[3] The team also reached the finals of the EHF Champions League two times, however, they fell short in both occasions.
After the cessation of large-field games in the early 1960s, Ferencváros, which regained its name in the autumn of 1956, focused on small-field handball.
The team members included Éva Czitkovics, Márta Giba, Erzsébet Huszár, Erzsébet Jányáné Bognár, Ida Nagy, Teréz Nagy, Júlia Pencz, Anna Rothermel, Ilona Ruff, Judit Stern, Ida Szegedi, Gizella Szilágyi, Gáborné Zubor, and Zsuzsa Zsidai, with Gyula Elek as their coach.
[6] Among the greats of the era were Márta Giba Takácsné, Erzsébet Bognár Szőkéné, and Magdolna Csiha, who played key roles as prolific scorers.
Amália Sterbinszky, who became one of the best Hungarian handball players of the 20th century and played 250 matches for the national team, also started her senior career at Ferencváros.
The champion team of that time included Mária Bregócs, Andrea Farkas, Ágnes Farkas, Adrienne Fiedler, Erika Fiedler, Klára Kertész, Erzsébet Kókai, Beatrix Kökény, Mária Krammer, Gyöngyi Kulcsár, Dóra Lőwy, Rita Menyhárt, Mária Olasz, Beáta Őze, Ildikó Pádár, Margit Pádár, Éva Szarka, Gabriella Takács, Beatrix Tóth, and Hajnalka Vavrik.
The master of this second golden era was András Németh, from whom legendary players emerged, such as goalkeepers Andrea Farkas and Tímea Sugár, and field players Beatrix Kökény, Ágnes Farkas, Ildikó Pádár, Eszter Siti, Erika Kirsner, Éva Szarka, Beatrix Tóth, Tímea Tóth, and Gabriella Takács.
[10] In the 2018/2019 season, the squad included several national team players: Blanka Bíró, Dorottya Faluvégi, Noémi Háfra, Dóra Horváth, Kinga Klivinyi, Katrin Klujber, Anikó Kovacsics, Viktória Lukács, Rea Mészáros, and Nadine Schatzl strengthened the Hungarian women's handball team at this time.
In the season, Ferencváros finished second in both the Hungarian Cup and the championship and was eliminated in the quarterfinals of the Champions League against the Russian Rostov-Don team.
[17] In the Final Four of the Champions League, they first defeated the Danish Team Esbjerg by one goal in a tough match, but in the final, they were defeated by the twice-defending champion Norwegian Vipers Kristiansand, featuring Anna Vjahirjeva, Katrine Lunde, and Markéta Jeřábková, with a score of 28–24.
[18] The following table shows in detail Ferencvárosi TC kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors by year: