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Buy tickets for Fuchse Berlin vs One Veszprém - EHF Champions League Buy tickets for Fuchse Berlin vs One Veszprém - EHF Champions League

EHF Champions League (QUARTER-FINAL)
06. May 2026. 18:45h
Fuchse Berlin vs One Veszprém
Max-Schmeling-Halle, Berlin, DE
2026
06
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Fuchse Berlin vs One Veszprem, EHF Champions League Quarter-final in Berlin, buy seats now

Looking for tickets for Fuchse Berlin vs One Veszprem in the EHF Champions League? Here you can quickly check the key details for this quarter-final in Berlin and plan your ticket purchase for a major handball night at Max-Schmeling-Halle, with useful context on team form, atmosphere and travel

Berlin gets an evening of high stakes and a major European handball test

Fuchse Berlin and One Veszprem enter the second-leg quarter-final clash of the 2025/2026 season as two teams that already have clear proof of how evenly matched this pairing is, but also of how much the home court in Berlin can change the rhythm of the contest. The match at Max-Schmeling-Halle at Am Falkplatz 1 in Berlin carries everything lovers of major European games are looking for: top individual quality, competitive weight, an arena with a strong identity, and clubs whose ambition does not stop at the quarter-finals. Fuchse Berlin reached this stage as the winner of Group A, which says enough about the consistency, squad depth, and quality of play the German team showed throughout the group stage. One Veszprem, on the other hand, had to come through an additional round and knocked out Paris Saint-Germain in the play-offs, thereby confirming that it is not coming into this round as an outsider content merely with reaching the last eight. In such a setting, ticket sales naturally increase as the match date approaches, because this is a meeting that can very easily deliver a memorable handball evening, with runs of comebacks, powerful defensive stretches, and individual plays of the highest class. For spectators who want to feel the true European charge, this is a match where tickets are not just a formality but part of an experience that begins long before the referee’s first whistle. Secure your tickets right away, because matches of this level in Berlin regularly attract both the home crowd and supporters travelling from other cities and countries.

The road to the quarter-finals shows why the host has a slight edge, but no right to relax

Fuchse Berlin finished Group A in first place with 22 points, a record of 11 wins and 3 losses, and a goal difference of 470:433, which is a sufficiently clear indicator of stability in the most important part of the season. One Veszprem was fifth in the same group with 14 points and a record of 7 wins and 7 losses, but that placing hides more nuances than are visible at first glance, because the Hungarian team showed very high attacking potential in a number of games and finished the group stage with 471 goals scored, exactly one more than Berlin. In the play-offs, it was precisely that offensive capacity that came to the fore, as One Veszprem eliminated Paris Saint-Germain over two matches by an aggregate score of 67:59, thereby clearly sending the message that it has enough depth, experience, and quality to advance against anyone. Still, Fuchse Berlin’s advantage is not only in hosting the second leg, but also in the fact that it has already beaten the same opponent twice this season in the group stage, first 32:31 in Veszprem, and then 38:34 in Berlin, which is not psychologically insignificant when the same teams meet again in the knockout phase. Such results create the feeling that the host knows how to open up the opponent’s defence and where it can look for scoring runs in the moments when the match is being decided. For the reader considering attending this duel, that also means something very practical: in front of them is a match whose sporting stake is enormous, while the previous head-to-head meetings have already produced 65 and 72 goals, so it is realistic to expect another evening of strong tempo and constant tension. Tickets for a clash like this are not sought only because of the clubs’ names, but also because of the very concrete promise of a rich, fast, and uncertain match that is rarely missed.

