21.05.2018, 12:10
Turda take first European title on second attempt

FINAL REVIEW: After losing the Men's Challenge Cup Final last year, the Romanian side have lifted the trophy this season despite a defeat against Athens in the return leg of the final


Turda take first European title on second attempt

A direct free throw after the buzzer gave A.E.K. Athens the win in the second leg of the Men’s Challenge Cup Final on Sunday night, but AHC Potaisa Turda took the trophy.

The 27:26 defeat in Athens was no threat to Turda’s first ever European Cup title. The Romanian side had won the first leg at home by 11 goals last week, and could even afford to lose a seven-goal half-time lead in the return leg.

MEN’S CHALLENGE CUP FINAL, SECOND LEG

A.E.K. Athens (GRE) vs AHC Potaissa Turda (ROU) 27:26 (11:18)
First leg 22:33; Turda win 59:49 on agg.

After losing the final to Sporting CP from Portugal last year, Turda lifted the Challenge Cup trophy on their second attempt despite a narrow defeat in the second leg of the final.

Enthusiastic support from the crowd in the Nikos Galis Olympic Indoor Hall could not help Athens to catch up with their 11-goal deficit from the first leg in Romania.

Athens did have the better start, though, and led 2:0 and 3:1, but four straight Turda goals turned the tables. The Romanian side went from 5:3 up to 10:7, 12:8, 14:9 and - at half-time - 18:11.

That score increased their aggregate lead to 18 goals, so nothing could really threaten the Romanian triumph anymore in the second half - and the visitors were obviously aware of that.

But A.E.K. showed great morale and slowly reduced the gap. They first got back into the lead again (24:23) with five minutes and nine seconds left to play, and indeed grabbed the win thanks to a free throw after the final buzzer.

Julios Argyrou scored seven goals from seven attempts for A.E.K, while Alexandru Asoltanei netted five times for the champions.

Turda became the second Romanian team to win their maiden European Cup title this season. Earlier, SCM Craiova won the Women’s EHF Cup for their first European trophy.

TEXT: Peter Bruun / ew


Content Copyright by the European Handball Federation and EHF Marketing (c) 1994-2024