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France men's national handball team

National handball team

France men's national handball team

Summary

National handball team

FieldValue
NameFrance
BadgeFrance national handball team logo.png
Badge_size240px
Nickname1992: les Bronzés
1993–1996: les Barjots
2001–2008: les Costauds
2008–2017: les Experts
AssociationFrench Handball Federation
CoachGuillaume Gille
Assistant coachYohann Delattre
Most capsJackson Richardson (417)
Most goalsJérôme Fernandez (1,463)
pattern_la1_France21h
pattern_b1_France21h
pattern_ra1_France21h
pattern_sh1_France21h
leftarm1191A4F
body1191A4F
rightarm1191A4F
shorts1191A4F
pattern_la2_France21a
pattern_b2_France21a
pattern_ra2_France21a
pattern_sh2_France21a
leftarm2808080
body2808080
rightarm2808080
shorts2FFFFFF
Summer Olympics apps9
Summer Olympics first1992
Summer Olympics best1st (2008, 2012, 2020)
World cup apps25
World cup first1954
World cup best1st (1995, 2001, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2017)
Regional nameEuropean Championship
Regional cup apps16
Regional cup first1994
Regional cup best1st (2006, 2010, 2014, 2024)

1993–1996: les Barjots 2001–2008: les Costauds 2008–2017: les Experts

The France men's national handball team in 1992

The France national handball team is supervised by the French Handball Federation, and represents France in international matches. It is the first handball team to have held all three titles twice (the Danish women's team also held all three in 1997), and the only national team in its sport to hold six world titles and a total of thirteen medals at the World Men's Handball Championship. With a total of five medals, including three gold in 2008, 2012 and 2021, France is also the most successful Handball team at the Summer Olympics. As of January 2024, they are the defending European Champions.

Results at international tournaments

Since the 1990s, France has emerged as a major handball team. France won the bronze medal in the 1992 Summer Olympics, giving birth to their first nickname: les Bronzés (meaning tanned in French, a reference both to bronze and to cult French film Les Bronzés). This led to an increased popularity of the sport in France, which was already one of the most popular in primary and secondary schools.

One year after their Olympic medal, les Bronzés reached the final of the 1993 World Championship, which they lost against Russia.

In 1995, France won the World Championship in Iceland, defeating Croatia in the final. The team became known as les Barjots because the players played the final with an extravagant haircut (barjot is a slang word for crazy in French).

The team finished 4th in the 1996 Summer Olympics (France lost the bronze medal game to Spain, whom they had beaten in the first round). France finished third a year later in the 1997 World Championship. The team finished 6th in the 1999 World Championship and in the 2000 Summer Olympics.

France won the world title again in the 2001 World Championship organised in France. During both their quarterfinal and final, against Germany and Sweden respectively, they were one goal behind until a few seconds before the end of the game, but scored a late goal and finally win in overtime with a three-goal margin. This great strength of character was cause for their new nickname: les Costauds (the strong, or the tough). Five members of les Costauds had already been world champions in 1995 with les Barjots: Jackson Richardson, Grégory Anquetil, Patrick Cazal, and the goalkeepers Bruno Martini and Christian Gaudin.

The team finished third in the 2003 World Championship. In the 2004 Olympics, the teamed finished 5th. Although they won their five games of the preliminary round, the team lost to an ageing Russian team led by 42-year-old goalkeeper Andrey Lavrov in the quarterfinals (24–26).

In the 2005 World Championship, France finished third again. This was the last international competition played by Jackson Richardson, a veteran from the first team les Bronzés. The retirement of their star meant for the French team the final transition between the early successes and the new generation of players.

In 2006 France won for the first time the European Championship, a competition in which they had never won a medal until then. In the final, they overwhelmed Spain, the reigning world champions (31–23), against whom they had lost the opening match in the preliminary round.

In 2008, France finished third in the European Championship. They were undefeated until the semi-final, which they lost to Croatia.

France won the gold medal in the Beijing Olympics. The French players elected to call themselves Les Experts, which is the French title for the TV show CSI in France. The team won the gold medal in the 2008 handball tournament in Beijing, defeating underdogs Iceland in the final (28–23). Thierry Omeyer, Daniel Narcisse and Bertrand Gille were voted into the tournament's All Star team.

