Champions League | 10/19 18:00 | 5 | [3] FC Barcelona v PSG Handball [1] | L | 36-32 | |
France Starligue | 10/16 18:30 | 7 | Ivry v PSG Handball | W | 24-30 | |
Champions League | 10/13 15:00 | 4 | [4] PSG Handball v RK Celje [6] | W | 27-18 | |
France Starligue | 10/10 18:45 | 6 | [1] PSG Handball v Chambery Savoie [11] | W | 32-29 | |
France Starligue | 10/03 18:45 | 5 | [7] USAM Nimes v PSG Handball [1] | W | 28-31 | |
Champions League | 09/28 15:30 | 3 | [6] Elverum v PSG Handball [2] | W | 22-25 | |
France Starligue | 09/25 19:00 | 4 | [1] PSG Handball v Toulouse [5] | W | 34-28 | |
Champions League | 09/22 17:00 | 2 | [4] PSG Handball v Pick Szeged [5] | W | 30-25 | |
France Starligue | 09/18 18:30 | 3 | [8] Chartres v PSG Handball [1] | W | 30-36 | |
Champions League | 09/14 18:00 | 1 | RK Zagreb v PSG Handball | W | 29-37 | |
France Starligue | 09/11 18:45 | 2 | [2] PSG Handball v Nantes [5] | W | 32-29 | |
France Starligue | 09/04 18:30 | 1 | Istres Provence v PSG Handball | W | 25-35 | |
France Trophee des Champions | 08/31 16:00 | 1 | PSG Handball v Montpellier | W | 34-27 | |
Club Friendlies | 08/16 16:30 | - | Århus Håndbold v PSG Handball | W | 24-35 | |
Club Friendlies | 08/14 18:00 | - | THW Kiel v PSG Handball | L | 34-30 | |
France Starligue | 06/06 18:45 | 26 | [1] PSG Handball v Cesson Rennes [13] | W | 29-20 | |
France Starligue | 05/29 18:30 | 25 | [14] Pontault Combault v PSG Handball [1] | W | 23-39 | |
France Starligue | 05/22 18:45 | 24 | [1] PSG Handball v USAM Nimes [5] | W | 41-29 | |
France Starligue | 05/12 14:00 | 23 | [7] Saint Raphael v PSG Handball [1] | L | 33-31 | |
France Starligue | 05/09 18:45 | 22 | [6] AIX UC v PSG Handball [1] | W | 20-29 | |
Champions League | 05/05 15:00 | 3 | [1] PSG Handball v VIVE Kielce [4] | W | 35-26 | |
Champions League | 04/27 16:00 | 3 | [4] VIVE Kielce v PSG Handball [1] | L | 34-24 | |
France Starligue | 04/20 17:00 | 21 | [1] PSG Handball v Montpellier [3] | W | 33-26 | |
France Starligue | 04/03 18:30 | 20 | [11] Ivry v PSG Handball [1] | W | 24-37 | |
France Starligue | 03/27 19:45 | 19 | [1] PSG Handball v Istres Provence [13] | W | 44-29 | |
France Starligue | 03/21 19:45 | 18 | [5] Chambery Savoie v PSG Handball [1] | W | 21-30 | |
France Coupe de la Ligue | 03/17 15:00 | 1 | PSG Handball v Montpellier | W | 31-25 | |
France Coupe de la Ligue | 03/16 15:00 | 2 | Ivry v PSG Handball | W | 22-27 | |
France Cup | 03/10 18:30 | 3 | Montpellier v PSG Handball | L | 32-31 | |
France Starligue | 03/07 19:45 | 17 | [1] PSG Handball v Nantes [3] | W | 34-29 |
Paris Saint-Germain Handball (PSG) is a French professional handball club founded in 1941, and based in the city of Paris in France. The club is the handball department of Paris Saint-Germain.
PSG play in the highest tier of French handball, the LNH Division 1. Their home ground for LNH matches is Stade Pierre de Coubertin, which has a seating capacity of 3,400 spectators. For EHF Champions League matches, the club play at Halle Georges Carpentier, which has a seating capacity of 4,500 spectators.
Initially called Patriotes d'Asnières (1941–1942), the club has gone through several name changes: Asnières Sports (1942–1987), Paris-Racing-Asnières (1987–1988), Paris-Asnières (1988–1992), PSG-Asnières (1992–2002), and Paris Handball (2002–2012). After being bought by Paris Saint-Germain owners Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) in 2012, the club became Paris Saint-Germain Handball.