What the head-to-head meetings reveal about the rhythm, tactics, and possible scenario in Berlin

Fuchse Berlin’s two wins this season against One Veszprem provide a good framework for reading this pairing, but they by no means offer a finished recipe, because both matches were tight enough to show that the Hungarian side knows how to stay level for almost the entire evening. In the first meeting, Berlin won 32:31 away from home, and that is a result that speaks of the German team’s ability to remain calm in the finish and withstand the home side’s surges in an arena that has traditionally been very demanding for opponents. In the second meeting, Fuchse Berlin defeated One Veszprem 38:34 in front of its own crowd, with the hosts’ attack looking more fluid, with greater width and better use of transition, and it is precisely that segment that presents itself as one of the keys in the quarter-final second leg as well. One Veszprem, meanwhile, is not a team that easily drops out of a match, because it possesses the strength, experience, and rotation that can endure a high tempo, while the number of goals scored during the season confirms that it can punish any weaker retreat in defence. For that reason, Berlin is not expected to host a closed-type contest, but rather a duel in which every bigger defensive sequence will stand out precisely because both teams naturally gravitate towards a strong attack. For supporters planning to attend, such a match profile gives an additional reason to buy tickets, because this is not a meeting that promises only name and prestige, but a pairing that has already proved this season that it can produce content, tempo, and a result worthy of the biggest stage. Buy tickets via the button below, because when European knockout handball, previous close meetings, and Berlin’s home energy come together, public interest can very easily turn into a fight for every free seat.

Stars, squad depth, and the numbers shaping expectations before the first throw-off

In the Fuchse Berlin team, the greatest share of attention is logically drawn by Mathias Gidsel, who this season too is confirming himself as one of the most important names in European handball, and his output in elite competition speaks sufficiently for itself. On the scorers’ list after the season so far, he shares the top with 120 goals, even though he has played fewer matches than some direct competitors, which further strengthens the impression of his efficiency and his ability to change the tone of the entire match in a short period. Alongside him, Berlin also has a series of solutions that prevent the opponent from focusing its defence on only one name, so in such circumstances the value of players such as Lasse Andersson rises in particular, as does the goalkeeping stability the team gets when the defence succeeds in slowing down the opposing attack. One Veszprem comes with its own assets, and the fact that Hugo Descat is among the competition’s best scorers with 68 goals and very high efficiency resonates in particular, making him a constant threat in high-tempo matches. It is also important that One Veszprem has already played a total of 16 matches in this European cycle and in those contests reached 540 goals from 831 shots, confirming that this team is not entering Berlin only to defend a result or slow the game down, but to impose its own attacking volume. In such a distribution of quality, tickets for this match gain additional weight, because the crowd is practically buying the opportunity to watch several players who can decide a contest in one or two minutes, which is a luxury that quarter-finals at this level regularly bring. The factor of absences and the season’s workload should not be overlooked either, because injuries and the dense schedule have already left a mark on both squads, so minute management and bench depth will probably also have a serious influence on the end of the match.

Max-Schmeling-Halle as a sporting stage and one more reason why the experience from the stands is special

Max-Schmeling-Halle is not just the address where the match is played, but one of the spaces that gives this meeting additional identity and local strength. The arena is located in the heart of Berlin’s Prenzlauer Berg, within the Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark area, and the location itself carries a recognisable mixture of sporting tradition, urban rhythm, and very good connections with the rest of the city. It was opened in the late 1990s, developed as a multifunctional arena, and according to the venue’s own data it has approximately 11,900 seats in the maximum configuration, with 7,491 fixed seats and up to 76 spaces for wheelchair users. For a handball evening, such a framework means that the crowd can create an exceptionally dense and loud atmosphere, especially when the home side gains momentum and the stands begin to push the team through defensive runs and transition. That is precisely why ticket sales are not merely a technical issue for visitors, but part of the decision on whether they want to follow the match through a screen or directly from one of Berlin’s best-known sports halls, where changes of rhythm and emotional surges are felt far more strongly than in a television broadcast. Tickets for this clash are disappearing quickly, so buy your tickets in time, especially if you want to plan your arrival without stress and choose a better position in the stands. When the sporting importance is combined with the very reputation of the arena, which is the home court of Fuchse Berlin, it is clear why interest is growing both among locals and among visitors travelling to a European handball summit.

