3 times before, the finals tournament of Europe’s second-tier competition consisted of three German teams, as Füchse, Magdeburg and Göppingen all played at the EHF Cup Finals in 2017 and 2018
3 former EHF Cup championsare still in the running for the EHF European League 2020/21 title: Magdeburg (1999, 2001, 2007),Löwen (2013), and Füchse (2015, 2018).
4 - which means all - EHF Finals contenders won their respective group earlier this season.
8 nations have been part of the EHF Cup Finals in the past, represented by 28 different clubs: Germany (6 clubs), France (4), Denmark (2), Romania, Spain, Portugal, Hungary, and Slovenia (all 1)
10 goals was the biggest winning margin in the quarter-final when Löwen beat Chekhov 37:27.10 victories in a row - including in all four knock-out matches - were earned by Magdeburg since a defeat to Alingsås in round 3 of the group phase.
13 matches this season (11 in the group phase, 1 in the Last 16, 1 in the quarter-final) ended with a difference of 10 or more goals.
14 goals were the largest aggregate winning margin in the quarter-final, when Magdeburg beat Kristianstad 73:59.20 times a German club won the competition’s predecessor, the EHF Cup, including six from seven EHF Cup Finals (2013-19).
24 was the highest number of saves by a goalkeeper in both legs of the quarter-final: from Dejan Milosavljev (Füchse); followed by Viktor Hallgrimsson (GOG, 23), Andreas Palicka (Löwen, 23), and Jannik Green (Magdeburg, 20)
26 years of age makes Füchse’s Jaron Siewert the youngest coach at a finals tournament of any men’s EHF competition so far.
24 goals was the aggregate winning margin of Magdeburg in the Last 16 and quarter-final combined.
39 was the highest number of goals by a team in a quarter-final match when Magdeburg beat Kristianstad 39:31.
54 was the lowest number of goals in a quarter-final match when Füchse beat Montpellier 31:23.
70 was the highest number of goals in a quarter-final match when Magdeburg beat Kristianstad 39:31.