HeartBeat Handball Brochure
HeartBeat Handball Brochure
HeartBeat Handball Brochure
CONTENTS
20 Years of the
European Handball Federation
1991
Congress in Berlin / GER
Foundation of the European Handball Federation
Meeting of the EHF Committee in Hamburg / GER
1992
Meetings of the Technical Commission in Madrid / ESP
Meetings of the EHF Committee in Vienna / AUT
1st Ordinary Congress in Vienna / AUT
1st Extraordinary Congress in Barcelona / ESP
EHF staff begin activities in Vienna / AUT
1993
1996
1994
1995
Video recordings used for the first time in arbitration cases
1st EHF Periodical for Coaches and Lecturers
Meeting of the Methods Commission in Prague / CZE
1998
1999
2000
1997
2001
10 year Anniversary of the European Handball Federation
1st EHF Seminar for Chiefs of Referees at the Vision Forum
SMART Programme introduced
Introduction of the EHF E-News service
2006
Foundation of EHF Marketing GmbH
Introduction of the European Open and W17 ECh YAC events
Official EHF Champions League website launched
2002
2005
2004
2003
EHF Symposium Handball at School
Nijha joins forces with the EHF to create a new goal
First time prize money awarded to top four teams at the EHF EUROs
1st European Beach Handball Championship in Gaeta / ITA
2008
2007
15 years Mens and Womens EHF Champions League
8th EHF Extraordinary Congress votes to establish Beach
Handball Commission in September 2008
Agreement of Collaboration signed by EHF with the EOC
First Foster agreement signed
2009
2010
2011
7
t the EHF Foundation Congress in Berlin the Swede Staffan Holmqvist, who
since 1979 had been the President of the Swedish National Federation, was
elected as the first EHF President. In his first period of office, he introduced the
EHF European Handball Championship for men and women. His term of office
lasted until 2004, when his then Vice President Tor Lian from Norway won the
crucial vote and thus the most important position in the EHF at the Ordinary
Congress in Cyprus.
Lian, like Holmqvist, belongs to the founding fathers of the EHF, an organisation
that rose from the Western-European nations of leading handball countries. At
the Foundation Congress in Berlin, all National Federation Presidents attended
the forming of this alliance Tor Lian had been President of the Norwegian
Federation since 1985 and from day one, was a member of the EHF Executive
Committee. Moreover, 66-year-old Lian remembers fondly the first days of the
EHF as well as his predecessor Staffan Holmqvist, who sadly passed away in
2007 shortly before his 65th birthday.
We want the
development of
womens handball
to increase.
Handball was Staffan Holmqvists life. He was a real man of action in the sport
who came from one of the strongest handball nations at the time and who
also enjoyed the utmost respect, said Lian. His period of office was absolutely
decisive for the further development of the EHF because in this time all the
foundations for everything that exists today were being laid.
Tor Lian was born in Trondheim on 13 June 1945 and has been married to
Froydis since 1968. He has two sons and two grandchildren. Following his active
period as a player (1953-1985), he moved into the realm of coaching and then
into the Executive Committee of the Norwegian Handball Federation (NHF). In
1983, he was elected to the position of Vice President and from 1985 until 1999
he served as President of the NHF. In addition to the many years as Board
Member of the Norwegian Olympic Committee, he was also on the Advisory
Board of the Olympic Games in Lillehammer in 1994 as well as serving as Head
of the Organising Committee of the IHF Womens World Handball Championship
in 1993 and 1999 in Norway. Since 2000, he has served on the IHF Council and
has been a member of numerous IHF Working Groups. For over 20 years, Lian
has also worked for the top human resource agencies in the world. Currently, he
is the head of the Oslo offices of Edward W. Kelley & Partners, a specialist in the
search for top executives. It is also through this professional experience that the
Norwegian knows how to value teamwork.
Lians second term in office will run until 2012 along the same lines as his first
term. Lian, as well as his Vice President Jean Brihault (France) and Treasurer Ralf
Dejaco (Italy), were re-elected and the Chairmen; Jan Tuik for the Competitions
Commission, Frantisek Taborsky for the Methods Commission and Laszlo Sinka
for the newly formed Beach Handball Commission were elected to serve the
three technical commissions.
Lian sees his role as the EHF President above all as a political role. The main
task is to guide the Executive Committee and the Finance Delegation as well as
the performance of the Congress and the most important meetings, intones
the Norwegian, who made one of the most important decisions in the history
of his term in office - the decision to create EHF Marketing GmbH. In the same
way, he has decided upon the further development of all competitions just
look at the EHF European Championships and the EHF Champions League:
Handball is
a sport and
business now.
The BeginningS
To fully appreciate the progress of an organisation that started with a solitary full-time employee in 1991, we
have to pay homage to the beginnings. Here we look back to the establishment of the European body.
t the time of the EHF foundation in the late 1980s and early 1990s the
body that regulated, administered and organised handball in Europe was the
International Handball Federation (IHF). In those days it was fair to say that
handball was far behind other sports in terms of development.
We had to work
out from which
new nation each
team came.
10
Handball is
so much more
different an
attractive and
engaging sport
with high speed
and many goals.
In his time in the service of the European Handball Federation, Tor Lian
reflecteson the changes he has seen, especially to the sport itself, Originally,
handball was played outside, over time it became an indoor sport discipline. At
the time of the EHF foundation there were a few strong national leagues; but
today handball is so much more different an attractive and engaging sport
with high speed and many goals.
Now look where we are today
11
The Structure
Good governance over all 50 member federations and one associated federation requires an organisation
that covers all interests of the European Handball Federation.
The EHF
Executive
Committee is
the highest
internal body
within the EHF
only answerable
to the Congress.
ver the past 20 years, the internal structure of the EHF has been amended
multiple times: all changes to the administrative structure have led to improved
management of the sport. Dedicated committees, boards and commissions
ensure that handball continues to develop and improve on all levels whilst
maintaining the integrity and reputation of the sport.
The EHF Executive Committee is the highest internal body within the EHF only
answerable to the Congress. Comprised of 10 members, the President, Vice
President, Treasurer, the Chairmen of the Competitions, Methods, Beach Handball
Commissions, the Professional Handball Board and three additionally elected
members; the body represents all stakeholders. The Executive Committee is
the effective leadership of the EHF, overseeing all EHF affairs and empowered
to take the most important decisions in European handball as they continue to
represent the values of the European Handball Federation in collaboration with
the member federations and other organisations.
The Professional Handball Board (PHB) was established at the 10th EHF Congress
in Copenhagen in 2010 as a common strategic platform for the stakeholders of
European mens elite handball. It consists of 12 members: two members from
each stakeholder group. Forum Club Handball (FCH) represents the interests of
the top European clubs; the Nations Board represents the European member
federations; the European Professional Handball Leagues Association consists
of the handball leagues from seven European countries and the European
Handball Players Union represent the professional players all of these groups
have signed a Memorandum of Understanding a cooperation agreement with
the EHF. The remaining members of the PHB include two members of the EHF
Executive Committee with voting rights and the EHF President and Secretary
General complete the group.
The EHF Nations Board was created in response to the request of the national
federations and is a transformation of the Mens National Team Committee,
which was disbanded upon the ratification of the Nations Board at the 2008
Extraordinary Congress in Lillehammer. The six members representing the
interests of National Federations and national teams consist of the chairman,
their deputy and four members.
Following the creation of the European Handball Federation a commission
overseeing technical matters was put in place. In 1994, at the 2nd Ordinary
Congress in Antibes, France, the Technical Commission was fragmented into
the Competitions Commission (CC) and the Methods Commission (MC). The
Competitions Commission comprises of seven members and is responsible for the
organisation and execution of all EHF competitions on a club and national level.
The CC also has three sub-committees. The Technical Refereeing Committee
led by Sandor Andorka handles refereeing matters, including courses, technical
development in the refereeing area, educational activities and more. The Womens
National Team Committee led by Karl-Arne Johannessen represents the EHFs
vision to support the development of womens handball with specialisation to
national team competitions. Finally, the Womens Club Committee led by Carmen
Manchado represents the EHFs vision to support the development of womens
handball with specialisation to club competitions.
12
The Methods Commission (MC) is the technical body for methodical matters. It
oversees all technical initiatives, development concepts and educational aspects
within and for the sport of handball. Consisting of Chairman Frantisek Taborsky
and four elected representatives responsible for the main areas, methods and
coaching, education and training, development and youth, school and noncompetitive sport, the body meets on a quarterly basis. Recommendations
of the Methods Commission, as well as the Competitions and Beach Handball
Commissions, are presented to the Executive Committee for ratification.
At the 8th EHF Extraordinary Congress in 2007, the Congress ratified the
creation of the Beach Handball Commission as of September 2008. Although
beach handball in relation to the indoor version of the sport is very young; due
to the rapid development of the competition, increased participation interest
from the federations and the spike in popularity, it became necessary to
introduce the Beach Handball Commission to deal specifically with this branch
of the sport. Since the launch of the Commission, the Beach Handball European
Championships have been introduced for the younger age categories. Chairman
Laszlo Sinka, assisted by four additional elected members, is responsible for
events and competitions, officiating, game design and coaching and development
and promotion. Furthermore, the Technical Delegation consisting of the three
Chairmen (Tuik, Taborsky and Sinka) also work in close cooperation with the EHF
Competence Academy and Network (EHF CAN) led by Senior Manager Helmut
Hritsch. The EHF CAN is responsible for handball education and development.
