Name: Hans-Walter Eigenbrodt
Country:

Germany
Club: Eintracht Frankfurt
Position: *
CB,
SB,
DMFSide: RF/RS
Age: 25-29 years (04/08/1935)
Height: 182 cm
Weight: 73 kg
Attack:
58Defence:
80Balance:
86Stamina:
80Top Speed:
79Acceleration:
75Response:
81Agility:
74Dribble Accuracy:
72Dribble Speed:
70Short Pass Accuracy:
73Short Pass Speed:
71Long Pass Accuracy:
75Long Pass Speed:
74Shot Accuracy:
60Shot Power:
78Shot Technique:
61Free Kick Accuracy:
60Curling:
62Header:
80Jump:
83Technique:
73Aggression:
60Mentality:
79Keeper Skills:
50Team Work:
75Injury Tolerance:
BCondition:
5Weak Foot Accuracy:
4Weak Foot Frequency:
4Consistency:
4Growth Type:
StandardCARDS:S09 Covering
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Covering
Attack / Defence Awareness Card: Defence Minded
INFO:Hans-Walter Eigenbrodt was centre half, but also right back and right wing half. Temperamental player who very hard contolled his agressivness and butchering, he was good in aerial battles and very strong tackler, had decent pace and knew to send good long balls from the back. He had some mental blackouts during the games and than it didn't end good for his team. The defender won with Eintracht Frankfurt the German championship in 1959 and reached with the club the legendary 1960 European Cup Final against Real Madrid. The central defender joined Eintracht Frankfurt as a youth in 1948 and should stay until 1965 when an injury forced him to retire. In 1959 he won with Eintracht the German championship after defeating local rivals Kickers Offenbach in a dramatic final 5–3 after extra time. In the semi-finals of the European Champions' Cup 1959–60 Eintracht stunningly eliminated Rangers FC with 6–1 and 6–3 and thus reached the final which took place at Hampden Park in Glasgow. There 135 000 spectators witnessed one of the arguably greatest matches in European Cup history when Real Madrid defeated the Eagles 7–3. Eigenbrodt, who for most part of his career also worked as a commercial employee because to the semi-professional status of German football in this era, also played 15 matches in the Bundesliga between 1963 and 1965. Later he worked as youth coach with Eintracht. In 1977 the Under 17 team coached by him won Germany's first championship for this age group. He died 29 March 1997, aged 61.