In 2012, I decided to leave France. After all, one of my career goals was to win the EHF Champions League, and it felt that I could not do it, even with Metz, which was the best club at the time. Early in the year, I felt like I was ready. Even though I had suffered a knee injury at the 2011 World Championship, I decided to join Valcea, in Romania.
Now, for a 23-year-old, to move to Romania, it was something like a bold move. I wanted to play with the best players, give myself a chance to win the Champions League, but it was clearly about getting out of my comfort zone. I had travelled a lot in my personal life, but this was completely different, really like jumping into the unknown. After a few months, my friend Amandine Leynaud suffered an injury, and I really felt like I was on my own, trying to win my place at every training.
Things were not easy, on many levels, in that first year away from France. But it made me a better player and it helped me grow as a person as well. Since then, every opportunity has brought its ups and downs.
In 2013, we had an amazing season with Vardar. The season ended on a high, playing the first ever Women’s EHF FINAL4. We knew that it was history in the making. It had witnessed the first edition of the Men’s EHF FINAL4, but to think that women’s handball could generate such excitement was amazing.
Every year since, my aim has been to play the event again. Sadly, things did not evolve the way I wanted with Vardar. Despite signing a contract extension, the owner decided he wanted me to leave, something he admitted as being an error a few years later. This was one of the many times in my career when I experienced injustice. It happened to me in Brest as well when I came back to France in 2016. I stayed there three years, but this is not a time of my career about which I have too much to say.