The EHF
structure will
continue to adapt
as necessary
to the needs
of our primary
stakeholders.
hen the EHF started with European Cup competitions during the 1993/94
season and with the European Championships in 1994, there were no regulations
or requirements for arenas concerning the floor, the lines on the floor, the
advertising boards or the spectator areas. It was all in the hands of the clubs and
the nations. Many countries already had great halls; other playing halls however,
were not of the best standard.
Over time, as some arenas began to cause concern, the EHF started to implement
specific standards at EHF EURO events. To give the sport of handball a better
look, the obvious first thing was to exchange the floors in order to give a better
optical perception - a clean floor in stronger colours with no lines except for
the handball lines.
The floor had to have an recognition factor for the TV viewers and had to
offer optimal marketing potential. This is what we have achieved with the unique
floors for the EHF EURO and the EHF Champions League matches, explained
Jan Tuik about the flooring, which has been developed in cooperation between
the EHF and the market-leading French sport flooring experts Gerflor, and their
special Taraflex flooring.
Tuik, as Chairman of the Competitions Commission, is ultimately responsible for
all standards that are implemented at all EHF EUROs and other EHF competitions.
In three e-Books, available online, there are over 100 pages with all parameters
for hall and arena standards including defined processes, the luminous intensity
in the arena, the number of electrical outlets and emergency exits, the size
of changing rooms for teams and referees and the number of press working
areas everything is exactly defined. The measures that the EHF define in the
Arena Construction Manual are implemented today across Europe by architects
planning multi-function arenas, said Tuik.
Monika Flixeder and Sasha Martell, based in the EHF office in Vienna, are
responsible for the correct execution and implementation of these standards at
European Championships. All national federations have to concern themselves
with these criteria if they wish to host a European Championships whether
senior or in the younger age category. Graded to the level of the event, all halls
and arenas must fulfil the criteria.
A decisive standard for the EHF EURO is the spectator capacity within the halls
and arenas: Preliminary Round in which the host nation team plays must be able
to hold 5,000 spectators and a minimum of 3,000 spectators at the other venues.
In the Main Round, the minimum figure is 5,000 seats with 8,000 at the venue
where the host team plays. In the Final Round of the competition, at a womens
event an arena with a 12,000 seating capacity is the minimum requirement and
at a mens event, this figure rises to 15,000.
14
In the first 10
years since the
foundation of
the EHF, we were
always concerned
with whether
the match could
be somehow
transmitted
somewhere.
At the same time society has also changed, and before the spectators just came
to see a match, appearing shortly before throw-off and leaving after the final
whistle, nowadays people come to the arenas not only for the matches, but also
to be part of an event. Therefore, other areas of interest in the arenas are of
importance. Many halls are not handball halls but multi-functional arenas, with
the possibility to rearrange internal moveable structures into a suitable handball
arena. These modern halls offer sport and entertainment more importantly
a striking TV picture. In cooperation with the EHFs long-standing media and
marketing partner, Infront Sports and Media AG, a TV transmission concept
is being further developed. The arenas nowadays also cater to the needs of
sponsors in terms of advertisement space as well as VIP lounges. The halls offer
high-speed internet connection and state of the art media facilities.
In the first 10 years since the foundation of the EHF, we were always concerned
with whether the match could be somehow transmitted somewhere. After that
we began to pay more attention to the standards in the chosen venues, said Jan
Tuik on the development of the arenas.
Since the start of the 19th handball season, the teams of the EHF Womens
Champions League now also play on the unique blue lagoon and black floors.
Furthermore, the VELUX EHF FINAL4 in Cologne in 2011 was the first club
handball event to be produced in HD using the spectacular spider-cam that
captured exceptionally clear images.
And as we look to the next 20 years, the development is bound to continue.
15
The turning
point was the
Extraordinary
Congress during
the final weekend
of the Mens
EHF EURO in
Lillehammer.
16
On 9 March 2011, Joan Marin was elected to the seat of Chairman and thus
became the 10th member of the EHF Executive Committee; Rainer Witte was
elected Deputy Chairman. At this inaugural meeting of the PHB, the course
for the future was set; numerous proposals of the PHB went to the Executive
Committee for consideration and were later accepted, for instance, the
introduction of additional rest days at the EHF EURO events, the merging of two
European Cup competitions, a general insurance for national team players and
much more besides. The remaining committees for women on club and national
team levels continue to exist however, it remains the desire of EHF Vice
President Jean Brihault to introduce a Handball Board for Women ever since
the Womens Competitions Conference took place in June 2010. Both the 2011
Conference of Presidents and the 2012 EHF Congress will deal with this matter.
This decision
is a step towards
more democracy.
The idea of the
Professional
Handball Board
is to preserve
the unity and
the coherence
of European
Handball.
17
International Affinity
Close cooperation with the world federation as IHF President praises the EHF for their support on all sportpolitical levels.
Europe is the
driving force
behind handball,
and the EHF
engages itself
in the further
development
of handball
worldwide.
escribing the relationship between the world federation and the EHF, Dr.
Hassan Moustafa, President of the International Handball Federation (IHF) said,
The EHF is healthy; therefore, the IHF is also doing well. The Egyptian, who
has been in office since 2000, describes the rapport between the two most
important handball federations. For the International Handball Federation,
the EHF is an absolutely reliable partner in every way. Europe is the driving
force behind handball, and the EHF engages itself in the further development of
handball worldwide, in other continents as well.
EHF President Tor Lian also stresses time and again the cooperation with the
world federation, as well as the good contact that the EHF maintains in relation
to the rest of the continental federations. We gladly come to the help of other
continents; together with the IHF we support a number of national federations.
One example of a joint project with the IHF is the shared support of the Great
Britain team in view of their preparations for the 2012 Olympics. In general,
the EHF is ready and willing when it comes to supporting measures in other
continental federations, says Lian.
There is an exchange of information at least once a week among the Presidents.
The management personnel of the IHF and the EHF sit in many committees
together, and we are always in line with what the assessments of the topics are.
For example, recently, the new Calendar Schedule Commission of the IHF met,
and of course the prominent representatives of the EHF were sitting at the table,
and we came to many positive results, which will be presented in the future. The
EHF and the IHF have the same opinion concerning the insurance of the national
players, and that is also valid for the compensation payments for the federations
from major events. If there were differing views, we sat together and discussed.
We meet very frequently for consultations, this last time in August, the IHF
President said.
From the IHFs point of view, the worldwide advancement of handball cannot
function without the assistance of the Europeans. There are not only the best
handball teams in Europe, but the best handball experts at every level. We as
the IHF are glad that we can fall back on this know-how, Moustafa underlines.
In addition, amongst the most important committees of the world federation
there are a number of Europeans in key positions. The EHF President Tor Lian
and the EHF Vice President Jean Brihault are both members of the IHF Council
in addition to the following IHF Executive Members: Miguel Roca Mas from Spain
(1st IHF Vice President), IHF Treasurer Sandi Sola (Croatia) and IHF General
Secretary Joel Delplanque (France). Other European IHF council members are
Manfred Prause from Germany (Arbitrator and Court Commission), as well as
Slovenian Leon Kalin (Event and Competition Commission) serving as respective
commission Presidents.
Moustafa not only congratulates Tor Lian but all of the Executive as well
as the National Federations on the 20th Anniversary of the EHF. Looking
forward to a continuation of the past relations, the IHF President said,
I wish the EHF positive development just as in the past 20 years and look forward
to an ever more intensive continuation of partnership at every level.
18
31 January 2010: After a victory over Croatia, attack genius Nikola Karabatic
and his central defence blocker Didier Dinart celebrate the French national
teams second European Championship title at the EHF EURO 2010 in Vienna.
19
t was decided that the European Handball Federation was to be created, but
where should it be located? This was the decision facing the Executive Committee
on 17 November 1991 at the EHF Congress. Berlin, Zurich, Lisbon, Bratislava and
Vienna, among other cities, were all in the race to be the headquarters of the
new EHF. All locations offered something different and it was already decided
that when the location was chosen, a manager would be placed in situ from the
very first day.
Michael Wiederer, then General Secretary for the Austrian Handball Federation,
applied for the new role of Secretary General at the European Handball
Federation, but the decision on who would head the new organisation was
delayed eventually to be decided in tandem with its location at the EHF Congress
in June 1992.
The EHF Executive Committee under the presidency of Staffan Holmqvist and
supported by Karl Gntzel, former Treasurer, in an administrative capacity
decided in March 1992 to propose Vienna to the June 1992 Congress because of
favourable conditions and positive signals from other institutions of the benefits
that Vienna brought to the business and its employees.
Both the Austrian Government and the local Viennese Government provided
financial contributions for three years through their sporting streams and
this, alongside the application from Wiederer, ensured that the EHF Executive
Committee was confident that the new organisation would have a person
managing it who knew the business and could be a driving force.
Further to this, geographically, Austria was in the middle of Europe with good
opportunities for many nations to visit at a low cost and with easy travel for
many countries such as those from the Balkan region, the Czech Republic,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary and Germany. These journeys could be completed
by car allowing representatives from both clubs and federations the opportunity
to attend draws, events and lectures and to be an active part of the European
Handball Family.
So where to start in Vienna? A site was chosen due to proximity to a hotel,
roads and city centre and airport links the Austria Trend Hotel Bosei at Gutheil
Schoder Gasse in the 10th district in southern Vienna complete with golf course
and sports hall.
The EHF office opened up on 1 September 1992 in a rented office next to the
hotel with just two people in an office each. A rather big space initially, within a
short period it became apparent that this was not big enough so a third and then
fourth room were rented but it was clear the EHF had outgrown its surroundings.
A year and a half later the EHF moved within the area to a traditional Japanese
Tea House owned by the hotel (Bosei is a term for Motherhood in Japanese), a
traditional symbol to have in the grounds of Japanese buildings.
