fbpx
Wikipedia

Olympiacos F.C.

Olympiacos Club of Fans of Piraeus (Greek: Ολυμπιακός Σ.Φ.Π. Greek pronunciation: [olibiaˈkos]), known simply as Olympiacos or Olympiacos Piraeus, is a Greek professional football club based in Piraeus, Attica. Part of the major multi-sport club Olympiacos CFP (Olympiakós Sýndesmos Filáthlon Peiraiós, "Olympic Club of Fans of Piraeus"), their name was inspired from the ancient Olympic Games and along with the club's emblem, the laurel-crowned Olympic athlete, symbolize the Olympic ideals of ancient Greece.[3] Their home ground is the Karaiskakis Stadium, a 32,115-capacity stadium in Piraeus.[4]

Olympiacos
Full nameΟλυμπιακός Σύνδεσμος Φιλάθλων Πειραιώς
Olympiakos Sýndesmos Filáthlon Peiraiós
(Olympic Club of Fans of Piraeus)
Nickname(s)Thrylos (Legend)
(Red-Whites)
Founded10 March 1925; 98 years ago (1925-03-10)
GroundKaraiskakis Stadium
Capacity33,334[1][2]
OwnerEvangelos Marinakis
PresidentEvangelos Marinakis
ManagerJose Anigo
LeagueSuper League Greece
2021–22Super League Greece, 1st of 14 (champions)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Founded on 10 March 1925, Olympiacos is the most successful club in Greek football history,[5] having won 47 League titles, 28 Cups (18 Doubles) and 4 Super Cups, all records.[6] Τotalling 79 national trophies, Olympiacos is 9th in the world in total titles won by a football club.[7] The club's dominating success can be further evidenced by the fact that all other Greek clubs have won a combined total of 39 League titles, while Olympiacos also holds the record for the most consecutive Greek League titles won, with seven in a row in two occasions (19972003 and 20112017), breaking their own previous record of six consecutive wins in the 1950s (19541959), when Olympiacos was unequivocally nicknamed Thrylos. (Greek: Θρύλος, "The Legend"). Having won the 2014–15 League title, Olympiacos became the only football club in the world to have won a series of five or more consecutive championships for five times in their history, a record that was praised by FIFA with a congratulatory letter of its president, Sepp Blatter.[8] They are also the only Greek club to have won five consecutive national Cups (19571961) as well as six League titles undefeated (1937, 1938, 1948, 1951, 1954, 1955).[9] Olympiacos are one of only three clubs to have never been relegated from the top flight of Greek football, and by winning the 2012–13 title, their 40th in total, they added a fourth star above their crest, each one representing 10 League titles.[10]

In European competitions, Olympiacos best performances are their presence in the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals in 1998–99, losing the semi-final spot in the last minutes of their second leg match against Juventus, as well as in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup quarter-finals in 1992–93. The Red-Whites are by far the highest ranked Greek club in the UEFA rankings, occupying the 37th place in Europe in the five-year ranking and the 30th in the ten-year ranking as of 2021,[11][12] and one of the founding members of the European Club Association.[13] Olympiacos won the Balkans Cup in 1963, at a time when the competition was considered the second most important in the region after the European Cup,[14] becoming the first ever Greek club to win an international competition.

Olympiacos is the most popular football club in Greece,[15][16][17] also being the most popular club among the population of Athens,[18][19] and gathering strong support from Greek communities all over the world.[20][21] With 83,000 registered members as of April 2006, the club was placed 9th in the 2006 list of football clubs with the most paying members in the world; that figure increased to 98,000 in 2014.[22] Olympiacos share a long-standing rivalry with Panathinaikos, with whom they contest in the "derby of the eternal enemies", the most classic football derby in Greece and one of the most well known around the world.[23][24][25][26][27][28][29]

History

Early years (1925–1931)

 
The founders of Olympiacos (1925)
 
The legendary Andrianopoulos brothers: (from left) Yiannis, Dinos, Giorgos, Vassilis and Leonidas Andrianopoulos
 
Notis Kamperos inspired the name and the emblem of the club

Olympiacos was founded on 10 March 1925, in the Athenian port city of Piraeus. The club's initial aim, as stated in the statutes, was the systematic cultivation and development of its athletes' possibilities for participation in athletic competitions, the spreading of the Olympic athletic ideal and the promotion of sportsmanship and fanship among the youth according to egalitarian principles, by stressing a healthy, ethical and social basis as its foundation. Members of "Piraikos Podosfairikos Omilos FC" (Sport and Football Club of Piraeus) and "Piraeus Fans Club FC" decided, during a historical assembly,[30] to dissolve the two clubs in order to establish a new unified one, which would bring this new vision and dynamic to the community. Notis Kamperos, a senior officer of the Hellenic Navy, proposed the name Olympiacos and the profile of a laurel-crowned Olympic winner as the emblem of the new club. Michalis Manouskos, a prominent Piraeus industrialist, expanded the name to its complete and current status, Olympiacos Syndesmos Filathlon Pireos. Besides Kamperos and Manouskos, among the most notable founding members were Stavros Maragoudakis, the post office director; Nikos Andronikos, a merchant; Dimitrios Sklias, a Hellenic Army officer; Nikolaos Zacharias, an attorney; Athanasios Mermigas, a notary public; Kostas Klidouchakis, who became the first goalkeeper in the club's history; Ioannis Kekkes, a stockbroker; and above all, the Andrianopoulos family. Andrianopoulos, a family of well-established Piraeus merchants, played a pivotal role in the founding of Olympiacos. The five brothers, Yiannis, Dinos, Giorgos, Vassilis and Leonidas Andrianopoulos raised the reputation of the club and brought it to its current glory.[3] Yiannis, Dinos, Giorgos and Vassilis were the first to play, while Leonidas, the youngest of the five, made his debut later on and played for the club for eight years (1927–1935). The club's offensive line, made up of the five brothers, became legendary, rising to a mythical status and soon Olympiacos gained enormous popularity and became the most successful and well-supported club in Greece. Back then, their fan base consisted mainly of the working class, with the team's home ground at Neo Phaliron Velodrome, before moving to its current Karaiskakis Stadium. They became Piraeus Champions in 1925 and 1926.[31]

 
Olympiacos line-up in 1928

In 1926, the Hellenic Football Federation was founded and organized the Panhellenic Championship in the 1927–1928 season. This was the first national championship, where the regional champions from EPSA league (Athens), EPSP league (Piraeus) and EPSM league (Thessaloniki) competed for the national title during play-offs, with Aris becoming the first champion. The Panhellenic Championship was organized in this manner up until 1958–59. However, in the second season (1928–29) a dispute arose between Olympiacos and the Hellenic Football Federation and as a result, the club did not participate in the championship, with Panathinaikos and AEK Athens deciding to follow Olympiacos. During the course of that season, the three of them played friendly games with each other and formed a group called P.O.K.

Meanwhile, the club continued to dominate the Piraeus Championship, winning the 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30 and 1930–31 titles and started establishing themselves as the leading force in Greek football; they set a record by remaining undefeated against all Greek teams for three consecutive seasons (14 March 1926 to 3 March 1929), counting 30 wins and 6 draws in 36 games. Those results ignited an enthusiastic reception from the Greek press, who called Olympiacos Thrylos ("Legend") for the first time in history.[32] The fourth Panhellenic Championship took place in 1930–31 and found Olympiacos winning the Greece national league title for the first time ever, which was a milestone that marked the beginning of a very successful era in Olympiacos history. Olympiacos put in a great performance during the competition and won the title very convincingly with 11 wins, 2 draws and only one game lost. They managed to score 7 wins in 7 matches at home, beating Panathinaikos, AEK Athens, Aris, Iraklis and PAOK with the same score: 3–1. The sole exception was the match against Ethnikos, where Olympiacos netted 4 goals and won with 4–1. Besides the Andrianopoulos brothers and Kostas Klidouchakis, other notable players of the first era in the club's history (1925–1931) were Achilleas Grammatikopoulos, Lalis Lekkos, Philippos Kourantis, Nikos Panopoulos, Charalambos Pezonis and Kostas Terezakis.

Domination in Greece and World War II (1931–1946)

 
Olympiacos fearsome trio of attackers during the 1930s (from left): Christoforos Raggos, Giannis Vazos, Theologos Symeonidis

The rise of the new decade marked a substantial rise in Panhellenic Championship's popularity throughout Greece. In October 1931, Giorgos and Yiannis Andrianopoulos, emblematic players and founding members of Olympiacos, retired from active football. However, new heroes emerged, such as Giannis Vazos, Christoforos Raggos, Theologos Symeonidis, Michalis Anamateros, Spyros Depountis, Aris Chrysafopoulos, Nikos Grigoratos, Panagis Korsianos as well as the iconic brothers Giannis and Vangelis Chelmis and the club won five Championships in nine seasons (1932–33, 1933–34, 1935–36, 1936–37, 1937–38) and by 1940, Olympiacos had already won six Championships in the eleven first seasons of the Panhellenic Championship.[3] Especially Giannis Vazos, Christoforos Raggos and Theologos Symeonidis composed a formidable trio of attacking players, scoring numerous goals and became nothing short of legendary. Giannis Vazos played for 18 years for Olympiacos (1931–1949), and managed to score 450 goals in 364 games (179 goals in 156 official games) for the club, being the club's second all-time scorer, winning also the Greek Championship top scorer award four times (1933, 1936, 1937 and 1947).

In addition, the club managed to win the 1936–37 and 1937–38 Championship titles undefeated. Ιn Greek Cup, the team did not manage to win the competition in its first four editions, despite some outstanding wins such as the record-setting 1–6 away victory against Panathinaikos in Leoforos Stadium in 1932 (V. Andrianopoulos 16', 68', 88', Raggos 24', Vazos 69', 70'), which is the biggest away victory in this derby's history.[3][33]

On 28 October 1940, Fascist Italy invaded Greece, and several Olympiacos players joined the Hellenic Army to fight against the Axis invaders.[3] Chistoforos Raggos was heavily injured in his left leg in January 1941, and wasn't able to play football again. Leonidas Andrianopoulos suffered severe frostbite in the Albanian front and almost died, while Nikos Grigoratos was injured in the leg during the Battle of Klisura.[34] Furthermore, after the subsequent German occupation of Greece, Olympiacos players joined the Greek Resistance and fought fiercely against the Nazis.[3] Olympiacos player Nikos Godas, an emblematic figure for the club, was captain of the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) and fought against the Germans in many fronts.[35] He was executed wearing Olympiacos shirt and shorts, as was his last wish: "Shoot me and kill me with my Olympiacos shirt on, and do not blindfold me, I want to see the colours of my team before the final shot."[36][37] Michalis Anamateros was also an active member of the Greek Resistance and was killed in 1944. Olympiacos paid a heavy price during the destructive war, the Axis occupation and the ensuing Greek Civil War and the club's progress was put on temporary hold.[3]

The Legend (1946–1959)

 
Andreas Mouratis captained Olympiacos and played in 295 games for the club (1945–1955)
 
Andreas Mouratis, Babis Kotridis, Ilias Rossidis, key players of the Olympiacos team of the 1950s

After the war, Olympiacos saw many of its key-players of the pre-war era retire, with many significant changes being made in the team's roster. Olympiacos captain and prolific scorer Giannis Vazos remained in the club, along with Giannis Chelmis. New important players joined the club, such as Andreas Mouratis, Alekos Chatzistavridis, Stelios Kourouklatos and Dionysis Minardos. As soon as regular fixtures recommenced, the Piraeus club returned to their dominant position in Greek football. From 1946 to 1959, Olympiacos won 9 out of the 11 Greek Championships (1947, 1948, 1951, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959), bringing home 15 Championship titles in a total of 23 completed seasons of the Greek League. The six-straight Greek Championships won by Olympiacos from 1954 to 1959 was an unmatched achievement in Greek football history, an all-time record which stood for 44 years, up until Olympiacos managed to win seven-straight Greek Championships from 1997 to 2003.[3]

Furthermore, during the same period (1946–1959), the club won 8 Greek Cups out of 13 editions (1947, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1958, 1959), thus completing 6 Doubles (1947, 1951, 1954, 1957, 1958, 1959), three of which being consecutive (1957–1959).[3] The legendary Olympiacos team of the 1950s, with key performers such as Andreas Mouratis, Ilias Rossidis, Thanasis Bebis, Ilias Yfantis, Babis Kotridis, Kostas Polychroniou, Giorgos Darivas, Babis Drosos, Antonis Poseidon, Savvas Theodoridis, Kostas Karapatis, Mimis Stefanakos, Thanasis Kinley, Stelios Psychos, Giannis Ioannou, Themis Moustaklis, Vasilis Xanthopoulos, Dimitris Kokkinakis, Giorgos Kansos, Kostas Papazoglou and Aristeidis Papazoglou marked Olympiacos' period of absolute domination in Greek football, which skyrocketed the club's popularity and spread the word of Olympiacos' superiority throughout Greece.[3] Hence, after the club's record-breaking performance in the trophy-laden era of the 1950s, the club gained unequivocally the nickname of Thrylos, meaning "The Legend".[3][38][39]

On 13 September 1959, Olympiacos made its debut in Europe against Milan for the 1959–60 European Cup and became the first Greek club that ever played in the European competitions.[40] The first leg was held at the Karaiskakis Stadium in Piraeus and Olympiacos took the lead with a goal by Kostas Papazoglou (1–0), which was the first goal ever scored by a Greek club (and by a Greek player as well) in the European competitions.[41] Milan's prolific goalscorer José Altafini equalised the match with a header in the 33rd minute, after a cross by Giancarlo Danova. Ilias Yfantis scored an outstanding goal and gave Olympiacos the lead again in the 45th minute of the game, when he controlled the ball between Cesare Maldini and Vincenzo Occhetta and unleashed a powerful volley, burying the ball into the back of the net (2–1).[41] Altafini scored his second goal once again with a header (72nd minute), after a free-kick by Nils Liedholm. The match ended 2–2, with Olympiacos putting in a great performance against the Italian champions, despite the fact that they had no foreign players in their roster, while Milan had four world-class foreign players, such as Altafini, Liedholm, Juan Alberto Schiaffino and Ernesto Grillo.[41] In the second leg Milan won 3–1 (Giancarlo Danova 12', 26', 85'; Psychos 68') and qualified for the next round, despite Olympiacos' good performance especially in the second half.

First international success and Márton Bukovi era (1960–1972)

 
Márton Bukovi coached Olympiacos to two consecutive Greek League titles (1965–66, 1966–67)

Olympiacos entered the 1960s by winning the 1960 and 1961 Greek Cups, thus completing five consecutive Greek Cup wins, which is an all-time record in Greek football history. In this decade, a strong side was created with players from the late 1950s and new important players, such as Giannis Gaitatzis, Nikos Gioutsos, Pavlos Vasileiou, Vasilis Botinos, Giannis Fronimidis, Christos Zanteroglou, Grigoris Aganian, Stathis Tsanaktsis, Mimis Plessas, Giangos Simantiris, Pavlos Grigoriadis, Savvas Papazoglou, Stelios Besis, Sotiris Gavetsos, Tasos Sourounis, Vangelis Milisis, Orestis Pavlidis, Panagiotis Barbalias and last but not least the prolific goalscorer Giorgos Sideris, top-scorer in the club's history with 493 goals in 519 matches in all competitions (224 goals in 284 Greek Championship matches).

In 1963, Olympiacos became the first ever Greek club to win a non-domestic competition, winning the Balkans Cup, which marked the first international success by any Greek football club. The Balkans Cup was a very popular international competition in the 1960s (the 1967 final attracted 42.000 spectators),[42] being the second most important international club competition for clubs from the Balkans (after the European Champions' Cup).[42] Olympiacos topped his group after some notable wins, beating Galatasaray 1–0 at the Karaiskakis Stadium (Stelios Psychos 49'),[43] as well as FK Sarajevo (3–2) and FC Brașov (1–0), bagging also two away draws against Galatasaray (1–1) in Mithatpaşa Stadium (Metin Oktay 78' – Aristeidis Papazoglou 6') and FK Sarajevo in Koševo Stadium (3–3).[43] In the final, they faced Levski Sofia, winning the first match in Piraeus (1–0, Giorgos Sideris 37') and losing the second match in Vasil Levski Stadium with the same score.[43] In the third decisive final in Istanbul (a neutral ground), Olympiacos beat Levski 1–0 in Mithatpaşa Stadium with a goal by Mimis Stefanakos in the 87th minute and won the Balkans Cup.[44]

The club went on to win the 1963 and 1965 Greek Cups, completing seven Greek Cup titles in nine years. However, the years 1959–1965 were not fruitful for Olympiacos in the Greek Championship, as the team was not able to win the title for six years. This mediocre performance led Olympiacos board to hire the legendary Márton Bukovi as the club's head coach, with Mihály Lantos (prominent member of the Hungary national team of the 1950s widely known as the "Mighty Magyars" or "Aranycsapat") as his assistant coach.[45] The innovative Hungarian coach, pioneer of the 4–2–4 formation (along with Béla Guttmann and Gusztáv Sebes) was a solid tactician and favoured attacking football and very demanding training sessions.[45] Bukovi's innovatory tactics and groundbreaking training methods transformed Olympiacos and created a powerful, attacking team with constant player movement and solid combination game that often played spectacular football.[46] Under Bukovi's guidance and with the great performance of key players such as Giorgos Sideris, Nikos Gioutsos, Kostas Polychroniou, Vasilis Botinos, Aristeidis Papazoglou, Pavlos Vasileiou, Giannis Gaitatzis, Christos Zanteroglou, Grigoris Aganian, Mimis Plessas, Giannis Fronimidis and Orestis Pavlidis, Olympiacos won 2 straight Greek Championships (1966, 1967).[46] They won the 1966 title with 23 wins and 4 draws in 30 games and in the decisive away match against Trikala, an estimated 15,000 ecstatic Olympiacos fans swarmed into the city of Trikala to celebrate the win (0–5) and the Championship title after seven years.[47][48]

The next season 1966–67, Olympiacos won 12 out of the first 14 games in the league, which was an all-time record in Greek football history, which lasted for 46 years and up until 2013, when Olympiacos, under coach Míchel's guidance, broke his own record by winning 13 out of the 14 first matches of the 2013–14 season.[49] They won the title in a convincing way and with some notable wins, like the 4–0 smashing victory against arch-rivals Panathinaikos at the Karaiskakis Stadium (Vasileiou 17', Sideris 20', 35', 62'), where Olympiacos played spectacular football and missed a plethora of chances for a much bigger score.[50] Bukovi became a legend for the club's fans and his creation, the Olympiacos team of 1965–67, became nothing short of legendary. A special anthem was written for Bukovi's Olympiacos and became popular throughout Greece: "Του Μπούκοβι την ομαδάρα, τη λένε Ολυμπιακάρα" ("Bukovi's mighty team is called Olympiacos").[51]

Shortly before the end of the 1966–67 season, a military coup d'état took place and the Colonels seized power in Greece, establishing a dictatorship. The regime of the Colonels had devastating consequences for Olympiacos.[3] In December 1967, Giorgos Andrianopoulos, club legend and president of the club for 13 years (1954–1967) was forced out of the club's presidency by the military regime.[52] Furthermore, the regime canceled the transfer of Giorgos Koudas to Olympiacos[53] and days later another blow was delivered to the club: Márton Bukovi, already a legend and architect of the great 1965–67 team, was forced out of Greece by the military junta, being labeled a communist.[54][55] He left Greece on 21 December 1967, along with Mihály Lantos.[56]

Goulandris era (1972–1975)

Another chapter began in 1972, after Nikos Goulandris became president of the club. He reinstated all the prominent members of Olympiacos board that had been forced out by the military regime (including Giorgos Andrianopoulos) and opened-up the member election process, establishing a new, trustworthy board of directors.[57] He appointed Lakis Petropoulos as head coach and signed top-class players, creating a great roster with key performers such as Giorgos Delikaris, Yves Triantafyllos, Julio Losada, Milton Viera, Panagiotis Kelesidis, Michalis Kritikopoulos, Takis Synetopoulos, Romain Argyroudis, Maik Galakos, Nikos Gioutsos, Giannis Gaitatzis, Vasilis Siokos, Thanasis Angelis, Lakis Glezos, Petros Karavitis, Kostas Davourlis, Giannis Kyrastas, Dimitris Persidis, Lefteris Poupakis and Babis Stavropoulos. Under Goulandris' presidency, Olympiacos won the Greek Championship three times in a row (1972–73, 1973–74, 1974–75), combining it with the Greek Cup in 1973 (beating PAOK 1–0 in the final) and 1975 (beating Panathinaikos 1–0 in the final) to celebrate two Doubles in three years.[3] Ιn the 1972–73 season, Olympiacos won the title by conceding only 13 goals in 34 matches, which is an-all-time record in Greek football history. The team's best year though, was undoubtedly the 1973–74 season, when Olympiacos won the league with 26 wins and 7 draws in 34 games, scoring an all-time record of 102 goals and conceding only 14.

