While
the Faroe Islands may have taken the silverware at the 2nd IHF
Men’s Emerging Nations Championship in Bulgaria last month, the IHF
tournament aimed to help aid developing handball nations, the third team on court
for every game were also developing in the world of handball.
For
seven referee couples in Bulgaria, the tournament will stay long in their
memory as they all received their IHF refereeing badges as part of the IHF
Global Referee Training Programme (GRTP).
Denis
Bolic and Christoph Hurich (AUT), Georgi Doychinov and Yulian Goretsov (BUL), Vânia
Sá and Marta Sá (POR), Maria Bennani and Safia Bennani (SWE), Youcef Belkhiri
and Sidali Hamidi (ALG), Yasmina Elsaied Maher and Heidy Elsaied Maher (EGY),
along with Zhou Yunlei and Cheng Yufeng (CHN) can all now proudly call
themselves ‘IHF referees’.
“We've
been whistling for 10 years now since we started at 17-years-old,” said Safia
Bennani, twin sister of Maria from Sweden. “We gained our EHF badge in March
2014 and the feeling to now get the IHF one is amazing.”
For
the younger of the Egyptian sister referee couple, Heidy El-Saied, the new qualification
means more challenges after they gained their CAHB badge in Togo, in 2014.
“I
started to referee when I was 16, around four years ago,” said the 20-year-old,
who whistled four games with her 22-year-old sister – Ireland vs Great Britain,
Moldova vs Andorra, Kosovo vs Albania and Andorra vs Azerbaijan. “I was happy
to get it and we told our mother straight away, but I feel now that I have more
responsibility – it is the first step in my career.”
Family
were also the first ones contacted by the Bennani’s as they gained the
prestigious honour after years of hard work.
“The
first ones we told were our family,” said Safia who whistled Albania vs Great
Britain, China vs Armenia and Kosovo vs Turkey with her sister. “We just told
sent them a picture with our certificates saying, ‘we made it’ in a group
messaging chat.
“The
whole week was so turbulent with our feelings and it was late at night we got
the news – it's still hard to process, even now when some time has passed.
“We
will now prepare for the Women’s EHF EURO U19 Championship in Slovenia which
starts at the end of July,” she continued.
“Getting
the IHF badge really is a life achievement as a referee so to be able to belong
in the IHF family is such an honour – very few have done this and we feel
privileged.”