland  | 
  | 1997  |  Strasbourg, France  |      France  |    |      Portugal  |      Switzerland  |    |      Spain  | 
  | 1999  |  Lisburn, Northern Ireland  |      Iceland  |    |      Poland  |      Portugal  |    |      Spain  | 
  | 2001  |  Most, Czech Republic  |      Spain  |    |      Portugal  |      Czech Republic  |    |      Slovenia  | 
  | 2003  |  Caldas da Rainha, Portugal  |      France  |    |      Slovenia  |      Czech Republic  |    |      Portugal  | 
  2005[2]   Details  |  Agros, Cyprus  |      Czech Republic  |  3–2  |      Spain  |      Portugal  |  3–2  |      Belgium  | 
  2007   Details  |  Reykjavík, Iceland  |      Iceland  |  3–2  |      Ireland  |      Estonia  |  3–2  |      Switzerland  | 
 References