After making it to the EHF Finals in the EHF European League Men last year, 2003 and 2018 champions Montpellier are back in the top-flight competition, of course coached by legendary Patrice Canayer who has his 30th season as coach of the same club ahead of him. And again Canayer and Montpellier have to cope with several stars leaving the team, including wing Hugo Descat who moved to group phase opponents Veszprém and Julien Bos who transferred to Nantes.
The dark horse in this group could be Orlen Wisla Plock. Despite losing goalkeeper Biosca and shooter Sergei Mark Kosorotov to Veszprém, the Polish runners-up and cup winners managed to add experience to their squad by signing goalkeeper Mirko Alilović from Szeged and Champions League winner Miha Zarabec from Kiel. In the previous season, Plock almost became the stumbling block for would-be winners Magdeburg in the quarter-finals, having previously eliminated Nantes in the play-offs.
Two teams from group B changed their coaches: Nicolej Krickau left GOG to join SG Flensburg-Handewitt and was replaced by Ian Marco Fog, while Portuguese legend Carlos Resende took over from FC Porto’s previous mastermind Magnus Andersson. Krickau was not the only one from GOG arriving at Flensburg, as EHF Excellence Award winner Simon Pytlick and line player Lukas Jørgensen also start on the other side of the Danish-German border after becoming Danish champions again by beating Aalborg in the finals.
In contrast to GOG, Resende can work with almost the same squad as in the previous season. Porto and 2005 Champions League winners RK Celje Pivovarna Laško both have the goal of proceeding to the knock-out stage. As with GOG, Celje have the same regular fate of having to replace their top stars: Aleks Vlah, top scorer of the 2022/23 Champions League group phase, joined Aalborg in Denmark; Gal Marguc – brother of Veszprém’s wing Gasper – transferred to Croatian side RK Nexe; and youngster Tilen Strmljan arrived at German club Hanover.
Photos © Franziska Gora/Jan Huebner; Victor Salgado; Victor Sousa