Since its inception, the club has won 23 titles. Domestically, Paris SG have clinched eleven LNH Division 1 titles, six French Cups, three Coupes de la Ligue, a record four French Super Cups and two LNH Division 2 titles. They are the only club in French handball to have ever won all their matches in LNH Division 1 in a season, which they did in the 2021–22 season. In international club handball, the capital side finished runners-up in the 2016–17 edition of the Champions League. PSG also have a reserve team that currently play in the Championnat National 1, which serves as the third tier of French handball. They have played in Nationale 1 since 2017–18, after clinching the Championnat National 2 title and winning promotion during the 2016–17 season.
The Parisian club was founded in 1941. Initially, it took the name of Patriotes d'Asnières before becoming Asnières Sports one year later. Asnières Sports was presided by Christian Picard, whose son Gérard Picard took over during the 1975–1976 season and remained president until 2003.
In 1987, the club's management succeeded in convincing the Paris City Council to partner Asnières Sports and create a major handball team in the capital. This resulted in the Hauts-de-Seine team moving to Paris and being renamed Paris-Racing-Asnières then Paris-Asnières. Relegated in 1989, Paris-Asnières immediately bounced back to the top flight in 1990 after winning the D2 title. At the time, the club's most notable players were future French internationals Jackson Richardson and Patrick Cazal.
In 1992, the club came under the management of Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, a partnership that lasted 10 years. This led to another name change, and Paris-Asnières became PSG-Asnières. PSG-Asnières finished second in the LNH Division 1 during the 1995–96 season and then reached the French Cup final in 2001, losing to Montpellier.
During that time, PSG-Asnières managed to attract several international players such as Stéphane Stoecklin, Denis Lathoud, Gaël Monthurel, Nenad Peruničić and Olivier Girault. The latter set up home in Paris in 1999, playing for the club until 2008 and then coaching the team until 2011.
Under yet another name, Paris Handball began 2002 with new club owner Louis Nicollin. During the next decade, the club played in the EHF Champions League during the 2005–06 season, and won its first major trophy in 2007 with star player Kévynn Nyokas. Paris Handball registered a 28-21 win in the French Cup final over Pays d'Aix.
But there were tough times too. At the end of the 2008–09 season, the club was relegated to Division 2. Paris Handball won the LNH Division 2 the very next season and rejoined the top clubs. In 2012, the team narrowly avoided relegation in the last round of play.
After being bought by Paris Saint-Germain Football Club owners Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) in 2012, the club became Paris Saint-Germain Handball. Under the initiative of Nasser Al-Khelaifi, a new management and playing team was assembled. Jean-Claude Blanc was named general manager, Philippe Gardent signed as first-team manager, and a host of international stars arrived at the French capital, including Didier Dinart, Luc Abalo, Samuel Honrubia, Mikkel Hansen, Marko Kopljar, José Manuel Sierra and Antonio García.
In the 2012–13 season, PSG claimed their maiden league success, which also meant the club secured a spot in the EHF Champions League. However, PSG were denied the double by Montpellier in the French Cup final.
Big-name signings kept coming in the 2013–14 season with the arrivals of Daniel Narcisse, Igor Vori, Jakov Gojun, Fahrudin Melić and Gábor Császár. PSG reached the Champions League quarterfinals for the first time in its history, but failed to keep up the pace with Dunkerque in the league. Despite this, the season finished on a high note, thanks to a victory in the French Cup final against Chambéry, adding a second national cup trophy to the club's honours.
In the 2014–15 season, new manager Zvonimir Serdarušić and star signing Nikola Karabatić led the capital club to its second league title following a nail-biting battle for top spot against Montpellier. PSG claimed the trophy on the last day of the season, after a win over Tremblay. The league crown rounded off a domestic treble, going alongside the French Cup and the French Super Cup that they had won after beating Nantes and Dunkerque, respectively. On the European stage, PSG's hopes were dashed, for a second time, by Veszprém in the Champions League semifinals.
PSG continued its winning ways in the 2015–16 season by claiming a second French Super Cup and a third league title. However, the crowning moment was reaching the Champions League Final4 for the first time in its history. Along the way, the club downed THW Kiel at the Sparkassen-Arena, where the German side had been undefeated for four years; topped its group for the first time ever; and trumped Kiel in the third-place play-off. Additionally, Mikkel Hansen set a new record for goals in a Champions League season, with no fewer than 141 strikes to his name.
In the 2021–22 season they finished off LNH Division 1 with 60 points on 30 matches, being the only team ever in the french league to achieve that.