20
With two floors, the traditional teahouse had many entrances and many doors
where the EHF worked with five, six and eventually seven people. Having so many
access points caused much fun and games for the staff due to people having
so many possibilities of entering the house so many would arrive through the
wrong entrance including on one occasion a delivery driver hoping to deposit
5-6 tonnes of red sand for the nearby tennis courts. The EHF office was like a
telephone exchange and, again, it had outgrown its environs and it became time
to move on again.
In 1996 at the 3rd Ordinary EHF Congress in Greece, it was confirmed by the
Executive Committee that the EHF should buy a piece of land and build their
own headquarters with the precondition of not moving too far away from their
current location due to the hotel proximity and transport links.
After many sites in Vienna and locations had been rejected due to logistical
inconsistencies, a piece of land was identified. With a good cooperation with
the Gartenhotel Altmannsdorf already in place, the plot with the address
Hoffingergasse 18 in the 12th district of Vienna was chosen and acquired. The
new location also matched prerequisites set by the EHF Executive as it was
only 2km away from the original office at the Hotel Bosei. Construction began
in 1997.
The building of the new EHF headquarters was under the total control of the
staff members who would be working there. Plans presented to the Executive
Committee included good working conditions, with lots of light and an open feel
with mezzanines rather than full traditional floors to make communication and
contact easy. The Secretary General office would even have a handball shaped
window over the meeting area after the architect proposed a symbol of the
sport should be incorporated into the design.
Meetings took place with authorities and local residents during the construction
and the new building eventually opened in May 1998 to house nine staff with
a celebratory housewarming party including invited member federations
attending soon after.
However, the office needed to expand twice over the following years, with largescale enlargement that was initially protested at by local residents objecting
to potential sunlight infringement, but this was quickly smoothed over as the
Secretary General, a local resident himself, ensured that all queries and concerns
were engaged and rectified in his role as the EHF representative on the project.
The staff increases and subsequent office expansion over the past 20 years
are clear signs of the progress that European handball has made as the EHF
Congress and EHF Executive Committee give the EHF more tasks such as new
competitions, development projects, methods and everything else in between.
These new tasks naturally resulted in new people being needed as the EHF
required even more human resources to complete its mandates.
From not even owning a sheet of paper in 1991, there are now almost 50
permanent office staff including former national team players and Olympians
with employees coming from a host of different countries to be part of the
European handball movement. The staff who deal with the issues of transfers,
competitions, development, events and marketing as well as the EHFs other
business, hail from England, Austria, Bulgaria, France, Germany, Turkey, Romania,
Spain, Switzerland, Slovakia, Hungary, Cyprus, Serbia, Italy and Lithuania.
21
EHF Grassroots
From Albania to the Ukraine, the National Federations are vital to the promotion of handball in Europe. The success
of the European Handball Federation can be attributed to the hard work of the National Federations.
22
Bozidar Djurkovic, the Secretary General of the Serbian Handball Federation, has
one of the best seats in the house for the upcoming EHF EURO 2012 in Serbia. For
years, he has tirelessly campaigned to bring top handball competitions to Serbia
and after hosting two younger age category competitions, at the 9th Ordinary
Congress in Vienna, Austria - it was third time lucky! He said, Handball is very
traditional in our country and the whole surrounding region. Already in schools,
kids start playing it. The EHF recognises the tradition and supports it. We are
now also part of the SMART programme for mini-handball. We are pleased that
the EHF has a lot of understanding for the Serbian Handball Federation and for
our issues. Now we have been asked three times to organise European Handball
Championships, with the biggest one the Mens EHF EURO 2012 coming up
in January.
The European Handball Federation understands that there remains a gap
between the larger and smaller national federations and is aware of the needs
of the federations. This is reflected in the internal structure and tasks given
to the various boards. Arsene Welter, Secretary General of the Luxembourger
Handball Federation and leaders from other smaller nations are recipients of
EHF development support projects. Welter said, Every nation chips in, even
though the Luxembourger Federation cannot be compared to our neighbouring
federations in Germany and France. We have a very amicable relation to the
EHF. Despite being a smaller federation we have also organised handball events
like the 2001 Younger Age Category European Championship and the 2008
Challenge Trophy. The rapid development of the EHF in terms of professionalism
and size is impressive it stands for the whole sport of handball. We know that
for us as one of the smaller nations it is not realistic to demand participation at
major events. Still we want a piece of the cake for instance matches against
top nations.
Continuous development and support are essential. Anrijs Brencans, Vice
President of the Latvian Handball Federation works in very close cooperation
with the EHF in this area. Looking towards his own federation he summarises,
We received EHF support from the very beginning and have had a great
cooperation level ever since. As a member of the Nations Board, I can give the
EHF input on the handball scene in smaller countries. For us the main focus is
to develop local handball where it already takes place. With the help of the EHF,
we provide infrastructure, support lectures for coaches and supply equipment.
We also want to develop our website to make it very modern. By that we want to
reach young people to play handball as the look of a website is an important
factor to them.
The rapid
development of
the EHF in terms
of professionalism
and size is
impressive it
stands for the
whole sport of
handball.
Philippe Bana is the Technical Director of the French Handball Federation. His
relationship with the EHF dates back to the early years of the EHF. Looking
back on the past 20 years he said, We see the EHF as a French tradition.
Claude Rinck was instrumental in making handball, as a business, an important
issue for us. We have always had French representatives at the EHF who have
been bringing back great European values to our national federation, which has
helped to make steps forward in the last 20 years. We have always felt heard, as
the EHF is very open to talking to the federations. Despite our successful teams
in European competitions, from a French perspective, the Rinck Convention is
the highlight of our cooperation.
The national handball federations, along with their players and their clubs are at
the heart of European handball. It is clear that the EHF could not have enjoyed
20 years of success without the diversity of the cultures and the proffered
experience emanating from these handball schools. The member federations
are integral pieces of the EHF mosaic.
23
Our goal is to
select the best
referees for the
EHF team as early
as possible.
s the European Handball Federation was founded in 1991 and later as the
first competitions were held, naturally there was a need for referees. The current
IHF Chief of Referees, Manfred Prause from Germany, was in 1991 the first
person responsible for the EHF referees. He remembers, The first official event
of the EHF was the 1992 Youth European Championships in Switzerland. We did
not have our own referees there, we had to access and utilise the referee pool of
the International Handball Federation. We selected the five best young couples
available and we drew the lucky straw: four of the referee couples chosen were
later refereeing the matches of the mens and womens EHF EUROs. Two pairs
Garcia/Moreno from France and Hansson/Olsson from Sweden are now part
of the elite IHF referee group and have officiated at World Championships and
finals of the Olympic Games.
Today, the EHF has a referee pool of 149 couples from 40 countries among them
40 female pairs and 71 from the Young Referees Programme (YRP). This big
number is also necessary, because from the side of the EHF, there are around
1400 matches per year from the European Cup to the Champions League,
European Championships and the qualifications, the Younger Age Categories
and much more.
Since 2002, the Hungarian Sndor Andorka as member of the EHF Competitions
Commission, has been responsible for the referees and their nominations and
training. In 2008, the Technical Refereeing Committee was formed and is led by
Andorka. The Committees priority was to deal with strategic questions as well as
education and training, the Young Referees Programme in addition to the rules.
Above all, the programme for the new generation, led by Dane Henrik La Cour
Laursen EHF delegate and former referee, is a resounding success. At the end of
the 1990s, the programme began based on the French model, and today there are
five to six events a year attended by up to 50 referees from across Europe.
We cooperate very closely with the National Federations in order to enable an
optimal developments, said Andorka, our goal is to select the best referees for
the EHF team as early as possible. At this point, we concern ourselves more with
the development of the personality of the referees on the court, than with the
theory. These young referees then receive their first international trials at the
Partille Cup or the European Open in Gothenburg for example. Many referees
that began in this programme are today top referees with the EHF and IHF
respectively such as the French referee couple Lazaar/Reverret who led the final
of the VELUX EHF FINAL4 2011 or the Danes Gjeding/Hansen who officiated the
2009 World Championship and the Womens EHF EURO 2010 Final.
The next step is then the integration of the new generation of referees in the
worldwide Global Referee Training Programme of the IHF, both programmes
work in close cooperation and it gives central uniform criteria to the development
of young referees. For Prause it is important that the Technical Referee
Committee makes officiating more attractive to young people. Compared to
former times, the way from player to referee to delegate has become more
seldom. Altogether, there must be more specialised educational competence of
the educators.
24
25
he first European Cup season was played over nine months from September 1993 to May 1994. Since
then, the competitions for men and women have grown from strength to strength. The development of the
teams and their tenacity and determination to win and prove supremacy can be seen in the competitions,
especially the Champions League. In the mens competitions, the strongest club teams have come from Spain
and Germany. In the womens competitions, the teams are more balanced with the majority of winners coming
from Denmark, Austria, Norway and Romania. Here we present the winners of the past 18 seasons.
