Dieter EILTS | 1995-1997 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)
EILTS PES STATS | 1995-1997
Seb Hallo! I am new at this forum and i am interested in editing players. My first project ist Dieter Eilts. He was a great Player at the DM Position at my favourite club Werder Bremen. He won the german bundesliga two times, the german national cup three times and for sure the Euro 96 with the german team. This time, between 95 and 97 he really became popular. So this is the time i choose for think about skills. Ok let´s see! Dieter EILTS | 1995-1997 Pleas help me to find nice skill settings Name: Dieter Eilts Club: German National Team/SV Werder Bremen Number: 21 Position: *DMF Nationality: German Age: 31 Foot: R Side: B Length: 186 Weight: 74 Attack: 58 Defence: 79 Balance: 89 Stamina: 85 Top Speed: 77 Acceleration: 79 Response: 86 Agility: 74 Dribble Accuracy: 71 Dribble Speed: 69 Short Pass Accuracy: 82 Short Pass Speed: 75 Long Pass Acc.: 71 Long Pass Speed: 73 Shot Accuracy: 66 Shot Power: 68 Shot Technique: 64 Free Kick Accuracy: 64 Curling: 59 Header: 80 Jump: 79 Technique: 74 Aggression: 59 Mentality: 87 Keeper Skills: 50 Team Work: 88 Injury Tolerance: A Condition/Fitness: 6 Weak Foot Accuracy: 5 Weak Foot frequency: 5 Consistency: 7 Special Abilities: *Marking *Covering *Sliding Like i tell you above, he won german bundesliga two times, three times the national cup and Euro 96. In Werder Bremen he allways was an important player at the team of his further coach Otto Rehagel. In the national team they were allways big names in front of him. For example Lothar Matthäus! But in 1996 Berti Vogts needed a good player to do the dirty work at the midfield. So Dieter Eilts got a place in the first eleven. He won the most tacklings in per cent of all player at the tournament. So he was the best tackler, and best DM of the tournament. He was elected for Euro 96 All star team. Something about Dieter ''Staubsauger'' (vacuum cleaner, Hoover) Eilts http://www.monstersandcritics.de/archiv ... biographie Here a text which describes Eilts career. They speak about his sliding tackles at Euro 96, which were making hime famous. But also about his bad technique. Otto Rehagel realized in the late 80s that this young player had high skills but not in making goals, assist them or be a playmaker. http://www.neon.de/kat/freie_zeit/sport/171819.html Here you can read his statistics. http://www.fussballdaten.de/spieler/eiltsdieter/ Only 7 goals in whole career! There you can watch the funniest one: http://www.youtube.com/v/-Cg_ROB0gik Ailton got angry because no one tends to run in good positions or even reclaimed the ball in a good position. So Dieter Eilts had to score the goal. --------------------- Tackling: I think a high Defence and Balance value is the right way to show his tackle skills. Passing: He needs a normal or good passing for sure. Losing the ball in his situation was forbidden! Heading and Jump: I don´t really know what to give hime for heading and Jump. Sliding Star: He deserves the sliding star for his sliding tackles at Euro 96. Covering and Marking Stars: They are necessary to define his roll in the DM. At Euro 96 he played much for the team. Players like Scholl, Sammer, Klinsmann were creative. He had to work on their back. --> Frank Baumann http://pesstatsdatabase.com/00-s/frank-baumann-2008-09-t3318.html was another Bremen Player at the DM position. They play similar, so i watch the Baumann stats to create the skills of Eilts. -------------------- History of editing this player: 1) Change Defence cause he isn´t SB, raise Passing skills raise shot skills, a bit edit his Speed and Acceleration. 2) Raise his Dribbling Skills. To do: Heading? Jumping? Others? _________________ @native speakers: I want to improve my English! So please correct me (via PM) if there is something absolutely wrong in my posts and not an obvious typing error... Thanks! Dieter EILTS | 1995-1997 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)
This blog is dedicated to reviving posts from the "golden era" of PES Stats Database (2008-2010). This was possible thanks to Wayback Machine and my hard work.
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