In European competitions, they managed to eliminate Cagliari in the 1972–73 UEFA Cup, a major force in Italian football during the late 1960s and the early 1970s, (1970 Serie A Champions, 1972 Serie A title contenders), with world-class Italian international players like Gigi Riva, Angelo Domenghini, Enrico Albertosi, Pierluigi Cera, Sergio Gori and Fabrizio Poletti.[58] Olympiacos managed to beat Cagliari twice, 2–1 in Piraeus and 1–0 in Cagliari, becoming the first ever Greek football club to win on Italian soil.[58] In the next round they faced the competition's defending champions Tottenham Hotspur, who were undefeated for 16-straight games in all European competitions. Olympiacos did not manage to qualify against Spurs, but they managed to get a 1–0 win in Piraeus, which ended Tottenham's undefeated streak and marked the first ever victory of a Greek football club against an English side.[59] Two years later, Olympiacos entered the 1974–75 European Cup and they were drawn to face Kenny Dalglish's Celtic, one of the strongest teams in European football at that time[60] and semi-finalists of the previous season. The first leg was played in Celtic Park, where Celtic had never been defeated, running an undefeated streak of 36 straight home games in all European competitions (27 wins, 9 draws) from 1962 to 1974. Olympiacos took the lead through Milton Viera's strike in the 36th minute, with Celtic equalising late in the game.[61] The away draw gave Olympiacos the advantage and they finished the job in Piraeus, after a spectacular 2–0 win against the Scottish Champions with Kritikopoulos and Stavropoulos finding the net.[62] In the next round, they were drawn to play against Anderlecht for a place in the quarter-finals of the competition. Anderlecht won the first leg with 5–1 and Olympiacos' task seemed impossible. In the second leg in Greece, however, Olympiacos put on a dominant display and almost reached a winning score in a match that was marked by referee Károly Palotai's decisions.[63] Olympiacos beat Anderlecht 3–0, while Palotai disallowed four Olympiacos goals[64] and did not give at least three clear penalties committed by Anderlecht players,[65] while Stavropoulos was shown a red card for no good reason.[66] The match is widely known in Greece as the "Palotai massacre"[67][68] with Olympiacos coming close to one of the biggest comebacks in European Cup history.

Domination in the early 1980s, UEFA Cup quarter-finalists (1975–1996)

Following Goulandris resignation from the presidency in 1975, the team went through a relative dry spell in the second half of the 1970s. However, in the summer of 1979, the Greek championship turned professional and Stavros Daifas became owner and president of the club.[3] Olympiacos emerged again as the dominant force in Greek football, winning the title four times in a row (1980, 1981, 1982, 1983) with players like the relentless goalscorer Nikos Anastopoulos, Martin Novoselac, Vicente Estavillo, Thomas Ahlström, Roger Albertsen, Maik Galakos, Tasos Mitropoulos, Takis Nikoloudis, Nikos Sarganis, Nikos Vamvakoulas, Giorgos Kokolakis, Vangelis Kousoulakis, Petros Michos, Takis Lemonis, Christos Arvanitis, Petros Xanthopoulos, Stavros Papadopoulos, Meletis Persias, Giorgos Togias and Kostas Orfanos. Kazimierz Górski, the iconic Polish coach, led Olympiacos to the 1980, 1981 and 1983 titles (winning also the Double in 1981, the 9th Double in Olympiacos' history)[3] while Alketas Panagoulias, who had also been manager of the Greece national football team and the United States national team as well, led the team to the 1982 title after a memorable 2–1 win (Estavillo 6', Anastopoulos 69') against arch-rivals Panathinaikos in the crucial Championship final match in Volos.[69] With Panagoulias as head coach, Olympiacos won the 1986–87 title as well, having a solid roster with players from the early 1980s like Anastopoulos, Mitropoulos, Michos, Xanthopoulos and other strong players like Miloš Šestić, Giorgos Vaitsis, Jorge Barrios, Andreas Bonovas, Alexis Alexiou and Vasilis Papachristou.[3]

Olympiacos experienced its darkest days from the late-1980s until the mid-'90s. In the mid-'80s, Olympiacos came into the hands of Greek businessman George Koskotas who was soon accused of and convicted for embezzlement, leaving Olympiacos deep in debt. The club went through a period of administrative turbulence until 1993, when Sokratis Kokkalis became majority shareholder and president of the club. As soon as he took the club's presidency, Kokkalis agreed a settlement to pay off all the club's debts and started reorganising and restructuring the club.[3] On the pitch, the team, with all the financial and managerial problems, as well as the lack of strong administrative leadership until the Kokkalis arrival, spent nine seasons without a league title, from 1988 to 1996, despite the foreign top-class players that played for the club at that period, such as Lajos Détári, Oleh Protasov, Juan Gilberto Funes, Bent Christensen, Hennadiy Lytovchenko, Yuri Savichev, Andrzej Juskowiak, Daniel Batista, Fabián Estay and the backbone of solid Greek players like Vassilis Karapialis, Kiriakos Karataidis, Giotis Tsalouchidis, Nikos Tsiantakis, Giorgos Vaitsis, Minas Hantzidis, Theodoros Pahatouridis, Savvas Kofidis, Chris Kalantzis, Gιorgοs Mitsibonas, Ilias Talikriadis, Alekos Rantos, Panagiotis Sofianopoulos, Ilias Savvidis and Michalis Vlachos.[3] This period is so called as Olympiacos' stone years.[70] Nevertheless, the club brought home the 1990 (beating OFI Crete 4–2 in the final) and 1992 Greek Cups (beating PAOK 2–0 in the second leg of the double final in Piraeus), as well as the 1992 Greek Super Cup, beating AEK 3–1 in the final. In addition, the team, under the guidance of the legendary Ukrainian coach Oleg Blokhin, managed to reach the quarter-finals of the 1992–93 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, eliminating Arsène Wenger's Monaco, after a hard-fought 1–0 away win in Stade Louis II with a late goal by Giorgos Vaitsis and a goalless draw at Karaiskakis Stadium in the second leg. They did not manage to qualify for the semi-finals, however, as they were eliminated by Atlético Madrid (1–1 draw at home, 3–1 loss in Madrid).[3]

The Golden Era (1996–2010)

Seven consecutive Championships, near-miss to UEFA Champions League semi-finals (1996–2003)

 
Predrag Đorđević won a record 12 Greek League titles with Olympiacos and is the club's record foreign goalscorer with 158 goals in 493 official matches[71]

In 1996, Socratis Kokkalis appointed Dušan Bajević as the team's head coach.[3] By that time, Olympiacos had already a very strong roster, with players like Kyriakos Karataidis, Vassilis Karapialis, Grigoris Georgatos, Alexis Alexandris, Giorgos Amanatidis, Nikos Dabizas and Ilija Ivić. Upon Bajević's arrival, Kokkalis opted to strengthen the team significantly in order to create a very strong roster that would dominate Greek football for years to come. He purchased the highly rated prospects Predrag Đorđević and Stelios Giannakopoulos from Paniliakos, outbidding both AEK Athens and Panathinaikos; signed Refik Šabanadžović, Andreas Niniadis, Giorgos Anatolakis and Alekos Kaklamanos; and brought Olympiacos Academy product Dimitris Eleftheropoulos back from his loan spell at Proodeftiki.[3] With all these players up front, Olympiacos strode to the 1996–97 title by 12 clear points over AEK and 20 points over the third Panathinaikos in Bajević's first season in charge; this was the club's first Greek Championship in nine seasons, putting an end to the "stone years" and officially beginning Olympiacos' era of domination.[3] In the next season, 1997–98, Dimitris Mavrogenidis, Siniša Gogić, Ilias Poursanidis and the Ghanaian striker Peter Ofori-Quaye were transferred to the club and Olympiacos won the 1997–98 Championship. Bajević's team, along with AEK and Panathinaikos, were closely separated in the table, but finally Olympiacos made an important away win against Panathinaikos (0–2)[72] and celebrated the second consecutive Championship, with three points difference from Panathinaikos. Olympiacos participated for the first time in the UEFA Champions League group stage and took third place in a tough group, leaving Porto in fourth place, while Real Madrid, the eventual champions, topped the group and qualified for the quarter-finals.

The 1998–99 season was undoubtedly one of the best seasons in Olympiacos history.[3] They won the 1998–99 Greek Championship quite convincingly, with ten points difference from AEK and 11 from third-placed Panathinaikos, and also celebrated the domestic double,[3] bringing home the 1998–99 Greek Cup after a convincing 2–0 win against arch-rivals Panathinaikos in the final (Mavrogenidis 54', Ofori-Quaye 90'), despite the fact that they played for more than 60 minutes in the game with ten players.[73] In European competitions, they entered the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League group stage, being drawn in a group with Ajax, Porto and Croatia Zagreb. They won the group and qualified to the quarter-finals, gathering 11 points with 3 home wins against Ajax (1–0), Porto (2–1) and Croatia Zagreb (2–0) and two away draws in Porto (2–2) and Zagreb (1–1). In the quarter-finals of the competition, they faced Juventus, with the first leg in Turin. Juventus took a 2–0 lead, but Olympiacos scored a crucial away goal in the 90th minute of the game with a penalty by Andreas Niniadis, a goal that caused the 10.000 Olympiacos fans who travelled to Italy[74] to erupt into joyous ecstasy. In the second leg in Athens, Olympiacos totally dominated the match, and scored the goal that put them in the driving seat in the 12th minute of the game, when Siniša Gogić's powerful header found the back of the net after Grigoris Georgatos's superb cross. They also missed an outstanding chance to double the lead, when Giorgos Amanatidis' powerful header from short distance was saved by Michelangelo Rampulla.[75] Olympiacos kept the ticket to the semi-finals in his hands until the 85th minute, when Juventus, who hadn't produced any chances in the game, equalised the score after a crucial mistake by Dimitris Eleftheropoulos, who had been the team's hero in all the previous games.[75] Despite the big disappointment from the way the qualification to the semi-finals was lost, the presence of the team in the Champions League quarter-finals, their best-ever European campaign, combined with the domestic double, marked a very successful season for the club, arguably the best in their long history.[3]

The next four seasons (1999–2000, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03) Olympiacos signed world-class players of great magnitude such as Giovanni, Zlatko Zahovič and the World champion Christian Karembeu, as well as other top-class players including Pär Zetterberg, Zé Elias, Nery Castillo, Christos Patsatzoglou, Lampros Choutos and Stelios Venetidis. These transfers strengthened even more the already strong roster from the previous successful years and under the guidance of coaches like Giannis Matzourakis, Takis Lemonis and Oleg Protasov (Bajević had left the club in 1999). Olympiacos managed to win seven consecutive Greek Championships (19972003), breaking their own past record of six (19541959). Olympiacos won their seventh consecutive title after a breathtaking closing of the 2002–03 Greek League: Olympiacos was hosting arch-rivals Panathinaikos in matchday 29, who led the table with a three-point difference. Olympiacos needed to win the derby by two clear goals in order to overthrow their rivals in the championship race.[76] Olympiacos beat Panathinaikos 3–0 (Giovanni 3', Giannakopoulos 15' 48') in a dominant display in Rizoupoli[76] and celebrated the all-time record of seven straight Championships, which was a dream and a historic objective for the club and especially for the fans.[77]

Five consecutive Championships, Two presences in UEFA Champions League knockout phase (2004–2010)

In 2004, Olympiacos rehired Dušan Bajević and signed the 1999 World Footballer of the Year and 2002 World Champion Brazilian superstar Rivaldo and the 2004 European champion Antonis Nikopolidis. The end of the season found Olympiacos winning the domestic double and having a decent Champions League display, gathering ten points in a tough group alongside Liverpool, Monaco and Deportivo de La Coruña and losing the qualification to the knockout phase in the last four minutes of the last game against the eventual European champions Liverpool at Anfield. Bajević left the club and the Norwegian coach Trond Sollied was hired in his place.[78] They club signed Cypriot striker Michalis Konstantinou from Panathinaikos, 2004 European champion defender Michalis Kapsis from Bordeaux and the versatile box-to-box Ivorian midfielder Yaya Touré. During the 2005–06 season, Olympiacos won all the four derbies against their major rivals, Panathinaikos and AEK Athens, something only achieved once more, during the season 1972–73. The combined goal total in these four matches was 11–3 in favour of Olympiacos. They also beat AEK Athens 3–0 in the Greek Cup Final to clinch their second-straight double and managed to win an all-time record of 16 consecutive matches in the championship, breaking their own past record.[79]

After a record-breaking season, in the 2006 summer transfers, Trond Sollied signed Michał Żewłakow, Júlio César and Tomislav Butina among others. However, he did not live up to expectations in the 2006–07 Champions League and was replaced by Takis Lemonis at the end of 2006. Lemonis transferred the young star Vasilis Torosidis, and led Olympiacos in their third consecutive championship, but failed to win the Greek Cup after a surprise elimination by PAS Giannina.[80]

In the summer of 2007, Olympiacos made very expensive transfers like Luciano Galletti, Darko Kovačević, Raúl Bravo, Lomana LuaLua, Cristian Ledesma and Leonel Núñez. They also brought back the solid Greek defender Paraskevas Antzas and signed the very talented young striker Kostas Mitroglou from Borussia Mönchengladbach. Furthermore, they accomplished the most lucrative sale in Greek football history after selling striker-midfielder Nery Castillo to Ukrainian club Shakhtar Donetsk for the record sum of €20 million ($27.5M).[81] Because of a clause in Castillo's contract, Olympiacos received €15 million, with the remaining €5 million given directly to the player.[82] Furthermore, a controversy started between the team and Rivaldo, as Olympiacos did not wish to renew the player's contract despite the fact that Rivaldo had featured heavily in the club's successful campaigns, both in Greece and abroad. Former player Ilija Ivić was selected for the role of the team's football director. The team did not start well in the Greek championship, but it achieved a stunning performance in the Champions League, qualifying for the last 16 as they finished second in their group, level on 11 points with group winners Real Madrid, eliminating Werder Bremen and Lazio.[83] However, the team's less than satisfactory performance in the league, coupled with the defeat from Chelsea in Stamford Bridge for the knockout phase, prompted club owner Sokratis Kokkalis to sack coach Takis Lemonis. The team's assistant manager, José Segura, coached the team for the remainder of the season. Olympiacos managed to win both the Greek Championship and Cup, but Segura left the club at the end of the season.

In the summer of 2008, Olympiacos made prominent transfers, signing Dudu Cearense, Avraam Papadopoulos, Diogo Luis Santo and Matt Derbyshire and appointed Ernesto Valverde as the new coach with a three-year contract worth approximately €6 million.[84] The 2008–09 season started badly for Olympiacos, with the team losing their first few official matches, against Anorthosis Famagusta for the Champions League third qualifying round, and was eliminated from the tournament, which resulted to a seat in the UEFA Cup first round, where Olympiacos beat Nordsjælland to qualify for the group stage. The team also started well in the 2008–09 Super League Greece, winning every match at home, but facing difficulties away. They ended up winning the Greek Championship and the Greek Cup, celebrating the 14th double in Olympiacos history. After an impressive UEFA Cup run at home, with some spectacular wins against Benfica (5–1) and Hertha BSC (4–0), the team managed to get through to the round of 32, facing French side Saint-Étienne.

In the summer of 2009, Olympiacos signed major players, such as Olof Mellberg from Juventus for €2.5 million,[85] midfielder Jaouad Zairi from Asteras Tripolis and Enzo Maresca from Sevilla. Many other players returned from loan spells, such as former Real Madrid defender Raúl Bravo, Georgios Katsikogiannis and midfielder Cristian Ledesma. Olympiacos appointed former Brazil legend Zico as their coach and started the 2009–10 season with great success, as they qualified for the Champions League final 16, finishing second in Group H only 3 points behind Arsenal,[86] despite the absence of numerous first-team players due to injuries. They faced Bordeaux in the final 16 and lost the first match at home (0–1). In the second match, despite Bordeaux's early lead, Olympiacos leveled the match and missed some great chances to score a second goal, before eventually losing in the dying moments of the match (1–2). Domestically, Olympiacos secured a 2–0 derby win over arch-rivals Panathinaikos, with striker Kostas Mitroglou scoring twice.[87] However, this was only a highlight in an otherwise below-par season for the club, as they not only lost the championship to Panathinaikos, but were also defeated in four out of their six playoff games, eventually finishing last, in the 5th position of the league table;[88] this result marked the team's worst ranking since being placed 8th in 1988, and meant that the club would start their Europa League campaign from the second qualifying round the following season.

New presidency, seven consecutive championships and European ascent (2010–2017)

In 2010, Evangelos Marinakis, a successful shipping magnate, bought the team from Sokratis Kokkalis.[3] During the first year of his presidency, Marinakis appointed fans' favourite Ernesto Valverde as coach (who came back for a second tenure in the club) and signed players with international pedigree, such as Albert Riera, Ariel Ibagaza, Kevin Mirallas, Marko Pantelić and François Modesto.[3] As a result, Olympiacos won the Greek title for the 38th time in its history, 13 points ahead of second-placed Panathinaikos.

In the 2011–12 season, the team's roster was strengthened with players like Jean Makoun, Pablo Orbaiz, Iván Marcano, Rafik Djebbour and Djamel Abdoun and with Ernesto Valverde as their coach for the second straight season, Olympiacos had a very successful campaign both domestically and internationally. They won both the Greek league and the Greek Cup to complete the 15th domestic double in the club's history.[3] In European competitions, Olympiacos had a solid Champions League campaign, having been drawn in Group F against Arsenal, Borussia Dortmund and Marseille. Despite delivering nine points in the group, with two emphatic wins against Arsenal and Dortmund at home (both with a 3–1 scoreline) and an away win against Marseille (0–1), they lost the qualification to the knock-out stage after Marseille's controversial 2–3 away win in Dortmund in game 6, with Marseille scoring two goals in the last five minutes of the match to come back from an early 2–0 Dortmund lead.[3] Olympiacos continued in Europa League where he was drawn to play against Rubin Kazan. The Greek champions eliminated the Russian side with two wins (1–0 in both Kazan and Piraeus) and were up to play against Metalist Kharkiv in the Last 16 of the competition.[3] They won the first match in Ukraine with David Fuster scoring the winning goal (0–1) but in the second match, despite their early lead and the plethora of missed chances (they hit the woodwork twice in the first half), they conceded two goals in the last nine minutes of the game and lost the qualification to the quarter-finals.

At the end of the season, Ernesto Valverde announced his decision to return to Spain, thus ending his second successful spell at Olympiacos. The club announced the Portuguese Leonardo Jardim as their new head coach.[3] The team performed very well in the Greek league and had a decent Champions league campaign, gathering nine points in Group B, after wins against Arsenal (2–1 at home) and Montpellier (1–2 in Montpellier, 3–1 in Piraeus). Despite the relatively good results, Leonardo Jardim was replaced by the Spanish coach and Real Madrid legend Míchel. The team went on to celebrate the 16th double in their history by winning their 40th Greek Championship, 15 points ahead the second PAOK, as well as their 26th Greek Cup after a 3–1 win against Asteras Tripolis in the final. The 40th Greek championship title gave Olympiacos the fourth star on top of the club's emblem, which was a major goal for the club and especially for the fans.[3]

The expectations for the 2013–14 season were very high, especially after the signing of players such as striker Javier Saviola, Joel Campbell, Roberto, Alejandro Domínguez, Vladimír Weiss, Delvin N'Dinga and Leandro Salino. Olympiacos had a great season both domestically and internationally.[3] In Europe, they were drawn in Group C of the 2013–14 Champions League alongside Paris Saint-Germain, Benfica and Anderlecht. After a strong performance in the group, Olympiacos finished second with ten points and qualified for the Last 16 at the expense of Benfica (1–0 win in Piraeus, 1–1 draw in Lisbon) and Anderlecht (0–3 win in Brussels, 3–1 win in Piraeus). In the round of 16, they were drawn to play against Manchester United. Olympiacos, after a solid display, won the first leg with a comfortable 2–0 (Alejandro Domínguez 38', Campbell 55'), in a match where they dominated totally and missed chances to even extend the lead.[3] Despite the two-goal advantage which put them within touching distance of a quarter-final place for the first time since 1999, Olympiacos lost 3–0 in the second leg in Old Trafford, having missed an outstanding double chance to equalize the score in the 40th minute. The Greek champions pushed on in the last ten minutes to find the crucial away goal, but to no avail. Although the ticket to the quarter-finals slipped out of the club's hands, Olympiacos' overall performance and the fact that the club managed to qualify to the knockout phase (round of 16) of the Champions League for the third time in six years (2007–08, 2009–10, 2013–14), marked a very successful European campaign. Domestically, Olympiacos won their history's 41st Greek Championship very convincingly, 17 points ahead of second-placed PAOK.[3]

In the 2014–15 season, Olympiacos entered the 2014–15 Champions League group stage with hopes to repeat the previous year's performance; they were drawn alongside Atlético Madrid, Juventus and Malmö FF.[3] They had a solid performance in the group, managing to beat last year's runners-up Atlético 3–2 and eventual finalists Juventus 1–0 at the Karaiskakis Stadium, but they lost the qualification for the knockout stage in the last game: Olympiacos beat Malmö FF 4–2 at home but at the same time Juventus were drawing against Atlético in Italy, securing the crucial one point they needed to qualify. Had Olympiacos and Juventus finished with the same points, Olympiacos would have qualified due to best aggregate score (away goals) of their two games (1–0 Olympiacos win in Piraeus, 3–2 Juventus win in Turin).[3] The third place in the group gave Olympiacos the ticket for the next round of UEFA Europa League, where they were eliminated by the eventual runners-up Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. Domestically, the team had a very successful season, winning the 17th double in their history. They won their 42nd Greek Championship with 12 points difference from the second Panathinaikos and their 27th Greek Cup, beating Skoda Xanthi 3–1 in the final.[89]

The 2015–16 season started with a new manager replacement, as Marco Silva took over the management over his fellow countryman Vitor Pereira,[90] while the squad was strengthened with the world-class presence of Esteban Cambiasso and a number of other players with European competition experience, including Kostas Fortounis, Felipe Pardo, Sebá, Manuel Da Costa, Brown Ideye and Alfreð Finnbogason.[91] In a tough Champions League group that included Bayern München, Arsenal and Dinamo Zagreb, Olympiacos managed to record 9 points through a 3–2 away win over the Gunners at the Emirates Stadium, considered by many as one of the club's most important European victories, as well as two more wins against Dinamo (1–0 away and 2–1 at home). Last matchday saw the team face Arsenal at the Karaiskakis stadium, needing a 1–0 or 2–1 defeat to the Gunners, as the worst-case scenario, to advance to the knockout phase of the competition based on the away goals rule; the Red-Whites eventually lost 3–0 and continued their European journey in the UEFA Europa League, where they were eliminated by Anderlecht in the first knockout stage.[90] Despite the above, Olympiacos broke the record for most European competition victories recorded by a Greek club, with 97 over the 96 of second-placed Panathinaikos as of the summer of 2016.[92] Domestically, Olympiacos had perhaps their most successful season in years, as the team managed to secure their 43rd Greek Championship, and 6th consecutive, on the last day of February 2016, considered a national record for the earliest time, within a league campaign, when a title is clinched.[90] The team managed to finish their league campaign with a 30-point difference over their arch rivals Panathinaikos, who came in second. The team's 85 points over the course of 30 matchdays, including a 28–1–1 overall result breakdown with 13 away wins and a perfect 15 victories out of 15 home games, are also considered a national record.[92] However, despite the club's expectations of doing the double, they did not manage to win the Greek Cup as they finished runners-up to rivals AEK after a 2–1 loss in the final.

