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Buy tickets for Aalborg Handbold vs Sporting CP - EHF Champions League Buy tickets for Aalborg Handbold vs Sporting CP - EHF Champions League

EHF Champions League (QUARTER-FINAL)
06. May 2026. 20:45h
Aalborg Handbold vs Sporting CP
Gigantium, Aalborg, DK
2026
06
May
Aalborg Håndbold - Sporting CP tickets for the EHF Champions League quarter-final in Gigantium
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Aalborg Håndbold - Sporting CP tickets for the EHF Champions League quarter-final in Gigantium

Looking for tickets for Aalborg Håndbold - Sporting CP in the EHF Champions League quarter-final? Here you can buy tickets for a high-stakes handball night at Gigantium and secure your seat for the return leg that decides the road to the final tournament in Cologne

Aalborg Håndbold against Sporting CP: the return leg that leads toward Cologne

Aalborg Håndbold and Sporting CP enter the quarter-final return leg with a scoreline that practically erases the first match: in Lisbon it ended 31-31, after Aalborg survived the Portuguese surge and snatched a draw with a goal by Buster Juul-Lassen in the closing moments. This means that at Sparekassen Danmark Arena there is no room for calculation - the winner from Aalborg goes to the final tournament in Cologne on 13 and 14 June, and every lost ball and every suspension can decide the season.

Sporting arrive as a team that has already shown this season that it can hit Aalborg where it hurts most: in transition, the quick restart and one-on-one play from the back line. Aalborg, on the other hand, have the home court, a deeper Scandinavian rotation and the experience of players who have already been through matches like this. Tickets for this meeting are in demand among fans because it is not only a semi-final place being played for, but a place among the four best handball teams in Europe.

What is at stake for both teams

Aalborg finished the group stage second in Group A with 21 points from 14 matches, just behind Füchse Berlin. That placing brought them direct entry into the quarter-finals and weeks without additional playoff stress. Sporting were sixth in the same group with 14 points, so they had to go through the playoff against Orlen Wisła Płock: in Lisbon they won 33-29, and then in Poland they lost 28-27, which was enough overall for them to advance.That difference in the route to the quarter-finals gives an interesting contrast. Aalborg had a more favourable schedule and the advantage of a home return leg, but Sporting have already gone through two high-pressure playoff matches. The Portuguese team is used to playing on the edge, and its young back line has no problem taking responsibility in the final ten minutes.

In their meetings this season there is no clear psychological dominance. Aalborg beat Sporting 35-30 at home in September, Sporting struck back 35-33 in Lisbon in February, and the first quarter-final duel ended 31-31. Three matches, three different scenarios, but the same conclusion: the rhythm is high, the goalkeepers are constantly under pressure, and the defences rarely have long periods of control.

Form and the route to the return leg

The first quarter-final match at Pavilhão João Rocha was a warning for Aalborg. Sporting had a five-goal lead in the second half, but the Danish team did not break. Thomas Arnoldsen was one of Aalborg's most important players in attack, and the final 31-31 draw changed the tone of the return leg: Sporting missed the chance to come to Denmark with capital, while Aalborg got a new opportunity in front of their own fans.

The most important verified information ahead of the return leg:

  • Aalborg Håndbold finished second in Group A: 14 matches, 10 wins, 1 draw, 3 defeats, 21 points.

  • Sporting CP finished sixth in Group A: 14 matches, 7 wins, 7 defeats, 14 points.

  • The first quarter-final meeting in Lisbon ended 31-31.

  • In the group, Aalborg beat Sporting 35-30 at home, while Sporting beat Aalborg 35-33 in Lisbon.

  • The aggregate winner of this tie goes to the final tournament in Cologne on 13 and 14 June 2026.



Aalborg's season in Europe has a stable foundation: they conceded 407 goals in the group, the fewest in their group, which shows how much the combination of a solid central block, the pivot's defensive work and depth in the goalkeeping position means to them. Sporting scored 465 goals in the group, more than Aalborg, but conceded 476, which explains why their matches often slide toward handball in runs.

Aalborg: experience, depth and home pressure

Aalborg's list of names looks like a blend of Scandinavian power and international experience. Niklas Landin brings authority in goal, Sander Sagosen and Juri Knorr provide creation from the back line, Thomas Arnoldsen is one of the players who can change the rhythm of the attack on his own, while Simon Hald and René Antonsen hold the middle of the defence and the line in attack. Alongside them are Mads Hoxer, Lukas Nilsson, Kristian Bjørnsen, Alexander Blonz and Felix Möller - enough options that Aalborg do not depend on one hand.

Coach Simon Dahl must find the balance between control and speed. Against Sporting it is dangerous to play too slowly, because the Portuguese can then step out more aggressively onto the backs and close the pivot line. But it is equally dangerous to enter an open exchange of attacks, because then Sporting get the kind of match they like most: plenty of possessions, quick restarts, attacks before the defence is fully set.For Aalborg, the key will be the first and second phase of defence. If the home side force Sporting into long attacks, reduce the number of easy goals from the wings and keep Francisco Costa away from clean shots from nine metres, the crowd will feel the match breaking in the Danish direction. If Aalborg fall into technical mistakes early, Sporting will turn every lost ball into a run.

Sporting CP: the Costa family and handball without fear

Sporting are led by Ricardo Costa, a coach with a clear handball idea and an additional peculiarity: his main stars in the back line are his sons Francisco Costa and Martim Costa. Francisco, also known as Kiko Costa, has more than 120 goals in this European season according to the EHF player profile. Martim Costa is also among Sporting's most dangerous scorers, and the two of them create constant pressure on the defence because they can shoot from outside, break through the first contact or play the wings into position.

Sporting are not only the team of the Costa brothers. Orri Freyr Þorkelsson brings goals and width on the left wing, Mohamed Aly and André Kristensen provide options in goal, while Christian Moga, Edney Oliveira and Víctor Romero Holguín offer different profiles on the line. On the wings there are also Mamadou Gassama, Diogo Branquinho and Carlos Álvarez, players who punish every half-hearted transition defence.

Sporting's attack is particularly awkward because it is not afraid of the early shot. In quarter-final handball that can be a double-edged sword. If several of the first attempts go in, the away side opens up, and the arena falls quiet. If Aalborg draw Landin or Fabian Norsten saves from those shots, the home side get a chance for easy goals through the wings and the second wave. Places in the stands are disappearing quickly precisely because of this kind of match: the tempo will probably be high from the first minute.

Key duels on the court

The match will not only be a clash of clubs, but a series of small handball battles. Aalborg must decide how deep they will step out on Francisco Costa, and how much they will protect the space behind them for the pivot. Sporting must find a way to stop Aalborg's cooperation between the backs and the line, especially when Hald or Möller set themselves between two defensive players and open space for the return pass.

Duels that can decide the evening:


  • Francisco Costa against Aalborg's central defence - if he gets clean shots, Sporting will hold level more easily.

  • Thomas Arnoldsen and Juri Knorr against Sporting's aggressive zone - Aalborg need calm decisions, not only powerful shots.

  • Niklas Landin and Fabian Norsten against the Portuguese wings - every save from a clear chance can turn the energy of the arena.

  • Simon Hald and Felix Möller on the line - Aalborg must punish every over-aggressive Sporting step-out.

  • Orri Freyr Þorkelsson in transition - Aalborg must not allow easy goals after their own misses.



Discipline during suspensions will be especially important. Sporting are a team that know how to speed up the game with an extra player, but Aalborg also have enough quality to attack patiently through the line when they have a numerical advantage. In a match in which the first meeting ended level, two consecutive suspensions can be as costly as a run of three missed attacks.

Tactical expectations: control against speed

Aalborg will probably try to slow Sporting down whenever they lose the ball or miss a shot. That means a quick recovery by the central players, closing the first pass toward the wing and smart use of fouls before the nine-metre zone. In attack, the home side will look for width through the wings and depth through the pivot, because Sporting's defence must not get the chance to stand compactly and wait only for the outside shot.

Sporting will seek the opposite: a match in which there is a lot of running, in which Aalborg's heavier defensive players must often change direction and in which Francisco Costa can attack before the block is arranged. The Portuguese are dangerous even when the score is not developing according to plan, because they have players who take shots without fear in the early phase of the attack. That is why Aalborg must not think that home court is enough in itself.

If the meeting enters the final ten minutes with one or two goals between the teams, the advantage may go to the team that has more freshness in the back line. Aalborg count on depth there, Sporting on the confidence and automatisms of the Costa brothers. In such a finish there is no small decision: the choice of shot, the moment for a time-out, a seven-metre save or a passive-play call can become the headline of the evening.

Gigantium and Sparekassen Danmark Arena: a handball evening in Aalborg Øst

The match is played in the Gigantium complex, that is, Sparekassen Danmark Arena, at Willy Brandts Vej 31 in Aalborg Øst. The complex is one of the most important sports venues in Aalborg, with a handball arena, ice hall, swimming pool, athletics hall and other facilities. For fans, the most important thing is that it is an indoor arena in which the sound of drums and chants remains very close to the court.

Gigantium is described in local sources as a large flexible sports and cultural centre. Capacity for handball is stated at around 5,500 spectators, while for concerts a larger number is mentioned because of a different layout of the space. This is not a huge arena in which the sound of the stands is lost, but a space in which pressure from the stands is quickly felt during seven-metre throws, attacks under passive-play pressure and the closing minutes.

Useful information for arrival:


  • The arena address is Willy Brandts Vej 31, 9220 Aalborg Øst.

  • Aalborg Håndbold, in their fan information, particularly highlight arrival by bus for home matches.

  • There are parking options around Gigantium, but for a European quarter-final evening you should expect congestion before the start.

  • It is advisable to arrive earlier, especially if collecting a ticket, coming with children or looking for the entrance to the complex for the first time.

  • The complex has several sports facilities, so you should orient yourself toward the Sparekassen Danmark Arena section.



It is worth securing tickets in time, because in European matches like this Aalborg live not only from the result but also from the rhythm of the stands. When the home goalkeeper strings together two saves or when a wing sprints out on the counterattack, the noise in the arena quickly turns into additional pressure on the away attack.

Aalborg as host city

Aalborg is a city in northern Denmark, in the Nordjylland region, large enough to welcome fans from outside the city, but compact enough that match day can be organised without great distances. The city centre, the Limfjord waterfront and the area around the arena are not the same zone, so travellers should check transport to Aalborg Øst in advance, especially after a match that starts at 20:45.

For fans arriving earlier, Aalborg offers a calmer rhythm than major European metropolises. That can be an advantage: lunch in the centre, a walk by the water, then heading toward the arena without the feeling of losing half the day in traffic. Still, the evening kick-off time means the return should be planned before the start, especially if using public transport or a taxi after the end of the meeting.

The atmosphere around the match will be different from an ordinary league round. Sporting fans travelling to Denmark will have clear hope after the first draw, while the home fans will expect Aalborg to make use of the court advantage. Ticket sales for this match are under way, and the interest is understandable: a quarter-final return leg without any score cushion means handball without waiting.

What fans can expect in the arena

From the first minute, fast handball and little room for feeling out the pulse should be expected. Aalborg will want to show that they are the home side and that the draw from Lisbon has value only if it is confirmed in Aalborg. Sporting, however, will try to avoid a long period of home control. If the visitors withstand the first ten minutes without a larger Aalborg run, the match can turn into a nervous duel in which every attack carries weight.

Fans coming to the arena should pay attention to details that are easier to miss on television: how Aalborg change defence after the introduction of Hald's profile on the line, how quickly Sporting take the restart after conceding a goal, how Knorr and Arnoldsen position themselves when the referees' arm is raised for passive play, and how often Sporting look for isolation for Francisco Costa.

For the neutral spectator, this is a meeting that has all the elements of top-level handball: the result of the first match is open, both teams have players who can score double-digit goals, and the arena is compact enough that every 3-0 run changes the mood. For Aalborg fans, this is a chance to turn home court into a real advantage. For Sporting, it is a chance to break through to the final tournament by the hardest possible route.

The biggest questions before the first whistle

Aalborg must answer whether they can keep Sporting below the 30-goal mark. In the first three head-to-head meetings this season, Sporting scored 30, 35 and 31 goals, which shows how difficult it is to completely shut down the Portuguese team. On the other hand, Sporting must prove that they can play 60 minutes away from home without long empty stretches, because in Lisbon they already had a five-goal lead and still did not win.The greatest pressure will be on the home side, but not necessarily the greatest burden. Aalborg know that victory takes them through, in front of their own crowd and after a season in which they secured a privileged position through the group. Sporting arrive by a less comfortable route, but with an attack capable of runs and with a coach who knows well the mentality of his young core.

If Aalborg get goalkeeper saves early and convert counterattacks, Sporting will have to chase the result in an arena that will grow louder and louder. If Sporting open the match patiently, draw suspensions and force Aalborg into shots from difficult positions, the return leg can go down to the very last ball. That is the most realistic picture of this match: not a duel in which one favourite calmly controls the evening, but a quarter-final in which every detail accumulates until the final minute.

Sources:

- EHF Home of Handball - used data about the tie Sporting Clube de Portugal - Aalborg Håndbold, the first quarter-final meeting 31-31, the return-leg schedule, competition phases and the profile of Francisco Costa.

- Aalborg Håndbold - used information about the timing of the return leg at Sparekassen Danmark Arena, the winner's passage to the final tournament in Cologne, practical arrival information and the club address.- TNT Sports - used data about the final standings of Group A, Aalborg's and Sporting's performance in the group stage and the number of goals scored and conceded.

- sport.de - used data about the squads of Aalborg Håndbold and Sporting CP for the 2025/2026 season, including players and coaches.

- Gigantium - used the description of the complex as a sports and cultural centre in Aalborg and practical location data.

- Enjoy Nordjylland and local sources about Gigantium - used context about the complex's facilities, the role of the arena in Aalborg and fan arrival.

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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