SG Flensburg-Handewitt was created in 1990 following a merger of the handball divisions of TSB Flensburg and Handewitter SV. The first season of the club (1990–1991) took place in the
2. Handball-Bundesliga, with SG finishing in fourth position under
Zvonimir Serdarušić. In 1992, they were promoted to the
top division as SG Flensburg-Handewitt for the first time, winning every league fixture. In their first season in the top-flight, SG finished sixteenth, though they were spared
relegation due to the
liquidation of
TSV Milbertshofen. The following year, under the leadership of
Anders Dahl-Nielsen, SG were fourth and from that point, equalled that placement or better in each season until the 2008/09 season. SG Flensburg-Handewitt acquired their first major trophy with the 1996/1997
EHF Cup by defeating Danish side Virum-Sorgenfri HK 52–42 on aggregate in the final. Three consecutive
DHB-Pokal titles (2003/04 vs
TUSEM Essen, 2004/05 vs
HSV Hamburg, and 2005/06 vs
THW Kiel) followed, as did success in the
league, with a championship victory in the 2003/04 season. Flensburg defeated
HSG Nordhorn-Lingen at
Flens-Arena in round 33 to secure their very first title with a game to spare. Slovenian club
RK Celje did however, prevent a third trophy that year for SG by winning the
2003-04 EHF Champions League final against them. The 2004-05 and 2005-06 league campaigns both saw Flensburg finish second behind
THW Kiel. In
2007, SG once again lost the Champions League final, this time they were defeated by "Landesderby" rivals
THW Kiel. In 2010, former player
Ljubomir Vranjes became the new coach and it was under him that SG Flensburg-Handewitt won the
EHF Champions League final at their third attempt, beating
THW Kiel 30–28 at the
Lanxess Arena in
Cologne. During Vranjes' time as coach of SG, they also won the
DHB-Pokal for a fourth time, beating
SC Magdeburg on penalties.
Maik Machulla took over from Vranjes as head coach in 2017, and consecutive league titles (their second and third successes) followed in the 2017/18 and 2018/2019 campaigns. The 2017/18 title was secured on the final day of the season with a 22–21 victory over
Frisch Auf Göppingen. The following year, SG once again took the title on the final day, winning 27–24 away at
Bergischer HC. Machulla was sacked in April 2023 after Flensburg lost three vital matches in just eight days. They were defeated 38–31 by
Rhein-Neckar Löwen in the
DHB-Pokal semi-finals, 35–27 at
Flens-Arena by
BM Granollers in the
EHF European League quarter-finals, and then 29–19 by
THW Kiel in the Nordderby in a crucial
Handball-Bundesliga game. In the 2023-24 season with
Nicolej Krickau as head coach, Flensburg missed out on qualification for the
2024-25 EHF Champions League by finishing 3rd in the
Handball-Bundesliga. They were also defeated in the semi-finals of the
DHB-Pokal by
MT Melsungen, though they were victorious in the
2023-24 EHF European League final, defeating
Füchse Berlin. SG Flensburg-Handewitt holds a reputation as being a perennial "second-place" club – with three league titles the team has also finished runner-up fourteen times. In addition to this, they reached each of the seven
DHB-Pokal finals between 2011 and 2017, losing six of them. The club has however, won all the competitions it has participated in at least once except the
IHF Super Globe, and it is the only club to have won four different European Cups (one
EHF Champions League, two
EHF Cup Winners' Cup, two
EHF European League titles and one
EHF European Cup in addition to several finals), as well as the three different German national competitions (three
German championships, four
DHB-Pokal and three
DHB-Supercup). Due to their proximity to
Scandinavia, SG typically have top international players from
Denmark,
Sweden and
Norway in their squad.
Danish right winger
Lasse Svan became the club's all-time leading appearance maker during the 2021/22 season (627 matches), overtaking legendary left winger and fellow Dane
Lars Christiansen. At the
2023 World Men's Handball Championship, the victorious Danish squad featured six Flensburg players. ==Club information==