And the first EHF FINAL4, when we reached the final, that was something else. A pure adrenaline rush. What a moment. Talking about it just doesn’t do it justice. If you have not lived this moment, you cannot understand how it feels.
Living that at 35 for the first time made me see things differently. I never took anything for granted, and I know how hard I have worked to belong in the best in Europe. I know where I come from and, in the bad times, I sometimes looked back to see the journey I had made.
The role I had in Nantes was more than just a captain. Telling the young guys to keep working every day, not to think they’ve made it to the top yet. I know I was tough with a lot of them. But now, Nicolas Tournat, Dragan Pechmalbec, they all know why I pushed them when they were little.
Am I their hero? I might be.
Since I announced I was retiring, a lot of guys told me that I inspired them, and that might be what makes me the proudest.
But these young guys, they know I was as tough with the stars. When Kiril Lazarov arrived in Nantes, he quickly understood that he had everything to prove here. And being such a great player, he took on the test.
Coming back to the hero notion, I never had any in handball. Jackson Richardson was the obvious one, but I could not identify with any player.
So, I watched old VHS tapes of the NBA with Gorgon and Benoit, my brothers. Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, those were the guys I looked up to. I remember watching those tapes over and over again, amazed at their ability to perform for such a long time.
My resilience and my ability to remain on top, it might have come from them.
For me to think that I might have such a role on those players makes me very proud. Even though I was working in the shadows, far from the offensive spotlights, I was one of them.
I felt it in the messages I received lately, in the hugs the Barça and Paris players gave me in Cologne. There was respect there. And that I fought my way to the top.
One of them told me: “You put the behind the scenes work into the spotlight.” I could not think of a better phrase to sum up the hell of a ride I’ve been on.