The 2016–17 season proved to be rather tumultuous for the club, despite the signing of such key players as Óscar Cardozo, Tarik Elyounoussi, Alaixys Romao, Aly Cissokho and Marko Marin.[93] The main issues that arose were the team's shock elimination from Israeli outfit Hapoel Be'er-Sheva, after a 1–0 aggregate defeat, in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, and the highly frequent change of managers, leading the club to having been coached by five individuals over the same season: Marco Silva, Victor Sánchez (responsible for the elimination from Hapoel), Paulo Bento, Vasilis Vouzas and Takis Lemonis. The team's UEFA Europa League journey was not as successful as other European campaigns, starting with a difficult 3–1 aggregate victory (1–1 before extra time) over Arouca in the playoffs, continuing with the team's qualification from the group stage but only as second-placed to APOEL (in a group that also included Young Boys and Astana), and ending with a heavy 5–2 aggregate defeat to Besiktas in the last 16 of the knockout stage (with goalkeeper Nicola Leali being highly responsible for 4 out of the 5 goals conceded[94]), despite having advanced from the last 32 thanks to a 3–0 aggregate win over Osmanlispor. The frequent manager change negatively affected the team's stability and rhythm in domestic competitions as well. Firstly, Olympiacos failed to qualify for the Greek Cup final after being ousted by AEK, who advanced on the away goals rule after a 2–2 aggregate draw. Secondly, despite the fact that the Reds clinched their 44th Greek Championship, and 7th consecutive for the second time in Greek football history, they only managed to do so with a six-point difference (67 to 61) over PAOK.

2017–present

At the start of the 2017–18 season, the board decided to hire former Anderlecht manager Besnik Hasi to guide Olympiacos back to the UEFA Champions League group stage after a year's absence. Upon his arrival, Hasi strengthened the squad with players as Vadis Odjidja-Ofoe, Guillaume Gillet, Mehdi Carcela, Jagoš Vuković, Björn Engels, Uroš Đurđević, Emmanuel Emenike and Panagiotis Tachtsidis.

Aggregate victories over Partizan (5–3) and Rijeka (3–1) in the two final qualifying rounds ensured the Red-Whites' presence in Group D of the competition, considered perhaps the toughest in Olympiacos' European history due to Barcelona, Juventus and Sporting CP being the opponents.[95] A disheartening 2–3 defeat in the hands of Sporting at Thrylos' European season opener,[96] combined with a 3–2 loss to AEK despite being 0–2 up, led to Hasi's dismissal from the club and his replacement by Takis Lemonis.[97] The latter decided to focus on getting the squad back on track in domestic competitions, at a time when Olympiacos eventually got eliminated from Europe ahead of the Christmas break for the first time in 12 years.[98] Following a home goalless draw against Barcelona and five defeats, the Red-Whites only managed to acquire one point during their entire Champions League group stage campaign, something considered a setback for the club after their 7 previous UEFA Champions League campaigns (2007–08, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16), in which they gathered at least 9 points in all of the groups (11 points in 2007–08, 10 points in 2009–10, 9 points in 2011–12, 9 points in 2012–13, 10 points in 2013–14, 9 points in 2014–15 and 9 points in 2015–16), with three qualifications to the knockout stage (Last 16) of the competition. Despite their one-point group stage exit, the worst European records by a Greek team in the history of European competitions both belong to AEK Athens: AEK's zero (0) point campaign in Group E of the 2018–19 UEFA Champions League and AEK's zero (0) point campaign as well in the Group H of the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, a lower-tier UEFA competition. Panathinaikos has also a one-point campaign in Group G of the 2016–17 UEFA Europa League.[99] Despite being in the Super League lead halfway through the season, Lemonis was dismissed on grounds of dressing room instability, and Óscar García was subsequently appointed with a vision of increasing attacking efficiency and discipline.[100] Domestically, Olympiacos' Greek Cup run ended in the quarter-finals, marking their third consecutive year that they failed to lift the Cup. In the Super League the Red-Whites conceded the title to AEK three matchdays before completion, thus ending a run of seven consecutive championship wins and leading to the dismissal of García after two months at the club's helm, with Christos Kontis finishing the season as caretaker manager. Portuguese Pedro Martins was appointed head coach in order to lead Olympiacos at the following 2018–19 season.[101]

After four seasons and winning 3 League titles with the club, Martins got fired from Olympiacos, in August 2022, and Spanish prodigy Carlos Corberán was appointed as the new head coach.[102]

Crest and colours

When, in 1925, the merger of the two clubs of Piraeus, Athlitikos Podosfairikos Syllogos Pireos and Omilos Filathlon Pireos, gave birth to the new football club, the latter was unanimously baptized Olympiacos Club of Fans of Piraeus, a name inspired from the Ancient Olympic Games, the morality, the vying, the splendor, the sportsmanship and the fair play ideal that were represented in Ancient Greece. Consequently, after Notis Kamperos's proposal, the club adopted the laurel-crowned adolescent as their emblem, which symbolizes the Olympic Games winner, a crest that underwent minor changes through the ages. Red and white were chosen as the colours of the crest; red for the passion and victory and white for the virtue and purity.[103][104]

The typical kit of the team is that of a shirt with red and white vertical stripes, and red or white shorts and socks. The shirt has taken different forms during the history of the club, for example with thin or wider stripes. The second most common kit is the all-red one and next the all-white one. Olympiacos has used several other colours during its history as an away or third kit, with the most notable of them being the monotint black or silver one. The most common kits of Olympiacos during their history are these below (the year of each one is indicant):

Kit evolution

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

 
 
 
 
 
Olympiacos historical shirts

Since 1979, when football became professional in Greece, Olympiacos had a specific kit manufacturer and since 1982 a specific shirt sponsor as well. The following table shows in detail Olympiacos kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors by year:

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1979 Umbro
1980 Puma
1980–1982 ASICS Tiger
1982 Adidas[105]
1982–1984 ASICS Tiger Fiat
1984–1985 Travel Plan
1985–1988 Puma Citizen
1988 Toyota
1989 Bank of Crete
1989–1990
1990–1992 Diana
1992–1993 Umbro
1993–1994 Lotto
1994–1995 Adidas Ethnokarta MasterCard
1995–1997 Puma
1997–2000 Aspis Bank
2000–2005 Umbro Siemens Mobile
2005–2006 Puma Siemens
2006–2009 Vodafone
2009–2010 Citibank
2010–2013 Pame Stoixima
2013–2015 UNICEF[106]
2015– Adidas Stoiximan.gr[107]

Stadium

 
The Karaiskakis Stadium during a 2009–10 UEFA Champions League fixture against Arsenal

The Karaiskakis Stadium, situated at Neo Faliro in Piraeus, is the current (since 2004) and traditional home of Olympiacos. With a capacity of 32,115,[1][2] it is the largest football-only stadium and the second largest football stadium overall in Greece. It was built in 1895 as Neo Phaliron Velodrome, to host the cycling events for the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens, and the pitch was covered with curm. Olympiacos started using it since its foundation in 1925. In 1964, the stadium was renovated and was given its current name after Georgios Karaiskakis, a military commander of the Greek War of Independence, with an athletics track around the pitch.[108]

Olympiacos left the Karaiskakis Stadium temporarily to play home matches at the newly built Athens Olympic Stadium in 1984. After a five-year use (1984–1989) of the biggest stadium in Greece, the team returned to their traditional home, where they played until 1997. It was then that Olympiacos got back to the Athens Olympic Stadium, where they stayed for another period of five years (1997–2002). In 2002, the Olympic Stadium was closed for renovation works due to the 2004 Summer Olympics and Olympiacos moved to the Georgios Kamaras Stadium in Rizoupoli, home of Apollon Smyrnis, for the following two seasons (2002–2004).

Meanwhile, the Karaiskakis Stadium had fallen in disrepair and was not anymore suitable for football matches. In 2003, its use passed to Olympiacos in order to build a football-only ground, to be used for the football tournament of the 2004 Olympics. In return, Olympiacos got exclusive use of the stadium until 2052, covering all maintenance costs and also paying 15% of revenue to the Greek State. The old stadium was demolished in the spring of 2003 and the new one was completed on 30 June 2004 at a total cost of €60 million.[109] Nowadays, the Karaiskakis Stadium is one of the most modern football grounds in Europe, also hosting the museum of Olympiacos,[110] with several facilities around.

Support

 
Olympiacos fans provide their support with extreme passion at home, as well as away matches. Here, at the Karaiskakis Stadium against Chelsea for the knockout stage of the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League.
 
Mural at the Stadion Crvena Zvezda, Belgrade, featuring the brotherhood between the fans of Olympiacos and Red Star Belgrade.

Olympiacos' traditional fanbase comes from the city of Piraeus, where the club is based, as well as a good part of the rest of the Athens area. The club's popularity increased during the 1950s after winning consecutive titles and setting several records, and they became the best-supported football club in the country. Traditionally, Olympiacos used to represent the working class, but the club has always attracted fans from all the social classes and their fanbase is not associated with any specific social group anymore.[111][112]

Olympiacos is the most popular Greek club according to UEFA[15] and numerous polls and researches.[113] Several newspapers and magazines' polls rank Olympiacos as the most popular club in Greece with a percentage varying between 30 and 40% among the fans and more or less 30% in total population, which corresponds to around three and a half millions of supporters in Greece.[16][114] The club is overwhelmingly popular in Piraeus, where almost half of its population supports Olympiacos,[115] while their support in the whole of Athens reaches 30% of the fans, making them the 3rd most popular club in the Greek capital. They are also the most popular club in the working class with a percentage of 37% and in all age groups,[115] as well as among both male and female fans;[116] the vast majority of their fans comes from the centre-left and centre-right of the political spectrum.[115] Outside of Athens, Olympiacos is the most popular club in Central Greece, the Peloponnese, Thessaly Additionally, they have the highest average all-time attendance in Greek football, having topped the attendance tables in most of the seasons in Super League Greece history.[117]

Friendships

In 2006, Olympiacos was placed in the top ten of the clubs with the most paying members in the world, holding ninth place, just ahead of Real Madrid.[118] As of April 2006, the club had some 83,000 registered members.[119] Olympiacos and Red Star Belgrade fans have developed a deep friendship, calling themselves the "Orthodox Brothers".[120] Usually, Olympiacos supporters from several fan-clubs attend Red Star's matches, especially against their old rival Partizan, and vice versa. More recently, the Orthodox Brothers have started to include fans of Spartak Moscow in their club.

Olympiacos fans are renowned for their passionate and fervent support to the team, with the atmosphere at home matches regarded as intimidating. When they played Newcastle United at home in the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, the match was televised in the United Kingdom on Channel 5 and the guest commentator was former England international Tony Cottee, who was constantly mentioning how great the atmosphere was. During the game he was asked whether it was the most atmospheric stadium he had been to and replied: "I'd have to say it probably is. You hear a lot about various places and the atmosphere there but when you go you realise it's not all that... But this place is the real deal."[121] The experienced Czech international winger Jaroslav Plašil paid further testament to the hostile atmosphere created by Olympiacos fans at home before his team Bordeaux visit the Karaiskakis Stadium, where he had played during his time with Monaco and stated, "It was one of the most intense atmospheres I've ever experienced in a stadium, so I expect it will be a bit like hell for us. Their supporters really can help their team."[122] Former Paris Saint-Germain superstar striker Zlatan Ibrahimović spoke of his admiration for Olympiacos supporters after an Olympiacos–Paris Saint-Germain match on 17 September 2013: "They played in front of their fantastic public. Olympiacos supporters were amazing. My friend Olof Mellberg played here and he talked to me about the supporters. I never saw it live, but now I understand. It's amazing. It's a big advantage for Olympiacos."[123][124] PSG billionaire owner Nasser Al-Khelaifi stated, "I have big respect for the fans here. I've never seen fans like Olympiacos' fans in my life."[125] PSG and Brazil international winger Lucas Moura in an interview with goal.com stated that Olympiacos home ground was the most intense and heated stadium he's ever played in.[126][127][128]

The Gate 7 tragedy

The history of the Karaiskakis Stadium and Olympiacos was marked by the worst tragedy that ever hit Greek sports, known as the Karaiskakis Stadium disaster. On 8 February 1981, Olympiacos hosted AEK Athens for a league match, which ended 6–0, in an unprecedented triumph for the host team of Piraeus. During the last minutes of the game, thousands of Olympiacos fans at the Gate 7 rushed to the exit, to get to the stadium's main entrance and celebrate with the players, but the doors were almost closed and the turnstiles still in place, making the exit almost impossible.[129] As people continued to come down from the stands, unable to see what happened, the stairs of Gate 7 became a death trap; people were crushed, tens of fans were seriously injured and twenty-one young people died, most of them by suffocation.[130]

In memory of this event, every year on 8 February, there is a memorial service at the stadium in honour of the supporters that died in that incident. The service is attended by thousands of fans every year, who are rhythmically shouting the phrase, "Αδέρφια, ζείτε, εσείς μας οδηγείτε." (Adhélfia, zíte, esís mas odhiyíte, "Brothers, you live, you are the ones who guide us."). At the tribune part of the stadium where Gate 7 is now, some seats are colored black instead of red, shaping the number "7", whereas there is also a monument on the eastern side of the stadium, bearing the names of all 21 supporters killed on that day in the stadium.[131]

Even though this incident affected almost solely the fanbase of Olympiacos, other teams occasionally pay their respects to the people killed as well, as they consider the incident to be a tragedy not only for one team, but for the whole country. In the past, even foreign teams, such as Liverpool and Red Star Belgrade, have honoured the incident's victims.[132]

Rivalries

 
Olympiacos fans in Karaiskakis Stadium during a 3–2 derby win against rivals Panathinaikos.

Traditionally, Olympiacos' main rival is Panathinaikos and their so-called "derby of the eternal enemies" is a classic local derby in Attica, the most famous fixture in Greek football and one of the most well known around the world.[111] The two clubs are the most successful, having won together a total of 67 League titles (Olympiacos 47, Panathinaikos 20), and the most popular football clubs in Greece. The rivalry also encompasses social, cultural and regional differences; Olympiacos, coming from the famous port of Piraeus, used to be very popular in the working to middle classes, while Panathinaikos, of downtown Athens, was considered the representative of middle to higher social classes, although this differentiation has weakened nowadays and the two clubs have similar fanbases.[112] Most recent notorious incidents include a fan's death in 2007, during a pre-arranged clash between hooligans on the occasion of a women's volleyball game between the two clubs, which caused major upset in Greece,[133] and the abandonment of a derby in 2012 after riots at the Athens Olympic Stadium, which resulted in major fires in parts of it.[citation needed]

Olympiacos also shares a traditional rivalry with AEK Athens, in one more local derby of the Greek capital with the other member of the so-called Big three,[134] but also with PAOK, in the fiercest inter-city rivalry in Greece between the most popular clubs of the two largest Greek cities, Athens and Thessaloniki, a rivalry that erupted in the 1960s for the sake of footballer Giorgos Koudas.[135] A popular rivalry used to be the Piraeus derby, between Olympiacos and Ethnikos Piraeus, the second most successful football club in the region, but the fixture has faded-out due to Ethnikos' constant presence in lower divisions in the last decades. It remains a derby in water polo where Olympiacos and Ethnikos compete in the top division.

European performance

 
Olympiacos players arrayed in Stamford Bridge, in the second match for the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League first knockout round against Chelsea.

Olympiacos has a long presence in the UEFA competitions, debuting on 13 September 1959,[136] against Milan for the 1959–60 European Cup, the first ever Greek club to compete in a European competition. Olympiacos was also the first Greek club to advance to the next round of any European competition, eliminating Zagłębie Sosnowiec for the 1963–64 European Cup Winners' Cup. Their best European campaigns are their presence in the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League quarter-finals, where they lost a semi-final spot in the last minutes by Juventus, and in the 1992–93 European Cup Winners' Cup quarter-finals, losing to Atlético Madrid.[137][138][139]

Olympiacos is by far the highest ranked Greek club in the UEFA rankings, occupying the 5th place in Europe in the five-year ranking and the 6th in the ten-year ranking as of 2019.[11][12] They are also the Greek team with the most wins in all European competitions, leading also the table with the most home and away wins,[140][141] and the Greek team with the most games played in European level, celebrating their 200th match on 23 February 2010, against Bordeaux in the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League first knockout round. Olympiacos also holds the all-time record attendance for a Greek club of 75,263 in a 1982–83 European Cup match against Hamburg at the Athens Olympic Stadium.[142]

Olympiacos has eliminated (in either knockout matches or group stages) clubs like Milan, Arsenal, Ajax, Benfica, Porto, Borussia Dortmund, Lazio, Celtic, Werder Bremen, Anderlecht, Monaco, Deportivo La Coruña, Hertha BSC, Cagliari, PSV Eindhoven, GNK Dinamo Zagreb and Standard Liège among others. They have spent most of their European history in the UEFA Champions League, where they are widely known for being a strong home side, having run some long-standing sequences, such as the 15 straight UEFA Champions League unbeaten home matches since their debut in the tournament under its new format, when Manchester United stopped their record in their fifth consecutive participation, and their 15 wins in 19 UEFA Champions League home matches between 2009–10 and 2014–15. They have a vast record of home wins over traditional European powerhouses and UEFA Champions League winners like Real Madrid, Milan, Liverpool, Manchester United, Ajax, Juventus, Arsenal, Borussia Dortmund, Benfica, Porto, Celtic, Olympique Lyonnais, Olympique Marseille, Atlético Madrid, Valencia, Sevilla, Leverkusen, Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe, Red Star Belgrade, PSV Eindhoven among many others. Olympiacos has also won the Balkans Cup in 1963, at a time when the competition was considered the second most important in the region after the European Cup,[14] becoming the first ever Greek club to win an international competition.

From 2007 to 2016 Olympiacos participated seven times in the UEFA Champions League Group Stage, and gathered at least 9 points in every one of those seven groups, qualifying three times for the knockout stage (Last 16) of the competition (2007–08, 2009–10, 2013–14).

