Newsletter

Handball World Cup: Outstanding Wolff captures the victory of the Germans

Handball Against Norway

Wolff towers over again – German handball players finish the World Cup with a win

Outstanding Wolff leads Germany’s handball team to fifth place – the highlights in the video

The German national team finished the World Cup in fifth place. Also thanks to the extremely strong parrying Andreas Wolff, the DHB team managed to take revenge in the placement game against Norway. The highlights in the video.

The German handball players finish the World Cup in fifth place by beating Norway. The team wants to finish in the top four at the European Championships at home.

Dhe German handball players celebrated the once again outstanding Andreas Wolff, and after the successful conclusion of the World Cup, the goalkeeper already quietly expressed hopes for the title in the upcoming home tournament. With heart, passion and Wolff as support, the team of national coach Alfred Gislason secured fifth place with 28:24 (16:13) against Norway in Stockholm on Sunday and reported back in the extended world class.

“Today we managed to play well for 60 minutes against a top opponent,” said Wolff on ZDF. For the 2024 European Championships in front of a home crowd, it is now a matter of “tweaking a few things” in order to “hopefully make up at least one or more two, three, four places”.

In the ninth game in 17 days, the German team in front of 6260 spectators showed no after-effects from the first game in the placement round against Egypt, which was won on Friday only after extra time with 35:34. Although there were one or the other phase of weakness, this time there was no slump. The best throwers for the DHB selection were Luca Witzke, Johannes Golla and Kai Häfner, each with five goals.

Relieved: Alfred Gislason after the victory at the end of the title fights

Which: REUTERS

“I’m very happy, we absolutely wanted to win the tournament,” said coach Gislason and also praised the players from the second row: “I’m extremely happy with the boys.” Between the posts, experienced goalkeeper Wolff shone once more with a world-class performance. The 31-year-old fended off numerous throws by the Norwegians – including three seven-meter throws – and gave the people in front a lot of security.

also read

World-class duel: Spain goalkeeper Gonzalo Perez de Vargas against Denmark's Mikkel Hansen (left)

Handball World Championship

Even before the final encounter, Gislason had given the goalkeeper an excellent World Cup certificate. “He held up great,” said the national coach about Wolff’s performance at the finals in Poland and Sweden, and attested to the personal development of the 2016 European champion: “He’s mature, calm, and incredibly stable. He’s ambitious, but not as tense as a few years ago.”

Positive World Cup balance with room for improvement

Wolff’s teammates were also wide awake at an unusually early time and showed a largely concentrated performance in defense and attack. Juri Knorr steered the game carefully again and was very well represented by Witzke during his longer breaks. Lukas Stutzke, who was nominated later, also posed a goal threat from the backcourt.

also read

Alfred Gislason still has a contract that runs until 2024

With three goals each in the first 30 minutes, the duo played a large part in the three-goal lead at the break. “It was very refreshing what the two showed,” praised DHB sports director Axel Kromer at halftime.

also read

After the change, the DHB selection even pulled away by six goals because Wolff continued to act at the highest level and now hit Häfner in front. In the final phase, strength and concentration dropped a bit, but in the end the Gislason protégés were able to celebrate.

also read

Despite the quarter-finals, the German national handball team played a good World Cup

opinion Despite bankruptcy in the World Cup quarterfinals

Even before the kick-off, Kromer had drawn a positive World Cup balance. The team “worked closer to the top of the world. We’re in the closest field of pursuers,” said the 46-year-old. But you don’t yet have “the experience and breadth of the squad like the top teams”.

That should change by next year when the European Championships in Germany increase. “The goal must be to take another step forward and finish in the top four,” said DHB President Andreas Michelmann.

German handball players fail after a big fight in the quarterfinals – the highlights in the video

The German national team missed the semi-finals against France. The DHB team starts the game strong and keeps the game open for a long time, but the favorite turns up in the final phase. The highlights in the video.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending