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Panionios F.C.

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Panionios GSS FC
File:Panionios Crest2006.jpg
Full namePAE Panionios Gymnastikos
Syllogos Smyrnis

(Pan-Ionian Gymnastic
Association of Smyrna FC)
Nickname(s)Kyanerythri (Blue-Reds)
Istorikos (Historic)
Founded1890
GroundPanionios Stadium, Nea Smyrni,
Athens, Greece
Capacity11,700 (all-seated)
ChairmanGreece Georgios Katsifarakis
ManagerGermany Ewald Lienen
LeagueSuper League Greece
(Σούπερ Λίγκα Ελλάδα)
2007-08Super League Greece, 5th

Panionios GSS FC (Greek: Πανιώνιος Γυμναστικός Σύλλογος Σμύρνης - Panionios Gymnastikos Syllogos Smyrnis), the Pan-Ionian Gymnastic Association of Smyrna, is a Greek association football club based in the Athenian suburb of Nea Smyrni, Greece.

The club currently competes in the Super League Greece.

Early history

The club was founded in 1890 in Smyrna(Σμύρνη))/İzmir,Ottoman Empire, under the name of "Orpheus Music and Sports Club". In 1893 some Orpheus members keen on sports formed a separate organization, the "Gymnasion Club", and started holding yearly sports competitions. In 1898, Orpheus and Gymnasion merged again to form PGSS. After the Greek military defeat in 1922 the club was transferred to the Athenian suburb of Nea Smyrni. The club has a tradition of cultivating all major sports and was the first Greek club to establish a track and field division for women, in 1925. With the gradual transformation of men's football and basketball into professional sports, Panionios FC and Panionios BC became privately owned clubs operating under the auspices of the traditional "amateur sports" PGSS.

Recent history

Panionios has spent nearly its entire history in the Greek First Division (now called 'Superleague'), having missed out from competing in Greek football's top division only twice in its more than 100-year history. Within this, Panionios rose quite often to high levels, with top achievement in terms of the league being the 2nd position that the club reached in 1971, losing the title to AEK.

Panionios has produced all three major Greek strikers of the 1980s, namely Nikos Anastopoulos (later of Olympiakos), Thomas Mavros (later of AEK), and Dimitris Saravakos (later of Panathinaikos). Other notable players coming out of the club include Nikos Tsiantakis (later of Olympiakos) and Takis Fyssas, later of Panathinaikos and member of Greek national team.

In December 2001, working around bankruptcy legislation, the club was renamed to Neos ("New") Panionios FC, to avoid the threat of relegation from the first division because of financial difficulties.

Change of ownership

In 2004, shipowner Constantinos Tsakiris was elected president of the "amateur sports" PGSS. Panionios won the women's Basketball Championship in 2006, the club's first in a team sport, and the women's volleyball team advanced to the first division. In 2006, Tsakiris acquired 85% of Neos Panionios FC stock and started restructuring the team from scratch. He changed the name of the club back to the original "Panionios GSS" FC and hired German coach Ewald Lienen who, during his first year created a team that made it to the top 5 of the Greek Super League and on to the UEFA Cup. Tsakiris has also unveiled an ambitious plan to have the aging football ground and athletics track demolished, and build a modern multi-sport arena in its place.

PAOK incident november 2007

On 25 november 2007 Panionios coach Ewald Lienen was slightly injured by glass shards in Thessaloniki when PAOK fans threw stones at the team bus. Earlier, riot police had used tear gas to disperse about 10,000 PAOK fans demanding that the state forgive at least part of club debts estimated at $45 million. PAOK beat Panionios 3-1. Ewald Lienen was shocked and deeply troubled by the incident stating it would be his main reason to leave Greece if in fact he chose to. [1]


Current squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Croatia CRO Dario Kresic
2 DF Greece GRE Giannis Maniatis
3 DF Finland FIN Mehmet Hetemaj
4 DF Mali MLI Sékou Berthé
5 DF Greece GRE Theodoros Koumparoulis (on loan from Egaleo F.C.)
6 DF France FRA Fousseni Diawara
7 MF Greece GRE Manolis Skoufalis
8 MF Greece GRE Kostas Kapetanos
9 FW Algeria ALG Rafik Djebbour
10 MF Greece GRE Dimitrios Kiliaras
11 FW Greece GRE Christos Aravidis
12 GK Greece GRE Konstantinos Andriolas
13 DF Greece GRE Evaggelos Koutsopoulos
14 DF Greece GRE Grigorios Makos
15 MF Ghana GHA Bennard Yao Kumordzi
16 MF Brazil BRA Rebeiro Wagner
17 FW Albania ALB Albi Kondi
18 FW Germany GER Michael Delura
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF Germany GER Ivica Majstorović
20 MF Greece GRE Fanouris Goundoulakis
21 MF Greece GRE Giorgos Barkoglou
23 MF Greece GRE Dimitrios Siovas
25 DF Greece GRE Giannis Kontoes
26 FW Brazil BRA Alexandre D'Akol
28 MF Cyprus CYP Marios Nicolaou
29 FW Greece GRE Dimitrios Sialmas
30 DF Greece GRE Spyros Gitsalis
31 DF Greece GRE Georgios Tzavelas
32 DF Belarus BLR Pavel Plaskonny
33 FW Greece GRE Giannoulis Fakinos
50 FW Angola ANG Lourenço da Silva
79 FW Greece GRE Lampros Choutos
MF Greece GRE Nikolaos Papavasiliou
GK Greece GRE Charalambos Tabasis
DF Czech Republic CZE Pavel Drsek

Out on loan: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
27 MF Greece GRE Efthymios Gousoulis (to Ethnikos Olympiakos Volos F.C.)
MF Greece GRE Manolis Markakis (to Ethnikos Olympiakos Volos F.C.)

Famous former players

National titles

1979, 1998

1971


European record

Season Achievement Notes
European Cup Winners Cup
1979–80 Second Round eliminated by IFK Göteborg
1998–99 Quarter-finals eliminated by S.S. Lazio


See also

References

Official Sites

Fans

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