Walter Frosch (19 December 1950 – 23 November 2013[2]) was a German professional footballer who played as a defender.

Walter Frosch
Frosch in 2008
Personal information
Date of birth (1950-12-19)19 December 1950
Place of birth Ludwigshafen am Rhein, West Germany[1]
Date of death 23 November 2013(2013-11-23) (aged 62)
Position Defender
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1970–1972 SV Alsenborn
1974–1976 1. FC Kaiserslautern 43 (3)
1976–1979 FC St. Pauli 81 (8)
Total 124 (11)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Career

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Legacy

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Frosch gained renewed, lasting fame through a half-time interview given on 9 September 2007 at the "Tag der Legenden" (Day of Legends) event at the Millerntor-Stadion, in which he appeared with a cigarette pack in his sock. The clip became a viral internet meme in Germany, accumulating millions of views on YouTube, especially through his thick Palatinate dialect pronunciation of Zigaretten ("cigarettes") as "Zijaretten"[7].

Frosch became known for the exceptionally large number of yellow cards he received in the second-division season of 1976–77. Soon afterwards, the DFB introduced an automatic match suspension after four (today five) yellow cards. There are two versions of the exact number of yellow cards in 1976–77:

  • For a long time the incorrect figure of 27 yellow cards circulated, which is in part still used today.[8][9] Compared with this figure, according to the Süddeutsche Zeitung there is no professional footballer anywhere in the world who has received more yellow cards in a single season.[8]
  • The authors of FC St. Pauli's anniversary book, Christoph Nagel and Michael Pahl, concluded in their research that the figure of 27 was incorrect and that there were in fact 18 or 19 yellow cards that season (the exact number can no longer be determined).[10]

Two matches before the end of the season, Frosch was quoted in the Hamburg press as saying:

Gegen Solingen und im letzten Spiel bei Wacker Berlin hole ich mir noch je eine Gelbe, dann bin ich auf 20, und das ist doch eine runde Sache, oder?

Against Solingen and in the final match at Wacker Berlin I'll pick up one more yellow each, then I'll be on 20, and that's a nice round number, isn't it?

Walter Frosch, FC St. Pauli. Alles drin, p. 48.

Frosch then fell short of his goal, however; the kicker spoke at the time of 18 yellow cards,[11] the 1977–78 Bundesliga special issue of Sport Megaphon likewise of 18,[12] and the Hamburger Abendblatt of 19. Across the three Bundesliga seasons, Frosch was shown 17 yellow cards, but did not receive a single red.

References

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  1. "Walter Frosch". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  2. "Walter Frosch: Leben als steter Zweikampf". www.ndr.de.
  3. "Frosch, Walter" (in German). Kicker. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  4. "Zum Todestag von Walter Frosch: Das sind die 10 verrücktesten Kult-Kicker". Sportbuzzer.de. 23 November 2017.
  5. "Nicht nur Zigaretten in den Stutzen – das sind die legendärsten Walter-Frosch-Geschichten". watson.de.
  6. Walter Frosch at fussballdaten.de (in German)
  7. Interview with Walter Frosch at the "Tag der Legenden" match
  8. 1 2 sueddeutsche.de
  9. David Gohla: Walter Frosch: Zigaretten statt Nationalmannschaft. kicker, 1. November 2010.
  10. [dead link] auf fcstpauli.com
  11. kicker, 23. Juni 1977: „Böser Bube“ Frosch steigt auf
  12. Sport Megaphon Hamburg-Niedersachsen-Bremen, Sonderheft Bundesliga 77–78, S. 70.