7. RK Nexe (CRO)
With a long-standing tradition of playing the second-tier continental club competition, the Croatian side have participated in every EHF European League Men season since the inaugural edition in 2020/21. Finishing fourth in the 2021/22 campaign was a highlight for Nexe, who went on to reach the quarter-final the following year and were eliminated by Rhein-Neckar Löwen in the play-offs last season.
The team from Nasice start their new European campaign without goalkeeper Dominik Kuzmanovic, who has joined fellow European League team Gummersbach, and playmaker Marko Bezjak, who moved to HC Erlangen after he was suspended for 12 months by the Croatian Handball Federation for an incident in a domestic match against RK Zagreb. However, the new signings Tin Lucin and Jure Dolenec should strengthen the back court, and Kresimir Kozina, who has returned to his home country after an 11-year spell in Austria and Germany, is an experienced line player, so Nexe hope for another successful campaign in Europe.
6. FC Porto (POR)
For the first time since 2018, Porto did not become the Portuguese champions last season, losing the title to Sporting, and therefore failed to qualify for the Machineseeker EHF Champions League, in which they had been regular participants over the past five years.
Following that setback, head coach Carlos Resende was replaced by Magnus Andersson, who had already been at the helm of the team between 2018 and 2023 and led them to a number of domestic titles. With the Swedish coach in charge, Porto hope to do well both domestically and internationally, and, although the club parted ways with Nikolaj Laesø, Antonio Areia, Nikola Mitrevski and Diogo Branquinho, there are still quite a few experienced players in the squad.
When the team last played in the second-tier European competition, when it was still called the EHF Cup in the 2018/19 season, they reached the final tournament and ultimately finished third. Now, Porto hope their vast European experience will help them to at least emulate that result.
5. GOG (DEN)
In 2022 and 2023, the team from Gudme won the Danish league, but after head coach Nicolej Krickau left for SG Flensburg-Handewitt in 2023, GOG had a turbulent season, finishing third in the 2023/24 domestic championship. Krickau's successor Ian Marco Fog was replaced by his assistant Mikkel Voigt in September 2023, and in the new season, the Danish side has a new coach, Kasper Christensen, who previously worked with the women's team at Ikast Håndbold.
There are quite a lot of changes in GOG's squad, as important players like Emil Madsen, Aaron Mensing, Anders Zachariassen and Tobias Thulin left the team, and it will be not easy to replace them. However, there are some quality signings, such as the Norwegian centre back Tobias Grøndahl and the Swedish goalkeeper Peter Johannesson, so Gudme should stay competitive and be aiming high in the EHF European League Men.