Schwalb knows how to beat Chekhov in a quarter-final: he steered his former club HSV Hamburg to a 38:24 home victory against the Russian record champions in the EHF Champions League 2010/11 to make it to the VELUX EHF FINAL4 2011.
This year, Schwalb is eager to make it to the EHF FINALS on home ground, as it is his biggest wish to leave Mannheim with a trophy after 18 months.
In June, Schwalb will return to Hamburg to take over HSV again. The European League seems his only chance to win a title this season, as Löwen trail Bundesliga leaders Flensburg by two points and runners-up Kiel by one but have already played four matches more than the leading pair.
“We truly hope to win the first edition of the European League after we won the premiere of the merged EHF Cup in 2013,” Schwalb said.
Right wing Patrick Groetzki was part of the Löwen team that won first trophy in the club’s history. He knows what it needs to be successful against Chekhov.
“Medvedi played clever and can count on some top individually skilled players,” Groetzki said. “But we caused too many quite stupid mistakes in the first leg. If we stop it, we will proceed to the final tournament.”
In the absence of team captain Uwe Gensheimer, who is out after knee surgery, and other key players like goalkeeper Mikael Appelgren and defence specialists Ilija Abutovic and Jesper Nielsen, Groetzki will be one of the main players for Löwen on Tuesday.
“In contrast to the first leg at Chekhov, we have to support our goalkeepers in a better way and we need to score more goals by counter-attacks,” says Groetzki, who expects “another narrow match.”