Men’s winners
Spain took their second gold medal in the men’s event after beating Hungary in the final, adding to their victory four years before.
The Spanish side won all three of their preliminary round matches without dropping a set and remained unbeaten in the main round. After beating Serbia and Montenegro in the quarter-finals and Turkey in the semis their opponents in the final were a Hungary side who made the final four for the first time in their history.
The Hungarians took a tight opening set 20:19 and the second set was another tense one that Spain edged 23:20. That meant a shootout would decide the destination of the gold medal and it was Spain that ran out winners, taking it 7:2.
Turkey made it back-to-back bronze medals in the competition with a shootout victory over hosts Germany in the fight for third place.
Women’s winners
The story of the tournament was without doubt hosts Germany taking the women’s title on home sand.
Having finished in third in Turkey at the previous EURO in 2004, the Germans went two places better this time around with a straight sets (16:14, 27:17) win over reigning champions Russia in the final.
The Germans finished second in their preliminary round group – losing in a shootout to Hungary – but after beating Bulgaria and Croatia in the quarters and semi-finals respectively, they reached the final.
With the home crowd behind them they overcame Russia (who had beaten Turkey in their semi-final) to clinch gold.
For the Russians, who had won the title in 2002 and 2004, the silver medal was their fourth podium finish in four EHF Beach Handball EUROs.
In the bronze medal match, Croatia – runners-up in 2004 – took third spot with a straight sets win over Turkey.
Best of the best
Here’s the All-star Team results for the tournament…
Men
Best Fair Play Team: Croatia
MVP: Gabor Bathori (Hungary)
Best goalkeeper: Ibrahim Demir (Turkey)
Top scorer: Juan Antonio Vazquez (Spain)
Women
Best Fair Play Teams: Italy and Hungary
MVP: Janin Hetzer (Germany)
Best goalkeeper: Jelena Grubisic (Croatia)
Top scorer: Andrea Lekic (Serbia and Montenegro)
Stars in your eyes
No, your eyes aren’t telling lies… the top scorer EURO was indeed Andrea Lekic, the Serbian centre back who went onto win the EHF Champions League with Győr in 2013.
The Serbian national (indoor) team the centre back scored 554 goals in 121 internationals, was in the All-star Team of 2012 and won silver at the World Championship in 2013.
A special EURO because…
Germany winning gold on home sand? Well that’s pretty special.