VfL Gummersbach
VfL Gummersbach
Pevafersa Valladolid
MKB Veszprm KC
HSV Hamburg
Chehovski Medvedi, Chekhov
C. BM. Ademar Leon
Portland San Antonio
A.D.C. Ciudad Real
A.D.C. Ciudad Real
SG Flensburg-Handewitt
Portland San Antonio
Prosesa Ademar Leon
Caja Cantabria Santander
Elgorriaga Bidasoa
TBV Lemgo
FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona
GER
GER
ESP
HUN
GER
RUS
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
GER
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
GER
ESP
ESP
26
RK Cimos Koper
Sporting Clube de Portugal
UCM Sport Resita
UCM Sport Resita
C.S. UCM Resita
Steaua Bucuresti
Wacker Thun
IFK Skvde HK
Skjern Handball
Skjern Handball
RK Jugovic Kav
TW Grosswallstadt
SG Flensburg-Handewitt
TuS Nettelstedt
TuS Nettelstedt
Drammen HK
TV Niederwrzbach
TUSEM Essen
HUN
MNE
DEN
NOR
ROM
SCG
NOR
DEN
FRA
RUS
UKR
ESP
NOR
NOR
GER
GER
HUN
GER
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
SLO
POR
ROM
ROM
ROM
ROM
SUI
SWE
DEN
DEN
YUG
GER
GER
GER
GER
NOR
GER
GER
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
Mios Biganos
Buxtehuder Sportverein
Handball Cercle Nimes
VfL Oldenburg
HC Naisa Nis
C.S. Rulmentul Brasov
TSV bayer 04 Leverkusen
1. FC Nrnberg
Borussia Dortmund
Non Profit S.A. Uni.
Handball Cercle Nimes
Rapid Bucuresti
Napredak Krusevac
Ikast F.S.
Frankfurter Handball Club
AS Silcotub Zalau
Rotor Volgograd
Buxtehuder SV
FRA
GER
FRA
GER
SRB
ROM
GER
GER
GER
ROM
FRA
ROM
YUG
DEN
GER
ROM
RUS
GER
GER
GER
GER
GER
GER
GER
GER
GER
ESP
GER
GER
CRO
GER
GER
GER
ESP
ESP
ESP
BM Ciudad Real
BM Ciudad Real
THW Kiel
BM Ciudad Real
FC Barcelona-Cifec
RK Celje Pivovarna Lasko
Montpellier HB
SC Magdeburg
Portland San Antonio
FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona
Elgorriaga Bidasoa
TEKA Santander
ESP
ESP
GER
ESP
ESP
SLO
FRA
GER
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
ESP
FC Barcelona Borges
THW Kiel
FC Midtjylland Handball
Rander HK A/S
Handball Cercle Nimes
HC Dinamo Volgograd
SC Zvezda Zvenigorod
FTC Budapest
Cornexi Alcoa
Viborg HK A/S
Slagelse FH
Ikast Bording EH
Montex Lublin
Metkovic Jambo
Sportclub Magdeburg
THW Kiel
SG Flensburg-Handewitt
BM Granollers
BM Granollers
Aliza Avidesa
DEN
DEN
FRA
RUS
RUS
HUN
HUN
DEN
DEN
DEN
POL
CRO
GER
GER
GER
ESP
ESP
ESP
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
2011 Larvik
2010 Viborg HK A/C
2009 Viborg HK A/C
2008 Zvezda Zvenigorod
2007 Slagelse DT
2006 Viborg HK A/S
2005 Slagelse FH
2004 Slagelse FH
2003 Krim ETA Kotex Ljubljana
2002 Kometal D.P. Skopje
2001 RK Krim Neutro Roberts
2000 Hypo Niedersterreich
1999 Dunaferr SE
1998 Hypo Niedersterreich
1997 Mar El Osito LEliana Valencia
1996 Podravka Koprivnica
1995 Hypo Niedersterreich
1994 Hypo Niedersterreich
NOR
DEN
DEN
RUS
DEN
DEN
DEN
DEN
SLO
MKD
SLO
AUT
HUN
AUT
ESP
CRO
AUT
AUT
ESP
GER
27
he first national team competitions to be played in 1992 were the mens and womens Youth European
Championships. This was swiftly followed by the first European Championships for men and women in 1994.
Over the past 20 years, national team events have been hosted by 37 member federations. The national
teams of Sweden, Denmark and Norway have had the most notable success. Here we present an overview
of national team winners:
Venue
2010 Austria
2008 Norway
2006 Switzerland
2004 Slovenia
2002 Sweden
2000 Croatia
1998 Italy
1996 Spain
1994 Portugal
Venue
Winner
2010 Denmark/Norway Norway
2008 FYR Macedonia
Norway
2006 Sweden
Norway
2004 Hungary
Norway
2002 Denmark
Denmark
2000 Romania
Hungary
1998 Netherlands
Norway
1996 Denmark
Denmark
1994 Germany
Denmark
Winner
France
Denmark
France
Germany
Sweden
Sweden
Sweden
Russia
Sweden
28
Winner
Denmark
Denmark
Germany
Germany
Poland
Yugoslavia
Denmark
Denmark
Womens 19 European
Handball Championship
*Womens Junior European
Championship 1996 2002
Venue
2011 Netherlands
2009 Hungary
2007 Turkey
2004 Czech Republic
2002 Finland
2000 France
1998 Slovakia
1996 Poland
Winner
Denmark
Norway
Denmark
Russia
Russia
Romania
Romania
Denmark
Winner
Croatia
Germany
Croatia
Serbia & Monten.
Iceland
Russia
Hungary
Sweden
Spain
Portugal
Winner
Sweden
Slovenia
Sweden
Germany
Winner
Finland
Georgia
Moldova
Moldova
Latvia
Cyprus
29
The EHF
invited member
federations to the
office situated at
the Hotel Bosei
Vienna for a
seminar where
they were taught
how to use the
computers and
modems.
o set the scene, the European Handball Federation was still very young and
in some areas, the organisation was still finding its feet. At this time, the second
European Cup season was about to begin and the organisation of national team
competitions was increasing. However, behind the scenes, something else was
happening; the EHF was throwing itself into technological developments. It was
a chance meeting in 1993 at a technology trade fair in Vienna that Pia Pedersen,
then PA to EHF Secretary General Wiederer, met Wolfgang Dittrich and Manfred
Kirisits, founders and directors of EOS Data Systems GmbH a local systems
development company in the city; this was the start of a business relationship
that continues today.
On an EHF internal level, it was at one of the early Congresses that, due to the
need to communicate and share information on a broader basis, it was decided
to implement the EHF Info System. This project was to connect the National
Federations to the EHF by means of a modem, so that the data flowing between
the organisations was appropriately maintained and utilised. When the EHF Info
Systems project rolled out in Autumn 1994, the EHF invited member federations
to the office situated at the Hotel Bosei Vienna for a seminar where they were
taught how to use the computers and modems, and also instructed how to
input and maintain the data resulting from matches, for instance. The Member
Federations in attendance were presented with their first computers courtesy
of the EHF.
On this occasion, although all EHF Member Federations of the time were invited
to participate, due to transit visa issues, not all were able to attend. Thus, less
than a year later in 1995, the second EHF Info System seminar was held in Sofia,
Bulgaria. The EHF team of staff entered Bulgaria with thirty-two pieces of extra
baggage. As the team was collected at the airport by Mr. Spasov, former Secretary
General of the Bulgarian Handball Federation, they realised they were missing a
motherboard. Luckily, this was delivered to the event location the next day!
The EHF Info System project was the foundation upon which decades of
technological development has been built. In close cooperation and many
brainstorming sessions between EOS and Assistant Secretary General Alexander
Toncourt in the formative years and IT Manager Christoph Gamper from 2001,
the cornerstones of the EHF IT system were created. The original cornerstones
included MAILING for individual and specialist distribution actions and the
PLAYER Database for handling all player and transfer information. This
was quickly joined by the EHF HQ, which assisted basic data handling, match
administration, reporting and data exchange and most recently the EHF FAMILY
PORTAL directly linked to HQ.
Getting the EHF technological platforms to where they are today included
some smaller hits and misses. Alexander Toncourt reminisces, It was all about
learning by doing; we were intensively exchanging knowledge. EOS had, and
did, learn about the sport of handball and its organisation, just as I had to learn
about technology and I learned fast! When it came time to implement the tools
we had developed together, I remember weeks and weeks of testing systems.
For the EHF employees today, it is inconceivable to work without these tools; in
every area of the business, they have become indispensible.
30
However, not everything was possible at a click of a button. Right up until 2001,
whilst plans were being developed and projects were being implemented, the
EHF was still sending the news and nominations by fax machine and Telex
(teleprinters used like a phone network to send text-like messages). This was
not always an easy task; if the fax did not transmit correctly, EHF staff members
had to stay in the office until the fax finally went through. In addition, failed
transmissions did not only keep the staff awake, just ask the former handball
journalist Alice Kaufmanns. Alexander Toncourt fills us in, I remember Alice
contacting me and begging me to find another solution to the fax distribution.
This was because her fax machine was linked to her telephone line and if we
were sending the news or nominations, she would wake in the middle of the
night to her phone ringing off the hookunfortunately this happened more than
once! Nevertheless, based on the swift development of technical solutions; all of
this information is now distributed by email or online.
From information delivery by fax to the e-News, draws carried out with the aid
of a pin board to immediate results via the live-ticker; internal EHF processes
continue to progress. Under the expert tutelage of Markus Glaser, Christoph
spent half his time in the competitions department and the other half was spent
developing systems with Toncourt. It was his very first project, creating the new
seeding and ranking system for the EHF European Cup, a dual project between
both departments, which secured his permanent move to the IT department.
Today, Gamper is the Senior IT Manager with a team of three staff. Currently
located in the renovated basement of the office in Hoffingergasse, Gamper
and his team work around the clock (if necessary). When asked why, Gamper
explained: Securing the optimal functionality of the internal working processes
of the EHF is the ultimate goal of the IT department. In order to do this, we have
nurtured our relationship with EOS Data Systems GmbH, because it is of the
utmost importance to have reliable and trustworthy partners that cooperate
with us on a long-term basis. Working with technological processes is not the
same as working on an event; at some point the event ends and in IT we have to
maintain the systems long after the implementation.