UEFA competition record

European
Team
Competition Season Pld W D L GF/GA
Olympiacos European Cup / UEFA Champions League 35 186 66 36 84 222–283
Olympiacos UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 9 33 14 6 13 43–47
Olympiacos UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League 26 118 48 23 47 167–155
Results Total 67 337 128 65 144 432–486

Best campaigns

Season Achievement Notes
European Cup / UEFA Champions League
1974–75 Last 16 eliminated by Anderlecht 1–5 in Brussels, 3–0 in Patras
1982–83 Last 16 eliminated by Hamburg 0–1 in Hamburg, 0–4 in Athens
1983–84 Last 16 eliminated by Benfica 1–0 in Athens, 0–3 in Lisbon
1998–99 Quarter-finals eliminated by Juventus 1–2 in Turin, 1–1 in Athens
2007–08 Last 16 eliminated by Chelsea 0–0 in Piraeus, 0–3 in London
2009–10 Last 16 eliminated by Bordeaux 0–1 in Piraeus, 1–2 in Bordeaux
2013–14 Last 16 eliminated by Manchester United 2–0 in Piraeus, 0–3 in Manchester
European Cup Winners' Cup
1961-62 Last 16 eliminated by Dynamo Žilina 2–3 in Piraeus, 0–1 in Žilina
1963–64 Last 16 eliminated by Lyon 1–4 in Lyon, 2–1 in Piraeus
1965–66 Last 16 eliminated by West Ham United 0–4 in London, 2–2 in Piraeus
1968–69 Last 16 eliminated by Dunfermline Athletic 0–4 in Dunfermline, 3–0 in Piraeus
1986–87 Last 16 eliminated by Ajax 0–4 in Amsterdam, 1–1 in Athens
1990–91 Last 16 eliminated by Sampdoria 0–1 in Piraeus, 1–3 in Genoa
1992–93 Quarter-finals eliminated by Atlético Madrid 1–1 in Athens, 1–3 in Madrid
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League
1989–90 Last 16 eliminated by Auxerre 1–1 in Piraeus, 0–0 in Auxerre
2004–05 Last 16 eliminated by Newcastle United 1–3 in Piraeus, 0–4 in Newcastle
2011–12 Last 16 eliminated by Metalist Kharkiv 1–0 in Kharkiv, 1–2 in Piraeus
2016–17 Last 16 eliminated by Beşiktaş 1–1 in Piraeus, 1–4 in Istanbul
2019–20 Last 16 eliminated by Wolverhampton Wanderers 1–1 in Piraeus, 0–1 in Wolverhampton
2020–21 Last 16 eliminated by Arsenal 1–3 in Piraeus, 1–0 in London

UEFA ranking

5-year club ranking at the end of season 2018–19.[143]

Rank Club Points gained in season Total
2014–15 2015–16 2016–17 2017–18 2018–19
33
  Anderlecht 10.000 11.000 16.000 6.000 3.000 46.000
33
  Athletic Bilbao 10.000 17.000 9.000 10.000 46.000
35
  Olympiacos 11.000 10.000 10.000 5.000 8.000 44.000
36
  Wolfsburg 16.000 24.000 40.000
37
  Club Brugge 19.000 4.000 4.000 1.500 11.000 39.500

10-year club ranking at the end of season 2018–19.[144]

Rank Club Points gained in season Total
2009–10 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17 2017–18 2018–19 Bonus
29
  Roma 9.000 16.000 1.500 12.000 14.000 13.000 25.000 17.000 107.500
29
  CSKA Moscow 20.000 14.000 16.000 1.500 6.000 8.000 7.000 7.000 17.000 9.000 2.000 107.500
31
  Olympiacos 16.000 1.000 16.000 10.000 18.000 11.000 10.000 10.000 5.000 8.000 105.000
32
  Villarreal 7.000 23.000 4.000 12.000 23.000 9.000 8.000 16.000 102.000
33
  PSV Eindhoven 12.000 18.000 16.000 5.000 5.000 6.000 18.000 6.000 1.000 6.000 5.000 98.000

Honours

Domestic competitions

Olympiacos in European competitions

Regional

  • Piraeus FCA Championship
    • Winners (25) (record): 1925, 1926, 1927, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1934, 1935, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959

Doubles

  • Winners (18) (record): 1946–47, 1950–51, 1953–54, 1956–57, 1957–58, 1958–59, 1972–73, 1974–75, 1980–81, 1998–99, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2014–15, 2019–20

Players

Current squad

As of 30 April 2023[146]

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

Reserves and Academy

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

Other players under contract

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

No. Pos. Nation Player

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
DF   GRE Fotis Kitsos (at Omonia until 31 May 2023)
DF   ISR Doron Leidner (at Austria Wien until 30 June 2023)
MF   POR Pêpê (at Cartagena until 30 June 2023)
MF   POR João Carvalho (at Estoril until 30 June 2023)
MF   FRA Abdoulaye Dabo (at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023)
MF   GUI Mamadou Kané (at Pafos until 30 June 2023)
MF   GUI Mady Camara (at Roma until 30 June 2023)
MF   ARG Maximiliano Lovera (at Ionikos until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   NGA Henry Onyekuru (at Adana Demirspor until 30 June 2023)
MF   CMR Pierre Kunde (at VfL Bochum until 30 June 2023)
MF   DEN Philip Zinckernagel (at Standard Liège until 30 June 2023)
MF   FRA Bandiougou Fadiga (at Ionikos until 30 June 2023)
MF   GUI Aguibou Camara (at Atromitos until 30 June 2023)
MF   GRE Andreas Bouchalakis (at Konyaspor until 30 June 2023)
FW   EGY Ahmed Hassan (on loan from Alanyaspor until 30 June 2023)
FW   MTN Aboubakar Kamara (at Aris until 30 June 2023)

Former players

Personnel

Coaching staff

Position Staff[147][148]
Manager   José Anigo
Assistant managers -
-
Analysts   Giannis Vogiatzakis
  Iosif Loukas
Fitness coach   Christos Mourikis
Goalkeepers' trainer   Panagiotis Agriogiannis
Rehabilitation trainer   Kike Sanz

Technical staff

Position Staff[149]
Team manager   Avraam Papadopoulos
Kit takers   Pavlos Pitsilidis
  Dimos Meris
Football department liaison office   Spyros Bitsakis
Interpreter   Marina Tsali

Scouting staff

Position Staff[150]
Chief scout   José Anigo
Scout   Simos Havos
Scout   Giannis Theodorou

Medical staff

Position Staff[151]
Club doctor   Christos Theos
Head of physiotherapy   Dimitris Skordis
Physiotherapists   Nikos Lykouresis
  Panagiotis Sivilias
  Sifis Klidis
Masseur   Aristidis Chelioudakis

Management

Position Staff[152][153][154]
President   Evangelos Marinakis
Vice presidents   Giannis Moralis
  Michalis Kountouris
  Christos Mistriotis[155]
  Konstantinos Karapapas
Vice president and managing director   Dimitris Agrafiotis
Members   Ioannis Vrentzos
  Konstantinos Barbis
  Andreas Nasikas
  Giorgos Pavlou
Sport director   Christian Karembeu
Technical director   José Anigo

Former presidents

Years Name
1925–1950   Michalis Manouskos
1950–1954   Thanasis Mermigas
1954–1967   Giorgos Andrianopoulos
1967–1975   Nikos Goulandris
1975–1978   Kostas Thanopoulos
1978–1987   Stavros Daifas
1987–1988   Giorgos Koskotas
1988–1992   Argyris Saliarelis
1992–1993   Stavros Daifas
1993–2010   Sokratis Kokkalis
2010–2017   Evangelos Marinakis
2017–2021   Giannis Moralis
2021–present   Evangelos Marinakis

Statistics

Greek Championship records

Outline Record
Champions in a row 7 (19972003, 20112017)
Undefeated Champions 6 (1936–37, 1937–38, 1947–48, 1950–51, 1953–54, 1954–55)
Series of five or more consecutive Championships 5 (World Record[8]) (19331938, 19541959, 19972003, 20052009, 20112017)
Record win 11–0 (vs Fostiras, 1973–74)
Most wins in a season 30 (1999–00)
Most goals scored in a season 102 (1973–74)
Fewest goals conceded in a season 13 (1972–73)
Longest sequence of wins 17 (1st day of 2015–16 – 17th day of 2015–16)
Longest sequence of unbeaten matches 58 (3rd day of 1972–73 – 27th day of 1973–74)

Top scorers

The table refers to Olympiakos' top scorers in all official competitions.

The next table refers to the top scorers of Olympiakos only in the Greek championship

