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Croatia has achieved the greatest success in its history, reaching the semi-finals of the Danish Women’s Handball Championship by defeating Germany. In the final round of the semi-finals, also in our group, the Netherlands confidently edged the reserve Romania, leaving Cristina Neagu in 12th place, her worst result in continental tournaments. In Group 1 in Herning, France secured their pass, while Montenegro took a big disadvantage against Spain and finally managed a draw.
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The Croats deserve the semi-finals (Photo: Kolektiff images) |
GROUP 2: INCREASE CROATIS, INCLUDING ROMANS
CROATIA-GERMANY
Fought a real who-who for the semifinals a German and the Croatian team, Emily Bölkék needed at least a two-goal hit to break into the four. The Croats traded Podravka’s coronavirus point man Dejana Milosavljevic for this clash, the first of BL’s guards to join the national team.
The Croats seemed to start nervous, with more sales of balls, which is not surprising, because the surprise team of the tournament was no longer on the field without a bet, because there were chances of a historic result. The Croats could then play against Ana Debelic, who was at the height of their positions, to be able to tie. For the Germans, Bölk de Ferencváros was free to shoot multiple times, and his team dictated the pace and continued to control the match.
The expected fierce match was fought by the parties, the Croats could have taken the lead in a double human advantage, but they could hardly create a situation, and then they made a mistake. They made up for all this in front of their goal, aggressively catching the rival, the Germans were unable to shoot an action goal from minute 13 until halftime. In turn, they fought for six weeks, which were sold by Julia Maidhof. In the 28th minute, the Croats led for the first time with a blow from Katarina Jezic of Siófok, Maidhof tied with a time beyond seven (12-12).
The Croats started the second half well, the White Castle goalkeeper, Tea Pijevic, took out the balls in a row, and under the leadership of Camila Micijevic, the Croats left with three, Henk Groener, who controlled the Germans, was forced to ask for time. However, his team did not leave the pit, he was hit only once in a quarter of an hour, during which time he was already behind by six goals.
The Croats defended themselves in a very disciplined way, so it would also fit in if they broke down in an attack. The Germans were running out of time and despite openly trying to defend themselves, they could no longer influence the outcome. Pijevic finished 50 percent, deservedly becoming the best of the match.
The Croats are in the semi-finals with a 23-20 success, thus achieving their best result in their history, having previously finished fifth at the 1994 European Championship. The Germans finally came up short in the match for fifth place.
The Romanians are beyond their worst European performance (Photo: Kolektiff images) |
NETHERLANDS-ROMANIA
Disappointingly featured Romanian Cristina Neagut and her two goalkeepers on the right, replacing Lorena Ostas Dutch meeting. At first, the orange groves seemed to soon decide the fate of the two points, but then the unpaved Romanians caught up with it. Anca Polocoser and Cristina Laslo, who were injured against ours, also fired successfully, so the difference was one goal on several occasions, but the Dutchman again intervened for the break with four.
Defending World Cup champion Emmanuel Mayonnade showed that he had played a high-paced match with the Germans the day before, so the pace dropped into the second half. At the same time, the Dutch knew how to take advantage of the technical errors of the Romanians, especially in former winger Bo van Wetering, closing with eight goals as the most productive in the field (Ferenc City Angela Malestein shot two goals). By then the scissors between the two teams were wide open, even the Romanian goalkeeper gave a goal pass to the Dutch …
With their eventual 11-goal defeat, the Romanians can only show meager success against the Poles, otherwise they have failed all five more games, which is not very encouraging for the Olympic qualifiers, even if several important players may come back in. March. Overall they finished 12th, which is their worst ranking in the European Championship, so far in 1998 11th held the negative record.
The Dutch already knew before the game that they would miss the semi-finals (this was last done with them at the 2014 World Cup), but they could challenge for fifth place due to the defeat of the Germans.
GROUP 1: FINAL FINALS
FRANCE-SWEDEN
The French set out knowing that if they didn’t get out of the Swedes, they would get their way. By comparison, in the first half they had to fight for equalization, which was joined by the results of Estelle Nze Minko and Alexandre Lacrabere of Győr (14-14).
In the second part of the match, the French team took the lead, went five times to get to the hair, and finally won the semifinals by six, in the third consecutive continental tournament. Nze Minko finished the game with six goals.
MONTENEGRO-SPAIN
Directed by Kim Rasmussen Montenegro The silver medal of the World Cup started very badly Spain In the last game against, he made only three hits in a quarter of an hour, leaving him behind by eight goals, six of which were left for halftime. In the second half, however, the Montenegrin team, known for their willpower and fighting ability, shook and turned with a run of 11-4. From here, a new match began, with Nerea Peña drawing twice for the Spanish in the final minutes. In the end, first Djurdjina Jaukovics shot a goalpost from the steal, then the replay was caught by Silvia Navarro, but on the other side, former Ljubica Nenezics of Kispest defended the outfield, making it 26-26.
Debrecen’s Jelena Deszpotovic hit four times, with Montenegro finishing fourth in her group and finishing eighth overall. In general, Rasmussen’s team can confidently look forward to the national Olympic qualifiers, where, according to the paper form, they have to beat the Romanians to come out.
WOMEN’S HANDBALL EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP, DENMARK
SEMIFINAL, ROUND 3 (LAST)
GROUP 1 (HERNING)
Montenegro-Spain 26-26 (11-17)
Ld: Radicsevics 7, Jaukovics 5, sick. Penalty 6
France-Sweden 31-25 (14-14)
Ld: Nze Minko 6, Lacrabere 5, Sick Gulldén 5
LATER
20.30: Denmark-Russia
1. France | 5 | 4 | 1 | – | 132-121 | +11 | 9 |
2. Russia | 4 | 3 | 1 | – | 113–99 | +14 | 7 |
3. Denmark | 4 | 3 | – | 1 | 106–88 | +18 | 6 |
4. Montenegro | 5 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 122-127 | -5 | 3 |
5. Spain | 5 | – | 2 | 3 | 120-140 | -twenty | 2 |
6. Sweden | 5 | – | 1 | 4 | 121-139 | –18 | 1 |
GROUP 2 (KOLDING)
Netherlands-Romania 35-24 (16-12)
Ld: Van Wetering 8, sick. Laslo 7, Polocoser 6
Croatia-Germany 23-20 (12-12)
Ld: Debelic 6, sick. Maidhof 9
LATER
20.30: HUNGARY-Norway (TV: Sport1) – live on UFOs!
1. Norway | 4 | 4 | – | – | 138–93 | +45 | 8 |
2. Croatia | 5 | 4 | – | 1 | 124-123 | +1 | 8 |
3. Holland | 5 | 3 | – | 2 | 141-134 | +7 | 6 |
4. Germany | 5 | 2 | – | 3 | 124-137 | –13 | 4 |
5. HUNGARY | 4 | 1 | – | 3 | 97-108 | -eleven | 2 |
6. Romania | 5 | – | – | 5 | 107-136 | –29 | 0 |
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