Name:
Alfred PreißlerNickname:
"Adi"Country:
Germany
Club: Borussia Dortmund
Position: *
SS,
AMF,
CFSide: RF/BS
Age: 29-33 years (09/04/1921)
Height: * 168 cm
Weight: * 67 kg
Attack:
89Defence:
38Balance:
75Stamina:
77Top Speed:
78Acceleration:
81Response:
79Agility:
83Dribble Accuracy:
90Dribble Speed:
83Short Pass Accuracy:
92Short Pass Speed:
79Long Pass Accuracy:
86Long Pass Speed:
77Shot Accuracy:
88Shot Power:
82Shot Technique:
85Free Kick Accuracy:
71Curling:
75Header:
67Jump:
69Technique:
87Aggression:
79Mentality:
78Keeper Skills:
50Team Work:
83Injury Tolerance:
BCondition:
5Weak Foot Accuracy:
6Weak Foot Frequency:
6Consistency:
6Growth Type:
Standard LastingCARDS:P05 Trickster
P20 Talisman
S02 Passer
S03 1-on-1 Finish
S05 1-touch Play
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Tactical Dribble - Playmaking - Passing - 1 touch Pass - 1on1 Scoring
Attack / Defence Awareness Card: Attack Minded
INFOAlfred Preissler (9 April 1921 – 15 July 2003) was a German footballer and manager who played as a forward mostly for Borussia Dortmund. He is the club's all-time top goalscorer with 177 goals. The greatest ever Borussia Dortmund legend and captain but not recognized outside of Germany because the Nazi took him at least 50 caps. Adi Preißler was neither one of the hardest training players nor the fastest player, but was brillant playmaker and scorer with fantastic technique and dribbling. He had outstanding ability to make lethal last pass, great intelligence and tactical awareness. Player with good agility but not so good heading abilities. One of Borussia Dortmund’s most legendary players, a temperamental inside right of small build who was known as a gifted virtuoso and clinical finisher with very quick footwork. Preissler was reputed to be one of the most intelligent players of his time. Despite his effervescing nature, he was well-respected among his teammates because of straightforward ways. After the war took him to Dortmund, where he kicked it now for Borussia Dortmund. In addition to two German championships (1956 and 1957, once runner-up 1949), he led Borussia Dortmund to six other West German championships. Meanwhile Preißler played two years at Munster Prussia, with whom he was runner-up in 1951. Preissler was long captain of Borussia Dortmund, played in the Oberliga West 241 games and scored 145 goals. There were also 22 games (14 goals) in the finals of the German championship, and 10 inserts (8 goals) and an insert in the European Cup (1 goal) in the DFB Cup. To this day, Adi Preißler with 168 gates of the leading scorer of the BVB. 1949 (25 goals) and 1950 (24 goals), he was top scorer in the Oberliga West. Together with Alfred and Alfred Kelbassa Niepieklo Preissler was a storm trio that was feared as the three Alfredo. Even in the national team in 1951 Preißler used twice (against Austria and Ireland). As a coach, Preissler 1969 led the team of Red-White Oberhausen in the Bundesliga, where he could keep the club for four years and with Heinz Murach as coach in 1973 then again descended. Adi Preissler is the oft-quoted dictum: "Gray is all theory - is crucial happens on the pitch." In Dortmund, the Adi-Preissler avenue is named in the training center of Borussia Dortmund after the players. On game day, according to Preiss Jewellers death Dortmund fans honored him with a choreography. On a block flag was Preiss moth image to see the championship trophy, banners were shown next to it with his famous football wisdom.