With a strong shot and a great handball IQ, projecting as one of Sweden’s top weapons in the future, left back Tyra Axnér looks to be one of the next stars of handball. The All-star left back at the W17 EHF EURO 2019 scored 13 goals and had two assists in her team’s run to the fifth place.
Another RYT alumni representing Sweden was right back Nina Koppang, with the Scandinavian side’s future looking bright.
Romania also had two RYT alumni in their squad: left back Diana Lixandroiu and right wing Mihaela Mihai, with the former playing meaningful minutes in the game against France, where she scored four goals in her full debut at the senior national team.
Mihai, on the other side, deputised on the right wing in the last game of the main round against Germany, and is one to watch for the future, especially in a position where Romania lacked impetus.
Switzerland made their debut at the EHF EURO, as Mia Emmenegger and Sev Albrecht shone for the side. Emmenegger, one of the top prospects on the right wing, had three of the six games where a player covered the largest number of kilometres, with 5.36, 5.32 and 5.25 kilometres run per game.
Montenegro’s left wing of the future, Nadja Kadovic, celebrated her side’s bronze medal after scoring six goals in the competition. Kim Molenaar scored three goals for the Netherlands, as the MVP of the 2022 Women’s Junior World Championship became accustomed with the senior national team.
France’s Léna Grandveau, Serbia’s Natasa Cetkovic and North Macedonia’s Marija Jovanovska were also players born after 2000 who got their first taste of the senior EHF EURO, as the Respect Your Talent programme surely helped them envision a bright future.