| Slagelse FH | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Slagelse Forenede Håndboldklubber | ||
| Founded | 1997 | ||
| Dissolved | 2013 | ||
| Arena | Antvorskovhallen | ||
| Capacity | 1.310 | ||
| Club colours | |||
| 
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| Website Official site | |||
Slagelse Dream Team was a handball team from the town of Slagelse, Denmark. It is sometimes referred to as "Slagelse DT", and is the professional first team for the handball club Slagelse Forenede Håndboldklubber (Slagelse FH). The club was catapulted into the limelight in 2000 when Anja Andersen took the head coach job and in a very short time led the women's team to the first Danish victory in the Women's EHF Champions League final in 2004.
History
Slagelse Forenede Håndboldklubber was created by a merger of the two clubs Slagelse HK and Marievang IF who each had their own success, especially on youth level. Slagelse HK's women's team was promoted twice to the premier division around 1990, though the team was relegated the following season on both occasions.
In 1997 the two clubs merged under the name Slagelse FH and in early 2000 the club signed a deal with Anja Andersen to help the club achieve promotion to the premier division.
Notable former players
 Camilla Andersen (2001–2004) Camilla Andersen (2001–2004)
 Louise Pedersen (2007–2008) Louise Pedersen (2007–2008)
 Line Hovgaard (2004–2008) Line Hovgaard (2004–2008)
 Rikke Hørlykke (2004–2006) Rikke Hørlykke (2004–2006)
 Janne Kolling (2000–2001) Janne Kolling (2000–2001)
 Christina Krogshede (2006–2008) Christina Krogshede (2006–2008)
 Anne Loft (2003–2008) Anne Loft (2003–2008)
 Sofie Steffensen (2005–2007) Sofie Steffensen (2005–2007)
 Marianne Bonde (2007–2008) Marianne Bonde (2007–2008)
 Kamilla Kristensen (2001–2007) Kamilla Kristensen (2001–2007)
 Mette Melgaard (2001–2008) Mette Melgaard (2001–2008)
 Rikke Schmidt (2002–2005) Rikke Schmidt (2002–2005)
 Mia Hundvin (2001–2003) Mia Hundvin (2001–2003)
 Cecilie Leganger (2005–2008) Cecilie Leganger (2005–2008)
 Anja Frešer (2003–2004) Anja Frešer (2003–2004)
 Jenny Lindblom (2002–2003) Jenny Lindblom (2002–2003)
 Ana Batinić (2005–2008) Ana Batinić (2005–2008)
 Katarina Bulatovic (2006–2007) Katarina Bulatovic (2006–2007)
 Bojana Popović (2002–2007) Bojana Popović (2002–2007)
 Maja Savić (2004–2008) Maja Savić (2004–2008)
 Ausra Fridrikas (2002–2005) Ausra Fridrikas (2002–2005)
 Gabriela Rotis (2007–2008) Gabriela Rotis (2007–2008)
 Stéphanie Cano (2003–2004) Stéphanie Cano (2003–2004)
 Hong Jeong-ho (2000–2003) Hong Jeong-ho (2000–2003)
 Lee Sang Eun (2002) Lee Sang Eun (2002)
 Valentina Radulovic (2003–2005) Valentina Radulovic (2003–2005)
 Carmen Lungu (2005–2007) Carmen Lungu (2005–2007)
 Irina Poltoratskaya (2004–2006) Irina Poltoratskaya (2004–2006)
 Emiliya Turey (2005–2008) Emiliya Turey (2005–2008)
 Anja Obradović (2006–2007) Anja Obradović (2006–2007)
 Suzana Cubela (2006–2008) Suzana Cubela (2006–2008)
 Svetlana Ognjenović (2007–2008) Svetlana Ognjenović (2007–2008)
 Andrijana Budimir (2004–2006) Andrijana Budimir (2004–2006)
 Ivana Mladenovic (2006–2007) Ivana Mladenovic (2006–2007)
 Rugile Kliukaite (2004–2006) Rugile Kliukaite (2004–2006)
 Maja Mitrovic (2003–2004) Maja Mitrovic (2003–2004)
Results
- Danish Championship:
- Gold: 2003, 2005, 2007
- Silver: 2004, 2006
 
- Champions League:
- Winner: 2004, 2005, 2007
 
- EHF Cup:
- Winner: 2003
 
- EHF Champions Trophy:
- Finalist: 2003, 2004
- Third place: 2007
 



