Once again, it was France’s defence that starred, conceding just the precise number of goals that enabled their attack to survive, registering their best-ever start at the EHF EURO, three wins in three matches and a goal difference of +26.
All of this without two of France’s top goalkeepers in the last decade, Amandine Leynaud, who retired and is now the goalkeeping coach of the team, and Laura Glauser, who got injured just before the start of the EHF EURO 2022.
This meant that Cleopatre Darleux and Floriane Andre were the two goalkeepers France were going to rely upon, with the latter making her debut at a major tournament.
"Olivier [Krumbholz] has his style with the goalkeepers, irrespective of the names they are playing. And it is working. Cleopatre was superb, Floriane was also very, very good, because we need their saves, whenever they are facing the wings and the line players, these are one-on-one situations. They need to play the same and we have a good chance of going far in the tournament,” says Edwige.
Indeed, Darleux saved 29 shots – the fourth largest number in the competition – and has the second best saving efficiency, 46.7%, after three matches, duly delivering whenever she was needed the most.
But, as Edwige said, it is not about the performance of a single player, even if it is the goalkeeper. No, it is about the system, one that has been tested time and time again and it always delivered.
One that brought France here, one of the favourites for the EHF EURO and the same that made North Macedonia’s coach, Ljubomir Savevski, emphatically say that this is France’s best team ever.
With the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on the horizon, things are looking good, also for Krumbholz’s swansong and legacy.