France won the world title again in 2009 at the 2009 World Championship, hosted by Croatia, against the organizing country, and the European title in 2010 in Austria, once more against Croatia. As a result, they became the first men's team to hold the three major titles in the sport (olympic title, world title and European title) simultaneously (Denmark women's national handball team held all three titles in 1997). It also became the third team to have won all three titles ever, the other two being Germany and Russia.

In the 2011 World Championship, France held its title, winning against Denmark (37–35 after extra time). This victory, in addition to granting an automatic participation to the 2012 Olympics, marked several achievements:

  • it became, with Romania (1964, 1974) and Sweden (1958), one of the few handball teams (on the men's side) to have successfully defended a world champion status;
  • it became (and is the only, so far) the first national handball team in history to have won four major titles in a row;
  • three players on the team (Jérôme Fernandez, Thierry Omeyer and Didier Dinart) achieved three world champions titles – putting them on par with Cornel Oţelea from Romania in the 60s (had he been present in 2009, Bertrand Gille would also have been one of them, but he missed 2009 due to injuries).

The 2012 and 2013 years were a mixed bag for the team; after an unexpected setback at the 2012 European championship where the team ended up in 11th place, it went on to be the first national handball team to retain the Olympic title at the London Olympic games. In 2013, they ended up being defeated by Croatia in this year's world championship.

2014 saw France regain its European title after losing it in 2012. Of note is that just like in 2009, the team ended up winning the final against the host country.

In 2015, they won their 5th World Champion title against host country Qatar. Thierry Omeyer was elected Most Valuable Player of the tournament; this was the first time in the IHF history that a goalkeeper was elected as an MVP. By doing so, they became the first team in the history of the sport to hold the three major titles for the second time.

In 2016, Les Experts lost their Olympic title in Rio, finishing second after a defeat in final against Denmark.

In 2017, they won their 6th World Champion title at home against Norway (33–26). Nikola Karabatic was elected Most Valuable Player of the tournament. Thierry Omeyer and Daniel Narcisse retired after the tournament, with two Olympic gold medals, three European titles, and respectively five and four world championship titles.

Honours

;Olympic Games :* Gold Medal: 2008, 2012, 2020 :* Silver Medal: 2016 :* Bronze Medal: 1992

;World Championship :* Winners: 1995, 2001, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2017 :* Runners-up: 1993, 2023 :* Third-place: 1997, 2003, 2005, 2019, 2025

;European Championship :* Winners: 2006, 2010, 2014, 2024 :* Third-place: 2008, 2018

;EHF Euro Cup :* Winners: 2026

CompetitionTotalTotal133824
Olympic Games3115
World Championship62513
European Championship4026

Competitive record

Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place

Olympic Games

GamesRoundPositionPldWDLGFGAGDTotal9/153 Titles68493161,8771,618+259
GER 1936 Berlindid not participate
FRG 1972 Munichdid not qualify
CAN 1976 Montreal
URS 1980 Moscow
USA 1984 Los Angeles
KOR 1988 Seoul
ESP 1992 BarcelonaThird place3rd of 127502157143+14
USA 1996 AtlantaFourth place4th of 127403190165+25
AUS 2000 SydneyMatch for 5th place6th of 128413192177+15
GRE 2004 Athens5th of 128701221176+45
CHN 2008 BeijingChampions1st of 128710228185+43
GBR 2012 London1st of 128701229175+54
BRA 2016 Rio de JaneiroRunners-up2nd of 128602241209+32
JPN 2020 TokyoChampions1st of 128701256222+34
FRA 2024 ParisQuarterfinals8th of 126213163166−3
USA 2028 Los AngelesTBD
AUS 2032 Brisbane