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Επίσημα στοιχεία ΟΛΥΜΠΙΑΚΟΣ Σ.Φ.Π. (Ο.Σ.Φ.Π) 2018-19 (in Greek). superleaguegreece.net. from the original on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Seating Plan" (in Greek). olympiacos.org. from the original on 2 October 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak "Olympiacos FC History". olympiacos.org. from the original on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
  4. ^ . olympiacos.org. Archived from the original on 23 August 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  5. ^ . fifa.com. 7 October 2011. Archived from the original on 11 January 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  6. ^ "Trophies". olympiacos.org. from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  7. ^ Οι ομάδες με τους περισσότερους τίτλους στον κόσμο, 9ος ο Ολυμπιακός (in Greek). sport24.gr. 10 May 2018. from the original on 30 September 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  8. ^ a b Μπλάτερ για Ολυμπιακό: Τι σταυραετος! (in Greek). sport24.gr. 28 April 2015. from the original on 29 April 2015. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  9. ^ "Unbeaten". RSSSF. from the original on 16 December 2015. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  10. ^ "This is the new legendary shirt!". olympiacos.org. 7 August 2013. from the original on 11 August 2013. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  11. ^ a b "Club coefficients". UEFA. from the original on 11 July 2018. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Club coefficients". UEFA. from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  13. ^ "New era in European game". UEFA. 22 January 2008. from the original on 29 December 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  14. ^ a b "Balkan Cup". RSSSF. from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  15. ^ a b "Concentration of people supporting the most popular club" (PDF). Club licensing benchmarking report - Financial year 2012. UEFA. 17 April 2014. (PDF) from the original on 13 September 2017. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  16. ^ a b Περισσότερους οπαδούς ο Ολυμπιακός (in Greek). sport24.gr. 30 June 2009. from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  17. ^ (in Greek). Archived from the original on 27 July 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  18. ^ (in Greek). Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2014. Στην Aθήνα το 45,1% των φιλάθλων είναι «ερυθρόλευκοι» (35,3% οι «πράσινοι», 16% οι Eνωσίτες) - In Athens 45.1% of fans support Olympiacos...
  19. ^ (in Greek). goalday.gr. 31 May 2006. Archived from the original on 10 May 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
  20. ^ ""Red and White" Olympiakos Moments in New York". greekreporter.com. 4 June 2011. from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  21. ^ (in Greek). redplanet.gr. 1 August 2013. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  22. ^ "History". olympiacos.org. Olympiacos F.C. from the original on 8 October 2014. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  23. ^ "10. Olympiakos v Panathinaikos". goal.com. 20 September 2013. from the original on 12 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  24. ^ "The 25 biggest club rivalries in world football - where does Real Madrid vs Atletico rank?". telegraph.co.uk. 26 May 2016. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  25. ^ "Biggest football derbies - Combined domestic trophy haul". thestatszone.com. from the original on 21 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  26. ^ "Rivals: Olympiakos vs Panathinaikos | Derby of the Eternal Enemies". outsideoftheboot.com. 27 April 2017. from the original on 30 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  27. ^ "Flares, fighting and fear: Why Olympiakos vs Panathinaikos is Europe's maddest derby". fourfourtwo.com. 5 March 2014. from the original on 12 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  28. ^ "Football First 11: Do or die derbies". cnn.com. 22 October 2008. from the original on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  29. ^ Neil Johnston (22 October 2014). "Olympiakos-Panathinaikos: Europe's maddest derby?". bbc.com. from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  30. ^ Η Ιστορία του Ολυμπιακού (in Greek). olympiacos.org. from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  31. ^ "Peiraias Regional Championship". from the original on 8 July 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2009.
  32. ^ . sdna.gr. Archived from the original on 22 July 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  33. ^ "Panathinaikos–Olympiacos 1–6" (in Greek). from the original on 8 June 2020. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
  34. ^ (in Greek). Archived from the original on 3 August 2017. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  35. ^ (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 16 December 2014. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 August 2014. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  37. ^ Εκτελέστε με, με τη φανέλα του Ολυμπιακού Βίντεο με τη συγκλονιστική ιστορία του Νίκου Γόδα (in Greek). onalert.gr. 19 November 2012. from the original on 26 October 2014. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  38. ^ . FIFA. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  39. ^ "Olympiakos (Greece)". Soccer Anthems. from the original on 18 January 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  40. ^ "Olympiacos–Milan 2–2". uefa.com. from the original on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  41. ^ a b c Όταν ο Ολυμπιακός, το 1959, συνάντησε τη Μίλαν (in Greek). retrosport. from the original on 3 February 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
  42. ^ a b "Balkans Cup". RSSSF. from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  43. ^ a b c "2nd Balkan Cup 1961/63". RSSSF. from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  44. ^ Το Βαλκανικό Κύπελλο του 1963 (in Greek). redsagainsthemachine.gr. from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  45. ^ a b (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  46. ^ a b (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  47. ^ "Trikala – Olympiacos 0–5, 12 June 1966, rare photos and videos" (in Greek). fatsimare.gr. from the original on 13 May 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  48. ^ "Trikala – Olympiacos 0–5, documentary" (in Greek). Sportime newspaper via youtube.com. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  49. ^ Ο Μίτσελ ξεπέρασε τον Μπούκοβι (in Greek). paraskhnio.gr. 8 December 2013. from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  50. ^ (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  51. ^ "Του Μπούκοβι την ομαδάρα anthem" (in Greek). youtube.com. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  52. ^ "Χούντα και Ανδριανόπουλος (2)". redsagainsthemachine.gr. from the original on 26 June 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  53. ^ "Υπόθεση Κούδα". redsagainsthemachine.gr. from the original on 8 May 2017. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  54. ^ Η νύχτα που έφυγε ο Μπούκοβι (in Greek). newsbeast.gr. 13 December 2011. from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  55. ^ (in Greek). kathimerini.gr. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  56. ^ Η νύχτα που έφυγε ο Μπούκοβι (in Greek). redsagainsthemachine.gr. from the original on 14 December 2016. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  57. ^ Νίκος Γουλανδρής: "Εσείς τον θέλετε Ολυμπιακό, εγώ Ολυμπιακάρα" (in Greek). redsagainsthemachine.gr. from the original on 18 March 2018. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  58. ^ a b (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  59. ^ Ολυμπιακός: Ευρωπαϊκή παρουσία τη δεκαετία του 1970 (in Greek). olympiacoscfp1925. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  60. ^ European Champions in 1967, finalists in 1970, semi-finalists in 1972
  61. ^ Ο Ολυμπιακός ταπείνωσε την Σέλτικ του Νταλγκλίς (in Greek). sportday.gr. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  62. ^ (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  63. ^ Όταν ο Ολυμπιακός άγγιξε το θαύμα (in Greek). newsbeast.gr. 2 October 2013. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  64. ^ Σαν Σήμερα 6 November 1974 (in Greek). enikos.gr. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  65. ^ Η αλήθεια για τον Παλοτάι (in Greek). sport24.gr. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  66. ^ (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  67. ^ (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  68. ^ Ο Θρύλος, η Αντερλεχτ και ο Παλοτάι (in Greek). sportday.gr. from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  69. ^ (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 22 May 2015. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  70. ^ Graham Wood (8 January 2011). . Athens News. Archived from the original on 10 December 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  71. ^ "Πρέντραγκ Τζόρτζεβιτς". sdna.gr. Retrieved 10 June 2015.[permanent dead link]
  72. ^ "Panathinaikos–Olympiacos 0–2". Youtube. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  73. ^ "Ολυμπιακός–Παναθηναικός 2–0, Τελικός Κυπέλλου 1999". youtube. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  74. ^ (in Greek). gavros.gr. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  75. ^ a b (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 20 April 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  76. ^ a b (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  77. ^ (in Greek). redplanet.gr. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  78. ^ "Greek champions Olympiacos name Sollied as coach". BBC.co.uk. 17 June 2005. from the original on 24 November 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  79. ^ (in Greek). pamesports.gr. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  80. ^ Ολυμπιακός–ΠΑΣ Γιάννινα 2–1 (in Greek). contra.gr. from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  81. ^ "Big spending Shakhtar eager to make splash in Europe". reuters.com. 14 September 2007. from the original on 9 January 2016. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
  82. ^ "El mexicano Nery Castillo, del Olympiakos, al Shakhtar Donetsk" (in Spanish). Soccerway.com. from the original on 18 March 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  83. ^ "Real Madrid finish top of Champions League Group C, Olympiacos also go through after cruising past Werder Bremen 3–0". CNN.com. from the original on 18 February 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  84. ^ "Lemonis leaves Olympiacos post". UEFA.com. from the original on 13 March 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  85. ^ "Mellberg joins Olympiakos from Juventus". goal.com. from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  86. ^ "Olympiacos–Arsenal 1–0". BBC.co.uk. 9 December 2009. from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  87. ^ "Olympiacos–Panathinaikos 2–0: Mitroglou Double Takes Thrylos Top". goal.com. from the original on 16 February 2015. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  88. ^ Dev, OTO |. "Super League Greece". from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  89. ^ . enikos.gr. Archived from the original on 9 January 2016. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  90. ^ a b c "Olympiacos.org / Official Website of Olympiacos Piraeus". Olympiacos.org | Official Website of Olympiacos Piraeus. from the original on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  91. ^ Dev, OTO |. . Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  92. ^ a b Ο Θρύλος τα... σπάει! (in Greek). from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  93. ^ Dev, OTO |. . Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  94. ^ "Ευρώπη τέλος για τον Ολυμπιακό με μοιραίο τον Λεάλι, 4–1 η Μπεσίκτας". from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  95. ^ "Groups UEFA Champions League – ESPN FC". www.espnfc.com. from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  96. ^ Κακή αρχή! (in Greek). from the original on 6 September 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  97. ^ "ΟΡΙΣΤΙΚΟ: Τέλος ο Χάσι από τον Ολυμπιακό". from the original on 26 September 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  98. ^ Μετά από 12 χρόνια …αποκλεισμός από την 5η αγωνιστική για τον Ολυμπιακό. www.athlitiki.com (in Greek). from the original on 4 February 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
  99. ^ "Αρνητικό ρεκόρ στο Champions League αν χάσει από την Γιουβέντους". from the original on 6 December 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  100. ^ Reuters Editorial. "Soccer-Olympiakos Piraeus appoint Spaniard Oscar Garcia as head coach". U.K. from the original on 7 October 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2018. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  101. ^ "Ανακοίνωσε Πέδρο Μαρτίνς ο Ολυμπιακός!". from the original on 11 April 2018. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  102. ^ "Ο Κάρλος Κορμπεράν είναι ο νέος προπονητής του Ολυμπιακού" (in Greek). from the original on 1 August 2022. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  103. ^ "Olympiacos team". olympiacos.org. from the original on 25 September 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  104. ^ . arsenal.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  105. ^ sentragoal.gr 27 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine (in Greek)
  106. ^ Ολυμπιακός και Unicef συνεχίζουν μαζί και στη φανέλα 27 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, 26 June 2015 (in Greek)
  107. ^ Official Website Olympiacos (2 October 2015). "Το Stoiximan.gr μεγάλος χορηγός της ΠΑΕ Ολυμπιακός: Ανακοίνωση της ΠΑΕ Ολυμπιακός για την έναρξη της συνεργασίας της με την κορυφαία εταιρεία στοιχηματισμού Stoiximan.gr." (in Greek). from the original on 4 November 2015. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  108. ^ "Velodrome & Karaiskaki Stadium (1895 - 1964 - 2003)". stadia.gr. from the original on 4 September 2017. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  109. ^ "New Karaiskaki Stadium". stadia.gr. from the original on 15 January 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
  110. ^ "The museum of Olympiacos". Olympiacos.org. from the original on 18 September 2013. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
  111. ^ a b "Football First 11: Do or die derbies". CNN. 22 October 2008. from the original on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  112. ^ a b . Footballderbies.com. Archived from the original on 16 October 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2009.
  113. ^ [1] 15 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Έλαβον(2022): ΟΣΦΠ 34%, ΠΑΟ 28%, ΑΕΚ 25%, ΠΑΟΚ 10%, Άρης 3%. Ύστερα από 15ετή έρευνα δύο πανεπιστημιακοί στο βιβλίο τους καταγράφουν την ιστορία και γεωγραφία του ελληνικού ποδοσφαίρου, 30 June 2009, ΤΑ ΝΕΑ – tanea.gr (in Greek)
  114. ^ [2] 27 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Περισσότερους φιλάθλους η Μπαρτσελόνα, πρώτη ελληνική ομάδα ο Ολυμπιακός (in Greek)
  115. ^ a b c (in Greek). Eleftherotypia. 23 May 2004. Archived from the original on 29 September 2008. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
  116. ^ Προτίμηση ποδοσφαιρικής ομάδας (in Greek). AEK Empire. 2005. Archived from the original on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
  117. ^ "Ellas attendances". EFS Attendances. from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2009.
  118. ^ . AIPS website. 2006. Archived from the original on 5 July 2009. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
  119. ^ (in Greek). www.sport24.gr. 14 April 2006. Archived from the original on 5 August 2007. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
  120. ^ (in Greek). 1925.gr. 30 October 2012. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  121. ^ Tony Cottee. "Channel 5 broadcast of the UEFA Cup match Olympiacos vs Newcastle – Live". 10 March 2005
  122. ^ "Away Game Against Olympiacos Will Be A Bit Like Hell – Bordeaux Midfielder Jaroslav Plasil". www.goal.com. 28 January 2010. from the original on 4 March 2010. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
  123. ^ Ιμπραΐμοβιτς: "Δεν αρκούσε ο κόσμος του Ολυμπιακού" (in Greek). onsports.gr. 18 September 2013. from the original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
olympiacos, parent, multi, sport, club, olympiacos, olympiacos, club, fans, piraeus, greek, Ολυμπιακός, greek, pronunciation, olibiaˈkos, known, simply, olympiacos, olympiacos, piraeus, greek, professional, football, club, based, piraeus, attica, part, major, . For the parent multi sport club see Olympiacos CFP Olympiacos Club of Fans of Piraeus Greek Olympiakos S F P Greek pronunciation olibiaˈkos known simply as Olympiacos or Olympiacos Piraeus is a Greek professional football club based in Piraeus Attica Part of the major multi sport club Olympiacos CFP Olympiakos Syndesmos Filathlon Peiraios Olympic Club of Fans of Piraeus their name was inspired from the ancient Olympic Games and along with the club s emblem the laurel crowned Olympic athlete symbolize the Olympic ideals of ancient Greece 3 Their home ground is the Karaiskakis Stadium a 32 115 capacity stadium in Piraeus 4 OlympiacosFull nameOlympiakos Syndesmos Fila8lwn Peiraiws Olympiakos Syndesmos Filathlon Peiraios Olympic Club of Fans of Piraeus Nickname s Thrylos Legend Red Whites Founded10 March 1925 98 years ago 1925 03 10 GroundKaraiskakis StadiumCapacity33 334 1 2 OwnerEvangelos MarinakisPresidentEvangelos MarinakisManagerJose AnigoLeagueSuper League Greece2021 22Super League Greece 1st of 14 champions WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonFounded on 10 March 1925 Olympiacos is the most successful club in Greek football history 5 having won 47 League titles 28 Cups 18 Doubles and 4 Super Cups all records 6 Totalling 79 national trophies Olympiacos is 9th in the world in total titles won by a football club 7 The club s dominating success can be further evidenced by the fact that all other Greek clubs have won a combined total of 39 League titles while Olympiacos also holds the record for the most consecutive Greek League titles won with seven in a row in two occasions 1997 2003 and 2011 2017 breaking their own previous record of six consecutive wins in the 1950s 1954 1959 when Olympiacos was unequivocally nicknamed Thrylos Greek 8rylos The Legend Having won the 2014 15 League title Olympiacos became the only football club in the world to have won a series of five or more consecutive championships for five times in their history a record that was praised by FIFA with a congratulatory letter of its president Sepp Blatter 8 They are also the only Greek club to have won five consecutive national Cups 1957 1961 as well as six League titles undefeated 1937 1938 1948 1951 1954 1955 9 Olympiacos are one of only three clubs to have never been relegated from the top flight of Greek football and by winning the 2012 13 title their 40th in total they added a fourth star above their crest each one representing 10 League titles 10 In European competitions Olympiacos best performances are their presence in the UEFA Champions League quarter finals in 1998 99 losing the semi final spot in the last minutes of their second leg match against Juventus as well as in the UEFA Cup Winners Cup quarter finals in 1992 93 The Red Whites are by far the highest ranked Greek club in the UEFA rankings occupying the 37th place in Europe in the five year ranking and the 30th in the ten year ranking as of 2021 11 12 and one of the founding members of the European Club Association 13 Olympiacos won the Balkans Cup in 1963 at a time when the competition was considered the second most important in the region after the European Cup 14 becoming the first ever Greek club to win an international competition Olympiacos is the most popular football club in Greece 15 16 17 also being the most popular club among the population of Athens 18 19 and gathering strong support from Greek communities all over the world 20 21 With 83 000 registered members as of April 2006 the club was placed 9th in the 2006 list of football clubs with the most paying members in the world that figure increased to 98 000 in 2014 22 Olympiacos share a long standing rivalry with Panathinaikos with whom they contest in the derby of the eternal enemies the most classic football derby in Greece and one of the most well known around the world 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1925 1931 1 2 Domination in Greece and World War II 1931 1946 1 3 The Legend 1946 1959 1 4 First international success and Marton Bukovi era 1960 1972 1 5 Goulandris era 1972 1975 1 6 Domination in the early 1980s UEFA Cup quarter finalists 1975 1996 1 7 The Golden Era 1996 2010 1 7 1 Seven consecutive Championships near miss to UEFA Champions League semi finals 1996 2003 1 7 2 Five consecutive Championships Two presences in UEFA Champions League knockout phase 2004 2010 1 8 New presidency seven consecutive championships and European ascent 2010 2017 1 9 2017 present 2 Crest and colours 2 1 Kit evolution 2 2 Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors 3 Stadium 4 Support 4 1 Friendships 4 2 The Gate 7 tragedy 5 Rivalries 6 European performance 6 1 UEFA competition record 6 2 Best campaigns 6 3 UEFA ranking 7 Honours 7 1 Domestic competitions 7 2 Olympiacos in European competitions 7 3 Regional 7 4 Doubles 8 Players 8 1 Current squad 8 1 1 Reserves and Academy 8 1 2 Other players under contract 8 2 Out on loan 9 Former players 10 Personnel 10 1 Coaching staff 10 2 Technical staff 10 3 Scouting staff 10 4 Medical staff 11 Management 11 1 Former presidents 12 Statistics 12 1 Greek Championship records 12 2 Top scorers 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditEarly years 1925 1931 Edit The founders of Olympiacos 1925 The legendary Andrianopoulos brothers from left Yiannis Dinos Giorgos Vassilis and Leonidas Andrianopoulos Notis Kamperos inspired the name and the emblem of the club Olympiacos was founded on 10 March 1925 in the Athenian port city of Piraeus The club s initial aim as stated in the statutes was the systematic cultivation and development of its athletes possibilities for participation in athletic competitions the spreading of the Olympic athletic ideal and the promotion of sportsmanship and fanship among the youth according to egalitarian principles by stressing a healthy ethical and social basis as its foundation Members of Piraikos Podosfairikos Omilos FC Sport and Football Club of Piraeus and Piraeus Fans Club FC decided during a historical assembly 30 to dissolve the two clubs in order to establish a new unified one which would bring this new vision and dynamic to the community Notis Kamperos a senior officer of the Hellenic Navy proposed the name Olympiacos and the profile of a laurel crowned Olympic winner as the emblem of the new club Michalis Manouskos a prominent Piraeus industrialist expanded the name to its complete and current status Olympiacos Syndesmos Filathlon Pireos Besides Kamperos and Manouskos among the most notable founding members were Stavros Maragoudakis the post office director Nikos Andronikos a merchant Dimitrios Sklias a Hellenic Army officer Nikolaos Zacharias an attorney Athanasios Mermigas a notary public Kostas Klidouchakis who became the first goalkeeper in the club s history Ioannis Kekkes a stockbroker and above all the Andrianopoulos family Andrianopoulos a family of well established Piraeus merchants played a pivotal role in the founding of Olympiacos The five brothers Yiannis Dinos Giorgos Vassilis and Leonidas Andrianopoulos raised the reputation of the club and brought it to its current glory 3 Yiannis Dinos Giorgos and Vassilis were the first to play while Leonidas the youngest of the five made his debut later on and played for the club for eight years 1927 1935 The club s offensive line made up of the five brothers became legendary rising to a mythical status and soon Olympiacos gained enormous popularity and became the most successful and well supported club in Greece Back then their fan base consisted mainly of the working class with the team s home ground at Neo Phaliron Velodrome before moving to its current Karaiskakis Stadium They became Piraeus Champions in 1925 and 1926 31 Olympiacos line up in 1928 In 1926 the Hellenic Football Federation was founded and organized the Panhellenic Championship in the 1927 1928 season This was the first national championship where the regional champions from EPSA league Athens EPSP league Piraeus and EPSM league Thessaloniki competed for the national title during play offs with Aris becoming the first champion The Panhellenic Championship was organized in this manner up until 1958 59 However in the second season 1928 29 a dispute arose between Olympiacos and the Hellenic Football Federation and as a result the club did not participate in the championship with Panathinaikos and AEK Athens deciding to follow Olympiacos During the course of that season the three of them played friendly games with each other and formed a group called P O K Meanwhile the club continued to dominate the Piraeus Championship winning the 1926 27 1928 29 1929 30 and 1930 31 titles and started establishing themselves as the leading force in Greek football they set a record by remaining undefeated against all Greek teams for three consecutive seasons 14 March 1926 to 3 March 1929 counting 30 wins and 6 draws in 36 games Those results ignited an enthusiastic reception from the Greek press who called Olympiacos Thrylos Legend for the first time in history 32 The fourth Panhellenic Championship took place in 1930 31 and found Olympiacos winning the Greece national league title for the first time ever which was a milestone that marked the beginning of a very successful era in Olympiacos history Olympiacos put in a great performance during the competition and won the title very convincingly with 11 wins 2 draws and only one game lost They managed to score 7 wins in 7 matches at home beating Panathinaikos AEK Athens Aris Iraklis and PAOK with the same score 3 1 The sole exception was the match against Ethnikos where Olympiacos netted 4 goals and won with 4 1 Besides the Andrianopoulos brothers and Kostas Klidouchakis other notable players of the first era in the club s history 1925 1931 were Achilleas Grammatikopoulos Lalis Lekkos Philippos Kourantis Nikos Panopoulos Charalambos Pezonis and Kostas Terezakis Domination in Greece and World War II 1931 1946 Edit Olympiacos fearsome trio of attackers during the 1930s from left Christoforos Raggos Giannis Vazos Theologos Symeonidis The rise of the new decade marked a substantial rise in Panhellenic Championship s popularity throughout Greece In October 1931 Giorgos and Yiannis Andrianopoulos emblematic players