Parallel to the start of the EHF EURO events, the club competitions, previously organised by the IHF, became a core market of the EHF with the start of the 1993/94 season. The first EHF-organised club match was played on 25 August 1993 in Skopje, when the women’s team of Djorce Petrov Skopje beat Lokosport Plovdiv (Bulgaria) 34:17. This team, later-on named Kometal Skopje, became EHF Champions League winners and Skopje is still the only city with Champions League winning clubs in both men’s and women’s competitions.
The Balkan wars caused many organisational problems to Markus Glaser and his staff, but looking upon the development of competitions such as the EHF Champions League, EHF Cup, Cup Winners’ Cup and City Cup, Glaser, Wiederer & Co. paved the way to a professional club system all over the continent. The first EHF Champions League winners were Teka Santander (with Talant Dujshebaev as a player) and Hypo Niederösterreich with Ausra Fridrikas, who won the competition a total of six times, a record high alongside Bojana Popovic.
The original playing system was equal for men and women: 32 national champions played two knock-out rounds, followed by a group phase with eight teams in two groups. The group winners duelled in the final. This system was updated several times in the early years, with many teams and larger group phases, quarter-finals and semi-finals.
In the first decade of EHF, Barcelona was the leading force in men’s handball, winning the Champions League five times in a row from 1996 to 2000, a feat which has never been matched. All men’s winners until 2001 were Spanish clubs. On the women’s side, Hypo were the club to be beaten but the titles were widely spread.
In the 2000/01 season, the City Cup was renamed the Challenge Cup to give clubs from emerging countries the chance to compete on an international stage. And to increase the revenue, the EHF installed central marketing of the EHF Champions League with an external agency.