12:31
The team lists for the finals of the EHF European League Men 2022/23 have now been finalised and can be found by clicking the links below:
On the injury list since the semi-finals on Saturday are two Göppingen players: Sebastian Heymann and Tim Kneule. Aside from them and Berlin's Paul Drux, a notable absence is Montpellier back Diego Simonet, who was ruled out before the EHF Finals Men.
12:22
It's not all about the final today — there is also third position to be decided, and both Göppingen and Montpellier are keen to claim it.
It will be the third game between the teams this season, after each side won their home game in the group phase.
Göppingen played for third in the second-tier competition a few seasons ago, losing to Magdeburg in 2018. For Montpellier, it is the first time in this clash — they always reached the final when playing in a top-four format: the Champions League in 2018, which they won, and the EHF Cup in 2014, which they lost.
For both teams, it is a tough recovery after the semi-finals on Saturday, as both were dominant in the first halves before ultimately losing. For Göpppingen especially, the chance was there until the last attack when Jan Gurri struck to secure the win for Granollers.
12:03
Another fun fact about the final relates to the EHF Champions League: with Magdeburg and Barça set to duel in the semi-final at the TruckScout24 EHF FINAL4, either Germany or Spain are certain to have a finalist in the Champions League as well as the European League. And one of these great handball countries could even raise both trophies.
Also on the Germany and Spain front, Granollers have had a great season against German clubs. They enter the final against Berlin having beaten both Göppingen and Flensburg in the European League knockout stage.
With Germany the unrivalled powerhouse in the second-tier competition, having taken 25 titles in the history of the various iterations, this is no small feat. Spain have taken a collective five titles and are second-ranked in this statistic, underlining Germany's dominance at this level.
11:31
Let's start to dig into this final! Both teams have won the former iteration of the EHF European League, the EHF Cup, twice before.
For Berlin, it was much more recent — in 2015 and 2018, although only two the current players were part of those successes: Fabian Wiede and Paul Drux. Drux is currently injured and will not play the final. Wing Hans Lindberg was also part of the team in 2018. Aside from that, it is a new line-up that will vie for the club's first title in the European League.
If Füchse take the title, it will be Lindberg's third different European club trophy, after he won the EHF Champions League with Hamburg in 2013 and the EHF Cup in 2018.
Granollers' EHF Cup wins were much longer ago — almost three decades, in 1995 and 1996. In fact, the last time a Spanish team made it to the final of the second-tier European cup competition was in 2007, but Aragon were defeated by Magdeburg in that final, making Granollers' last success also the last second-tier men's trophy for the country.
10:52
The EHF's Respect Your Talent programme has been developed to help young players with a holistic approach to development as a professional athlete, and one RYT player was absolutely on fire yesterday: Granollers' Jan Gurri, who scored nine goals from nine shots.
Gurri's teammate Bruno Reguart is another RYT player for Granollers, whom eurohandball.com interviewed right before the EHF Finals Men 2023. Check out the feature here.
10:19
Getting you ready for the final and 3/4 placement match, journalist Björn Pazen has gathered all the important information surrounding the two games — and you can find it all in our match previews by clicking below.