Diant Ramaj

: Behaved like a fish in water in his first Bundesliga minutes.

He directed the defense with a matter-of-factness that surprised, and he exuded great self-confidence.

Then he paid Gregoritsch the dues.

The Austrian noticed that the debutant was speculating on a cross and shot the ball into the near corner to make it 1-1.

After that, the junior national player was something like a touch of nervousness.

But that didn't lead to more errors.

In stoppage time, he even saved the point for his team in a one-on-one duel against Niederlechner.

Peter Hess

sports editor.

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Tuta:

Mostly stable in this hard-fought game, with more overview than last.

Charmed in between with a wonderful pass on Lindström's run.

Makoto Hasebe:

Another chapter of the bestseller: The Old Man and the Soccer Ball.

The Japanese played almost flawlessly, a pleasure to experience his game intelligence.

Evan Ndicka:

Very robust in duels.

A dominant defender.

When he scored, he was clearly offside, which is why it didn't count.

Almamy Touré:

On his comeback, initially with a good feeling for the moment to become offensive on the right wing.

After six failed crosses, he then held back.

Defensive as so often with dropouts.

Once he didn't hit the ball in his own six-yard box, but that didn't damage Eintracht.

When the ball fell in front of his feet in the Augsburg six-yard box, it was just as clumsy.

Offered himself for a substitution, but was allowed to play through.

Djibril Sow:

Busy bees, but, as is his habit, mostly inconspicuous.

Except for the spectacular moment when he took the ball with his chest and played it directly over 30 meters into Lindstrom's run.

An action that is otherwise only seen from world stars like Neymar and De Bruyne.

Sebastian Rode:

King in midfield in the first half.

Tortured the Augsburgers with his ball conquests and almost always had sensible solutions ready with the ball.

This time he lasted 77 minutes, each of which was a win for Eintracht.

Timothy Chandler:

Started surprisingly energetically on the unfamiliar left flank as a Kostic representative, then – as is so often the case – he was content to avoid mistakes.

He succeeded, but of course he didn't promote Eintracht's attacking game for a long time like Kostic did on the left.

Jesper Lindström:

Started erratically and lost the ball a few times.

He would have been forgiven for that if he had made it 2-0 after Sow's dream pass.

The Dane did everything right, received the ball perfectly and made room for a shot on goal.

But the ball landed on the post.

Then with more strong scenes.

Had the 2:1 on the foot in the 88th minute and failed free-standing to goalkeeper Gikiewicz.

After Dortmund for the second time, it remains his flaw to have cost the team points.

Daichi Kamada:

A wonderful goal to make it 1-0, which would also have delighted ballet trainers – so much balance, so much body control.

Otherwise mostly busy with the more inelegant sides of his job - also impressed as a duel.

Rafael Borré:

Like a tick in the Augsburg defense.

Tireless, uncomfortable.

He hardly ever got a shot himself, but quickly put the 1-0 in front of Kamada.

Kristijan Jakic:

Came in for Rode to disrupt the Augsburg game – and he disrupted.

Martin Hinteregger:

Fitted into the Frankfurt defensive wall without forming a gap.

Strong in a duel, factual, sovereign.

The fact that Glasner says: Hinteregger or Hasebe is a shame for Eintracht.

Goncalo Paciencia:

Came in for the exhausted Borré after 80 minutes and tried really hard, but without much effect.