One of the saddest days in the history of the EHF was marked by the sudden death of Siân Rowland, EHF’s head of media and communication for more than nine years, on 19 December 2008, who passed away aged 33 just after Women’s EHF EURO 2008.
A main highlight this decade was the instalment of the new format for the conclusion of the EHF Champions League season: the EHF FINAL4, an invention from Spain, professionalised in Germany and brought to perfection by the EHF with the start in Cologne in 2010. The EHF FINAL4 became a lighthouse event of European indoor sports and paved the way for more four-team final tournaments in the future.
The first VELUX EHF FINAL4 winners were THW Kiel. And right from that very first season, no winner of the trophy ever managed to successfully defend their title the following year. Many times, the defending champions didn’t even qualify for Cologne again, underlining the depth of European top club handball.
In 2002, for the first time a non-Spanish club had won the EHF Champions League when SC Magdeburg from Germany lifted the trophy. Montpellier (France) and Celje (Slovenia) followed, before four of the next five trophies went to Spain again. In 2007, Soviet-born Spaniard Andrej Xepkin made history when he became the first man to win the EHF Champions League seven times; he won it six times with Barcelona and once with Kiel.
The dominance of Hypo Niederösterreich in the Women’s EHF Champions League ended, as the next winners all came from Denmark (Slagelse and Viborg, each three times), before the second decade of the EHF ended with another Scandinavian winner: Larvik from Norway. It was the decade of two all-time greats, who are still holding the record of six titles each: Ausra Fridrikas and Bojana Popovic.
Both the men’s and women’s editions of the EHF Champions League changed their playing system several times: The group phase was enlarged and Last 16, quarter- and semi-finals were implemented to increase the thrill and excitement of the competitions.