and founding members of Olympiacos retired from active football However new heroes emerged such as Giannis Vazos Christoforos Raggos Theologos Symeonidis Michalis Anamateros Spyros Depountis Aris Chrysafopoulos Nikos Grigoratos Panagis Korsianos as well as the iconic brothers Giannis and Vangelis Chelmis and the club won five Championships in nine seasons 1932 33 1933 34 1935 36 1936 37 1937 38 and by 1940 Olympiacos had already won six Championships in the eleven first seasons of the Panhellenic Championship 3 Especially Giannis Vazos Christoforos Raggos and Theologos Symeonidis composed a formidable trio of attacking players scoring numerous goals and became nothing short of legendary Giannis Vazos played for 18 years for Olympiacos 1931 1949 and managed to score 450 goals in 364 games 179 goals in 156 official games for the club being the club s second all time scorer winning also the Greek Championship top scorer award four times 1933 1936 1937 and 1947 In addition the club managed to win the 1936 37 and 1937 38 Championship titles undefeated In Greek Cup the team did not manage to win the competition in its first four editions despite some outstanding wins such as the record setting 1 6 away victory against Panathinaikos in Leoforos Stadium in 1932 V Andrianopoulos 16 68 88 Raggos 24 Vazos 69 70 which is the biggest away victory in this derby s history 3 33 On 28 October 1940 Fascist Italy invaded Greece and several Olympiacos players joined the Hellenic Army to fight against the Axis invaders 3 Chistoforos Raggos was heavily injured in his left leg in January 1941 and wasn t able to play football again Leonidas Andrianopoulos suffered severe frostbite in the Albanian front and almost died while Nikos Grigoratos was injured in the leg during the Battle of Klisura 34 Furthermore after the subsequent German occupation of Greece Olympiacos players joined the Greek Resistance and fought fiercely against the Nazis 3 Olympiacos player Nikos Godas an emblematic figure for the club was captain of the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS and fought against the Germans in many fronts 35 He was executed wearing Olympiacos shirt and shorts as was his last wish Shoot me and kill me with my Olympiacos shirt on and do not blindfold me I want to see the colours of my team before the final shot 36 37 Michalis Anamateros was also an active member of the Greek Resistance and was killed in 1944 Olympiacos paid a heavy price during the destructive war the Axis occupation and the ensuing Greek Civil War and the club s progress was put on temporary hold 3 The Legend 1946 1959 Edit Andreas Mouratis captained Olympiacos and played in 295 games for the club 1945 1955 Andreas Mouratis Babis Kotridis Ilias Rossidis key players of the Olympiacos team of the 1950s After the war Olympiacos saw many of its key players of the pre war era retire with many significant changes being made in the team s roster Olympiacos captain and prolific scorer Giannis Vazos remained in the club along with Giannis Chelmis New important players joined the club such as Andreas Mouratis Alekos Chatzistavridis Stelios Kourouklatos and Dionysis Minardos As soon as regular fixtures recommenced the Piraeus club returned to their dominant position in Greek football From 1946 to 1959 Olympiacos won 9 out of the 11 Greek Championships 1947 1948 1951 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 bringing home 15 Championship titles in a total of 23 completed seasons of the Greek League The six straight Greek Championships won by Olympiacos from 1954 to 1959 was an unmatched achievement in Greek football history an all time record which stood for 44 years up until Olympiacos managed to win seven straight Greek Championships from 1997 to 2003 3 Furthermore during the same period 1946 1959 the club won 8 Greek Cups out of 13 editions 1947 1951 1952 1953 1954 1957 1958 1959 thus completing 6 Doubles 1947 1951 1954 1957 1958 1959 three of which being consecutive 1957 1959 3 The legendary Olympiacos team of the 1950s with key performers such as Andreas Mouratis Ilias Rossidis Thanasis Bebis Ilias Yfantis Babis Kotridis Kostas Polychroniou Giorgos Darivas Babis Drosos Antonis Poseidon Savvas Theodoridis Kostas Karapatis Mimis Stefanakos Thanasis Kinley Stelios Psychos Giannis Ioannou Themis Moustaklis Vasilis Xanthopoulos Dimitris Kokkinakis Giorgos Kansos Kostas Papazoglou and Aristeidis Papazoglou marked Olympiacos period of absolute domination in Greek football which skyrocketed the club s popularity and spread the word of Olympiacos superiority throughout Greece 3 Hence after the club s record breaking performance in the trophy laden era of the 1950s the club gained unequivocally the nickname of Thrylos meaning The Legend 3 38 39 On 13 September 1959 Olympiacos made its debut in Europe against Milan for the 1959 60 European Cup and became the first Greek club that ever played in the European competitions 40 The first leg was held at the Karaiskakis Stadium in Piraeus and Olympiacos took the lead with a goal by Kostas Papazoglou 1 0 which was the first goal ever scored by a Greek club and by a Greek player as well in the European competitions 41 Milan s prolific goalscorer Jose Altafini equalised the match with a header in the 33rd minute after a cross by Giancarlo Danova Ilias Yfantis scored an outstanding goal and gave Olympiacos the lead again in the 45th minute of the game when he controlled the ball between Cesare Maldini and Vincenzo Occhetta and unleashed a powerful volley burying the ball into the back of the net 2 1 41 Altafini scored his second goal once again with a header 72nd minute after a free kick by Nils Liedholm The match ended 2 2 with Olympiacos putting in a great performance against the Italian champions despite the fact that they had no foreign players in their roster while Milan had four world class foreign players such as Altafini Liedholm Juan Alberto Schiaffino and Ernesto Grillo 41 In the second leg Milan won 3 1 Giancarlo Danova 12 26 85 Psychos 68 and qualified for the next round despite Olympiacos good performance especially in the second half First international success and Marton Bukovi era 1960 1972 Edit Marton Bukovi coached Olympiacos to two consecutive Greek League titles 1965 66 1966 67 Olympiacos entered the 1960s by winning the 1960 and 1961 Greek Cups thus completing five consecutive Greek Cup wins which is an all time record in Greek football history In this decade a strong side was created with players from the late 1950s and new important players such as Giannis Gaitatzis Nikos Gioutsos Pavlos Vasileiou Vasilis Botinos Giannis Fronimidis Christos Zanteroglou Grigoris Aganian Stathis Tsanaktsis Mimis Plessas Giangos Simantiris Pavlos Grigoriadis Savvas Papazoglou Stelios Besis Sotiris Gavetsos Tasos Sourounis Vangelis Milisis Orestis Pavlidis Panagiotis Barbalias and last but not least the prolific goalscorer Giorgos Sideris top scorer in the club s history with 493 goals in 519 matches in all competitions 224 goals in 284 Greek Championship matches In 1963 Olympiacos became the first ever Greek club to win a non domestic competition winning the Balkans Cup which marked the first international success by any Greek football club The Balkans Cup was a very popular international competition in the 1960s the 1967 final attracted 42 000 spectators 42 being the second most important international club competition for clubs from the Balkans after the European Champions Cup 42 Olympiacos topped his group after some notable wins beating Galatasaray 1 0 at the Karaiskakis Stadium Stelios Psychos 49 43 as well as FK Sarajevo 3 2 and FC Brașov 1 0 bagging also two away draws against Galatasaray 1 1 in Mithatpasa Stadium Metin Oktay 78 Aristeidis Papazoglou 6 and FK Sarajevo in Kosevo Stadium 3 3 43 In the final they faced Levski Sofia winning the first match in Piraeus 1 0 Giorgos Sideris 37 and losing the second match in Vasil Levski Stadium with the same score 43 In the third decisive final in Istanbul a neutral ground Olympiacos beat Levski 1 0 in Mithatpasa Stadium with a goal by Mimis Stefanakos in the 87th minute and won the Balkans Cup 44 The club went on to win the 1963 and 1965 Greek Cups completing seven Greek Cup titles in nine years However the years 1959 1965 were not fruitful for Olympiacos in the Greek Championship as the team was not able to win the title for six years This mediocre performance led Olympiacos board to hire the legendary Marton Bukovi as the club s head coach with Mihaly Lantos prominent member of the Hungary national team of the 1950s widely known as the Mighty Magyars or Aranycsapat as his assistant coach 45 The innovative Hungarian coach pioneer of the 4 2 4 formation along with Bela Guttmann and Gusztav Sebes was a solid tactician and favoured attacking football and very demanding training sessions 45 Bukovi s innovatory tactics and groundbreaking training methods transformed Olympiacos and created a powerful attacking team with constant player movement and solid combination game that often played spectacular football 46 Under Bukovi s guidance and with the great performance of key players such as Giorgos Sideris Nikos Gioutsos Kostas Polychroniou Vasilis Botinos Aristeidis Papazoglou Pavlos Vasileiou Giannis Gaitatzis Christos Zanteroglou Grigoris Aganian Mimis Plessas Giannis Fronimidis and Orestis Pavlidis Olympiacos won 2 straight Greek Championships 1966 1967 46 They won the 1966 title with 23 wins and 4 draws in 30 games and in the decisive away match against Trikala an estimated 15 000 ecstatic Olympiacos fans swarmed into the city of Trikala to celebrate the win 0 5 and the Championship title after seven years 47 48 The next season 1966 67 Olympiacos won 12 out of the first 14 games in the league which was an all time record in Greek football history which lasted for 46 years and up until 2013 when Olympiacos under coach Michel s guidance broke his own record by winning 13 out of the 14 first matches of the 2013 14 season 49 They won the title in a convincing way and with some notable wins like the 4 0 smashing victory against arch rivals Panathinaikos at the Karaiskakis Stadium Vasileiou 17 Sideris 20 35 62 where Olympiacos played spectacular football and missed a plethora of chances for a much bigger score 50 Bukovi became a legend for the club s fans and his creation the Olympiacos team of 1965 67 became nothing short of legendary A special anthem was written for Bukovi s Olympiacos and became popular throughout Greece Toy Mpoykobi thn omadara th lene Olympiakara Bukovi s mighty team is called Olympiacos 51 Shortly before the end of the 1966 67 season a military coup d etat took place and the Colonels seized power in Greece establishing a dictatorship The regime of the Colonels had devastating consequences for Olympiacos 3 In December 1967 Giorgos Andrianopoulos club legend and president of the club for 13 years 1954 1967 was forced out of the club s presidency by the military regime 52 Furthermore the regime canceled the transfer of Giorgos Koudas to Olympiacos 53 and days later another blow was delivered to the club Marton Bukovi already a legend and architect of the great 1965 67 team was forced out of Greece by the military junta being labeled a communist 54 55 He left Greece on 21 December 1967 along with Mihaly Lantos 56 Goulandris era 1972 1975 Edit Another chapter began in 1972 after Nikos Goulandris became president of the club He reinstated all the prominent members of Olympiacos board that had been forced out by the military regime including Giorgos Andrianopoulos and opened up the member election process establishing a new trustworthy board of directors 57 He appointed Lakis Petropoulos as head coach and signed top class players creating a great roster with key performers such as Giorgos Delikaris Yves Triantafyllos Julio Losada Milton Viera Panagiotis Kelesidis Michalis Kritikopoulos Takis Synetopoulos Romain Argyroudis Maik Galakos Nikos Gioutsos Giannis Gaitatzis Vasilis Siokos Thanasis Angelis Lakis Glezos Petros Karavitis Kostas Davourlis Giannis Kyrastas Dimitris Persidis Lefteris Poupakis and Babis Stavropoulos Under Goulandris presidency Olympiacos won the Greek Championship three times in a row 1972 73 1973 74 1974 75 combining it with the Greek Cup in 1973 beating PAOK 1 0 in the final and 1975 beating Panathinaikos 1 0 in the final to celebrate two Doubles in three years 3 In the 1972 73 season Olympiacos won the title by conceding only 13 goals in 34 matches which is an all time record in Greek football history The team s best year though was undoubtedly the 1973 74 season when Olympiacos won the league with 26 wins and 7 draws in 34 games scoring an all time record of 102 goals and conceding only 14 In European competitions they managed to eliminate Cagliari in the 1972 73 UEFA Cup a major force in Italian football during the late 1960s and the early 1970s 1970 Serie A Champions 1972 Serie A title contenders with world class Italian international players like Gigi Riva Angelo Domenghini Enrico Albertosi Pierluigi Cera Sergio Gori and Fabrizio Poletti 58 Olympiacos managed to beat Cagliari twice 2 1 in Piraeus and 1 0 in Cagliari becoming the first ever Greek football club to win on Italian soil 58 In the next round they faced the competition s defending champions Tottenham Hotspur who were undefeated for 16 straight games in all European competitions Olympiacos did not manage to qualify against Spurs but they managed to get a 1 0 win in Piraeus which ended Tottenham s undefeated streak and marked the first ever victory of a Greek football club against an English side 59 Two years later Olympiacos entered the 1974 75 European Cup and they were drawn to face Kenny Dalglish s Celtic one of the strongest teams in European football at that time 60 and semi finalists of the previous season The first leg was played in Celtic Park where Celtic had never been defeated running an undefeated streak of 36 straight home games in all European competitions 27 wins 9 draws from 1962 to 1974 Olympiacos took the lead through Milton Viera s strike in the 36th minute with Celtic equalising late in the game 61 The away draw gave Olympiacos the advantage and they finished the job in Piraeus after a spectacular 2 0 win against the Scottish Champions with Kritikopoulos and Stavropoulos finding the net 62 In the next round they were drawn to play against Anderlecht for a place in the quarter finals of the competition Anderlecht won the first leg with 5 1 and Olympiacos task seemed impossible In the second leg in Greece however Olympiacos put on a dominant display and almost reached a winning score in a match that was marked by referee Karoly Palotai s decisions 63 Olympiacos beat Anderlecht 3 0 while Palotai disallowed four Olympiacos goals 64 and did not give at least three clear penalties committed by Anderlecht players 65 while Stavropoulos was shown a red card for no good reason 66 The match is widely known in Greece as the Palotai massacre 67 68 with Olympiacos coming close to one of the biggest comebacks in European Cup history Domination in the early 1980s UEFA Cup quarter finalists 1975 1996 Edit Following Goulandris resignation from the presidency in 1975 the team went through a relative dry spell in the second half of the 1970s However in the summer of 1979 the Greek championship turned professional and Stavros Daifas became owner and president of the club 3 Olympiacos emerged again as the dominant force in Greek football winning the title four times in a row 1980 1981 1982 1983 with players like the relentless goalscorer Nikos Anastopoulos Martin Novoselac Vicente Estavillo Thomas Ahlstrom Roger Albertsen Maik Galakos Tasos Mitropoulos Takis Nikoloudis Nikos Sarganis Nikos Vamvakoulas Giorgos Kokolakis Vangelis Kousoulakis Petros Michos Takis Lemonis Christos Arvanitis Petros Xanthopoulos Stavros Papadopoulos Meletis Persias Giorgos Togias and Kostas Orfanos Kazimierz Gorski the iconic Polish coach led Olympiacos to the 1980 1981 and 1983 titles winning also the Double in 1981 the 9th Double in Olympiacos history 3 while Alketas Panagoulias who had also been manager of the Greece national football team and the United States national team as well led the team to the 1982 title after a memorable 2 1 win Estavillo 6 Anastopoulos 69 against arch rivals Panathinaikos in the crucial Championship final match in Volos 69 With Panagoulias as head coach Olympiacos won the 1986 87 title as well having a solid roster with players from the early 1980s like Anastopoulos Mitropoulos Michos Xanthopoulos and other strong players like Milos Sestic Giorgos Vaitsis Jorge Barrios Andreas Bonovas Alexis Alexiou and Vasilis Papachristou 3 Oleg Blokhin Olympiacos experienced its darkest days from the late 1980s until the mid 90s In the mid 80s Olympiacos came into the hands of Greek businessman George Koskotas who was soon accused of and convicted for embezzlement leaving Olympiacos deep in debt The club went through a period of administrative turbulence until 1993 when Sokratis Kokkalis became majority shareholder and president of the club As soon as he took the club s presidency Kokkalis agreed a settlement to pay off all the club s debts and started reorganising and restructuring the club 3 On the pitch the team with all the financial and managerial problems as well as the lack of strong administrative leadership until the Kokkalis arrival spent nine seasons without a league title from 1988 to 1996 despite the foreign top class players that played for the club at that period such as Lajos Detari Oleh Protasov Juan Gilberto Funes Bent Christensen Hennadiy Lytovchenko Yuri Savichev Andrzej Juskowiak Daniel Batista Fabian Estay and the backbone of solid Greek players like Vassilis Karapialis Kiriakos Karataidis Giotis Tsalouchidis Nikos Tsiantakis Giorgos Vaitsis Minas Hantzidis Theodoros Pahatouridis Savvas Kofidis Chris Kalantzis Giorgos Mitsibonas Ilias Talikriadis Alekos Rantos Panagiotis Sofianopoulos Ilias Savvidis and Michalis Vlachos 3 This period is so called as Olympiacos stone years 70 Nevertheless the club brought home the 1990 beating OFI Crete 4 2 in the final and 1992 Greek Cups beating PAOK 2 0 in the second leg of the double final in Piraeus as well as the 1992 Greek Super Cup beating AEK 3 1 in the final In addition the team under the guidance of the legendary Ukrainian coach Oleg Blokhin managed to reach the quarter finals of the 1992 93 UEFA Cup Winners Cup eliminating Arsene Wenger s Monaco after a hard fought 1 0 away win in Stade Louis II with a late goal by Giorgos Vaitsis and a goalless draw at Karaiskakis Stadium in the second leg They did not manage to qualify for the semi finals however as they were eliminated by Atletico Madrid 1 1 draw at home 3 1 loss in Madrid 3 The Golden Era 1996 2010 Edit Seven consecutive Championships near miss to UEFA Champions League semi finals 1996 2003 Edit Predrag Đorđevic won a record 12 Greek League titles with Olympiacos and is the club s record foreign goalscorer with 158 goals in 493 official matches 71 In 1996 Socratis Kokkalis appointed Dusan Bajevic as the team s head coach 3 By that time Olympiacos had already a very strong roster with players like Kyriakos Karataidis Vassilis Karapialis Grigoris Georgatos Alexis Alexandris Giorgos Amanatidis Nikos Dabizas and Ilija Ivic Upon Bajevic s arrival Kokkalis opted to strengthen the team significantly in order to create a very strong roster that would dominate Greek football for years to come He purchased the highly rated prospects Predrag Đorđevic and Stelios Giannakopoulos from Paniliakos outbidding both AEK Athens and Panathinaikos signed Refik Sabanadzovic Andreas Niniadis Giorgos Anatolakis and Alekos Kaklamanos and brought Olympiacos Academy product Dimitris Eleftheropoulos back from his loan spell at Proodeftiki 3 With all these players up front Olympiacos strode to the 1996 97 title by 12 clear points over AEK and 20 points over the third Panathinaikos in Bajevic s first season in charge this was the club s first Greek Championship in nine seasons putting an end to the stone years and officially beginning Olympiacos era of domination 3 In the next season 1997 98 Dimitris Mavrogenidis Sinisa Gogic Ilias Poursanidis and the Ghanaian striker Peter Ofori Quaye were transferred to the club and Olympiacos won the 1997 98 Championship Bajevic s team along with AEK and Panathinaikos were closely separated in the table but finally Olympiacos made an important away win against Panathinaikos 0 2 72 and celebrated the second consecutive Championship with three points difference from Panathinaikos Olympiacos participated for the first time in the UEFA Champions League group stage and took third place in a tough group leaving Porto in fourth place while Real Madrid the eventual champions topped the group and qualified for the quarter finals The 1998 99 season was undoubtedly one of the best seasons in Olympiacos history 3 They won the 1998 99 Greek Championship quite convincingly with ten points difference from AEK and 11 from third placed Panathinaikos and also celebrated the domestic double 3 bringing home the 1998 99 Greek Cup after a convincing 2 0 win against arch rivals Panathinaikos in the final Mavrogenidis 54 Ofori Quaye 90 despite the fact that they played for more than 60 minutes in the game with ten players 73 In European competitions they entered the 1998 99 UEFA Champions League group stage being drawn in a group with Ajax Porto and Croatia Zagreb They won the group and qualified to the quarter finals gathering 11 points with 3 home wins against Ajax 1 0 Porto 2 1 and Croatia Zagreb 2 0 and two away draws in Porto 2 2 and Zagreb 1 1 In the quarter finals of the competition they faced Juventus with the first leg in Turin Juventus took a 2 0 lead but Olympiacos scored a crucial away goal in the 90th minute of the game with a penalty by Andreas Niniadis a goal that caused the 10 000 Olympiacos fans who travelled to Italy 74 to erupt into joyous ecstasy In the second leg in Athens Olympiacos totally dominated the match and scored the goal that put them in the driving seat in the 12th minute of the game when Sinisa Gogic s powerful header found the back of the net after Grigoris Georgatos s superb cross They also missed an outstanding chance to double the lead when Giorgos Amanatidis powerful header from short distance was saved by Michelangelo Rampulla 75 Olympiacos kept the ticket to the semi finals in his hands until the 85th minute when Juventus who hadn t produced any chances in the game equalised the score after a crucial mistake by Dimitris Eleftheropoulos who had been the team s hero in all the previous games 75 Despite the big disappointment from the way the qualification to the semi finals was lost the presence of the team in the Champions League quarter finals their best ever European campaign combined with the domestic double marked a very successful season for the club arguably the best in their long history 3 The next four seasons 1999 2000 2000 01 2001 02 2002 03 Olympiacos signed world class players of great magnitude such as Giovanni Zlatko Zahovic and the World champion Christian Karembeu as well as other top class players including Par Zetterberg Ze Elias Nery Castillo Christos Patsatzoglou Lampros Choutos and Stelios Venetidis These transfers strengthened even more the already strong roster from the previous successful years and under the guidance of coaches like Giannis Matzourakis Takis Lemonis and Oleg Protasov Bajevic had left the club in 1999 Olympiacos managed to win seven consecutive Greek Championships 1997 2003 breaking their own past record of six 1954 1959 Olympiacos won their seventh consecutive title after a breathtaking closing of the 2002 03 Greek League Olympiacos was hosting arch rivals Panathinaikos in matchday 29 who led the table with a three point difference Olympiacos needed to win the derby by two clear goals in order to overthrow their rivals in the championship race 76 Olympiacos beat Panathinaikos 3 0 Giovanni 3 Giannakopoulos 15 48 in a dominant display in Rizoupoli 76 and celebrated the all time record of seven straight Championships which was a dream and a historic objective for the club and especially for the fans 77 Five consecutive Championships Two presences in UEFA Champions League knockout phase 2004 2010 Edit Rivaldo Antonis Nikopolidis In 2004 Olympiacos rehired Dusan Bajevic and signed the 1999 World Footballer of the Year and 2002 World Champion Brazilian superstar Rivaldo and the 2004 European champion Antonis Nikopolidis The end of the season found Olympiacos winning the domestic double and having a decent Champions League display gathering ten points in a tough group alongside Liverpool Monaco and Deportivo de La Coruna and losing the qualification to the knockout phase in the last four minutes of the last game against the eventual European champions Liverpool at Anfield Bajevic left the club and the Norwegian coach Trond Sollied was hired in his place 78 They club signed Cypriot striker Michalis Konstantinou from Panathinaikos 2004 European champion defender Michalis Kapsis from Bordeaux and the versatile box to box Ivorian midfielder Yaya Toure During the 2005 06 season Olympiacos won all the four derbies against their major rivals Panathinaikos and AEK Athens something only achieved once more during the season 1972 73 The combined goal total in these four matches was 11 3 in favour of Olympiacos They also beat AEK Athens 3 0 in the Greek Cup Final to clinch their second straight double and managed to win an all time record of 16 consecutive matches in the championship breaking their own past record 79 After a record breaking season in the 2006 summer transfers Trond Sollied signed Michal Zewlakow Julio Cesar and Tomislav Butina among others However he did not live up to expectations in the 2006 07 Champions League and was replaced by Takis Lemonis at the end of 2006 Lemonis transferred the young star Vasilis Torosidis and led Olympiacos in their third consecutive championship but failed to win the Greek Cup after a surprise elimination by PAS Giannina 80 In the summer of 2007 Olympiacos made very expensive transfers like Luciano Galletti Darko Kovacevic Raul Bravo Lomana LuaLua Cristian Ledesma and Leonel Nunez They also brought back the solid Greek defender Paraskevas Antzas and signed the very talented young striker Kostas Mitroglou from Borussia Monchengladbach Furthermore they accomplished the most lucrative sale in Greek football history after selling striker midfielder Nery Castillo to Ukrainian club Shakhtar Donetsk for the record sum of 20 million 27 5M 81 Because of a clause in Castillo s contract Olympiacos received 15 million with the remaining 5 million given directly to the player 82 Furthermore a controversy started between the team and Rivaldo as Olympiacos did not wish to renew the player s contract despite the fact that Rivaldo had featured heavily in the club s successful campaigns both in Greece and abroad Former player Ilija Ivic was selected for the role of the team s football director The team did not start well in the Greek championship but it achieved