Women

Spain are slowly introducing young athletes to their senior squad, but the team still works under the strong leadership of previous generations and one thing is certain: they will not lack character on the court.Â
Although Spain's best attacker at the 2017 Women's World Championship, âthe goal machineâ Carmen Martin, is injured and not yet 100% ready as was announced by the Spanish federation, it's the chance for other players to step in.Â

The Peopleâs Republic of China have qualified for every IHF Womenâs World Championship since 1986, but in recent years the worldâs most populous country has come to a standstill on the global handball stage. Their most successful player of all time â Zhai Chao â was named the IHF World Handball Player of the Year in 2002 â but Chinese handball has had little to celebrate since.
Handball in China is currently undergoing a rebuilding phase with the aim of returning to the glory days of the mid-1980s, when the Chinese womenâs team won bronze at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.

Even though coach Henrik Signellâs concepts go far beyond what one single player might contribute to the team, there is no doubt he must have had his fingers crossed to have Bella Gullden in Kumamoto. For a long time it was uncertain if the Swedish superstar will be available to compete at her fifth IHF Womenâs Handball World Championship, since she gave birth to her first child in the beginning of July.

Norway arrive in Japan in an unfamiliar position â they currently hold no major international titles. As the Olympic champions in 2008 and 2012, the world champions in 2011 and 2015 , and the European champions at every edition of the biennial tournament from 2004 to 2016 apart from one (2012, won by Montenegro), Norway have been champions of at least one major international championship at any given time since 2004.Â

Are Hungary on their way back to the top? After finishing as medallists at the IHF Womenâs World Championship no less than nine times from the first edition in 1957 up until 2005, with the last podium climb that year (bronze), Hungaryâs rankings on the womenâs international scene dropped. Â

They were the hosts of the previous IHF Womenâs World Championship, in 2017, and hopes were therefore high for Germany to do something big on the home court, but an elimination in the eighth-finals ended the dream of returning to the top of the global rankings. That moment initiated a transition, with top stars such as then captain Anna Loerper and two-time Champions League winning goalkeeper Clara Woltering ending their national team careers.Â

The shelves of the Danish handball museum are crowded with trophies and medals. Throughout history, their womenâs team claimed three Olympic gold medals, one IHF World Championship title and three EHF EURO trophies â mentioning only their most remarkable achievements.
It is not hard to imagine how long it must feel for the Danes these past six years without medals â the last one was the bronze medal clinched at the Serbia 2013 IHF Womenâs Handball World Championship.


