Dream of the EM final burst: DHB women fail against France

The German handball women were not able to use their already minimal chance of a medal at the European Championships.

Dream of the EM final burst: DHB women fail against France

The German handball women were not able to use their already minimal chance of a medal at the European Championships. Title contenders France are too strong.

The dream of the European Championship semi-finals has finally burst for the German handball players - and the game for fifth place is also a long way off. After a 21:29 (9:13) defeat against Olympic champion France, the DHB selection must continue to wait for the first international medal since World Cup bronze in 2007 and hope for a small handball miracle, at least for the Olympic qualification to achieve any significant placement game.

The best thrower for the team of national coach Markus Gaugisch was backcourt player Alina Grijseels with seven goals in front of 300 spectators in Skopje in the evening. While the French and Montenegro, who are still unbeaten in the tournament, booked their ticket for the semi-finals early, Germany is fifth in the table with 2:6 points in the main round final against the Romanian team on Wednesday (3:30 p.m. / Sportdeutschland.tv). Only if Spain and the Netherlands (both 3:3) lose their last games and the DHB selection wins would the hoped-for jump to third place surely succeed.

After Montenegro's previous 35:34 against Romania, it was clear that only a win over France would give them a mini-chance to reach the semifinals. This knowledge seemed to inhibit the German team a little at the beginning, because France quickly pulled away 3-0. Only after six minutes did Grijseels score the first goal. The hit initially seemed like an initial spark. After a good eleven minutes, the tie was made at 4:4. Goalkeeper Katharina Filter, who was a strong support with several saves, played a big part in this.

The fact that it was not enough for a first-time German lead was once again due to the well-known weaknesses in the end. Again and again the best chances were given. In the middle of the first half, the favorite pulled away from 6:6 to 9:6 to 12:7 (25th), which the national coach followed with great displeasure on the sidelines in view of the increasing number of technical errors. After the change, there was hope when the DHB team reduced the deficit to two goals at 12:14. But there were more misthrows and technical errors, which stopped a possible race to catch up again and again. It didn't help that the fighting spirit was right.

Ten minutes before the end, Germany was still four goals behind at 16:20 and was unable to turn the game against an opponent who was superior in all respects, even in the final phase. So in the end there was a clear defeat.