UJUG
1935
Achja, träum wäre das schön gewesen mit der Eintracht durch Europa zu touren. Wären sogar tausende in die Ukraine gereist. Egal, für morgen habe ich über so ein Blind Date Packet Karten für ein EL Spiel gegen Interactive oder wie die heißen gekauft. Die kommen wohl aus so einem Stiefelland, wo die Leute soviel Wein trinken und Pizza essen. Sollen eine ganz gute Mannschaft haben, aber wo muss ich da morgen noch mal hin...? War glaub ich so eine Stadt mit „H“ in Norddeutschland. Weiß auch nicht warum ich dahin will...
Wegen der 5 Jahreswertung Plastik die Daumen drücken, nein danke. Egal gegen wen Red Bull spielt, ich bin immer für den Gegner. Um so öfters oder weiter die in Europa kommen um so mehr Geld bekommen die und es wird noch schwieriger für Vereine wie wir, Bremen, Gladbach usw. oben dran zu bleiben oder hinzukommen. Man muss nicht alle Vereine gut finden.
Wir haben gegen 18:40 Uhr ebenfalls die Bestätigung erhalten
Zur Info:
lt. Ticket-Hotline ist es tatsächlich so, dass wenn bspw. die Bestellung von 5 Karten durch ein Mitglied+DK Inhaber erfolgt, die restlichen Personen auch in den "Genuss" derselben Kategorisierung kommen auch wenn sie selbst weder Mitglied noch DK Inhaber sind. Somit ist immer nur der Besteller ausschlaggebend.
Zur Info:
lt. Ticket-Hotline ist es tatsächlich so, dass wenn bspw. die Bestellung von 5 Karten durch ein Mitglied+DK Inhaber erfolgt, die restlichen Personen auch in den "Genuss" derselben Kategorisierung kommen auch wenn sie selbst weder Mitglied noch DK Inhaber sind. Somit ist immer nur der Besteller ausschlaggebend.
Nicht wirklich viel zum Spiel gegen Hoffenheim:
Inter needs to improve at making profit of the chances we have. Specialy Perisic Candreva and Politano can't score in front of the goal.
No panic. A former Inter player just scored in their stadium
We can perfectly relate to that
This is gonna be just like the Atalanta game at Bergamo all over again.
Hope our boys will get us atleast a draw here.
the way i see it, we should either take europa league seriously or kind of give up on it and just deploy the reserves. you can't win the cup with a half-assed approach anyway.
There is no half-assed approached I feel. We don't have players to have any half-assed approach. It's the first team (within EL list) or youngsters. Btw, Einracht hasn't lost in the last 9 games. And hasn't lost at home in the last 5 games. They have won the last 3 games. Edit. For me it shows only 2.37 for Einracht in bet365.
Inter needs to improve at making profit of the chances we have. Specialy Perisic Candreva and Politano can't score in front of the goal.
No panic. A former Inter player just scored in their stadium
We can perfectly relate to that
This is gonna be just like the Atalanta game at Bergamo all over again.
Hope our boys will get us atleast a draw here.
the way i see it, we should either take europa league seriously or kind of give up on it and just deploy the reserves. you can't win the cup with a half-assed approach anyway.
There is no half-assed approached I feel. We don't have players to have any half-assed approach. It's the first team (within EL list) or youngsters. Btw, Einracht hasn't lost in the last 9 games. And hasn't lost at home in the last 5 games. They have won the last 3 games. Edit. For me it shows only 2.37 for Einracht in bet365.
UJUG schrieb:
Schöner Artikel über uns...
Geht runter wie Öl. Auch sprachlich sehr ansprechend formuliert.
Fand ich auch, man hat höchsten Respekt vor uns und das macht mich Stolz. Wir sind wieder wer in Europa. 7 Siege, 1 Unentschieden im Schnitt 5.000 Fans egal wo, 20.000 Ticket Anfragen für ein Spiel bei Inter, mit mindestens 13.500 wieder den eigenen Rekord eingestellt, das kommt auch bei gegnerischen Teams oder neutalen Fans/Mannschaften verdammt gut an. Wir rocken halt diesen Wettbwerb und alleine deswegen fahren wir nach Baku. Wer braucht schon CL wenn er solche Auftritte hinlegt und Fans hat...? Forza SGE
There are going to be around 13.500 away fans at the san siro to support Frankfurt by the way. It shows the importance of this game for them.
