Netherlands (NED)
Until 2020, the Netherlands never played a Men’s EHF EURO final tournament. In 2024, they are a force to be reckoned with. EHF EURO 2024 marks the third straight participation for the Dutch team, who qualified in style by winning their group ahead of Croatia. The Netherlands remained unbeaten in the two qualifiers against the Balkan powerhouse, including a 32:27 home win. But in the same qualifying campaign, the team of head coach Staffan Olsson also showed they are still vulnerable at times, too.
Apart from a brief appearance at the 1961 World Championship, the Netherlands failed to make it to any major event for decades. But a few years after the women’s national team started to make a name for themselves internationally, the men in orange followed suit. Their debut EHF EURO participation in 2020 stranded in the preliminary round, but two years later they made the headlines by downing co-hosts Hungary in their opening match and silencing the 20,022-capacity crowd in the MVM Dome in Budapest. The Netherlands ultimately came up short against the likes of Denmark and France in the main round, but it was clear the team had made another step in their rapid progression.
“We can cause the top nations troubles, but we still have to take one or two more steps to become really part of the international top ourselves,” said Olsson, who also led the Netherlands to their first World Championship berth in over six decades in 2023. At EHF EURO 2024, the coach aims for that next step with a squad that includes Paris Saint-Germain HB star Luc Steins alongside a range of Bundesliga players like goalkeeper Bart Ravensbergen, Dani Baijens and Bobby Schagen. However they will miss Kay Smits - the Machineseeker EHF Champions League winner is sidelined with a heart condition.
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| # | Player | MP | Goals | Shots | % | 7m | YC | RC | 2 Min | TP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| TOTAL | {{totalGoals}} | {{totalShots}} | {{totalShotsEfficiency}} | {{total7mGoals}}/{{total7mShots}} | {{totalWarnings}} | {{totalDisqualifications}} | {{totalTwoMinPenalties}} |
| # | Goalkeeper | MP | Saves | Shots | % | 7m |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| TOTAL | {{totalSaves}} | {{totalShotReceives}} | {{totalSaveEfficiency}} | {{total7mSaves}}/{{total7mShotsReceives}} |
33
33
37
34
35
32
39
27
29
28
20
36
34
29
32
26
23
28
25
25
32
27
32
28
25
24
EHF Competition History
Netherlands
31
Greece
25
Greece
31
Netherlands
27
Netherlands
33
Portugal
33
Slovenia
37
Netherlands
34
Norway
35
Netherlands
32
Denmark
39
Netherlands
27
Sweden
29
Netherlands
28
Bosnia Herzegovina
20
Netherlands
36
Netherlands
34
Georgia
29
Netherlands
28
Portugal
35
Portugal
30
Netherlands
33
Netherlands
28
Croatia
28
Denmark
35
Netherlands
23
Montenegro
30
Netherlands
34
France
34
Netherlands
24
Netherlands
32
Portugal
31
Iceland
29
Netherlands
28
Hungary
28
Netherlands
31
Sweden
26
Netherlands
20
Netherlands
25
Sweden
24
Netherlands
25
Poland
24
Poland
27
Netherlands
21
Czech Republic
38
Netherlands
26
Netherlands
21
Norway
36
Netherlands
30
Greece
30
Greece
30
Netherlands
23
Netherlands
25
Czech Republic
33
Norway
35
Netherlands
30
Spain
32
Netherlands
29
Ukraine
25
Netherlands
18
Netherlands
26
Spain
35
Cyprus
19
Netherlands
34
Netherlands
25
Lithuania
25
Lithuania
19
Netherlands
19
Netherlands
40
Cyprus
16
Netherlands
24
Ukraine
19
Netherlands
33
Montenegro
33
Montenegro
32
Netherlands
27
Finland
29
Netherlands
35
Netherlands
33
Finland
29
Netherlands
27
Austria
26
Austria
37
Netherlands
31
Italy
29
Netherlands
26
Netherlands
28
Italy
29
Greece
23
Netherlands
20
Netherlands
29
Greece
26
Netherlands
25
Bosnia Herzegovina
27
Bosnia Herzegovina
29
Netherlands
30
Netherlands
27
Estonia
22
Estonia
30
Netherlands
23
Bosnia Herzegowina
25
Netherlands
19
Netherlands
20
Bosnia Herzegowina
22
Netherlands
23
Ukraine
27
Ukraine
27
Netherlands
17
Poland
28
Netherlands
21
Netherlands
25
Poland
32
Netherlands
14
Austria
18
Austria
35
Netherlands
25
Bosnia Herzegowina
26
Netherlands
20
Netherlands
25
Bosnia Herzegowina
25
France
25
Netherlands
19
Netherlands
18
France
20
Israel
19
Netherlands
19
Greece
24
Netherlands
25
Germany
18
Netherlands
12
Netherlands
17
Germany
18
Netherlands
24
Greece
22
Netherlands
20
Israel
17
Key Players
Luc Steins was the second top scorer for the Netherlands at EHF EURO 2020 and 2022, scoring 22 times in the most recent tournament. The centre back joined Paris Saint-Germain in November 2020 as a replacement for the injured Nikola Karabatic, on loan from Fenix Toulouse, but instantly made an impact and is now under contract with PSG. In the current Machineseeker EHF Champions League season Steins stands out particularly for his assists, sitting third in the assists ranking with 42 from nine matches. Steins arrived in France in 2016, first played for Massy in the national second league, before joining Tremblay, then Toulouse. At 1.73m, Steins is one of the shortest players in the EHF Champions League and the EHF EURO 2024. He was named on the Team of the Year at the EHF Excellence Awards 2023.
Bart Ravensbergen made his national team debut at the age of 21 in 2014 when still playing in the Dutch league; his first major event was the EHF EURO 2020 and he was the team's number one goalkeeper at the EHF EURO 2022. He moved abroad to Sélestat in France in 2016 before joining Nordhorn-Lingen in Germany two years later, but his consistently strong performances in Germany’s second division and Dutch national team earned him a transfer to Frisch Auf! Göppingen in 2023. At the 2023 IHF Men's World Championship Ravensbergen excelled, making 63 saves in six matches.
Head Coach
Swede Staffan Olsson will lead the Netherlands to the European championship for the first time in 2024, but the coach already has huge experience from his time as head coach of Sweden. He coached Sweden for eight years, winning silver at the London 2012 Olympic Games, before stepping back in 2016. Olsson arrived in the Netherlands on a two-year contract in September 2022 to replace Erlingur Richardsson, but has already extended his stay until at least 2026 after coaching the team to their first World Championship participation in more than 60 years. As a player, Olsson was part of the golden Swedish generation which won four European and two world titles pus three Olympic silver medals; he scored 921 goals in 358 matches as a right back.