Among the records at stake when EHF EURO 2022 begins on 13 January is that for the holder of the most titles. Currently, this is held by the five Swedish ‘Bengan Boys’ who snatched four European crowns between 1994 and 2002. Only one player can match this record in Hungary and Slovakia: Nikola Karabatic, who will compete with France for a fourth gold medal.
Magnus Wislander
The Swedish stalwart remains on top of Europe, 20 years after winning his fourth and last EHF EURO, and that shows how extraordinary his performances were. Sweden won the EHF EURO four times between 1994 and 2002, only letting the 1996 edition slip to Russia. Wislander is one of the five Swedish players who won the competition a record four times.
Not only did Wislander step on top of the European podium four times, he also remains the only line player to have be named MVP of the EHF EURO. That was in 2002, and the now 57-year-old Wislander was also elected as All-star Team line player in the same year.
Nikola Karabatic
Nikola Karabatic might go down in history in a few weeks as the only non-Swedish player to have won four EHF EURO tournaments. The right-hander, who can play in both the left back and the centre back positions, already lifted the trophy three times, in 2006, 2010 and 2014. To these three titles, he added two bronze medals, the last one at EHF EURO 2018 in Croatia.
Karabatic was crucial to France’s success at all these tournaments. He is one of only two players to have been elected MVP of the EHF EURO twice, in 2008 and 2014. Despite being defeated in the semi-final by Croatia, 2008 was a fruitful edition for Karabatic, as he scored 44 to finish joint top scorer of the competition alongside Croatia’s Ivano Balic and Denmark’s Lars Christiansen.
Raul Entrerrios
As a general, what better way to go out than with a bang? Raul Entrerrios ended his European career on a high, lifting the trophy twice with Spain at his last two EHF EURO participations. Those 2018 and 2020 gold medals came after the massive disappointment of 2016, when Entrerrios and Spain lost the final to Germany while the centre back was elected MVP of the competition.
But, along with experienced soldiers such as Daniel Sarmiento and Jorge Maqueda, Entrerrios worked even harder to come back stronger. And while his role may have changed over the years, with less playing time, he remained as key as ever for his national team.