World Championship

YearRoundPositionGPWDLGSGATotal25/326 titles18813075149934352
GER 1938did not qualify
SWE 1954Preliminary Round630122661
East Germany 1958Preliminary Round931026657
FRG 1961Main Round8610570105
CZE 1964Preliminary Round1430034164
SWE 1967Preliminary Round1031023441
FRA 1970Preliminary Round11610580105
East Germany 1974did not qualify
DEN 1978Preliminary Round1630035497
FRG 1982did not qualify
SUI 1986did not qualify
CZE 1990Second round97313161158
SWE 1993Runners-up[[File:Silver medal icon.svg]]7502155151
ISL 1995Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]9702218185
JPN 1997Third place[[File:Bronze medal icon.svg]]9702223206
EGY 1999Quarter-finals69603241210
FRA 2001Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]9900233172
POR 2003Third place[[File:Bronze medal icon.svg]]9702257194
TUN 2005Third place[[File:Bronze medal icon.svg]]10622301240
GER 2007Fourth place410604300243
CRO 2009Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]10901296211
SWE 2011Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]10910327245
ESP 2013Quarter-finals67502207182
QAT 2015Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]9810259215
FRA 2017Champions[[File:Gold medal icon.svg]]9900282218
Denmark/Germany 2019Third place[[File:Bronze medal icon.svg]]10712278251
Egypt 2021Fourth place49702267250
Poland/Sweden 2023Runners-up[[File:Silver medal icon.svg]]9801301245
Croatia/Denmark/Norway 2025Third place[[File:Bronze medal icon.svg]]9801316246
Germany 2027TBD
France/Germany 2029Qualified as co-host
Denmark/Iceland/Norway 2031TBD

European Championship

YearRoundPositionGPWDLGSGATotal17/184 titles1137310*3032182931
POR 19945th/6th place66213148148
ESP 19967th/8th place76402154141
ITA 19987th/8th place76213140153
CRO 2000Fourth place47412173164
SWE 20025th/6th place67322180167
SVN 20045th/6th place67313189182
SUI 2006Champions1 [[File:Gold medal europe.svg18px]]8701243192
NOR 2008Third place3 [[File:Bronze medal europe.svg18px]]8602231207
AUT 2010Champions1 [[File:Gold medal europe.svg18px]]8620225196
SRB 2012Main round116213156163
DEN 2014Champions1 [[File:Gold medal europe.svg18px]]8701259227
POL 20165th/6th place57502210182
CRO 2018Third place3 [[File:Bronze medal europe.svg18px]]8701244212
AUTNORSWE 2020Preliminary round1431028279
HungarySlovakia 2022Fourth place49603278248
GER 2024Champions1 [[File:Gold medal europe.svg18px]]9810306270
DENNORSWE 2026 Main round77403267232
PORESPSUI 2028TBD
CZEDENPOL 2030TBD
FRAGER 2032Qualified as co-host

:*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided in a penalty shootout.

Current squad

Roster for the 2025 World Men's Handball Championship.

Head coach: Guillaume Gille

Records

Most capped players

#NameCareerCapsGoals
1Jackson Richardson1990–2005417787
2Jérôme Fernandez1997–20153901,463
3Didier Dinart1996–2013379162
4Thierry Omeyer1999–20173584
5Nikola Karabatić2002–20243561,293
6Daniel Narcisse2000–2017311943
7Guillaume Gille1996–2012308678
8Michaël Guigou2002–20213071021
9Philippe Gardent1983–1995298635
10Pascal Mahé1984–1996297739

Top goalscorers

#PlayerCareerGoalsCapsAverage
1Jérôme Fernandez1997–20151,463390
2Nikola Karabatić2002–20241,293356
3Michaël Guigou2002–20211,021307
4Frédéric Volle1987–19961,016241
5Daniel Narcisse2000–2017943311
6Stéphane Stoecklin1990–1999898238
7Luc Abalo2005–2021859289
8Bertrand Gille1997–2013806268
9Jackson Richardson1990–2005787417
10Pascal Mahé1984–1996739297

File:Jackson Richardson 04.JPG|Jackson Richardson is the most capped player in the history of France with 417 caps. File:Jerome Fernandez Hand Star Game 2013 t201139.jpg|Jérôme Fernandez is the top scorer in the history of France with 1,463 goals.

Kit suppliers

Since 2002, France's kit is supplied by Adidas.

References

References

  1. "EdFM – Dix-huit joueurs pour le Mondial". ffhandball.fr.
  2. (14 January 2025). "Team Roster France".
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