Amsterdam makes the EHL final unnecessarily exciting, but grabs gold

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Amsterdam is champion of Europe. Teun de Nooijer’s selection defeated German Mannheimer 2-1 in a sold-out Wagener Stadium. It is the sixteenth European title for the team from the capital.

The party started in the Wagener Stadium around ten past three. The national champion can also call himself European champion. They also had that title in 2022, but it went to Den Bosch last season.

Freeke Moes and Fay van der Elst ensured that the tension in the final had already disappeared in the first ten minutes. Although Mannheimer was allowed to create a penalty corner twice within three minutes, it was Amsterdam that opened the scoring. That all happened without Marijn Veen. The Amsterdam striker was given a handful of playing minutes against SCHC in the semi-finals, but now watched from the sidelines. She wasn’t fit enough. Noor de Baat also watched. She will no longer play this season due to a knee injury.

Amsterdam’s first really good attack resulted in an immediate hit. Ilse Kappelle brought the ball into the circle in the direction of Fay van der Elst. The striker was not selfish and thought her colleague Freeke Moes was even better in front of the German goal. It was a piece of cake for the Brabant attacker to push the ball over the goal line.

2-0 within ten minutes

It was later Van der Elst who forced the first corner for Amsterdam. She got the ball played high on her body in the circle. A big smile immediately appeared on her face. What the striker did not know was that it would be an immediate hit. The second opportunity immediately followed from the first corner – a drag from Michelle Fillet. A variant via Floor de Haan was tipped by Van der Elst – while lying on the ground -: 2-0. This is how Amsterdam started the European final wonderfully. And within ten minutes we had a nice lead.

Mannheim stayed alive in the first fifteen minutes, when video referee Rebecca Edwards turned back a goal by Felice Albers. She thought – just like Mannheimer – that Maria Verschoor’s assist was dangerously high. This ended the 3-0 scoreline. The final remained such a match, because the final blow was not forthcoming.

Carolin Seidel had a good chance with her forehand, but the German striker’s shot went wide. That was also Mannheimer’s only pinprick before halftime, where the team had to rely mainly on defense. Later it was fortunate that Fiona Morgenstern’s backhand went over the goal very hard and somewhat uncontrollably.

Mannheimer – which was in a European final for the first time – did everything it could to turn the tide in the one-sided final. But that wasn’t easy. Maria Verschoor was allowed to lash out with her backhand after a wonderful ball into Van der Elst’s depth, but Lisa Schneider saved with her glove. Amsterdam failed to completely outclass. Van der Elst should have made it 3-0 twenty minutes before the end, when she went alone to the German goalie. However, she made her angle too small, causing a shot to fail.

Sonja Zimmermann and Stella van Gils took their place on the penalty bench just before the end of the third quarter. They received a green print for a tap on the stick. Mannheimer managed to score a penalty corner (the third of the match). The cards were a bit stupid and later proved to be extra painful: declarer Charlotte Gerstenhöfer provided the tying goal via a corner variation: 2-1. Suddenly it was exciting again in the final.

With eight minutes to play, Amsterdam also got another penalty corner. The team opted for the same recipe as the Germans did before. From the head, back towards the declarer. There stood Morgenstern. She aimed for goal, but her ball hit the German goalie’s legguard. Gone opportunity.

Amsterdam made the EHL final unnecessarily exciting, but played the last quarter solidly. When Mannheimer exchanged the keeper for an extra field player three minutes before the end, things became even more exciting. Mannheimer took a corner, but it was run out by Gabrielle Mosch and the rebound was saved by Anne Veenendaal.

Amsterdam could breathe a sigh of relief and coach Teun de Nooijer’s arms went into the air. In his first year as coach, he won his first title. He already won a prize as head coach – the Gold Cup with Bloemendaal in 2018 – but still wrote history. He is the first to win the EHL title as a coach and as a player (2009 and 2013 with Bloemendaal).

Amsterdam – Mannheimer 2-1 (2-0)

6. Freeke Moes 1-0

12. Fay van der Elst 2-0 (SC)

45. Charlotte Gerstenhöfer 2-1 (SC)


The article is in Dutch

Tags: Amsterdam EHL final unnecessarily exciting grabs gold

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