Bundes teams have crazy attendance, I don't think those numbers alone mean the game is of any added significance to them. Eintracht's average attendance is like 49k and their stadium holds 51.5k (of which 9.3k standing)...
Nah, they're just going everywhere. --> Stimmt die haben es begriffen. Ich sag nur: "Rom, Mailand oder London, Moskau, Wien oder Athen, ob mit Bus oder Bahn, ob mit Flugzeug, scheißegal, Eintracht Frankfurt international".
Man scheint durch aus verwundert, begeistert, überrascht und doch etwas entsetzt zu sein in Milano. Und ja das Spiel bedeutet viel für uns, wir wollen halt mit aller Macht nach Baku und den EL Pokal mitnehmen.
Bundes teams have crazy attendance, I don't think those numbers alone mean the game is of any added significance to them. Eintracht's average attendance is like 49k and their stadium holds 51.5k (of which 9.3k standing)...
Nah, they're just going everywhere. --> Stimmt die haben es begriffen. Ich sag nur: "Rom, Mailand oder London, Moskau, Wien oder Athen, ob mit Bus oder Bahn, ob mit Flugzeug, scheißegal, Eintracht Frankfurt international".
Man scheint durch aus verwundert, begeistert, überrascht und doch etwas entsetzt zu sein in Milano. Und ja das Spiel bedeutet viel für uns, wir wollen halt mit aller Macht nach Baku und den EL Pokal mitnehmen.
UJUG schrieb:
Schöner Artikel über uns...
Geht runter wie Öl. Auch sprachlich sehr ansprechend formuliert.
Eintracht Frankfurt are the last German club standing in the UEFA Europa League, but Adi Hütter's men have good reason to believe they can keep the Bundesliga flag flying all the way to the final in Baku, Azerbaijan, in May.
Standing between them and the quarter-finals are Italian giants Inter Milan, but allow bundesliga.com to explain why it is anything but a David vs. Goliath tie, with five reasons why the Eagles will continue flying in Europe…
1) Scariest front three in Europe
Don't just take our word for it – it is a fact! Frankfurt have scored 23 goals in the Europa League this season – more than any other club. With Luka Jovic the tournament's second-highest scorer with six, and Sebastien Haller just one behind on five, Hütter boasts some of the finest tools around for picking the lock to the last eight. Domestically, only four clubs in the whole of Europe have a three-man attack delivering more goals than Jovic, Haller and Ante Rebic, who have struck 32 times in the Bundesliga this season.
That company is quite illustrious too, with Paris Saint-Germain's Neymar-Edinson Cavani-Kylian Mbappe triumvirate, followed by Barcelona's Lionel Messi-Luis Suarez-Ousmane Dembele-inspired attack, and English clubs Liverpool and Manchester City. Italian clubs may be famed for the strength of their defences, but when you have such a potent front three, that is the least of Frankfurt's concerns.
2) Europe's form team
With seven wins and one draw, the unbeaten Eagles boast the best record of any club in Europe this season. The only blot on their otherwise shiny white copybook was their 2-2 draw at Shakhtar Donetsk – where they led twice. They flexed their muscles in the return leg, though, with a 4-1 win completing a 6-3 aggregate triumph to ensure they remain Europe's form team, together with last season's beaten finalists Salzburg. Inter, on the other hand, were beaten by Tottenham Hotspur and Barcelona in the UEFA Champions League group stage.
3) Hütter warming hearts
When Niko Kovac defected to Bayern Munich after leading Frankfurt to DFB Cup glory last season, and one of their key individuals Kevin-Prince Boateng left the nest, there was no lack of concern that the Eagles had landed. In came Hütter, fresh from breaking FC Basel's eight-year dominance of Swiss football with Young Boys, for his first experience of German football after having also won the Austrian Bundesliga. Following elimination from the cup in the first round, Frankfurt were 15th after winning just one of their first five Bundesliga fixtures.
