I will never ever forget this year.
In the moment when we posed for photographers on the winners’ podium, Thierry Omeyer and Nikola Karabatic showed the number 2 with their fingers, as they just had won their second Champions League trophy after winning with Montpellier in 2003. Everyone else showed one finger for our first trophy. And then came our interim line player giant Andrei Xepkin – and he showed seven fingers for his seventh trophy. Simply incredible; this man only played for a few weeks with us, but he was like a father to all the young players. I am still in contact with this legend. These are the stories only handball can write.
THW extended my contract. I was so proud of this fact, playing in a team with Nikola Karabatic, Thierry Omeyer, Stefan Lövgren and later Marcus Ahlm and Filip Jicha. When you enter the arena and just look at those shirts and faces under the roof, you know what this club means. When you know 10,250 fans come for every home match to see you, and you feel and hear this special atmosphere in the arena, it sends shivers down your spine. At every match. This club, the players, the city, the fans – they mean so much to me. It did not take long for me to feel part of the DNA of THW Kiel, and the most successful era for this huge club was yet to come.
In 2010, we qualified for the first-ever edition of the EHF FINAL4 in Cologne, and it was thrilling from the moment we arrived. On Friday night the new Champions League trophy, the metal arm, was introduced, and I felt quite unhappy. “How can you drink champagne out of it when you win on Sunday?” was what I said when asked what I thought about it.