Coaches in Zvezda thought I would be a better line player and it turns out they were not wrong. Again, I was stubborn. For a year I protested, only standing on the line and not catching the ball because I wanted to be a back player. My thought was that a line player is not important, you're just standing and waiting for a ball… Oh, how wrong I was.
When coach Vlada Simicic came to Zvezda, he started working with us, he talked a lot to me and gave me advice for the position. I even started taking private lessons from him and it all fell into the right place. I finally fell in love with the position and handball and realised it could be my life. Today I live handball, I breathe handball and I enjoy playing it.
I played for all youth categories, for the second team and the first team there. Every week I would play five games and train every day and it helped me at the time to stay connected with handball and to mature even more.
And it gave me a competitive spirit. I wanted to show I can be the best, I can be the best line player in the world and that I would be able to play the EHF Champions League one day. I still remember when we were watching Slagelse on TV and I told my friends, “one day I will play there”.
And I did play. Not in Slagelse but in the Champions League. I was 18 when I signed for Krim and moved to Ljubljana. For some, maybe it would be hard to move again at a young age, to move to another country, but I really wanted to go to Krim. I was the first one from my generation to move abroad.
I was with the Serbian junior national team at some championship and I was very good. I received offers from Metz Handball, Buducnost and Krim. The main reason I chose the Slovenian side was Ljubmila Bodnjeva. To this day, for me, she is the best line player in the history of handball.
I wanted to be part of that team, to train and play with her. I will never forget my first interview in Krim, clearly I wasn't thinking straight – I told the interviewer I would be better than her. And I have to say she helped me a lot to progress. For two years in Krim she was teaching me, was coming before the training session because of me and stayed later. Every day. I was demanding, asking thousands of questions. I still don't know how she had patience with me. Her advice is with me even today. I am beyond thankful.