Fast-forward five months and Frankfurt are again knocking on the door of European football next season with a flowing brand of football that is earning them widespread acclaim, at home and in Europe. Hütter made a name for himself in Austria and Switzerland for this entertaining, attacking philosophy and, after the initial teething problems, Frankfurt are once again flying. Over in Milan, on the other hand, Luciano Spalletti continues to divide opinion and a recent blip in form saw doubts raised about his future at the Nerazzurri: stability vs. instability.
4) History on their side
Frankfurt have already proven this season that they can get the better of Serie A opposition, cruising to a 4-1 win at home to Lazio before beating Inter's league rivals 2-1 in their own Stadio Olimpico. Furthermore, they beat Napoli 1-0 home and away in the 1994/95 UEFA Cup, although they did then lose out to eventual finalists Juventus. That 3-0 defeat to the Bianconeri was, however, their one and only loss in six meetings with Serie A opposition, with four wins and a draw completing an impressive record against Italian sides. History, it would appear, is also on Frankfurt's side.
5) Frankfurt's solid defence
Contrary to appearance, Frankfurt's game is not purely about attacking and scoring goals. They also have a particularly solid defence – the fourth-meanest in the Bundesliga and the Europa League to be precise. Makoto Hasebe's transformation from midfielder to defensive lynchpin has given his career a new lease of life, while Martin Hinteregger, David Abraham and Evan N'Dicka have ensured only around a third of the goals Frankfurt's watertight rearguard have conceded this season have come down the middle, with the rest coming from wing play.
That will not be good news for Inter, who are heavily reliant on a single central striker in a 4-2-3-1 formation – Mauro Icardi up until when he was scrapped of the club captaincy earlier this month, and summer signing Lautaro Martinez since. Danny Da Costa will have no qualms about marking former Wolfsburg man Ivan Perisic or Matteo Politano either, having established himself as one of the brightest wing-backs in the division, and a candidate for national team duty.
So while there may have been a few sighs when Inter's name came out of the urn in Nyon, Frankfurt have no reason to fear the 2010 UEFA Champions League winners who, since then, have struggled to make headlines in Europe.
Oh, and did we forget to mention that Frankfurt are the best-supported club in Europe, with a vociferous 12th man travelling with them around Europe and set to make San Siro sound like the Commerzbank Arena?
Enough said.
https://www.bundesliga.com/en/bundes...ague-3467-2583
Kommentare von Inter Fans:
Their defence looked very shaky against Shakhtar in their last Europa match so I expect goals from us.
Gacinovic was impressive in Rome against Lazio. I hope that our tactics will be way better than theirs, our defence way better than theirs and that this will decide the tie.
Look to be honest, this will be big scoring game. Especially in Milan. Their defence is laughable at times in that video.
History on their side? We won this three times bitches.
yeah i couldn't stop myself from laughing when i read that. not to mention the champion leagues.
There are going to be around 13.500 away fans at the san siro to support Frankfurt by the way. It shows the importance of this game for them.
Bundes teams have crazy attendance, I don't think those numbers alone mean the game is of any added significance to them. Eintracht's average attendance is like 49k and their stadium holds 51.5k (of which 9.3k standing)...
Part of that is because Bundesliga ticket prices are generally more affordable than you'll find in most places in Europe.
Nah, they're just going everywhere.
no matter what corner of the world I find myself in, I inevitably hear some tall-ass person speaking German
Standing between them and the quarter-finals are Italian giants Inter Milan, but allow bundesliga.com to explain why it is anything but a David vs. Goliath tie, with five reasons why the Eagles will continue flying in Europe…
1) Scariest front three in Europe
Don't just take our word for it – it is a fact! Frankfurt have scored 23 goals in the Europa League this season – more than any other club. With Luka Jovic the tournament's second-highest scorer with six, and Sebastien Haller just one behind on five, Hütter boasts some of the finest tools around for picking the lock to the last eight. Domestically, only four clubs in the whole of Europe have a three-man attack delivering more goals than Jovic, Haller and Ante Rebic, who have struck 32 times in the Bundesliga this season.
That company is quite illustrious too, with Paris Saint-Germain's Neymar-Edinson Cavani-Kylian Mbappe triumvirate, followed by Barcelona's Lionel Messi-Luis Suarez-Ousmane Dembele-inspired attack, and English clubs Liverpool and Manchester City. Italian clubs may be famed for the strength of their defences, but when you have such a potent front three, that is the least of Frankfurt's concerns.