Berlin, Prenzlauer Berg, and the urban context that gives the match additional value

For many, attending this match will not be just going to a sporting event, but also entering one of the most recognisable parts of Berlin. Prenzlauer Berg has long outgrown its local neighbourhood frame and become part of the identity of modern Berlin, a place where sporting infrastructure, city parks, lively streets, and the recognisable everyday life of a great European city meet. Max-Schmeling-Halle is located next to Mauerpark and in an area that carries a strong symbolic charge of the once divided capital, so even the walk to the arena gives additional atmosphere to those who want to turn the match into a full evening out. Such an urban context is important also for readers considering travelling to Berlin precisely because of this clash, because tickets then become more than entry to the stands and turn into the central part of a mini trip in which sport naturally merges with the city experience. Particularly interesting is the fact that the arena is located on the so-called green bridge between the former eastern and western parts of the city, which gives it an additional urban-planning story that fits nicely into major European evenings. For supporters from outside Berlin, that means that buying tickets can also be the reason for a one-day or weekend stay in the city, in which the sporting experience is not separated from the local energy, but becomes part of it. At the moment when the quarter-final enters its final phase, it is precisely such matches that most often remain in memory, not only because of the result, but also because of the entire setting in which they were played.

Practical information for arrival and why it is good to plan earlier

For everyone intending to be in the arena, practical preparation can be crucial so that the experience remains focused on the match itself, and not on logistics. In its visitor information, Max-Schmeling-Halle recommends arriving by public transport or bicycle, and that is advice that makes sense both because of the venue’s position and because of the expected crowds on the day of a major European clash. The arena is very well integrated into the city’s transport system, while its location in Prenzlauer Berg makes arrival from different parts of Berlin easier without the need for complicated transfers by car and searching for a parking space at the last moment. Since this is a quarter-final and a match that also brings visiting supporters, it is reasonable to expect heavier traffic around the arena and earlier entry of the crowd, especially if pressure on the entrances increases immediately before the start. That is precisely why buying tickets in advance and planning your arrival earlier have very concrete value: less stress, better organisation, and more time to feel the atmosphere around the arena before the match begins. Buy tickets via the button below and plan your arrival early enough, because European evenings of this level begin in front of the arena, in queues, supporters’ conversations, and that growing murmur of the stands that turns into real sporting pressure as soon as the players come out to warm up. For families, groups of friends, and supporters coming from outside Berlin, it is precisely that early organisation that is often the difference between an average outing and a truly rounded sporting experience.

Why this clash is one of the most attractive handball dates of the spring

When everything already seen this season is summed up, it becomes clear why Fuchse Berlin against One Veszprem stands out as one of the most striking European handball clashes of this spring. The host has first place in the group behind it, a strong home base, and players who can raise the tempo and quality of the attack at any moment, while the visitor arrives with proof that it can survive a difficult knockout and eliminate a very strong opponent on the road to the quarter-finals. There are already two meetings between them this season full of goals and tension, and that is the best recommendation for everyone who wants a match with a clear sporting stake, but also with very likely dynamics that will hold attention from the first to the last minute. At the same time, Berlin in this period also offers one of those sporting evenings when the city, the arena, and the competition function as a single stage, so tickets for this event also carry the value of an experience that goes beyond the result itself. Anyone looking for a clash in which major European handball, a recognisable arena, a loud crowd, tactical depth, and enough individual class for several plays of the season come together will hardly find a better option than this match. Ticket sales are therefore attracting great attention for good reason, and for supporters who want to be part of a full arena, the message is very simple: secure your place in time and follow this quarter-final showdown directly from the stands, where every goal, every save, and every comeback are felt most strongly.

Sources:
- EHF Champions League, current standings of the 2025/2026 season, quarter-final schedule, and play-off results
- EHF Champions League, details of the head-to-head matches One Veszprém HC - Fuchse Berlin and Fuchse Berlin - One Veszprém HC in the group
- EHF Champions League, player and team statistics for the 2025/2026 season
- DAIKIN HBL, current German league standings and Fuchse Berlin’s form
- Max-Schmeling-Halle, official information about the arena, capacity, and arrival
- visitBerlin and Berlin.de, context of the Max-Schmeling-Halle location and the Prenzlauer Berg district
- One Veszprem, club information and competition calendar

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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