3 times in twelve years, the defending champions made it to Cologne: Barcelona in 2012, Kiel in 2013 and Vardar in 2018.
3 times clubs from the same country duelled in the EHF FINAL4 finals: Barcelona vs Ciudad Real in 2011, Flensburg vs Kiel in 2014 and Montpellier vs Nantes in 2018.
4 players have won the EHF FINAL4 with two different clubs: Besides Ivan Cupic, it was Tobias Reichmann (2010, 2012 with Kiel and 2016 with Kielce), Domagoj Duvnjak (2013 with Hamburg, 2020 with Kiel and Steffen Weinhold (2014 with Flensburg, 2020 with Kiel).
4 Spanish coaches have won the EHF FINAL4 so far: besides Pascual and Dujshebaev (2016 with Kielce), Raul Gonzalez (2017) and Roberto Parrondo Garcia (2019) both claimed the title with Vardar. Alberto Entrerrios can become the fifth Spanish coach to win.
4 times in the last five editions saw no German team qualified for the EHF FINAL4 - Flensburg were eliminated by Aalborg, defending champions Kiel by PSG.
5 EHF FINAL4 matches so far needed to be decided in extra-time, two of them in a penalty shootout. First Hamburg beat Barça in the 2013 final 30:29 after extra-time, followed by the 2014 semi shoot-out of Flensburg vs Barcelona (40:39). In 2016, first Veszprém beat Kiel after extra-time 31:28, but then lost to Kielce after penalties 38:39 in the final. In 2020, Kiel struck back against Veszprém, beating them 36:35 after extra-time in the semi-final.
5 goals is the highest winning margin in finals. Kiel beat Madrid 26:21 in 2012, Barça defeated Veszprém 28:23 in 2015, Montpellier were the 32:27 winners against Nantes in 2018 and the final result of Kiel vs Barcelona was 33:28 in 2020.
5 different nations are represented by the EHF FINAL 4 winners so far. Germany (Kiel/3, Hamburg, Flensburg), Spain (Barça/2), Poland (Kielce), North Macedonia (Vardar/2) and France (Montpellier). In the previous 16 EHF Champions League seasons from 1994 to 2009, only four different nations were represented (Spain, Germany, Slovenia, France).
7 different clubs won the trophy at Cologne: THW Kiel (2010, 2012, 2020), Barça (2011, 2015) and Vardar (2017, 2019) each twice, Hamburg, Flensburg, Kielce and Montpellier each once.
8 direct red cards were given in the history of the EHF FINAL4 so far, three of them for Croatian players (Denis Buntic/Kielce in 2013, Renato Sulic/Veszprém 2014 and Igor Vori/PSG 2016). Kielce’s Piotr Chrapkowski , Veszprém’s Blaz Blagotinsek (2019), Barça’s Thiagus Petrus (2019), Petar Nenadic and Patrick Wiencek in the 2020 semi-final betwee Vespzrém vs Kiel also seeing red. Petrus was the only to receive two red cards at the same weekend, as one day later, he was sent off after three two-minutes suspensions.
9 times including the 2021 edition, Barça were or will be part of the EHF FINAL4. In the all-time ranking they are ahead of Kiel (7), Veszprém (6), Paris (5), Kielce (4), Vardar, Ciudad Real/Atletico Madrid (both 3).
9 times Aron Palmarsson was part of the EHF FINAL4 so far, five times with Kiel (including his only two trophies in 2010 and 2012) and each twice with Veszprém and Barça. Twice he was awarded MVP, after losing the final (2014 and 2016). Next on the list is eight-time participant Momir Ilic (Kiel/Veszprém) ahead of three players with seven participations - Dominik Klein (six times with Kiel, once with Nantes), goalkeeper Arpad Sterbik (Ciudad Real/Atletico Madrid, Barça, Vardar and Veszprém) and Nantes’ Macedonian Kiril Lazarov (Ciudad Real/Atletico Madrid, Barcelona, Nantes).
12 times, a player scored ten or more goals in a single match of the EHF FINAL4. One player managed to score ten goals twice at the same tournament: Mikkel Hansen (PSG) in 2016. Filip Jicha (Kiel) managed to score double-figures twice in the 2010 final and the 2012 semi. The last to score ten was Aleix Gomez for Barça in the 2020 final against Kiel.