venerdì 12 giugno 2020

Football matches in Frankfurt (2003-2014)

Clicca qui per la versione italiana The German football league has resumed (rather bad for my Eintracht, even if it is now bouncing back), and since there is only this one, they have all become fans. Having lived in Frankfurt at different times, I saw a few games and became an Eintracht fan, although I could never wear a shirt because of its colours (I have some material, but in other colours).


The first German league match I saw was in the summer of 1992, Karlsruhe-Borussia Moenchengladbach, I think it was the first in the season: it ended 4-2. I remember a stadium surrounded by greenery, a very thorough personal inspection (I had a portable fan that made them very suspicious, but they left it to me) and, on the field, some uncertainty about the backpass rule, which had just entered into force.

The first match in Frankfurt was in 2003: Eintracht-Borussia Dortmund. The stadium was still called "Waldstadion", literally "Woods' Stadium": a couple of years later it would have taken the name of Commerzbank Arena. I arrived with the S-Bahn, the urban railway: leaving the station I thought "the Wald is here, but what about the Stadion?" In fact, the forest is dense and you have to go quite a long way before you see the stadium. You go first through the inspection and then the avenue with the kiosks: in merchandising there is Always something against the rivals of Kickers Offenbach, the neighbouring country, even if for a long time it has never gone beyond third division. I learned later than Eintracht won its only title in 1959, beating Kickers in the final (the single group league was born in 1962).
The match ended 1-0 for Borussia. There were many guest fans: I found out later on transports that not all of them had come from Dortmund and the surrounding area, many were from Frankfurt. I returned to the stadium a few weeks later: the opponent was Stuttgart. It was a team fighting for the title, with many famous players, such as striker Kuranyi, but I especially noticed the left back, an unknown player named Philipp Lahm. Stuttgart was clearly stronger: Eintracht held on a bit, but then lost 2-0. I went back to Italy, but Eintracht continued the season along that line, ending up being relegated.
I returned to Frankfurt for the 2010-11 season, in the stadium refurbished for the 2006 World Cup and with the name of the sponsor. I used to reach him by bus, which he leaves on the opposite side, much closer to the stadium (and in sight). After a series of games in which Eintracht never managed to score (one ended 0-0), towards the end of the season, I finally managed to see him win: 2-1 to Sankt Pauli. I was therefore able to witness the ritual of the announcement after the goal: the speaker says "Eintracht" and the audience says the score, then says the opponent's name and the audience answers "zero", even if it's not true.

I returned to Italy at the end of April, then shortly before the end of the season: from home I saw the loss to Borussia Dortmund which sanctioned the relegation of Eintracht, the fourth, I think, since the start of the single-group championship, but the second out of two seasons I had been in Frankfurt. I was afraid I would be banished forever, if not from the city, at least from the stadium.

Instead I returned in September 2012. I stayed three years, but I managed to see much fewer matches than I would have liked, as tickets were sold out several weeks in advance, often more than a month (even 2 months for key games like the one with Bayern), and it was difficult for me to predict which weekends I would be free: in the 2014-15 season I didn't see one.

I would not be able to name with certainty even one opponent of those games, but I remember that compared to previous years the results were more diverse: there were defeats, but also wins. The first few times I never took a drink, because drinks can be paid only with a prepaid card specific to the stadium, then I decided to buy it (I could see that this is also the case in Gelsenkirchen, but that's another story). Once I got there early, I glanced at the Eintracht museum, but from the outside, because it closes more than one hour before the start of the game: I remember the poster for the 1960 Champions League semi-final against Rangers, which qualified Eintracht for the final, which they lost 7-3 to Real Madrid.

I also went to see a match of the other team from Frankfurt, FSV Frankfurt, at the then Volksbank Stadion. I made the mistake of going by car: there is little parking on the main road and the side street are barred, to prevent them from being invaded. I had to park so far away that I was forced to take the underground (overground there), which arrives near the stadium (I didn't know it). In a full stadium for no more than a quarter, the FSV won 2-0, I don't remember the opponent. At the time they played in second division and at certain moments they seemed to be able to fight for promotion, now they are in fourth series and in the relegation zone.

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