a stunning performance in the Champions League qualifying for the last 16 as they finished second in their group level on 11 points with group winners Real Madrid eliminating Werder Bremen and Lazio 83 However the team s less than satisfactory performance in the league coupled with the defeat from Chelsea in Stamford Bridge for the knockout phase prompted club owner Sokratis Kokkalis to sack coach Takis Lemonis The team s assistant manager Jose Segura coached the team for the remainder of the season Olympiacos managed to win both the Greek Championship and Cup but Segura left the club at the end of the season In the summer of 2008 Olympiacos made prominent transfers signing Dudu Cearense Avraam Papadopoulos Diogo Luis Santo and Matt Derbyshire and appointed Ernesto Valverde as the new coach with a three year contract worth approximately 6 million 84 The 2008 09 season started badly for Olympiacos with the team losing their first few official matches against Anorthosis Famagusta for the Champions League third qualifying round and was eliminated from the tournament which resulted to a seat in the UEFA Cup first round where Olympiacos beat Nordsjaelland to qualify for the group stage The team also started well in the 2008 09 Super League Greece winning every match at home but facing difficulties away They ended up winning the Greek Championship and the Greek Cup celebrating the 14th double in Olympiacos history After an impressive UEFA Cup run at home with some spectacular wins against Benfica 5 1 and Hertha BSC 4 0 the team managed to get through to the round of 32 facing French side Saint Etienne In the summer of 2009 Olympiacos signed major players such as Olof Mellberg from Juventus for 2 5 million 85 midfielder Jaouad Zairi from Asteras Tripolis and Enzo Maresca from Sevilla Many other players returned from loan spells such as former Real Madrid defender Raul Bravo Georgios Katsikogiannis and midfielder Cristian Ledesma Olympiacos appointed former Brazil legend Zico as their coach and started the 2009 10 season with great success as they qualified for the Champions League final 16 finishing second in Group H only 3 points behind Arsenal 86 despite the absence of numerous first team players due to injuries They faced Bordeaux in the final 16 and lost the first match at home 0 1 In the second match despite Bordeaux s early lead Olympiacos leveled the match and missed some great chances to score a second goal before eventually losing in the dying moments of the match 1 2 Domestically Olympiacos secured a 2 0 derby win over arch rivals Panathinaikos with striker Kostas Mitroglou scoring twice 87 However this was only a highlight in an otherwise below par season for the club as they not only lost the championship to Panathinaikos but were also defeated in four out of their six playoff games eventually finishing last in the 5th position of the league table 88 this result marked the team s worst ranking since being placed 8th in 1988 and meant that the club would start their Europa League campaign from the second qualifying round the following season New presidency seven consecutive championships and European ascent 2010 2017 Edit Ernesto Valverde Kevin Mirallas In 2010 Evangelos Marinakis a successful shipping magnate bought the team from Sokratis Kokkalis 3 During the first year of his presidency Marinakis appointed fans favourite Ernesto Valverde as coach who came back for a second tenure in the club and signed players with international pedigree such as Albert Riera Ariel Ibagaza Kevin Mirallas Marko Pantelic and Francois Modesto 3 As a result Olympiacos won the Greek title for the 38th time in its history 13 points ahead of second placed Panathinaikos In the 2011 12 season the team s roster was strengthened with players like Jean Makoun Pablo Orbaiz Ivan Marcano Rafik Djebbour and Djamel Abdoun and with Ernesto Valverde as their coach for the second straight season Olympiacos had a very successful campaign both domestically and internationally They won both the Greek league and the Greek Cup to complete the 15th domestic double in the club s history 3 In European competitions Olympiacos had a solid Champions League campaign having been drawn in Group F against Arsenal Borussia Dortmund and Marseille Despite delivering nine points in the group with two emphatic wins against Arsenal and Dortmund at home both with a 3 1 scoreline and an away win against Marseille 0 1 they lost the qualification to the knock out stage after Marseille s controversial 2 3 away win in Dortmund in game 6 with Marseille scoring two goals in the last five minutes of the match to come back from an early 2 0 Dortmund lead 3 Olympiacos continued in Europa League where he was drawn to play against Rubin Kazan The Greek champions eliminated the Russian side with two wins 1 0 in both Kazan and Piraeus and were up to play against Metalist Kharkiv in the Last 16 of the competition 3 They won the first match in Ukraine with David Fuster scoring the winning goal 0 1 but in the second match despite their early lead and the plethora of missed chances they hit the woodwork twice in the first half they conceded two goals in the last nine minutes of the game and lost the qualification to the quarter finals Olof Mellberg At the end of the season Ernesto Valverde announced his decision to return to Spain thus ending his second successful spell at Olympiacos The club announced the Portuguese Leonardo Jardim as their new head coach 3 The team performed very well in the Greek league and had a decent Champions league campaign gathering nine points in Group B after wins against Arsenal 2 1 at home and Montpellier 1 2 in Montpellier 3 1 in Piraeus Despite the relatively good results Leonardo Jardim was replaced by the Spanish coach and Real Madrid legend Michel The team went on to celebrate the 16th double in their history by winning their 40th Greek Championship 15 points ahead the second PAOK as well as their 26th Greek Cup after a 3 1 win against Asteras Tripolis in the final The 40th Greek championship title gave Olympiacos the fourth star on top of the club s emblem which was a major goal for the club and especially for the fans 3 The expectations for the 2013 14 season were very high especially after the signing of players such as striker Javier Saviola Joel Campbell Roberto Alejandro Dominguez Vladimir Weiss Delvin N Dinga and Leandro Salino Olympiacos had a great season both domestically and internationally 3 In Europe they were drawn in Group C of the 2013 14 Champions League alongside Paris Saint Germain Benfica and Anderlecht After a strong performance in the group Olympiacos finished second with ten points and qualified for the Last 16 at the expense of Benfica 1 0 win in Piraeus 1 1 draw in Lisbon and Anderlecht 0 3 win in Brussels 3 1 win in Piraeus In the round of 16 they were drawn to play against Manchester United Olympiacos after a solid display won the first leg with a comfortable 2 0 Alejandro Dominguez 38 Campbell 55 in a match where they dominated totally and missed chances to even extend the lead 3 Despite the two goal advantage which put them within touching distance of a quarter final place for the first time since 1999 Olympiacos lost 3 0 in the second leg in Old Trafford having missed an outstanding double chance to equalize the score in the 40th minute The Greek champions pushed on in the last ten minutes to find the crucial away goal but to no avail Although the ticket to the quarter finals slipped out of the club s hands Olympiacos overall performance and the fact that the club managed to qualify to the knockout phase round of 16 of the Champions League for the third time in six years 2007 08 2009 10 2013 14 marked a very successful European campaign Domestically Olympiacos won their history s 41st Greek Championship very convincingly 17 points ahead of second placed PAOK 3 In the 2014 15 season Olympiacos entered the 2014 15 Champions League group stage with hopes to repeat the previous year s performance they were drawn alongside Atletico Madrid Juventus and Malmo FF 3 They had a solid performance in the group managing to beat last year s runners up Atletico 3 2 and eventual finalists Juventus 1 0 at the Karaiskakis Stadium but they lost the qualification for the knockout stage in the last game Olympiacos beat Malmo FF 4 2 at home but at the same time Juventus were drawing against Atletico in Italy securing the crucial one point they needed to qualify Had Olympiacos and Juventus finished with the same points Olympiacos would have qualified due to best aggregate score away goals of their two games 1 0 Olympiacos win in Piraeus 3 2 Juventus win in Turin 3 The third place in the group gave Olympiacos the ticket for the next round of UEFA Europa League where they were eliminated by the eventual runners up Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Domestically the team had a very successful season winning the 17th double in their history They won their 42nd Greek Championship with 12 points difference from the second Panathinaikos and their 27th Greek Cup beating Skoda Xanthi 3 1 in the final 89 Kostas Fortounis The 2015 16 season started with a new manager replacement as Marco Silva took over the management over his fellow countryman Vitor Pereira 90 while the squad was strengthened with the world class presence of Esteban Cambiasso and a number of other players with European competition experience including Kostas Fortounis Felipe Pardo Seba Manuel Da Costa Brown Ideye and Alfred Finnbogason 91 In a tough Champions League group that included Bayern Munchen Arsenal and Dinamo Zagreb Olympiacos managed to record 9 points through a 3 2 away win over the Gunners at the Emirates Stadium considered by many as one of the club s most important European victories as well as two more wins against Dinamo 1 0 away and 2 1 at home Last matchday saw the team face Arsenal at the Karaiskakis stadium needing a 1 0 or 2 1 defeat to the Gunners as the worst case scenario to advance to the knockout phase of the competition based on the away goals rule the Red Whites eventually lost 3 0 and continued their European journey in the UEFA Europa League where they were eliminated by Anderlecht in the first knockout stage 90 Despite the above Olympiacos broke the record for most European competition victories recorded by a Greek club with 97 over the 96 of second placed Panathinaikos as of the summer of 2016 92 Domestically Olympiacos had perhaps their most successful season in years as the team managed to secure their 43rd Greek Championship and 6th consecutive on the last day of February 2016 considered a national record for the earliest time within a league campaign when a title is clinched 90 The team managed to finish their league campaign with a 30 point difference over their arch rivals Panathinaikos who came in second The team s 85 points over the course of 30 matchdays including a 28 1 1 overall result breakdown with 13 away wins and a perfect 15 victories out of 15 home games are also considered a national record 92 However despite the club s expectations of doing the double they did not manage to win the Greek Cup as they finished runners up to rivals AEK after a 2 1 loss in the final The 2016 17 season proved to be rather tumultuous for the club despite the signing of such key players as oscar Cardozo Tarik Elyounoussi Alaixys Romao Aly Cissokho and Marko Marin 93 The main issues that arose were the team s shock elimination from Israeli outfit Hapoel Be er Sheva after a 1 0 aggregate defeat in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League and the highly frequent change of managers leading the club to having been coached by five individuals over the same season Marco Silva Victor Sanchez responsible for the elimination from Hapoel Paulo Bento Vasilis Vouzas and Takis Lemonis The team s UEFA Europa League journey was not as successful as other European campaigns starting with a difficult 3 1 aggregate victory 1 1 before extra time over Arouca in the playoffs continuing with the team s qualification from the group stage but only as second placed to APOEL in a group that also included Young Boys and Astana and ending with a heavy 5 2 aggregate defeat to Besiktas in the last 16 of the knockout stage with goalkeeper Nicola Leali being highly responsible for 4 out of the 5 goals conceded 94 despite having advanced from the last 32 thanks to a 3 0 aggregate win over Osmanlispor The frequent manager change negatively affected the team s stability and rhythm in domestic competitions as well Firstly Olympiacos failed to qualify for the Greek Cup final after being ousted by AEK who advanced on the away goals rule after a 2 2 aggregate draw Secondly despite the fact that the Reds clinched their 44th Greek Championship and 7th consecutive for the second time in Greek football history they only managed to do so with a six point difference 67 to 61 over PAOK 2017 present Edit Mathieu Valbuena At the start of the 2017 18 season the board decided to hire former Anderlecht manager Besnik Hasi to guide Olympiacos back to the UEFA Champions League group stage after a year s absence Upon his arrival Hasi strengthened the squad with players as Vadis Odjidja Ofoe Guillaume Gillet Mehdi Carcela Jagos Vukovic Bjorn Engels Uros Đurđevic Emmanuel Emenike and Panagiotis Tachtsidis Aggregate victories over Partizan 5 3 and Rijeka 3 1 in the two final qualifying rounds ensured the Red Whites presence in Group D of the competition considered perhaps the toughest in Olympiacos European history due to Barcelona Juventus and Sporting CP being the opponents 95 A disheartening 2 3 defeat in the hands of Sporting at Thrylos European season opener 96 combined with a 3 2 loss to AEK despite being 0 2 up led to Hasi s dismissal from the club and his replacement by Takis Lemonis 97 The latter decided to focus on getting the squad back on track in domestic competitions at a time when Olympiacos eventually got eliminated from Europe ahead of the Christmas break for the first time in 12 years 98 Following a home goalless draw against Barcelona and five defeats the Red Whites only managed to acquire one point during their entire Champions League group stage campaign something considered a setback for the club after their 7 previous UEFA Champions League campaigns 2007 08 2009 10 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 2014 15 2015 16 in which they gathered at least 9 points in all of the groups 11 points in 2007 08 10 points in 2009 10 9 points in 2011 12 9 points in 2012 13 10 points in 2013 14 9 points in 2014 15 and 9 points in 2015 16 with three qualifications to the knockout stage Last 16 of the competition Despite their one point group stage exit the worst European records by a Greek team in the history of European competitions both belong to AEK Athens AEK s zero 0 point campaign in Group E of the 2018 19 UEFA Champions League and AEK s zero 0 point campaign as well in the Group H of the 2004 05 UEFA Cup a lower tier UEFA competition Panathinaikos has also a one point campaign in Group G of the 2016 17 UEFA Europa League 99 Despite being in the Super League lead halfway through the season Lemonis was dismissed on grounds of dressing room instability and oscar Garcia was subsequently appointed with a vision of increasing attacking efficiency and discipline 100 Domestically Olympiacos Greek Cup run ended in the quarter finals marking their third consecutive year that they failed to lift the Cup In the Super League the Red Whites conceded the title to AEK three matchdays before completion thus ending a run of seven consecutive championship wins and leading to the dismissal of Garcia after two months at the club s helm with Christos Kontis finishing the season as caretaker manager Portuguese Pedro Martins was appointed head coach in order to lead Olympiacos at the following 2018 19 season 101 After four seasons and winning 3 League titles with the club Martins got fired from Olympiacos in August 2022 and Spanish prodigy Carlos Corberan was appointed as the new head coach 102 Crest and colours EditWhen in 1925 the merger of the two clubs of Piraeus Athlitikos Podosfairikos Syllogos Pireos and Omilos Filathlon Pireos gave birth to the new football club the latter was unanimously baptized Olympiacos Club of Fans of Piraeus a name inspired from the Ancient Olympic Games the morality the vying the splendor the sportsmanship and the fair play ideal that were represented in Ancient Greece Consequently after Notis Kamperos s proposal the club adopted the laurel crowned adolescent as their emblem which symbolizes the Olympic Games winner a crest that underwent minor changes through the ages Red and white were chosen as the colours of the crest red for the passion and victory and white for the virtue and purity 103 104 The typical kit of the team is that of a shirt with red and white vertical stripes and red or white shorts and socks The shirt has taken different forms during the history of the club for example with thin or wider stripes The second most common kit is the all red one and next the all white one Olympiacos has used several other colours during its history as an away or third kit with the most notable of them being the monotint black or silver one The most common kits of Olympiacos during their history are these below the year of each one is indicant Kit evolution Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Football kit templates Olympiacos FC Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors Edit Olympiacos historical shirts Since 1979 when football became professional in Greece Olympiacos had a specific kit manufacturer and since 1982 a specific shirt sponsor as well The following table shows in detail Olympiacos kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors by year Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1979 Umbro 1980 Puma1980 1982 ASICS Tiger1982 Adidas 105 1982 1984 ASICS Tiger Fiat1984 1985 Travel Plan1985 1988 Puma Citizen1988 Toyota1989 Bank of Crete1989 1990 1990 1992 Diana1992 1993 Umbro1993 1994 Lotto1994 1995 Adidas Ethnokarta MasterCard1995 1997 Puma1997 2000 Aspis Bank2000 2005 Umbro Siemens Mobile2005 2006 Puma Siemens2006 2009 Vodafone2009 2010 Citibank2010 2013 Pame Stoixima2013 2015 UNICEF 106 2015 Adidas Stoiximan gr 107 Stadium EditMain article Karaiskakis Stadium See also Olympic Stadium Athens and Georgios Kamaras Stadium The Karaiskakis Stadium during a 2009 10 UEFA Champions League fixture against Arsenal The Karaiskakis Stadium situated at Neo Faliro in Piraeus is the current since 2004 and traditional home of Olympiacos With a capacity of 32 115 1 2 it is the largest football only stadium and the second largest football stadium overall in Greece It was built in 1895 as Neo Phaliron Velodrome to host the cycling events for the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens and the pitch was covered with curm Olympiacos started using it since its foundation in 1925 In 1964 the stadium was renovated and was given its current name after Georgios Karaiskakis a military commander of the Greek War of Independence with an athletics track around the pitch 108 Olympiacos left the Karaiskakis Stadium temporarily to play home matches at the newly built Athens Olympic Stadium in 1984 After a five year use 1984 1989 of the biggest stadium in Greece the team returned to their traditional home where they played until 1997 It was then that Olympiacos got back to the Athens Olympic Stadium where they stayed for another period of five years 1997 2002 In 2002 the Olympic Stadium was closed for renovation works due to the 2004 Summer Olympics and Olympiacos moved to the Georgios Kamaras Stadium in Rizoupoli home of Apollon Smyrnis for the following two seasons 2002 2004 Meanwhile the Karaiskakis Stadium had fallen in disrepair and was not anymore suitable for football matches In 2003 its use passed to Olympiacos in order to build a football only ground to be used for the football tournament of the 2004 Olympics In return Olympiacos got exclusive use of the stadium until 2052 covering all maintenance costs and also paying 15 of revenue to the Greek State The old stadium was demolished in the spring of 2003 and the new one was completed on 30 June 2004 at a total cost of 60 million 109 Nowadays the Karaiskakis Stadium is one of the most modern football grounds in Europe also hosting the museum of Olympiacos 110 with several facilities around Support Edit Olympiacos fans provide their support with extreme passion at home as well as away matches Here at the Karaiskakis Stadium against Chelsea for the knockout stage of the 2007 08 UEFA Champions League Mural at the Stadion Crvena Zvezda Belgrade featuring the brotherhood between the fans of Olympiacos and Red Star Belgrade Olympiacos traditional fanbase comes from the city of Piraeus where the club is based as well as a good part of the rest of the Athens area The club s popularity increased during the 1950s after winning consecutive titles and setting several records and they became the best supported football club in the country Traditionally Olympiacos used to represent the working class but the club has always attracted fans from all the social classes and their fanbase is not associated with any specific social group anymore 111 112 Olympiacos is the most popular Greek club according to UEFA 15 and numerous polls and researches 113 Several newspapers and magazines polls rank Olympiacos as the most popular club in Greece with a percentage varying between 30 and 40 among the fans and more or less 30 in total population which corresponds to around three and a half millions of supporters in Greece 16 114 The club is overwhelmingly popular in Piraeus where almost half of its population supports Olympiacos 115 while their support in the whole of Athens reaches 30 of the fans making them the 3rd most popular club in the Greek capital They are also the most popular club in the working class with a percentage of 37 and in all age groups 115 as well as among both male and female fans 116 the vast majority of their fans comes from the centre left and centre right of the political spectrum 115 Outside of Athens Olympiacos is the most popular club in Central Greece the Peloponnese Thessaly Additionally they have the highest average all time attendance in Greek football having topped the attendance tables in most of the seasons in Super League Greece history 117 Friendships Edit Red Star Belgrade Spartak MoscowIn 2006 Olympiacos was placed in the top ten of the clubs with the most paying members in the world holding ninth place just ahead of Real Madrid 118 As of April 2006 the club had some 83 000 registered members 119 Olympiacos and Red Star Belgrade fans have developed a deep friendship calling themselves the Orthodox Brothers 120 Usually Olympiacos supporters from several fan clubs attend Red Star s matches especially against their old rival Partizan and vice versa More recently the Orthodox Brothers have started to include fans of Spartak Moscow in their club Olympiacos fans are renowned for their passionate and fervent support to the team with the atmosphere at home matches regarded as intimidating When they played Newcastle United at home in the 2004 05 UEFA Cup the match was televised in the United Kingdom on Channel 5 and the guest commentator was former England international Tony Cottee who was constantly mentioning how great the atmosphere was During the game he was asked whether it was the most atmospheric stadium he had been to and replied I d have to say it probably is You hear a lot about various places and the atmosphere there but when you go you realise it s not all that But this place is the real deal 121 The experienced Czech international winger Jaroslav Plasil paid further testament to the hostile atmosphere created by Olympiacos fans at home before his team Bordeaux visit the Karaiskakis Stadium where he had played during his time with Monaco and stated It was one of the most intense atmospheres I ve ever experienced in a stadium so I expect it will be a bit like hell for us Their supporters really can help their team 122 Former Paris Saint Germain superstar striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic spoke of his admiration for Olympiacos supporters after an Olympiacos Paris Saint Germain match on 17 September 2013 They played in front of their fantastic public Olympiacos supporters were amazing My friend Olof Mellberg played here and he talked to me about the supporters I never saw it live but now I understand It s amazing It s a big advantage for Olympiacos 123 124 PSG billionaire owner Nasser Al Khelaifi stated I have big respect for the fans here I ve never seen fans like Olympiacos fans in my life 125 PSG and Brazil international winger Lucas Moura in an interview with goal com stated that Olympiacos home ground was the most intense and heated stadium he s ever played in 126 127 128 The Gate 7 tragedy Edit Main articles Karaiskakis Stadium disaster and Gate 7 Olympiacos F C The history of the Karaiskakis Stadium and Olympiacos was marked by the worst tragedy that ever hit Greek sports known as the Karaiskakis Stadium disaster On 8 February 1981 Olympiacos hosted AEK Athens for a league match which ended 6 0 in an unprecedented triumph for the host team of Piraeus During the last minutes of the game thousands of Olympiacos fans at the Gate 7 rushed to the exit to get to the stadium s main entrance and celebrate with the players but the doors were almost closed and the turnstiles still in place making the exit almost impossible 129 As people continued to come down from the stands unable to see what happened the stairs of Gate 7 became a death trap people were crushed tens of fans were seriously injured and twenty one young people died most of them by suffocation 130 In memory of this event every year on 8 February there is a memorial service at the stadium in honour of the supporters that died in that incident The service is attended by thousands of fans every year who are rhythmically shouting the phrase Aderfia zeite eseis mas odhgeite Adhelfia zite esis mas odhiyite Brothers you live you are the ones who guide us At the tribune part of the stadium where Gate 7 is now some seats are colored black instead of red shaping the number 7 whereas there is also a monument on the eastern side of the stadium bearing the names of all 21 supporters killed on that day in the stadium 131 Even though this incident affected almost solely the fanbase of Olympiacos other teams occasionally pay their respects to the people killed as well as they consider the incident to be a tragedy not only for one team but for the whole country In the past even foreign teams such as Liverpool and Red Star Belgrade have honoured the incident s victims 132 Rivalries EditMain articles Derby of the eternal enemies Olympiacos A E K rivalry Olympiacos PAOK rivalry and Piraeus derby Olympiacos fans in Karaiskakis Stadium during a 3 2 derby win against rivals Panathinaikos Traditionally Olympiacos main rival is Panathinaikos and their so called derby of the eternal enemies is a classic local derby in Attica the most