Toncourt continued, Despite the growth of the EHF in the past 20 years and the
developments that have come over time, the EHF has managed to keep up with
the times due to a data structure that was implemented in 1993. We have built
and expanded on this original structure and it still holds today. This structure
is exceptionally secure; we have never experienced a loss of data regardless
of the operating system running at the time. We have evolved. We started out
with Windows OS 3.1 now we are about to rollout Windows 7. We have been
very lucky, every time prior to changing operating systems, we have had to
carefully investigate the effects on other internal systems, weve had to check
and secure existing data and our initial structure has proven time and again
resilient allowing us to keep up with modern technologies quite easily.
Everything that we have done was with a view to efficiency. For instance, in
cooperation with our partners, we have developed the electronic match report.
The data transmitted generates live statistics to feed into online systems for
media, fans and also for analytical tools used in feedback sessions. This leads
to a faster flow of information and will reduce the work force needed on a
competition intense weekend where up to a 100 matches are played. We are
now in the final phases of integration and heading towards the distribution
process. Clubs, National Federations and delegates will be trained via an online
platform, which means they do not even have to leave their offices to learn
how to use this new tool! Nevertheless, in the first phase of implementation, we
will also have to ensure that the users have continual support via telephone or
online help desks, said Gamper.
Summarising the role of the IT department, Gamper said, It is a never-ending
cycle of analysing processes, optimisation, implementation of tools and saving
resources. The number of EHF employees has grown from two in 1992 to
approximately 50 in 2011 (including EHF Marketing) this means the number
of ideas flowing into my department has increased. It is our job to analyse
and validate these ideas. We then have to implement the ideas with the view
to optimising and expanding existing systems thus increasing efficiency and
performance...and I love it!
We have built
and expanded
on this original
structure and it
still holds today.
31
As we grow,
we are able to
push the VELUX
EHF Champions
League to new
heights.
32
The handling of the TV rights internally by the EHF, rather than externally
provides the chance for better exploitation allowing the EHF to reach markets
which have never been covered or touched by handball before. This progression
is a continuous process, as there are always new clubs in new territories with
different sponsorship, marketing and ticketing incomes and needs. This huge
difference across Europe is always a challenge for the EHF and EHF Marketing,
but one they relish and embrace. The signing of the naming rights to VELUX
for the EHF Mens Champions League in 2010 highlights the continuing
development. One of the major challenges for EHF Marketing was to find the
balance between the pure marketing efforts, alongside knowing the market and
limitations and knowing the clubs. Close cooperation and coordination with the
EHF Competitions Department was necessary in order to agree and balance the
strategic approaches.
The success of EHF Marketing can be seen in TV figures relating to the VELUX
EHF Champions League and EHF Womens Champions League. The VELUX EHF
Champions League 2010/11 was broadcast live in 76 countries worldwide, with
more than 25 million people watching the final round of the competition, the
VELUX EHF FINAL4, played in Cologne, Germany at the end of May 2011. Over
2,800 hours of coverage were shown, an increase of 550% over the amount of
hours shown in 2005/06 and an overall 5% increase on the previous season.
The EHF Womens Champions League, also marketed by EHF Marketing, has
enjoyed sustained growth over the 2010/11 season with a total of 1,580 hours of
the very best womens handball action shown on television: an increase of 33.9%
from the previous season watched by more than 110 million people in 17 countries.
In six years, EHF Marketing has grown from two employees to a team of 14. As
we continue to grow in numbers, we are able to push the VELUX EHF Champions
League and the EHF Womens Champions League to new heights and to the
recognition that these elite competitions deserve, said Peter Vargo, EHFM
Managing Director.
33
Nobody at
the very first
draw in Vienna
could have ever
dreamed how
successful the
EHF Champions
League would
become.
t all began in a golf club in Vienna, the year was 1993. Two years after the
foundation of the European Handball Federation, the first draw of the EHF
Champions League was carried out and the first milestone was set after the new
continental federation took over the organisation of the European Cup from the
International Handball Federation. With a new system and the new name EHF
Champions League a brand was created, which in the meantime ranks among
the top competitions across all sport disciplines. Nobody at the very first draw
in Vienna could have ever dreamed how successful the EHF Champions League
would become and how 17 years later 20,000 fans would storm across Europe
to attend the VELUX EHF FINAL4 weekend in Cologne. Neither would they have
anticipated that 310 million viewers from 76 countries worldwide would be watching
2,800 hours of TV transmissions from the VELUX EHF Champions League 2010/11
season or 110 million viewers would be watching the matches of the EHF Womens
Champions League.
Naturally, with the creation of their Champions League, the EHF did model some
elements from big brother football, but in one specific point, the handballers
were way ahead of the footballers: from the very beginning, there was an equal
Womens Champions League. The first playing system, which has until today been
constantly updated and necessarily modified, saw 32 national champions play in
two KO rounds, before eight teams would move on to the Group Phase playing a
round-robin system against each other in both mens and womens competitions.
Previously, there were only knockout rounds. The winners of the group phase
then made it to the final. In the mens competition, the first finalists were Teka
Santander (Spain) and ABC Braga (Portugal). In the womens competition, it
was a repeat of the National Championship finals with HYPO Niedersterreich
playing against Vasas Budapest.
Looking at the pictures from these times comparing them to the Champions
League matches of today, one thing is very clear: the tendency has turned into
matches into an event in their own right. The matches that, back then, took place
in the school gymnasium are today taking place in large arenas. The spectator
figures, thanks to the greater capacity, have risen hundredfold and the Champions
League has become a brand; a brand at the pinnacle of European club handball.
The Champions League, through the efforts of EHF Marketing, has a unified
look. Since 2006, TV spectators across Europe know they are watching a mens
Champions League match when they see the distinct blue lagoon and black
supplied by the flooring specialists Gerflor in addition to the seasons individual
yellow and blue handball supplied by adidas. In the 2011/12 season, the matches
of the EHF Womens Champions League are now furnished with the uniform floor
and with this the recognition value has dramatically increased.
34
On the court, the heroes of this top sporting competition are making history and
creating European records: we have FC Barcelona; seven times winners of the
Champions League and HYPO Niedersterreich, who won the title five times.
Ausra Fridrikas (HYPO and Slagelse) and Andrey Xepkin (Barcelona and Kiel),
each of whom won the Champions League title seven times making them the
most successful players in club team history. We have Valero Rivera, who as the
former coach of FC Barcelona won six of the titles (five consecutive) and Anja
Andersen, who led the Danish team of Slagelse to three CL titles. Not to forget
the goalkeepers! We have Luminita Dinu who won three Champions League titles
with Krim and Skopje, as did Cecile Leganger with Slagelse and Larvik. We have
goalkeeper Xavier Hombrados who, up until 2011, was the only player with five CL
titles with three clubs (Santander, Portland, Ciudad Real); he was joined by Siarhei
Rutenka (Celje, Ciudad Real, Barcelona) in this elite club of award winners.
Then there is the other side of the coin
We have the story of RK Zagreb and Mirza Dzomba: the Croatian champions
made it to the Champions League finals on four occasions, and lost each time
against a Spanish team; three consecutive times against Barcelona. The story
becomes even more exciting for Croatian World Champion and Olympic medallist
Mirza Dzomba. Dzomba failed to win the Champions League on five occasions
with Zagreb, Veszprem and Ciudad Real. Only after years of disappointment, the
title was finally his in 2006 this victory was shared with Ciudad Real.
If you look at the winners of the mens and womens Champions League more
closely, it is clear to see that with the women, despite a dominance firstly
from HYPO Niedersterreich, then later from Denmark, there is much more
alternation. In the past 18 seasons, for which HYPO Niedersterreich always
qualified, there have been 10 different winners from Austria, Hungary, Slovenia,
FYR Macedonia, Croatia, Spain, Russia, Denmark and Norway. In the mens
competition, RK Zagreb holds the record for 18 participations in 19 years. The
first run of Spanish dominance lasted from 1994 to 2002, before SC Magdeburg
the first non-Spanish team took the title. Only twice, in 2003 (Montpellier)
and 2004 (Celje), did the Champions League winner not come from Spain or
Germany. In contrast to five Spanish-Spanish and one German-German final
duels, in the womens competition never have two teams from the same nation
faced each other in the final. In 2003, the qualification for the mens competition
was amended allowing three (sometimes even four) teams from the top leagues
to participate in the Champions League.
In the womens
competition, it
remains that only
the 12 national
champions from
most successful
nations on the
EHF ranking list
qualify directly for
the Group Phase.
However, this elite league would not have earned its name, if it had failed to
develop even if the playing system in the men and womens competition has
not changed in years. In the mens competition, where the league has been
called the VELUX EHF Champions League since 2010, the Last 16 and the
Quarterfinals follow the Group Phase of 24 teams divided into four groups. For
the past two years, the competition has concluded with the great showdown at
the LANXESS arena in Cologne. The VELUX EHF FINAL4 combines the SemiFinals and the Final played over one weekend at the end of the season and, at
each event so far, presented in front 40,000 spectators. In 2012, the event will
return to Cologne.
In the womens competition, it remains that only the 12 national champions
from most successful nations on the EHF ranking list qualify directly for the
Group Phase; the remaining four Group Phase participants are decided in two
qualification stages. Following the Group Phase, the competition moves into the
Main Round. Subsequently, as the season ends, the womens club teams pass
into the Semi-Finals and eventually the final match.
35
In September
of 1994, the first
womens EHF
EURO took place
in Germany.
hen on 3 June 1994 the Spaniard Ramon Gallego and the German Hans
Thomas almost simultaneously blew into their whistles, it was a small step for the
referees, but a decisive step for European handball. With the matches Belarus
against Germany in Porto and Sweden against Slovenia in Almada, the first mens
European Championship in the history of the EHF was officially opened. Twelve
national teams were divided between the two preliminary round groups at the
start; in the semi-finals, Russia (29:20 against Denmark) and Sweden (24:21
against Croatia) made it through to the very first EURO finals, and following an
event that lasted 10 days, Sweden won after defeating Russia in the final 34:21.
This first success led to a further 17 European Championships on a two-year
cycle because from the very start, the womens event was on an equal footing.
In September 1994, the first womens EHF EURO took place in Germany and
the hosts achieved their best ranking to date by winning the silver medal.
The first womens European Champion were Denmark. These first European
Championships, in terms of title winners, seemed to have prophetic meaning,
because the Swedish mens team won the title four times between 1994 and
2002 and thus are the record title holders. The Danish womens national team
won two further titles in 1996 and 2002, however, were destined to be eternally
ranked behind Norway, who secured the Championship title five times between
2004 and 2010, four times consecutively.
In the womens competition the emphasis of the titles is clearly in northern
Europe, because the only team to win the title and not to come from Norway
or Denmark was Hungary who used the reconstruction of many teams after
the 2000 Olympic Games to their advantage in order to take the gold medal
in Romania. In the semi-final, there were no teams from the high north and
only teams from Eastern Europe. Hungary made it to the final after a dramatic
period of extra-time against the Ukraine. Russia took the bronze medal against
Romania.
In the mens competition the range is broader, despite many years of Swedish
dominance four additional nations; Russia, Germany, Denmark and France
(2) have all won the coveted gold medal with Croatia being a constant in the
medal matches. Throughout the duration of the tournament, there has been no
country including the final tournaments in 2012 Serbia and 2014 Denmark
that has held the competition more than once. Denmark has hosted the womens
competition three times, even in 2010 in cooperation with Norway. In 2012, the
Netherlands host the European Championships for the second time since 1998,
and there the handball stars of today will run across the unique yellow and blue
floor.
Looking at the statistics of the previous championships, in the mens competition
it is noticeable that the larger handball nations such as Croatia and Spain have
been World Champions, but never European Champions. For example, Spain lost
all three finals for which they had qualified for. Since 1994, 27 medals have
been divided between 10 countries and in the womens competitions among
11, whereby record World Champion Russia has also never been European
Champion, just like the 2003 World Champions France.
36
Only once 2002 did the host nation in the mens competition take the gold
medal, in this case Sweden. In 1996 (Spain) and 2004 (Slovenia) the host nation
did win a medal, albeit silver. In the womens competition, Denmark won gold on
home soil twice in 1996 and 2002, and as co-hosts in 2010, the team ranked
fourth. These European Championships initiated the development for the future,
with the competition being hosted in two countries simultaneously and with
great success: with 220,000 visitors to the 47 matches in Denmark and Norway,
at the same time setting a new record for the womens events in the history
of the EHF EUROs if you include the mens event; this was the third-highest
spectator figure. Moreover, in the host countries, the EHF EURO broke new TV
records. In Norway and Denmark approximately 36 percent of all inhabitants
were watching the matches of their respective national teams. The EHF EURO in
2014 will also be co-hosted, by Croatia and Hungary.
When it comes to the EHF EURO and not only in terms of the host, the EHF
set itself on a new path years ago. Since 2002, at the mens and womens
Championships there have been 16 participating teams instead of 12 and a Main
Round has been added. Since the 2010 EHF EUROs, the qualification phase has
also been adapted; previously the play-offs determined EHF EURO participation
and since 2008, there are the group matches which have been modified for the
2012 EUROs.
In 1998, the EHF changed their working structure and with Helmut Hritsch,
followed by Monika Flixeder in 2004, introduced a special coordinator for the
EUROs. Today, under the umbrella of the Business Unit EURO Events, several
departments of the EHF office together with the Competitions Commission
contribute to the processes of awarding, preparing and organising the EHF top
events on a national team level.
And if we look
at the stars of
the EHF EUROs, it
reads like a whos
who of world
handball.
If we look at the stars of the EHF EUROs, it reads like a whos who of world
handball. In the delegation of the first European Champion Sweden among
others, there was Magnus Wieslander (World Handball Player of the Century),
Olsson and Lvgren. In the Spanish team in the 1996 final there was a certain
Talant Dujshebajev on the roster who, if he had retained his old citizenship
would have been European Champion with Russia. In the end he took the silver
medal and the accolade of Most Valuable Player of the tournament.
Continuing this honour roll are players like Ivano Balic, Stefan Kretzschmar
and Andrey Lavrov right through to players of today such as French superstars
Thierry Omeyer and Nikola Karabatic. The same honours are also valid for
the stars from the female delegations, where for instance the Norwegian Gro
Hammerseng, Tonje Larssen or Katrine Lunde Haraldsen spring to mind. Each
won European Gold four times. At the EHF EURO 2010, the star of the tournament
was Romanian Cristina Neagu, who shortly thereafter was honoured with the
title World Handball Player of the Year. This particular story has a long way to
go before it reaches its end.
In the early stages of the EHF European Handball Championships, no one not
even Ramon Gallego and Hans Thomas as they blew their whistles again could
have known what the future held for the European Championships. By the way,
Belarus turned the very first EURO match into a sensation by defeating Germany
24:23 and finished the tournament ranked eighth; for Sweden the 22:17 victory
against Slovenia was the beginning of a long series of wins. The rest, as they
say, is history.
37
38
39
Our vision
is that beach
handball will
become an
Olympic sport.
t was as early as 1990 when discussions for adapting handball to the beach
environment were held and a first set of rules of the new sport was developed
in cooperation between the Italian Olympic Committee and the Italian Handball
Federation at that time presided by Ralf Dejaco, current EHF Treasurer. In the
following summers the sport was developed further in Italy, with exhibition
games and enthusiasts playing the game; the rules were reviewed with the focus
on making the game more spectacular and emphasising the acrobatic plays.
Many people were enthused by this handball variation and the Comitato
Organizzatore Handball Beach federation (COHB) was set up in Italy. During
the same year, more tournaments followed and the sport was presented to the
International Handball Federation (IHF).
Beach handball had already gained international acceptance at this early
stage. Press and television took particular interest and helped to create a very
positive atmosphere for the sport. In 1994 more and more tournaments were
organised, for both women and men, spread over several European countries
also countries without natural beaches. A first EHF Lecturers Course on the
topic was held, with a remarkable interest in beach handball shown by the
participants. Many federations asked to receive further information to get this
sport off the ground in their respective countries.
The first tournament in the world for national teams was set up in Rio De Janeiro,
Brazil, in January 1995. At the same time, the EHF set up a special study group
to review the game within the tasks of the Methods Commission which led to
the game as it is known today. Structures were built as the EHF established a
working group and the IHF set up a commission for beach handball activities.
After presentation to the EHF Congress in 1996, the Competitions Commission
were of the opinion that a tournament should be played under auspices of the
EHF.
With the new EHF Beach Handball Experts Seminar 1997 in Marsala (ITA), the
sport was included in the EHF statutes. That summer, several beach handball
tournaments were played in European countries. Common meetings between
the IHF & EHF were held in this period for an internal review of the rules, and
a preliminary booklet on the rules was issued by IHF. In the summer of 1998
tournaments acted as test pilots.
The first European Beach Handball Championships were held in 2000 in Gaeta
(Italy) with eight mens and eight womens national teams participating. The first
Beach Handball European Champions were Belarus and Ukraine respectively.
Shortly after that the International World Games Association (IWGA) recognised
beach handball as a competitive sport and it became a discipline of the World
Games 2001 held in Akita, Japan.
In April 2001, the EHFs Working Group was established and as a result of this,
the European Beach Tour (EBT) was created as a summer competition for club
teams. Moreover, the second EHF Course for Beach Handball Referees and
Delegates was held. By the time the Beach Handball Commission was formed,
after ratification from the 2007 EHF Extraordinary Congress, four more
European Beach Handball Championships and two for Younger Age Categories
were carried out.
40
The last two events, 2009 in Larvik (NOR) and 2011 in Umag (CRO), took the sport
to an all-time high, with thousands of spectators courtside, live televised matches
- a huge success for both organisers. Looking back on the swift progression of
the sport Laszlo Sinka, Chairman of the Beach Handball Commission and Peter
Frschl, responsible in the EHF office said, We have reached great success with
this fantastic sport, and more is to come. Our vision is that beach handball will
become an Olympic sport.
The beach handball competitions, since the first official national team event in
2000 and the first club event in 2004, have an impressive honour roll. Here we
recap the winners:
Mens European Beach Tour Finals
Womens
European
Beach
Handball Championships
Venue Winner
2011 Croatia
Croatia
2009 Norway
Croatia
2007 Italy
Russia
2006 Germany Spain
2004 Turkey
Russia
2002 Spain
Spain
2000 Italy
Belarus
Venue Winner
2011 Croatia
Croatia
2009 Norway
Italy
2007 Italy
Croatia
2006 Germany Germany
2004 Turkey Russia
2002 Spain
Russia
2000 Italy
Ukraine
Venue Winner
2011 Croatia Croatia
2008 Hungary Hungary
Venue Winner
2011
Croatia
Hungary
2008 Hungary Hungary
Venue
2011
Spain
2010 Portugal
2009 Greece
2008 Spain
2007 Hungary
2006 Greece
2005 Spain
2004 Italy
Winning Team
Detono Zagreb
Detono Zagreb
Detono Zagreb
AXA Beach Stars Budapest BHC
Balonmano Playa Humel Barbate
Winterthur Budapest
LETO2002.COM
LETO2002.COM
Nation
Croatia
Croatia
Croatia
Hungary
Spain
Hungary
Serbia
Serbia
Winning Team
Detono Zagreb
Playadettes
Avant Garde
Euronics Nagyatad
Flying Kangaroos
WBHCKontesa
WBHCKontesa
Policastelliri
Nation
Croatia
Switzerland
Greece
Hungary
Germany
Croatia
Croatia
Italy
41
You have to
take it one step
at a time; on the
way to the top.
n 2006 in Estonia, a star was rising. A certain Domagoj Duvnjak enthralled the
spectators at the 2006 EHF Mens 18 European Championship. The playmaker
was voted Most Valuable Player of the tournament and led Croatia to its first of
two European Championship titles in the mens 18 category.
