Much earlier, in 2013, the second final tournament at EHF club level made its bow, the EHF Cup Finals as pinnacle event for the new EHF Cup. The 2011/12 season was the last with both the Cup Winners’ Cup and EHF Cup in their old formats, from 2012/13 on, the competitions merged into one, featuring a group phase and a final tournament. The first champions were Rhein-Neckar Löwen from Germany, beating hosts Nantes in the final. The Women’s EHF Cup was merged four years later.
In 2014, the Women’s EHF FINAL4 at the Papp László Arena in Budapest started to become a story of success. Unsurprisingly, the last winner of the old playing system was the same team as the first EHF FINAL4 winner: Hungarian side Györi Audi ETO, who went on to win four titles in Budapest. In May 2022, the new Budapest Arena will be host of the event for the first time.
While Györ dominated the women’s club game, the men’s pinnacle event in Cologne saw seven different winners from 2011 until 2021: Barcelona (3), Kiel (2), Vardar (2), Flensburg, Hamburg, Montpellier, Kielce - and still no team managed to win twice in a row in the LANXESS arena.
Not only did the club competitions undergo a major change, also the EHF EUROs - the younger age categories were split in different events for the same age groups to engage and involve more nations in international competitions.
The Men’s EHF EURO 2020 enjoyed a very special premiere as it was the first event with three hosts (Sweden, Norway and Austria) and the first with 24 teams instead of 16. Whoever thought the first stage would be boring with eight more teams, was left mistaken as we witnessed the elimination of record world champions France and reigning world champions Denmark in the preliminary round. Spain became the first winners of a 24-team tournament and defended their Men’s EHF EURO title for the first time since Sweden in 2002.
In 2024, the first Women’s EHF EURO (in Hungary, Austria and Switzerland) will be played with 24 teams - and when the Extraordinary Congress this Saturday in Vienna will be concluded, the hosts of the Men’s and Women’s EHF EURO events until 2028 will be confirmed.