Germany
Germany (GER)

Germany will start their 14th participation at a Men’s EHF EURO with a fairly new team.

After missing the semi-finals at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, team captain Uwe Gensheimer and right back Steffen Weinhold quit playing for the national team, EHF EURO 2020 best defender Hendrik Pekeler has announced a break, and goalkeeper Johannes Bitter is only on stand-by for “cases of emergency”.

Definitely, some new names will be on-court in Bratislava, where Alfred Gislason will have his first EHF EURO as German national team coach. The Icelander took over from Christian Prokop right after the EHF EURO 2020, when Germany had finished fifth.

The 24-year-old Flensburg line player Johannes Golla is the new team captain, and in the test matches against Portugal in November seven debutants were in the German squad. Some experienced stars, such as goalkeeper Andreas Wolff, line player Patrick Wiencek and EHF EURO 2016 champion Fabian Wiede are still in the roster, but one main focus is to build up a team for the EHF EURO 2024 on home ground.

In qualification for the EHF EURO 2022, Germany extended their impressive series to 20 straight victories in EHF EURO qualifiers, leaving Austria, Bosnia Herzegovina and Estonia behind.

In 2004, Germany became the first nation to win the full set of silverware at Men’s EHF EURO events, winning bronze in 1998, silver in 202 and gold in 2004 - but then it took until Poland in 2016 to win another medal (gold).

Now it is the turn for the new generation, led by Golla, right wing Timo Kastening or the even younger talents of left back Sebastian Heymann and goalkeeper Till Klimpke – both All-star Team members and bronze medallists at the U18 EHF EURO in 2016 – to take over the responsibility.

Latest news

More News

Information not available.

Player Cumulative Statistics Roster
# Player MP Goals Shots % 7m YC RC 2 Min TP
{{item.playerInfo.shirtNumber}} {{item.playerInfo.person.lastName}}, {{item.playerInfo.person.firstName}} {{item.statistics.matchesPlayed}} {{item.statistics.goals}} {{item.statistics.shots}} {{item.statistics.shotEfficiency}} {{item.statistics.goals7M}}/{{item.statistics.shots7M}} {{item.statistics.warningsCount}} {{item.statistics.disqualifications}} {{item.statistics.twoMinPenaltiesCount}} {{item.statistics.minutesPlayed}}
TOTAL {{totalGoals}} {{totalShots}} {{totalShotsEfficiency}} {{total7mGoals}}/{{total7mShots}} {{totalWarnings}} {{totalDisqualifications}} {{totalTwoMinPenalties}}
# Goalkeeper MP Saves Shots % 7m
{{item.playerInfo.shirtNumber}} {{item.playerInfo.person.lastName}}, {{item.playerInfo.person.firstName}} {{item.statistics.matchesPlayed}} {{item.statistics.goalKeeperSaves}} {{item.statistics.goalKeeperShotsReceived}} {{item.statistics.goalKeeperSavesEfficiency}} {{item.statistics.goalKeeperSaves7M}}/{{item.statistics.goalKeeperReceivedShots7M}}
TOTAL {{totalSaves}} {{totalShotReceives}} {{totalSaveEfficiency}} {{total7mSaves}}/{{total7mShotsReceives}}

EHF competition history

Top Results

ECh Beach Handball
2023 - 2nd place

ECh Beach Handball
2022 - Champion

European Championship
2016 - Champion

Key Players

Key Players

Andreas Wolff

Goalkeeper

Andreas Wolff excelled during Germany's golden EHF EURO 2016 in Poland, with a save rate of over 50 per cent in the final against Spain. Wolff was named German handball player of the year in 2015 and 2016 – and also “German bearded man of the year 2016”. He joined Kielce as his first foreign club in summer of 2019, arriving from three seasons with THW Kiel, but began his career at Wetzlar. At Kiel, Wolff was part of the victorious EHF Cup team in 2019.

Philipp Weber

Centre back

Philipp Weber made his national team debut for Germany in September 2017, and has been part of nearly all major tournaments since then including EHF EURO 2018 and 2020. He missed the IHF Men’s World Championship 2019. Weber is a classical playmaker, who is also strong in one-against-one actions. He was top scorer for the Bundesliga in the 2016/17 season for Wetzlar, and with more than 50 international matches is one of the most experienced players of the young German team.

Head Coach

Alfred Gislason

Coach

Alfred Gislason succeeded Christian Prokop as Germany’s coach after EHF EURO 2020, when Germany missed the semi-finals. He previously coached the Icelandic national team before, parallel to his job at Gummersbach. Gislason steered SC Magdeburg (2002) and THW Kiel (2010, 2012) to three EHF Champions League trophies, and was the first coach to win this trophy with two different clubs. He also won 25 domestic and international titles as coach of Magdeburg, Gummersbach and Kiel. As a player, he was a defence specialist and left back.

bottom design lines

Latest news

More News