Handball superstar retires: Schmid was so good that the Germans wanted to naturalize him

class=”sc-cffd1e67-0 iQNQmc”>

1/8
Bundesliga greats among themselves: Stefan Kretzschmar (l.) and Andy Schmid.
Blick_Portrait_2500.JPG
Christian MullerSports Editor

Actually, it’s too lame to be true: with his final goal at the recent European Championship in Germany, Andy Schmid broke Marc Baumgartner’s all-time national team record. Since Tuesday morning it has been clear that this is his last goal as a handball professional: Schmid is ending his career with immediate effect.

It is a career unparalleled in Swiss handball – perhaps even in Swiss team sports. When it comes to his sporting legacy, his five Bundesliga MVP awards are often mentioned first. However, his successes alone do not go far enough to explain the Andy Schmid phenomenon. The man from Lucerne managed to fascinate fans and inspire young handball players with his playing style. Above all, he took pivot interaction to a new level with his brilliant passing.

Last hurray at the European Championships: Here Schmid crowned himself Nati’s record man(01:17)

Too much fun to be a leader

The nickname “Messi of handball” is often used when it comes to honoring Schmid’s achievements. To this day he refrains from making such comparisons. Despite all his successes and all his ambition, he always retained a certain humility and down-to-earth attitude. “Andy is almost too nice to be a good leader,” former Nati coach Arno Ehret once said.

more on the subject
France is crowned European champion in an exciting final
Exciting final against Denmark
France is crowned European champions
Swiss handball players in the World Cup play-offs against Slovenia
Only one victory has been achieved so far
Tough Swiss fate for the World Cup play-offs

Schmid interprets the role of a leader in his own way. In the national team he always has an open ear for his younger teammates. He is partly responsible for putting the strict hierarchies of the past on the shelf. “Andy is the ultimate leader: what he says always has meaning,” German handball legend Stefan Kretzschmar once told Blick. “He treats his fellow human beings fairly and has a positive charisma. I wish I had such a leader before. It’s a shame he isn’t recognized enough for this role.”

Talented and sensitive

Kretzschmar guides Schmid’s time at Rhein-Neckar Löwen as a TV pundit and sports director for other Bundesliga clubs. He saw how the Swiss was labeled a bad signing in his first season in 2010/11 and almost returned to Switzerland. But Schmid perseveres. Kretzschmar: “It was clear from early on that Andy was a talented and sensitive player. Crucial to his career was that he got a coach who trusted him unconditionally as number 1.”

The most important coach in Schmid’s career is Nikolaj Jacobsen. He brought the then two-time Swiss champion from Amicitia Zurich to Silkeborg in Denmark in 2009. In 2014, the Dane followed the Swiss to the Lions. There he meets a dejected Andy Schmid, who lost the championship race against THW Kiel the season before due to two bad goals – the most difficult moment of his career.

Advertisement

Jacobsen remembers: “When I came to Mannheim, Andy looked at me and said: ‘Niko, you have to promise me that one day we will become German champions’.” Two years later, the warm-blooded Dane fulfills his promise. The Lions became champions in 2016 and 2017 and won the DHB Cup in 2018.

The request from Germany

Schmid has been so successful in winning the Lions titles that the German Handball Association is considering naturalizing the Swiss and allowing him to play for their own national team. After all, country changes are not uncommon in handball. And the timing is perfect, as Schmid takes a break from the then notoriously unsuccessful Swiss national team due to overload at the club. Nevertheless, he rejected Germany’s request.

Schmid therefore adds another successful chapter to his career with the national team: in 2020 he will lead Switzerland to a major tournament again after a dry period of fourteen years. The European Championships in Sweden will be followed by the Corona World Cup in Egypt in 2021 and now the conclusion in 2024 in its long-standing sporting home Germany. A cinematic conclusion that Schmid does not like at all – at least according to his wife Therese: “She says I am not a romantic at all.”

Source : Blick

follow:
Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

Related Posts