TTH Holstebro
Danish handball club
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TTH Holstebro is a men's handball club from Holstebro, Denmark. The team is playing in the Danish Primo Tours Ligaen and play their home matches in Gråkjær Arena. Previously, the club also had an affiliated women's team until 2020.
| TTH Holstebro | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | TTH Holstebro | ||
| Short name | TTH | ||
| Founded | May 1, 2000 | ||
| Arena | Gråkjær Arena | ||
| Capacity | 3,250 | ||
| President | John Mikkelsen | ||
| Head coach | Arnór Atlason | ||
| League | Håndboldligaen | ||
| 2024–25 | 4th | ||
| Club colours | |||
| Website Official site | |||
History
The club was founded on 1 May 2000, when Holstebro Håndbold 90 and Tvis KFUM merged their first teams to create the new club.[1]
In 2002 disagreements between HH90 and Tvis KFUM nearly let to the dissolvement of the club.[2] A general assembly was called to dissolve the club, but an agreement between the two founding clubs was found last minute, which separated the elite team as its own legal entity.
In 2008 the club won their first ever trophy, when they won the Danish Men's Handball Cup.[1]
In 2013 the women's team won the EHF Cup[3] and the men's team won bronze medals.[4] In 2014-15 the women's team won the title for a second time.[5]
In 2016 the club changed the name from 'Team Tvis Holstebro' to 'TTH Holstebro'.[1] The reason for the change was that the sponsors was primarily based in Holstebro and wanted that town to have more focus compared to the relatively smaller Tvis.[6]
In 2018 they won the Danish Cup for a second time as well as the Danish Super Cup.[1]
The club decided to split up the men's and women's in 2020 section in each clubs, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. HH90 took over the women's section, called Holstebro Håndbold.[7]
Men's handball team
Kits
Results
- Danish Handball League:
Silver: 2016
Bronze: 2009, 2012, 2014, 2020
- Danish Handball Cup: 2
Gold: 2008, 2017[1]
- EHF Cup:
Bronze: 2013
- Danish Super Cup
Gold: 2018[1]
Team
Current squad
- Squad for the 2025–26 season [8]
| ||||
Technical staff
Head Coach: Arnór Atlason
Assistant Coach: Jacob Hessellund
Goalkeeping Coach: Søren Rasmussen
Physiotherapist: Morten Graversen
Physiotherapist: Thomas Graagaard
Physiotherapist: Rasmus Jørgensen
Team Leader: Steen Kallesøe
Team Leader: Laust Buch
Transfers
- Transfers for the 2026–27 season
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European record
EHF Cup
| Season | Round | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013–14 | Round 2 | 35–23 | 36–36 | 71–59 | - | |
| Round 3 | 32–27 | 28–29 | 61–55 | - | ||
| Group | 28–24 | 30–32 | 60–54 | - | ||
| Group | 29–24 | 28–28 | 57–52 | - | ||
| Group | 34–28 | 34–34 | 68–62 | - | ||
| 1/4 Finals | 30–31 | 28–27 | 57–59 | - | ||
| 2012–13 | Round 2 | 30–24 | 29–26 | 56–53 | - | |
| Round 3 | 35–19 | 35–32 | 67–54 | - | ||
| Group | 27–26 | 28–29 | 56–54 | - | ||
| Group | 26–26 | 31–27 | 57–53 | - | ||
| Group | 33–18 | 28–28 | 61–46 | - | ||
| Quarter Finals | 27–26 | 24–24 | 51–50 | - | ||
| Final Tournament | - | - | 28–27 | - | ||
| Final Tournament | - | - | 20–26 | - | ||
EHF Cup Winners' Cup
| Season | Round | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009–10 | Round 3 | 31–23 | 33–29 | 60–56 | - | |
| Round 4 | 31–24 | 27–33 | 64–51 | - | ||
| 1/4 Final | 27–32 | 30–27 | 54–62 | - | ||
EHF Challenge Cup
| Season | Round | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002–03 | Round 2 | 32–18 | 21–26 | 58–39 | - | |
| Round 3 | 30–21 | 20–30 | 60–41 | - | ||
| Round 4 | 20–20 | 29–20 | 40–49 | - | ||
Women's handball team
Results
European record
| Season | Competition | Round | Club | 1st leg | 2nd leg | Aggregate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016–17 | EHF Cup | R3 | 25–27 | 21–31 | 46–58 | |