2) Europe's form team
With seven wins and one draw, the unbeaten Eagles boast the best record of any club in Europe this season. The only blot on their otherwise shiny white copybook was their 2-2 draw at Shakhtar Donetsk – where they led twice. They flexed their muscles in the return leg, though, with a 4-1 win completing a 6-3 aggregate triumph to ensure they remain Europe's form team, together with last season's beaten finalists Salzburg. Inter, on the other hand, were beaten by Tottenham Hotspur and Barcelona in the UEFA Champions League group stage.
3) Hütter warming hearts
When Niko Kovac defected to Bayern Munich after leading Frankfurt to DFB Cup glory last season, and one of their key individuals Kevin-Prince Boateng left the nest, there was no lack of concern that the Eagles had landed. In came Hütter, fresh from breaking FC Basel's eight-year dominance of Swiss football with Young Boys, for his first experience of German football after having also won the Austrian Bundesliga. Following elimination from the cup in the first round, Frankfurt were 15th after winning just one of their first five Bundesliga fixtures.
Fast-forward five months and Frankfurt are again knocking on the door of European football next season with a flowing brand of football that is earning them widespread acclaim, at home and in Europe. Hütter made a name for himself in Austria and Switzerland for this entertaining, attacking philosophy and, after the initial teething problems, Frankfurt are once again flying. Over in Milan, on the other hand, Luciano Spalletti continues to divide opinion and a recent blip in form saw doubts raised about his future at the Nerazzurri: stability vs. instability.
4) History on their side
Frankfurt have already proven this season that they can get the better of Serie A opposition, cruising to a 4-1 win at home to Lazio before beating Inter's league rivals 2-1 in their own Stadio Olimpico. Furthermore, they beat Napoli 1-0 home and away in the 1994/95 UEFA Cup, although they did then lose out to eventual finalists Juventus. That 3-0 defeat to the Bianconeri was, however, their one and only loss in six meetings with Serie A opposition, with four wins and a draw completing an impressive record against Italian sides. History, it would appear, is also on Frankfurt's side.
5) Frankfurt's solid defence
Contrary to appearance, Frankfurt's game is not purely about attacking and scoring goals. They also have a particularly solid defence – the fourth-meanest in the Bundesliga and the Europa League to be precise. Makoto Hasebe's transformation from midfielder to defensive lynchpin has given his career a new lease of life, while Martin Hinteregger, David Abraham and Evan N'Dicka have ensured only around a third of the goals Frankfurt's watertight rearguard have conceded this season have come down the middle, with the rest coming from wing play.
That will not be good news for Inter, who are heavily reliant on a single central striker in a 4-2-3-1 formation – Mauro Icardi up until when he was scrapped of the club captaincy earlier this month, and summer signing Lautaro Martinez since. Danny Da Costa will have no qualms about marking former Wolfsburg man Ivan Perisic or Matteo Politano either, having established himself as one of the brightest wing-backs in the division, and a candidate for national team duty.
So while there may have been a few sighs when Inter's name came out of the urn in Nyon, Frankfurt have no reason to fear the 2010 UEFA Champions League winners who, since then, have struggled to make headlines in Europe.
Oh, and did we forget to mention that Frankfurt are the best-supported club in Europe, with a vociferous 12th man travelling with them around Europe and set to make San Siro sound like the Commerzbank Arena?
Enough said.
https://www.bundesliga.com/en/bundes...ague-3467-2583
Kommentare von Inter Fans:
Their defence looked very shaky against Shakhtar in their last Europa match so I expect goals from us.
Gacinovic was impressive in Rome against Lazio. I hope that our tactics will be way better than theirs, our defence way better than theirs and that this will decide the tie.
Look to be honest, this will be big scoring game. Especially in Milan. Their defence is laughable at times in that video.
History on their side? We won this three times bitches.
yeah i couldn't stop myself from laughing when i read that. not to mention the champion leagues.
There are going to be around 13.500 away fans at the san siro to support Frankfurt by the way. It shows the importance of this game for them.