Back then, experts raved that Duvnjak could become the successor to the
ingenious Ivano Balic. Two years later, at the age of 20 years, Duvnjak was
already playing side-by-side next to his idol Balic at the Mens EHF EURO in
Norway. Duvnjak and the team won silver his first medal in the senior category.
To be voted the Most Valuable Player at the Mens 18 European Championship
was for me a sign that I had a certain talent. From out of the youth national
team; many of the players have transitioned well into the senior mens team,
said Duvnjak.
Meanwhile Duvnjak is contracted to HSV Hamburg and he is on his way to
international stardom. Nevertheless, he has not forgotten where he came from,
You have to take it one step at a time; on the way to the top, the youth and
junior championships were crucial to my development even if it was not always
easy, eventually I was playing junior team parallel to being in the senior team.
Duvnjak is one of many examples of how the system of the Younger Age
Category (YAC) competitions, introduced in 2004 with the Mens 18 European
Championship in Serbia, has formed players.
The idea behind the YACs is for the athletes to gain experience on an international
level, in a timely manner, with the best of their contemporaries on the continent.
In a four-year cycle from the Womens 17 to the Mens U-21 (IHF), the up-andcoming handball talents can compete in two European Championships and two
World Championships in addition to the European Open held in Gothenburg.
Many national talents have used these competitions as a springboard to the top
of their adult careers, such as Cristina Neagu. The Romanian was named Most
Valuable Player of the YAC European Championship in 2005, where her team
won the silver medal. A year later, she was at the youth World Championship
where she earned herself another MVP accolade and a bronze medal. In 2007
at the Womens 19 European Championship, she was the top scorer of the
tournament, got herself a spot in the All-Star Team and picked up yet another
bronze medal.
42
At the age of 20, she began her career in the senior national team. Three years
later, another bronze medal is hers along with another top scorer accolade at
the EHF EURO 2010 in Denmark/Norway. As Neagus star continued to rise and
after winning the prize of 2009 World Rookie of the Year, at the age of 22, she
was voted World Handball Player of the Year.
In Romania there is a tradition of good coaching for the younger generation
of players, but it is only through the international tournaments such as the YAC
European Championships that you see where you stand in comparison and
where you need to improve. Moreover, these competitions are the way to the
adult competitions and that is a great motivation, said Neagu.
This is a view that Uwe Gensheimer (25) also shares. Not only is Gensheimer a
top performer in the German national team, he is also an icon. In 2006, he won
the gold medal at the sixth edition of the Mens 20 European Championship and
at the Junior World Championship in 2007, he was named Most Valuable Player
(MVP) and with the German team also won the silver medal. In season 2010/2011,
Gensheimer was the top scorer of the VELUX EHF Champions League.
Now we are all curious to see whose star is going to rise in the future!
It is only
through the
international
tournaments
such as the
YAC European
Championships
that you see
where you stand
in comparison and
where you need to
improve.
43
44
In May 2010 a new EHF Infrastructure Support Programme was proposed ahead
of the 10th EHF Congress in Copenhagen, Denmark in September 2010, where it
was voted into effect from October 2010. This was to include informal, material
or financial support in these selected areas and an extension of the current
and well-accepted EHF development programmes with particular reference to
infrastructural development based on concrete proposals by the applying EHF
member federations. The first federations to sign up to the EHF Infrastructure
Support Programme (ISP) were Ireland and Scotland with England swiftly signed
up soon after.
With ISP, the EHF is also supporting the further training and development of
coaches, referees and delegates, elected members, officials, secretaries general,
finance officers and has established a group of experts to provide Federation
Consultancy where needed. In addition to this the EHF offers part-funding for
professional staff in national federations such as development officials and
office managers with selection criteria based on concrete development plans
and job descriptions submitted by the applying federations.
Further development for the EHF comes through the EHF Competency
Academy Network (CAN) facilities which provide a full-time service bringing
experts together; sharing opinions and expertise, and setting up frameworks
and concept which can be used regardless of religion, culture or language. The
work of the EHF development programmes are fascinating as, especially in
all of the EHF coaching courses, there is a big interest from other continents,
with participants attending from Asia, Africa and Central and South America
alongside an international flavour at EHF conventions and technical workshops.
Mainly during conventions and conferences, federation officials contact the EHF
on a political level. This request is followed up by Allan Lund, the Member for
Development with the Methods Commission who finds out exactly what they
need and what they want. A three-year master plan related to a budget is then
submitted and the Methods Commission and EHF Office then evaluates the
request and approves or rejects it accordingly.
Finally, the EHF Foster Programme establishes cooperation between EHF
developing and developed handball federations. A developed federation will
foster a developing federation based on a mutual agreement for a certain
period. The idea is to establish a well functioning system adapted to the needs
and preconditions of the respective federations through nomination of lecturers
to courses, inviting teams to competitions, inviting participants to national
courses, exchange information, allowing a look behind the science of successful
handball management (coaches & referees education, national development
programmes, etc.) and is supported via the EHF by material support, nomination
of EHF lecturers and financial support. Romania and Moldova are one of the
best examples of a foster programme working well with Moldovan youngsters
training in Romania ahead of a younger age category qualification tournament,
grassroots work and the exchange of referees.
The EHF will always be about not just the top level elite professional players, but
also the grassroots.
45
The speed is
much higher than
before and many
more goals are
scored.
46
20 years of progress
Frances coaching legend, Daniel Constantini sees positive developments, but wants to see more tactical
innovations.
ince 2010, France is the first and only nation in handball to hold the Olympic,
World and European titles in the mens category. However, the roots of these
titles can be traced back many years and the father of success is the 68-yearold Daniel Constantini who took over the French national team in 1985 after the
team ended the World Championship that year ranking 19th.
It took approximately 10 years until the Barjots managed to rank among the
worlds best teams: after taking bronze at the 1992 Olympics and silver at the
1993 World Championships, stars such as Jackson Richardson and Frederic
Volle won the World Championship title; a feat which they repeated on home soil
six years later. With the second gold, Constantini resigned his post and handed
the baton to his successor Claude Onesta. Constantini remains connected to
handball as a TV commentator and in the area of coaches education.
In his review of the development of handball over the past 20 years, he sees the
trend with men and women alike, in the clearly faster game. This is attributable
to the fast centre. However, the pressure on the players has also increased,
particularly during major events. Despite the high speeds and the increased
dynamic, the referee protects the players more, said Constantini.
Today, we
play in beautiful
large arenas
and around the
matches the fans
are offered much
more
It is clearly recognisable that the players are now better educated both
physically and technically - however, this is in view of the individual training and
Constantini believes that for the collective this is too rare leading to minimal
tactical innovations in the past years.
In the face of an increased attractiveness, Constantini also praises the
development of handball as an event. Today, we play in beautiful large arenas
and around the matches the fans are offered much more; the number of TV
transmissions have evidently increased. Additionally, also the fair play of the
spectators has positively changed in many places, he said.
In the future, Constantini would like to see a decrease in the number of major
tournaments, increased commitment from the international and continental
federations, harder punishments from the referees and an improvement on the
level of hardware where the construction of the shoes and colour of the balls
are concerned.
47
aving played handball for 20 years, Radulovics is the perfect person to look
back on the development of womens handball since the foundation of the EHF.
After a back injury ended her playing career for good, Radulovics now leads the
next generation of players at the Handball Academy in Dunajvros.
I never wanted
to be a star; I was
only a girl that
was doing what
she loved.
If you look at the speed at which the game is played today, everything is totally
different than it was before much faster and more dynamic, but also more
aggressive and rawer. Maybe it is because the players have entirely different
physical conditions. It is definitely interesting that the new generation of players
are much taller and stronger than the women of my time, she said.
As a result of the apparent higher tempo, the tactical adjustments in womens
handball have also completely changed. Radulovics states, Back when I played
we played out our attacks on the court much slower. Today the players look for
a really fast finish, but that is exactly what is expected from coaches in modern
handball these days. That is why, of course, the number of goals scored has
enormously increased, due to more than anything because of the counter attack
speed and second waves.
On the other hand, Radulovics wishes there would be a change in the attitude
and mentality of the younger players. They should love handball more instead of
focusing on money and contracts abroad. I hope that the handball mentality will
one day return to how it was in the past. I never wanted to be a star; I was only
a girl that was doing what she loved. Today every talented player automatically
wants to become a star.
Generally, the naturalised Hungarian sees the development of handball in
the land she calls home, and everywhere else in Europe for that matter, very
positively. Handball is much more popular than it used to be. In Hungary were
almost becoming as popular as football, and this is the case in other countries
as well, such as Denmark, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands and even Brazil
womens handball has developed enormously there.
Radulovics, awarded Best Female Handball Player through the years 2000-2010
in her home country, reflects fondly upon her long career, It was sheer luck to
transfer to Hungary as a young player back then and then become a citizen.
