Germany have been keeping up well with France for the opening 20 minutes, but have lost touch a bit since and dropped up to five goals behind. What are the half-time thoughts of EHF journalist Adrian Costeiu at the match in Skopje?
"If France win the EHF EURO 2022, it will be likely due to their excellent defence and to Cléopatre Darleux, who is having a monster tournament so far. Darleux had 41 saves and a 45% saving efficiency before the start of the game and she just delivered another excellent performance in the first half against Germany, finishing the first 30 minutes with six saves for a 42% saving efficiency.
Sure, France’s defence stood tall, their attack delivered when it mattered the most, finishing the half with a 7:3 run, where they totally outplayed their opponents and are cruising to the semi-finals, a berth sealed with at least a draw this evening.
Germany are on the brink of elimination and their goals dried up as time passed, with the top scorer of the tournament, centre back Alina Grijseels scoring five of their nine goals in the half. They need more impetus in attack, but mounting a comeback against France is bound to be very, very difficult, with the reigning Olympic champions taking a 13:9 lead at the break."
20:57
France opening a four-goal gap: 11:7. This could be a decisive phase in the match if Germany do not find a solution soon.
20:48
France and Germany in the balance after 16 minutes: 6:6. Captain Alina Grijseels once more the leading scorer for Germany so far, with four goals.
20:42
She will be bitterly disappointed after Romania's defeat in the tense thriller against Montenegro, but Cristina Neagu does have something to celebrate. With her match-leading nine goals, the star left back has officially become the all-time EHF EURO top scorer for both women and men!
And how close she is to becoming the only player to hit the 300-goal mark...
20:25
The next match is like a final for Germany: they must beat France to stay in the race for the semi-finals. Any other results ends all German medal hopes, and would send both France and Montenegro through to the semi-finals.
As for the stats: the last time France did not beat Germany in an official match was at the EHF EURO 2014, when they played to a 24:24 draw. The next five official games all went to France, as did two friendly games a few weeks before this EHF EURO.
The last German win? That came 17 years ago, at the 2005 IHF World Championship...