4 previous EHF Champions League top scorers will be on court in the competition this season: Kiel's Niclas Ekberg (top scorer in 2019/20), Kielce’s Alex Dujshebaev (2018/19), and PSG’s Mikkel Hansen (2011/12 and 2015/16) and Nikola Karabatic (2006/07). Two other top scorers will be on the benches: Filip Jicha (top scorer in 2008/09 and 2009/10) is Kiel’s coach and Momir Ilic (2013/14 and 2014/15) is Veszprém’s coach.
4 current coaches of the 16 teams have won the EHF Champions League as coaches: Talant Dujshebaev (Kielce — with Ciudad Real and Kielce), Xavi Pascual (Bucharest — with Barça), Patrice Canayer (Montpellier — with Montpellier) and Raul Gonzalez (PSG — with Vardar).
4 current coaches of the 16 teams have won the Champions League as players: Talant Dujshebaev (Kielce — with Santander), Momir Ilic (Veszprém — with Kiel), Filip Jicha (Kiel — with Kiel) and Börge Lund (Elverum — with Kiel).
4 former or current IHF World Handball Players of the Year are part of the 16 squads of this Champions League season. Nikola Karabatic (PSG — 2007, 2014, 2016), Mikkel Hansen (PSG — 2011, 2015, 2018), Domagoj Duvnjak (Kiel — 2013) and Niklas Landin (Kiel — 2019). In addition, two coaches were once IHF Players of the Year: Talant Dujshebaev (Kielce — in 1994 and 1996) and Filip Jicha (Kiel — in 2010).
4 throw-off times across two days will see the same weekly schedule as in the previous season: On Wednesday and Thursday the EHF Champions League Men matches will start at 18:45 and 20:45 CET/CEST.
4 Barça players won their third EHF Champions League title with the Catalan side in June 2021: Aitor Arino, Raul Entrerrios (ended his career), Gonzalo Perez de Vargas and Cedric Sorhaindo (now playing for Bucharest). Aron Palmarsson (now Aalborg) secured his third trophy but won the first two with Kiel. Besides them, Nikola Karabatic, Viran Morros (both Paris Saint-Germain) and Ivan Cupic (Zagreb) are the treble winners among the current group phase players.
6 former or current EHF Champions League champions, representing 18 trophies, are part of the 2021/22 group phase: Barça (nine), Kiel (three), Montpellier (two), Vardar (two), Flensburg and Kielce (one each).
6 countries are represented by the previous 26 EHF Champions League title winners: Spain (15 titles), Germany (seven), France, North Macedonia (two each), Poland and Slovenia (one each).
9 times (1995–2000, 2011, 2015, 2021), Barça have won the EHF Champions League, making the club the record winners. In addition, they won the Champions Cup (forerunner competition of the Champions League) once. Kiel (2007, 2010, 2012, 2020) have taken four trophies, while Vardar (2017, 2019) and Montpellier (2003, 2018) each won two.
9 different Spanish coaches account for an overall of 18 EHF Champions League trophies so far: Valero Rivera (five), Dujshebaev (four), Pascual (three), Javier Cuesta, Julian Ruiz, Francisco Equisoain, Francesc Espar, Raul Gonzalez and Roberto Parrondo (each one). Dujshebaev, Parrondo and Gonzalez were the only ones to win the trophy with non-Spanish teams.
8 of the 16 current teams have been part of the EHF FINAL4 in Cologne: Barça, Nantes, Paris, Flensburg, Kiel, Veszprém, Kielce and Vardar.
13 goals, in the 2021 final Barça vs Aalborg (36:23), were the biggest margin in all 24 matches at the EHF FINAL4 at Cologne so far.