It was a wonderful experience to participate in the 2000 Olympics, absolutely
amazing! My entire career fills me with much pride. I had so many wonderful
experiences throughout the years. For Radulovics, her greatest honour was
receiving the 2004 Sport Stars Award, which is only granted to one single
player of each individual sport, placing her among the high ranks along with
Roger Federer and Yelena Isinbajewa.
Nevertheless, her career came to an end this summer. I cant play any longer
because of my back, and I honestly do not wish to be in a wheelchair one day.
The 38-year old remains faithful to handball as a coach. She is the head of the
womens section of the Dunajvros Handball Academy and is mainly responsible
for the junior players ranging from 16 to 19 years, We do not only want to train
talent from Hungary, but from other countries as well. It is a dream job for me
because I not only teach the young players the rules of the game but also have
the opportunity to relay and instil in them my outlook.
48
I did not
recognise myself,
handball, tactics
or the speed!
Lvgren, however, does recognise the fast break, introduced in the late 1990s, as
the most important tactical development in handball in the past 20 years. Since
then, handball has been played with a totally different tempo and a different
kind of athleticism, said Lvgren who also admits, when I was still a player, I did
not react to the developments consciously. One sees this only when looking from
the outside in. But it is amazing how fast and energised handball is today. This
spectacle has also led to increased interest from the spectators and the media.
Moreover, Lvgren has also noticed other progressions: Before, there were
specialists that do not exist in this particular form anymore; or they have taken
on other and more varied tasks. Back then, it was enough when you were very
good at one particular thing out of five; today you need to be good at four out
of five things at the very least.
The increase in professionalism has had a tremendous effect on the external
perceptions of handball. In the past, we played the European Cup in school
gymnasiums, today handball is at home in major cities in huge arenas and has
turned into a big event you only have to look at the VELUX EHF FINAL4 in
Cologne. This is the best example for the development of handball.
49
In the very
early years of the
EHFs existence,
there were no
multiple TV
transmissions
direct to the LOC
Media Centre.
50
Today, print journalism takes place over a laptop with information flowing via the
internet; interviews take place in hotels via video conferencing tools. Even the
style in which reports are presented and distributed has changed nearly beyond
recognition continents can now be reached in seconds content is abridged
and transmitted over live-tickers. Print media no longer has to concentrate on
the execution of the game; there are many more areas to be reported, such
as the teams and their opponents and the events surrounding the match.
Furthermore, the private lives of the trainers and players are no longer off-limits.
Years ago, radio journalists had to secure a LOC-ordered telephone lines and
one of the technicians who had also travelled to the event would have to assist
in the transmission of reports and commentary. ISDN and DSL were both still
relatively unknown at the earlier events. Now the radio and video reporters are
also the technician and cutter.
In 2000, the first of the digital cameras started appearing at matches, most of
our younger colleagues find it hard to imagine how other colleagues still worked
and produced their photographs at the end of the 1990s. It was amazing to see
how simple the production and dispatching of photographic imagery became
with the introduction of internet and email. The photographs from each top
handball event are not only in their thousands, but also of the highest quality!
The EHF too has seen many changes in its handling of the media. The rapid
development and professionalism of competitions also led to the need for
professional media management. From one employee dealing with media
matters, the Corporate Communication department has become the Media &
Communications department with five full-time staff providing media services,
managing the websites of the EHF and giving support at an increased number
of top EHF events.
51
hen the Danish Pop duo Anna David and Jimmy Colding presented their
anthem Out of the Dark, Into the Light at the Womens EHF European
Championship 2010 in Denmark/Norway, the song not only became a popular
hit in the host countries for two weeks, but it also symbolised a development
of the EHF. The handing over of the EHF EURO plate with a bit of confetti and a
bottle of champagne at the award ceremonies is a thing of the past.
Looking at pictures from the first European Cup and the EHF Champions League
draws and comparing them with todays photos, they are worlds apart. This is
not only because EHF Secretary General Michael Wiederer has opened over
20,000 balls, with the names of clubs and nations since the foundation of the
EHF, but in the meantime also seems to have lost his moustache. Nowadays,
even as the faces of Wiederer and Jan Tuik still appear, the names of the clubs
are no longer stuck to a pin board.
In the electronic age, the EHF draws signify technological advances. The
computer generated names of clubs or national federations are cast upon the
wall and available worldwide on the Internet via live stream. Furthermore, the
draws have now become media events. They are embedded into Gala events or
fancy dinners, like on the occasion of the quarterfinal draw of the VELUX EHF
Champions League, with a catered five-course meal gazing over the roofs of
Vienna in the new Sofitel hotel. The draws have reached even higher altitudes
for two years now at the semi-final pairings of the VELUX EHF FINAL4 in KlnSky
overlooking the famous Cologne Cathedral.
The first large-scale Draw Gala was on the 29 June 2007, in Viennas futuristic
Uniqa Tower, where groups representing both the men and womens Champions
League were ceremoniously drawn from the lottery pots in front of over 300
invited guests as part of the Celebrate the Passion Gala, which celebrated
the 15th Anniversary of the EHF Champions League.
This Gala truly set milestones and was only outdone once in the magnitude of
its ceremonial and noble ambiance: on 24 June 2009, when the Liechtenstein
Museum was the setting of the important draws.
Both the Champions League Group Phases, as well as the Preliminary Rounds
of the Mens 2010 EHF EURO in Austria, drew lots in Vienna in front of 300
handpicked guests embedded in a spectacular entertainment programme and
fine dining. However, that is not the only reason why the EHF will remember this
event for a long time to come, but also because of the fire alarm that went off
due to a suspected fire.
52
Additionally, the EHF Headquarters in Vienna is not the only venue worthy
of having the multi-coloured lots be drawn from a glass bowl. Concurrently,
the draw has become a reputable tradition to establish the EHF EURO
Qualifications and Final Rounds in the respective host countries. To highlight
this, the Qualification Groups for the Womens 2012 EHF EURO were drawn by
the EHF representatives along with two Dutch junior national players, Myrthe
Schoenaker and Antje Angela Malestein, in the splendid Dutch Castle Nienoord
in Leek (near Gronigen). In addition, the Handball Good Luck Charms, Marko
Vujin (Serbia), Igor Vori (Croatia), Uros Zorman (Slovenia) and Christoffer Rambo
(Norway) drew the Mens 2012 Preliminary Rounds in Belgrade, Serbia before
an impressive crowd of 250 guests in a formal setting with a magician, a large
international media presence, lots of music and even more handball VIPs.
The best example of the slogan Out of the dark, Into the Light was without
a doubt the VELUX EHF FINAL4, which took place in the LANXESS arena in
Cologne. Teams ran across the court a giant inflatable adidas match ball alongside
a pyrotechnic and music show. After the 2010 Premiere, the Handballwoche
headline was justified, The Best Handball Event in the Last 20 Years because it
is simply not possible to organise a more spectacular handball event.
It was the merging of the perfect sport with a perfect show, claimed Xavier
OCallaghan, Manager of FC Barcelona. Right from the very opening with the
acrobatic performances and the carrying in of the winners trophy, created by
the Austrian blacksmiths, the Gahr brothers, you had goose pimples. The Queen
Musical performance of We Will Rock You was the climax in 2010, and in 2011 it
was the tightrope acrobats that got the 20,000 fans all hyped up.
For all that, the VELUX EHF FINAL4 was still not the first event in which the
EHF set a milestone. The Show has become an integral part of the European
Championship just the same. This ranges from folk dance groups like at the
2008 Womens EHF EURO in FYR Macedonia to music stars such as DJ tzi,
who made the Austrian 2010 EHF EURO anthem Sweet Caroline the song that
everyone had stuck in their head.
This linking of handball and music even set the stage for the Austrian star to lose
his trademark. After the EHF EURO winners ceremony in Viennas Stadthalle,
where DJ tzi gave a live performance, Icelands Bronze Medal Winner Olafur
Stefansson snatched his white cap and sported it himself for the rest of the
evening. In the end, it turned out that everyone got a piece of the show.
53
54
Albania
ALB 1992
France
FRA 1991
Netherlands
NED 1991
Andorra
AND 2011
Georgia
GEO 1991
Norway
NOR 1991
Armenia
ARM 1992
Germany
GER 1991
Poland
POL 1991
Austria
AUT 1991
Greece
GRE 1991
Portugal
POR 1991
Azerbaijan
AZE 1992
Hungary
HUN 1991
Romania
ROU 1991
Belgium
BEL 1991
Ireland
IRL 1992
Russia
RUS 1992
Iceland
ISL 1991
Scotland
SCO 2004
Belarus
BLR 1992
Israel
ISR 1991
Slovenia
SLO 1992
Bulgaria
BUL 1991
Italy
ITA 1991
Serbia
SRB 2006
Croatia
CRO 1992
Latvia
LAT 1991
Switzerland
SUI 1991
Cyprus
CYP 1991
Liechtenstein
LIE 1991
Slovakia
SVK 1993
Czech Republic
CZE 1993
Lithuania
LTU 1991
Sweden
SWE 1991
Denmark
DEN 1991
Luxembourg
LUX 1991
Turkey
TUR 1991
England
ENG 2004
Moldova
MDA 1992
Ukraine
UKR 1992
Spain
ESP 1991
FYR Macedonia
MKD 1993
Estonia
EST 1991
Malta
MLT 1996
Faroe Islands
FAR 1991
Montenegro
MNE 2006
Finland
FIN 1991
Monaco
MON 2006
Associated Federation
Kosovo
KOS 2006
Credits
Editorial board: Michael Wiederer, Peter Hofer,
Marsha Brown, JJ Rowland
Content:
Print:
Hofer Druck
Representative: Josef Stger