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Recco Goes For Repeat Title At LEN Champion’s League Final Eight

Courtesy: LEN

Recco is looking to retaining its title, which would be the first double since 2008 when also the Italians had managed to win back-to-back editions. However, six other freshly crowned national champion teams and their fellow Italian arch-rival Brescia all line up to prevent Recco from a record-breaking 10th victory. Belgrade is ready for another three-day show, starting this Thursday.

Since the reshaped format of the Champions League has been introduced in 2014 (preliminary with two groups, a Final Six, then Eight at the end), the first six editions saw six different teams from six different countries lifting the trophy. Last season Recco halted that trend and managed to clinch the title for a second time after 2015 – of course, that was also the Italians’ record-breaking 9th victory in the competition.

Now Recco can raise the stakes as the favourite team may achieve a title-defence for the first time since 2008. Indeed, they were the last one till date to retain their gold medal 14 years ago. It’s not an easy feat – it happened only 8 times in history (the competition started in the 1963-64 season), and only one team (Mladost, CRO, then YUG) could make a treble in 1968-1970.

This also demonstrates that going all the way in the Champions League has been anything but easy – and even if Recco dominated the prelims as usual, the Italian champions could take nothing for granted in Belgrade.

First of all, there will be seven freshly crowned champions in the field – all but one qualified team managed to win its respective domestic league, Brescia is the only exception for obvious reasons as they lost to Recco in Italy. This already adds some extra flavour to the three thrilling days – so this edition will lack the irony we had a year ago when the two sides reaching the final, Recco and Ferencvaros, had fallen short before the F8 in their countries (Recco got silver in Italy, Ferencvaros got bronze in Hungary).

The quarter-finals on Thursday already offer a series of exciting clashes. Only Brescia seems to face a bit easier task – this might be their reward for finishing atop in the group considered the toughest ever –, still, Hannover might cause them some headaches in a single game.

Despite losing only one game in 14 rounds, Recco will need to pass a crucial test right on Day 1 against Barceloneta. The Spaniards were on the rise in the spring and this match is something all water polo lovers are poised to see. It’s going to be interesting for another aspect too: both teams are led by a Croatian head-coach. Sandro Sukno is in charge in Recco, Elvis Fatovic is the boss in Barceloneta – both of them spend their first season in this job at the clubs. Add: when Croatia won the Olympic gold in 2012, Fatovic was the assistant coach of the national team where Sukno was a key player.

When Ferencvaros won the trophy in 2019, they downed Jug in the quarters to put an end to the Croats’ big run as the Dubrovnik-based side always reached the semis in the previous four editions. This year, the Hungarians were in trouble in early March but bounced back spectacularly and Jug also had some great matches lately – and don’t forget, the Croats are the only team having beaten Recco in the group stage.

Last but not least, host Novi Beograd, the only new participant compared to the 2021 field, will have a showdown with Marseille which showed some tremendous improvement during these years. The French first won the Euro Cup in 2019, qualified for the F8 last year and staged a 11-game winning streak in the prelims this season. With a great mix of French and foreign players, mostly from Montenegro and Croatia, led by a Montenegrin coach, they know the ways to put up a great fight against a Serbian team. However, Novi Beograd was put together to win this title in its home pool, preferably right on their first try. During the season, his majesty Igor Milinovic entered the scene to take over the team as the head coach. The legendary player already proved that, as a coach, he knew how to win the title against all odds when he led Partizan to a stunning victory against top favourite Recco in 2011 in the Foro Italico in Rome.

All matches can be followed via a live stream on our dedicated website with on-site English commentary (though in some countries geo-blocking may occur) – and the live-scoring site shall offer all the stats and video-clips of each goal scored in Belgrade.

Champions League, Final Eight – Schedule 

Quarter-finals, 2 June 

  • 14.30 AN Brescia (ITA) v Waspo 98 Hannover (GER)
  • 16.30 Pro Recco (ITA) v Zodiac Atletic Barceloneta (ESP)
  • 18.30 CN Marseille (FRA) v Novi Beograd (SRB)
  • 20.30 FTC-Telekom Budapest (HUN) v Jug Adriatic Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO)

Semi-finals, 3 June 

  • 14.30 Crossover for 5-8th places
  • 16.30 Crossover for 5-8th places
  • 18.30 Semi-final: Brescia/Hannover v Marseille/Novi B.
  • 20.30 Semi-final: Recco/Barceloneta v FTC/Jug

Final Round, 4 June 

  • 12.00 For the 7-8th place
  • 14.00 For the 5-6th place
  • 17.00 Bronze medal match
  • 19.30 Champions League Final

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About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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