Bundes teams have crazy attendance, I don't think those numbers alone mean the game is of any added significance to them. Eintracht's average attendance is like 49k and their stadium holds 51.5k (of which 9.3k standing)...
Part of that is because Bundesliga ticket prices are generally more affordable than you'll find in most places in Europe.
Nah, they're just going everywhere.
no matter what corner of the world I find myself in, I inevitably hear some tall-ass person speaking German
UJUG schrieb:
however, their one and only loss in six meetings with Serie A opposition, with four wins and a draw completing an impressive record against Italian sides.
Danke UJUG für die Mühe, das liest sich großartig. Allerdings wurde das 1:2 gegen Palermo übersehen. Muss ihnen aber auch niemand verraten
UJUG schrieb:
That 3-0 defeat to the Bianconeri was, however, their one and only loss in six meetings with Serie A opposition, with four wins and a draw completing an impressive record against Italian sides. History, it would appear, is also on Frankfurt's side.
Haben wir 2005 nicht gegen Palermo verloren?
Was ist das denn für eine Diskussion? Weibliche Eintracht Fans gehören genauso in die Kurve wie Männliche. Und selbst wenn jemand sein Frau oder Kinder (machen das ja auch jedes Wochenende irgendwie mit) zu einem EL mitnimmt, dann sind sie spätestens danach Adler Fans. Irgendwann startet ja mal jeder. Aber wenn man Fan von einem anderen Verein (Bayern, Dortmund, Bremen oder was auch immer) ist, wird da ein toller Abend mit der Eintracht wohl kaum was ändern. Das nennt man dann wohl Groundhopping. Seine Frau/Freundin oder Mann/Freund kann man ja mal wechseln, aber seinen Fussballverein nicht.
Das Problem ist, dass es organisatorisch einfacher ist die Karten an die EFCs zu geben als an Einzelbesteller. Die EFCs geben die Karten dann teilweise an Leute die nicht so viel fahren. Ich bin auch kein Vielfahrer, und habe das Gefühl quasi keine Chance auf Karten zu haben. Aber ich war in Rom und Charkiw plus ich fahre noch 3-4 mal in der Budesliga auswärts im Jahr. Ohne EFC Mitgliedschaft scheint das aber nicht zu reichen. Wenn dann Leute fahren die sonst nie da sind, nicht mal zu Hause, ist das schon ärgerlich.
Aber die Zeit für die Vergabe ist nun mal knapp und irgendwer fällt halt hinten runter. Ich werde in Mailand sein, und bin guter Dinge Abends irgendwie im Stadion zu sein. War ich in Rom am Ende auch.
Aber die Zeit für die Vergabe ist nun mal knapp und irgendwer fällt halt hinten runter. Ich werde in Mailand sein, und bin guter Dinge Abends irgendwie im Stadion zu sein. War ich in Rom am Ende auch.
Hallo,
ich bin selber DK+Mitglied+Vielfahrer und habe jetzt für Auswärts Inter noch eine Karte für einen Freund aus München bestellt, insgesamt also zwei Tickets. Er ist (leider) Bayern-Fan, möchte aber aufgrund der kurzen Anfahrt und unseres guten Fußballs auch mit zu dem Spiel.
Wie realistisch haltet ihr unsere Anfrage? Außer dem Pokalfinale 2018 hat er noch nie ein Eintracht Spiel gesehen.
ich bin selber DK+Mitglied+Vielfahrer und habe jetzt für Auswärts Inter noch eine Karte für einen Freund aus München bestellt, insgesamt also zwei Tickets. Er ist (leider) Bayern-Fan, möchte aber aufgrund der kurzen Anfahrt und unseres guten Fußballs auch mit zu dem Spiel.
Wie realistisch haltet ihr unsere Anfrage? Außer dem Pokalfinale 2018 hat er noch nie ein Eintracht Spiel gesehen.
Gelöschter Benutzer
steven82 schrieb:
10-15 Minuten zu spät der Wechsel.
Haller ist trotzdem bockig.
Bei beiden steht aber nichts von EL/CL auf der Homepage. Ruf mal an und frag nach. Viel Glück, ansonsten Thai TV überträgt einige Spiele auch immer mal wieder.