Surprising, in the end dramatic: DHB team beats the record world champion

Surprisingly, dramatically in the end
DHB team beats the record world champion

The European handball championship starts in a few days and the German national team seems ready: Despite numerous failures and cancellations, the DHB team beat a top team in the last test with France. The winning goal falls with the final siren.

Successful dress rehearsal as an encouragement: With a strong performance in the last European Championship test against Olympic and record world champions France, Germany’s handball players have given them a lot of self-confidence. The young DHB selection prevailed in Wetzlar with a goal in the last second by Luca Witzke with 35:34 (14:18) and raised hopes for a successful final in Hungary and Slovakia. The best thrower in the convincing team of national coach Alfred Gislason was backcourt player Kai Häfner with eight goals. On Wednesday, the DHB selection flies to Bratislava, where Belarus, Austria and Poland are the opponents in the preliminary round.

The German team started courageously, but had little access to the nimble French in defense in the first half. The DHB team was behind from the start, scoring three goals for the first time at 6: 9 (14th).

The Gislason protégés were initially unimpressed. With a 3-0 run, they equalized for the first time within six minutes. In this phase, almost everything in the German game fit, which subsequently remained too prone to errors. On the defensive in particular, the young German team was shown some limits by the seven-time world champion – especially since goalkeeper Till Klimpke was not a factor and mostly could not save anything.

At 10:14 (24th), the DHB selection was behind by four goals. To make matters worse, playmaker Philipp Weber from Bundesliga leaders SC Magdeburg had to go off the floor after an unfortunate collision with a shoulder injury. “We had a few phases in which we were equal. The biggest difference is in the speed game,” summed up DHB sports director Axel Kromer at halftime.

In order to stabilize the cover, Gislason sent Andreas Wolff into the goal shortly before the break. The 30-year-old from the Polish top club Vive Kielce, who had already shown a strong performance at 30:26 against Switzerland last Friday, was again the hoped-for support after a short start-up phase.

Overall, there was now a jolt through the German team. The defense was more courageous and in the attack, it was mainly the Melsung backcourt axis Kai Häfner and Julius Kühn (5 goals) that turned on. At 22:23 (40th) the connection was made. Five minutes later, the fifth in the European Championship of 2020 took the lead for the first time at 27:26. In the exciting final phase, the German team kept their nerve and celebrated a well-deserved success.

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