famous fixture in Greek football and one of the most well known around the world 111 The two clubs are the most successful having won together a total of 67 League titles Olympiacos 47 Panathinaikos 20 and the most popular football clubs in Greece The rivalry also encompasses social cultural and regional differences Olympiacos coming from the famous port of Piraeus used to be very popular in the working to middle classes while Panathinaikos of downtown Athens was considered the representative of middle to higher social classes although this differentiation has weakened nowadays and the two clubs have similar fanbases 112 Most recent notorious incidents include a fan s death in 2007 during a pre arranged clash between hooligans on the occasion of a women s volleyball game between the two clubs which caused major upset in Greece 133 and the abandonment of a derby in 2012 after riots at the Athens Olympic Stadium which resulted in major fires in parts of it citation needed Olympiacos also shares a traditional rivalry with AEK Athens in one more local derby of the Greek capital with the other member of the so called Big three 134 but also with PAOK in the fiercest inter city rivalry in Greece between the most popular clubs of the two largest Greek cities Athens and Thessaloniki a rivalry that erupted in the 1960s for the sake of footballer Giorgos Koudas 135 A popular rivalry used to be the Piraeus derby between Olympiacos and Ethnikos Piraeus the second most successful football club in the region but the fixture has faded out due to Ethnikos constant presence in lower divisions in the last decades It remains a derby in water polo where Olympiacos and Ethnikos compete in the top division European performance EditMain article Olympiacos F C in European football Olympiacos players arrayed in Stamford Bridge in the second match for the 2007 08 UEFA Champions League first knockout round against Chelsea Olympiacos has a long presence in the UEFA competitions debuting on 13 September 1959 136 against Milan for the 1959 60 European Cup the first ever Greek club to compete in a European competition Olympiacos was also the first Greek club to advance to the next round of any European competition eliminating Zaglebie Sosnowiec for the 1963 64 European Cup Winners Cup Their best European campaigns are their presence in the 1998 99 UEFA Champions League quarter finals where they lost a semi final spot in the last minutes by Juventus and in the 1992 93 European Cup Winners Cup quarter finals losing to Atletico Madrid 137 138 139 Olympiacos is by far the highest ranked Greek club in the UEFA rankings occupying the 5th place in Europe in the five year ranking and the 6th in the ten year ranking as of 2019 11 12 They are also the Greek team with the most wins in all European competitions leading also the table with the most home and away wins 140 141 and the Greek team with the most games played in European level celebrating their 200th match on 23 February 2010 against Bordeaux in the 2009 10 UEFA Champions League first knockout round Olympiacos also holds the all time record attendance for a Greek club of 75 263 in a 1982 83 European Cup match against Hamburg at the Athens Olympic Stadium 142 Olympiacos has eliminated in either knockout matches or group stages clubs like Milan Arsenal Ajax Benfica Porto Borussia Dortmund Lazio Celtic Werder Bremen Anderlecht Monaco Deportivo La Coruna Hertha BSC Cagliari PSV Eindhoven GNK Dinamo Zagreb and Standard Liege among others They have spent most of their European history in the UEFA Champions League where they are widely known for being a strong home side having run some long standing sequences such as the 15 straight UEFA Champions League unbeaten home matches since their debut in the tournament under its new format when Manchester United stopped their record in their fifth consecutive participation and their 15 wins in 19 UEFA Champions League home matches between 2009 10 and 2014 15 They have a vast record of home wins over traditional European powerhouses and UEFA Champions League winners like Real Madrid Milan Liverpool Manchester United Ajax Juventus Arsenal Borussia Dortmund Benfica Porto Celtic Olympique Lyonnais Olympique Marseille Atletico Madrid Valencia Sevilla Leverkusen Galatasaray Fenerbahce Red Star Belgrade PSV Eindhoven among many others Olympiacos has also won the Balkans Cup in 1963 at a time when the competition was considered the second most important in the region after the European Cup 14 becoming the first ever Greek club to win an international competition From 2007 to 2016 Olympiacos participated seven times in the UEFA Champions League Group Stage and gathered at least 9 points in every one of those seven groups qualifying three times for the knockout stage Last 16 of the competition 2007 08 2009 10 2013 14 UEFA competition record Edit EuropeanTeam Competition Season Pld W D L GF GAOlympiacos European Cup UEFA Champions League 35 186 66 36 84 222 283Olympiacos UEFA Cup Winners Cup 9 33 14 6 13 43 47Olympiacos UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League 26 118 48 23 47 167 155Results Total 67 337 128 65 144 432 486Best campaigns Edit Season Achievement NotesEuropean Cup UEFA Champions League1974 75 Last 16 eliminated by Anderlecht 1 5 in Brussels 3 0 in Patras1982 83 Last 16 eliminated by Hamburg 0 1 in Hamburg 0 4 in Athens1983 84 Last 16 eliminated by Benfica 1 0 in Athens 0 3 in Lisbon1998 99 Quarter finals eliminated by Juventus 1 2 in Turin 1 1 in Athens2007 08 Last 16 eliminated by Chelsea 0 0 in Piraeus 0 3 in London2009 10 Last 16 eliminated by Bordeaux 0 1 in Piraeus 1 2 in Bordeaux2013 14 Last 16 eliminated by Manchester United 2 0 in Piraeus 0 3 in ManchesterEuropean Cup Winners Cup1961 62 Last 16 eliminated by Dynamo Zilina 2 3 in Piraeus 0 1 in Zilina1963 64 Last 16 eliminated by Lyon 1 4 in Lyon 2 1 in Piraeus1965 66 Last 16 eliminated by West Ham United 0 4 in London 2 2 in Piraeus1968 69 Last 16 eliminated by Dunfermline Athletic 0 4 in Dunfermline 3 0 in Piraeus1986 87 Last 16 eliminated by Ajax 0 4 in Amsterdam 1 1 in Athens1990 91 Last 16 eliminated by Sampdoria 0 1 in Piraeus 1 3 in Genoa1992 93 Quarter finals eliminated by Atletico Madrid 1 1 in Athens 1 3 in MadridUEFA Cup UEFA Europa League1989 90 Last 16 eliminated by Auxerre 1 1 in Piraeus 0 0 in Auxerre2004 05 Last 16 eliminated by Newcastle United 1 3 in Piraeus 0 4 in Newcastle2011 12 Last 16 eliminated by Metalist Kharkiv 1 0 in Kharkiv 1 2 in Piraeus2016 17 Last 16 eliminated by Besiktas 1 1 in Piraeus 1 4 in Istanbul2019 20 Last 16 eliminated by Wolverhampton Wanderers 1 1 in Piraeus 0 1 in Wolverhampton2020 21 Last 16 eliminated by Arsenal 1 3 in Piraeus 1 0 in London UEFA ranking Edit Further information UEFA coefficient 5 year club ranking at the end of season 2018 19 143 Rank Club Points gained in season Total2014 15 2015 16 2016 17 2017 18 2018 1933 Anderlecht 10 000 11 000 16 000 6 000 3 000 46 00033 Athletic Bilbao 10 000 17 000 9 000 10 000 46 00035 Olympiacos 11 000 10 000 10 000 5 000 8 000 44 00036 Wolfsburg 16 000 24 000 40 00037 Club Brugge 19 000 4 000 4 000 1 500 11 000 39 50010 year club ranking at the end of season 2018 19 144 Rank Club Points gained in season Total2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 2014 15 2015 16 2016 17 2017 18 2018 19 Bonus29 Roma 9 000 16 000 1 500 12 000 14 000 13 000 25 000 17 000 107 50029 CSKA Moscow 20 000 14 000 16 000 1 500 6 000 8 000 7 000 7 000 17 000 9 000 2 000 107 50031 Olympiacos 16 000 1 000 16 000 10 000 18 000 11 000 10 000 10 000 5 000 8 000 105 00032 Villarreal 7 000 23 000 4 000 12 000 23 000 9 000 8 000 16 000 102 00033 PSV Eindhoven 12 000 18 000 16 000 5 000 5 000 6 000 18 000 6 000 1 000 6 000 5 000 98 000Honours EditMain article Olympiacos F C honours Domestic competitions Edit Super League Greece Winners 47 record 1930 31 1932 33 1933 34 1935 36 1936 37 1937 38 1946 47 1947 48 1950 51 1953 54 1954 55 1955 56 1956 57 1957 58 1958 59 1965 66 1966 67 1972 73 1973 74 1974 75 1979 80 1980 81 1981 82 1982 83 1986 87 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 1999 2000 2000 01 2001 02 2002 03 2004 05 2005 06 2006 07 2007 08 2008 09 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 2014 15 2015 16 2016 17 2019 20 2020 21 2021 22 Greek Cup Winners 28 record 1946 47 1950 51 1951 52 1952 53 1953 54 1956 57 1957 58 1958 59 1959 60 1960 61 1962 63 1964 65 1967 68 1970 71 1972 73 1974 75 1980 81 1989 90 1991 92 1998 99 2004 05 2005 06 2007 08 2008 09 2011 12 2012 13 2014 15 2019 20 Greek Super Cup Winners 4 record 1980 145 1987 1992 2007 Greater Greece Cup Winners 3 record 1969 1972 1976Olympiacos in European competitions Edit UEFA Champions League Quarter Finals 1998 99 UEFA Cup Winners Cup Quarter Finals 1992 93 Balkans Cup Winners 1 1963Regional Edit Piraeus FCA Championship Winners 25 record 1925 1926 1927 1929 1930 1931 1934 1935 1937 1938 1940 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959Doubles Edit Winners 18 record 1946 47 1950 51 1953 54 1956 57 1957 58 1958 59 1972 73 1974 75 1980 81 1998 99 2004 05 2005 06 2007 08 2008 09 2011 12 2012 13 2014 15 2019 20Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 30 April 2023 146 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF BRA Ramon4 DF GRE Panagiotis Retsos on loan from Hellas Verona 6 MF FRA Yann M Vila7 MF GRE Kostas Fortounis11 FW MAR Youssef El Arabi captain 14 DF GRE Thanasis Androutsos15 DF GRE Sokratis Papastathopoulos 3rd captain 16 MF KOS Zymer Bytyqi17 MF GRE Marios Vrousai19 MF GRE Georgios Masouras21 MF ESP Pep Biel23 DF BRA Rodinei24 DF SEN Ousseynou Ba No Pos Nation Player27 MF SUI Pajtim Kasami28 MF FRA Mathieu Valbuena vice captain 31 GK ISL Ogmundur Kristinsson33 MF KOR Hwang In beom38 MF MLI Diadie Samassekou on loan from 1899 Hoffenheim 45 DF MDA Oleg Reabciuk47 MF ESP Sergi Canos on loan from Brentford 74 DF ALB Andreas Ndoj66 DF SEN Pape Abou Cisse77 MF CPV Garry Rodrigues88 GK GRE Konstantinos Tzolakis91 GK GRE Alexandros Paschalakis94 FW COD Cedric BakambuReserves and Academy Edit Main article Olympiacos F C B Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player29 MF GUI Algassime Bah40 DF GRE Petros Bagalianis51 MF GRE Georgios Syrmis55 MF GRE Christos Liatsos65 DF GRE Apostolos Apostolopoulos71 MF GRE Pavlos Mavroudis No Pos Nation Player76 DF GRE Vasilios Katsoulidis78 MF ARG Iago Ibagaza80 MF GRE Anastasios Sapountzis90 MF GRE Vasilios Sourlis98 MF GRE Angelos Argyriou99 GK GRE Athanasios PapadoudisOther players under contract Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation PlayerOut on loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player DF GRE Fotis Kitsos at Omonia until 31 May 2023 DF ISR Doron Leidner at Austria Wien until 30 June 2023 MF POR Pepe at Cartagena until 30 June 2023 MF POR Joao Carvalho at Estoril until 30 June 2023 MF FRA Abdoulaye Dabo at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023 MF GUI Mamadou Kane at Pafos until 30 June 2023 MF GUI Mady Camara at Roma until 30 June 2023 MF ARG Maximiliano Lovera at Ionikos until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player MF NGA Henry Onyekuru at Adana Demirspor until 30 June 2023 MF CMR Pierre Kunde at VfL Bochum until 30 June 2023 MF DEN Philip Zinckernagel at Standard Liege until 30 June 2023 MF FRA Bandiougou Fadiga at Ionikos until 30 June 2023 MF GUI Aguibou Camara at Atromitos until 30 June 2023 MF GRE Andreas Bouchalakis at Konyaspor until 30 June 2023 FW EGY Ahmed Hassan on loan from Alanyaspor until 30 June 2023 FW MTN Aboubakar Kamara at Aris until 30 June 2023 Former players EditSee also List of Olympiacos F C playersPersonnel EditCoaching staff Edit See also List of Olympiacos F C managers Position Staff 147 148 Manager Jose AnigoAssistant managers Analysts Giannis Vogiatzakis Iosif LoukasFitness coach Christos MourikisGoalkeepers trainer Panagiotis AgriogiannisRehabilitation trainer Kike SanzTechnical staff Edit Position Staff 149 Team manager Avraam PapadopoulosKit takers Pavlos Pitsilidis Dimos MerisFootball department liaison office Spyros BitsakisInterpreter Marina TsaliScouting staff Edit Position Staff 150 Chief scout Jose AnigoScout Simos HavosScout Giannis TheodorouMedical staff Edit Position Staff 151 Club doctor Christos TheosHead of physiotherapy Dimitris SkordisPhysiotherapists Nikos Lykouresis Panagiotis Sivilias Sifis KlidisMasseur Aristidis ChelioudakisManagement EditPosition Staff 152 153 154 President Evangelos MarinakisVice presidents Giannis Moralis Michalis Kountouris Christos Mistriotis 155 Konstantinos KarapapasVice president and managing director Dimitris AgrafiotisMembers Ioannis Vrentzos Konstantinos Barbis Andreas Nasikas Giorgos PavlouSport director Christian KarembeuTechnical director Jose AnigoFormer presidents Edit Years Name1925 1950 Michalis Manouskos1950 1954 Thanasis Mermigas1954 1967 Giorgos Andrianopoulos1967 1975 Nikos Goulandris1975 1978 Kostas Thanopoulos1978 1987 Stavros Daifas1987 1988 Giorgos Koskotas1988 1992 Argyris Saliarelis1992 1993 Stavros Daifas1993 2010 Sokratis Kokkalis2010 2017 Evangelos Marinakis2017 2021 Giannis Moralis2021 present Evangelos MarinakisStatistics EditGreek Championship records Edit Outline RecordChampions in a row 7 1997 2003 2011 2017 Undefeated Champions 6 1936 37 1937 38 1947 48 1950 51 1953 54 1954 55 Series of five or more consecutive Championships 5 World Record 8 1933 1938 1954 1959 1997 2003 2005 2009 2011 2017 Record win 11 0 vs Fostiras 1973 74 Most wins in a season 30 1999 00 Most goals scored in a season 102 1973 74 Fewest goals conceded in a season 13 1972 73 Longest sequence of wins 17 1st day of 2015 16 17th day of 2015 16 Longest sequence of unbeaten matches 58 3rd day of 1972 73 27th day of 1973 74 Top scorers Edit The table refers to Olympiakos top scorers in all official competitions Classification Player Total goals1 Giorgos Sideris 2992 Nikos Anastopoulos 1983 Alexis Alexandris 1784 Predrag Đorđevic 1585 Nikos Gioutsos 1286 Michalis Kritikopoulos 1027 Elias Yfantis 1018 Giannis Vazos 989 Giovanni 9610 Aris Papazoglou 9111 Youssef El Arabi 88The next table refers to the top scorers of Olympiakos only in the Greek championship Classification Player Total goals1 Giorgos Sideris 2262 Nikos Anastopoulos 1443 Alexis Alexandris 1274 Predrag Đorđevic 1275 Nikos Gioutsos 986 Michalis Kritikopoulos 837 Aris Papazoglou 728 Kostas Fortounis 699 Panagiotis Tsalouchidis 6510 Youssef El Arabi 64See also Edit Association football portal Greece portalOlympiacos B Olympiacos CFP Olympiacos F C Youth Academy European Club AssociationReferences Edit a b Epishma stoixeia OLYMPIAKOS S F P O S F P 2018 19 in Greek superleaguegreece net Archived from the original on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 12 December 2018 a b Seating Plan in Greek olympiacos org Archived from the original on 2 October 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Olympiacos FC History olympiacos org Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 30 April 2013 The new Karaiskakis Stadium olympiacos org Archived from the original on 23 August 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Olympiacos a true Greek legend fifa com 7 October 2011 Archived from the original on 11 January 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Trophies olympiacos org Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 5 May 2013 Oi omades me toys perissoteroys titloys ston kosmo 9os o Olympiakos in Greek sport24 gr 10 May 2018 Archived from the original on 30 September 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 a b Mplater gia Olympiako Ti stayraetos in Greek sport24 gr 28 April 2015 Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 Retrieved 29 April 2015 Unbeaten RSSSF Archived from the original on 16 December 2015 Retrieved 20 September 2015 This is the new legendary shirt olympiacos org 7 August 2013 Archived from the original on 11 August 2013 Retrieved 8 August 2013 a b Club coefficients UEFA Archived from the original on 11 July 2018 Retrieved 31 July 2019 a b Club coefficients UEFA Archived from the original on 3 January 2019 Retrieved 31 July 2019 New era in European game UEFA 22 January 2008 Archived from the original on 29 December 2014 Retrieved 29 May 2013 a b Balkan Cup RSSSF Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 22 November 2018 a b Concentration of people supporting the most popular club PDF Club licensing benchmarking report Financial year 2012 UEFA 17 April 2014 Archived PDF from the original on 13 September 2017 Retrieved 20 April 2014 a b Perissoteroys opadoys o Olympiakos in Greek sport24 gr 30 June 2009 Archived from the original on 22 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Posoi einai oi opadoi Olympiakoy Pana8hnaikoy AEK PAOK Arh kai poso toys aresoyn oi omades toys efetos in Greek Archived from the original on 27 July 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2013 H pio prosfath apografh in Greek Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2014 Sthn A8hna to 45 1 twn fila8lwn einai ery8roleykoi 35 3 oi prasinoi 16 oi Enwsites In Athens 45 1 of fans support Olympiacos H pio prosfath apografh in Greek goalday gr 31 May 2006 Archived from the original on 10 May 2009 Retrieved 4 February 2009 Red and White Olympiakos Moments in New York greekreporter com 4 June 2011 Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 H omogeneia den 3exna ton Erasitexnh in Greek redplanet gr 1 August 2013 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2018 History olympiacos org Olympiacos F C Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 21 November 2014 10 Olympiakos v Panathinaikos goal com 20 September 2013 Archived from the original on 12 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 The 25 biggest club rivalries in world football where does Real Madrid vs Atletico rank telegraph co uk 26 May 2016 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Biggest football derbies Combined domestic trophy haul thestatszone com Archived from the original on 21 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Rivals Olympiakos vs Panathinaikos Derby of the Eternal Enemies outsideoftheboot com 27 April 2017 Archived from the original on 30 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Flares fighting and fear Why Olympiakos vs Panathinaikos is Europe s maddest derby fourfourtwo com 5 March 2014 Archived from the original on 12 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Football First 11 Do or die derbies cnn com 22 October 2008 Archived from the original on 17 October 2014 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Neil Johnston 22 October 2014 Olympiakos Panathinaikos Europe s maddest derby bbc com Archived from the original on 22 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 H Istoria toy Olympiakoy in Greek olympiacos org Archived from the original on 5 October 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2012 Peiraias Regional Championship Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Retrieved 12 March 2009 90 years Olympiacos sdna gr Archived from the original on 22 July 2015 Retrieved 22 July 2015 Panathinaikos Olympiacos 1 6 in Greek Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 20 March 2014 Oi podosfairistes sto metwpo ths Albanias Greek footballers in the front in Greek Archived from the original on 3 August 2017 Retrieved 15 March 2014 O 8rylikos hrwas Nikos Godas The legendary hero Nikos Godas in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 16 December 2014 Retrieved 20 April 2015 The Nikos Godas story Archived from the original on 25 August 2014 Retrieved 15 March 2014 Ekteleste me me th fanela toy Olympiakoy Binteo me th sygklonistikh istoria toy Nikoy Goda in Greek onalert gr 19 November 2012 Archived from the original on 26 October 2014 Retrieved 10 May 2015 Olympiacos a true Greek Legend FIFA Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 27 January 2014 Olympiakos Greece Soccer Anthems Archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2012 Olympiacos Milan 2 2 uefa com Archived from the original on 11 October 2015 Retrieved 5 January 2015 a b c Otan o Olympiakos to 1959 synanthse th Milan in Greek retrosport Archived from the original on 3 February 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2021 a b Balkans Cup RSSSF Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 5 January 2015 a b c 2nd Balkan Cup 1961 63 RSSSF Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 Retrieved 20 January 2015 To Balkaniko Kypello toy 1963 in Greek redsagainsthemachine gr Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2015 a b Otan efyge o Mpoykobi in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2015 a b Toy Mpoykobi h omadara in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 27 February 2015 Trikala Olympiacos 0 5 12 June 1966 rare photos and videos in Greek fatsimare gr Archived from the original on 13 May 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Trikala Olympiacos 0 5 documentary in Greek Sportime newspaper via youtube com Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2015 O Mitsel 3eperase ton Mpoykobi in Greek paraskhnio gr 8 December 2013 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 Adiko to 4 0 in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Toy Mpoykobi thn omadara anthem in Greek youtube com Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Xoynta kai Andrianopoylos 2 redsagainsthemachine gr Archived from the original on 26 June 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2013 Ypo8esh Koyda redsagainsthemachine gr Archived from the original on 8 May 2017 Retrieved 28 May 2013 H nyxta poy efyge o Mpoykobi in Greek newsbeast gr 13 December 2011 Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 6 April 2013 O 8rylos poy eri3e agkyra sto Limani in Greek kathimerini gr Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 28 May 2013 H nyxta poy efyge o Mpoykobi in Greek redsagainsthemachine gr Archived from the original on 14 December 2016 Retrieved 28 May 2014 Nikos Goylandrhs Eseis ton 8elete Olympiako egw Olympiakara in Greek redsagainsthemachine gr Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 14 May 2015 a b Otan apekleise thn Kaliari in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 Olympiakos Eyrwpaikh paroysia th dekaetia toy 1970 in Greek olympiacoscfp1925 Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2015 European Champions in 1967 finalists in 1970 semi finalists in 1972 O Olympiakos tapeinwse thn Seltik toy Ntalgklis in Greek sportday gr Retrieved 22 April 2015 Otan gonatise th Seltik in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 22 April 2015 Otan o Olympiakos aggi3e to 8ayma in Greek newsbeast gr 2 October 2013 Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 San Shmera 6 November 1974 in Greek enikos gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 H alh8eia gia ton Palotai in Greek sport24 gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 To profil ths Anterlext in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 H sfagh toy Palotai in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 O 8rylos h Anterlext kai o Palotai in Greek sportday gr Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 May 2015 To a3exasto mparaz toy Boloy Olympiakos Pana8hnaikos 2 1 in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 22 May 2015 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Graham Wood 8 January 2011 End of an era as Kokkalis retires Athens News Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2012 Prentragk Tzortzebits sdna gr Retrieved 10 June 2015 permanent dead link Panathinaikos Olympiacos 0 2 Youtube Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Olympiakos Pana8hnaikos 2 0 Telikos Kypelloy 1999 youtube Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2015 Opoy ki an briskesai 8 akoloy8hsw in Greek gavros gr Archived from the original on 27 May 2015 Retrieved 2 May 2015 a b Sto Ntele Alpi kai o aeras toy OAKA in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 20 April 2015 Retrieved 8 May 2015 a b To 8ryliko glenti sthn Rizoypolh in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 27 May 2015 Retrieved 12 April 2015 Seven to Heaven in Greek redplanet gr Archived from the original on 27 May 2015 Retrieved 10 April 2015 Greek champions Olympiacos name Sollied as coach BBC co uk 17 June 2005 Archived from the original on 24 November 2014 Retrieved 6 April 2013 To kalytero seri sthn Eyrwph in Greek pamesports gr Archived from the original on 27 May 2015 Retrieved 10 April 2015 Olympiakos PAS Giannina 2 1 in Greek contra gr Archived from the original on 27 May 2015 Retrieved 16 April 2015 Big spending Shakhtar eager to make splash in Europe reuters com 14 September 2007 Archived from the original on 9 January 2016 Retrieved 25 March 2013 El mexicano Nery Castillo del Olympiakos al Shakhtar Donetsk in Spanish Soccerway com Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2013 Real Madrid finish top of Champions League Group C Olympiacos also go through after cruising past Werder Bremen 3 0 CNN com Archived from the original on 18 February 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2013 Lemonis leaves Olympiacos post UEFA com Archived from the original on 13 March 2008 Retrieved 12 March 2008 Mellberg joins Olympiakos from Juventus goal com Archived from the original on 29 August 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2013 Olympiacos Arsenal 1 0 BBC co uk 9 December 2009 Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 2 January 2013 Olympiacos Panathinaikos 2 0 Mitroglou Double Takes Thrylos Top goal com Archived from the original on 16 February 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2013 Dev OTO Super League Greece Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Olympiacos wins 17th double beating Xanthi in Greek Cup final enikos gr Archived from the original on 9 January 2016 Retrieved 25 May 2015 a b c Olympiacos org Official Website of Olympiacos Piraeus Olympiacos org Official Website of Olympiacos Piraeus Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Dev OTO Super League Greece Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 a b O 8rylos ta spaei in Greek Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Dev OTO Super League Greece Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Eyrwph telos gia ton Olympiako me moiraio ton Leali 4 1 h Mpesiktas Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Groups UEFA Champions League ESPN FC www espnfc com Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Kakh arxh in Greek Archived from the original on 6 September 2022 Retrieved 12 September 2017 ORISTIKO Telos o Xasi apo ton Olympiako Archived from the original on 26 September 2017 Retrieved 27 September 2017 Meta apo 12 xronia apokleismos apo thn 5h agwnistikh gia ton Olympiako www athlitiki com in Greek Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2021 Arnhtiko rekor sto Champions League an xasei apo thn Gioybentoys Archived from the original on 6 December 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Reuters Editorial Soccer Olympiakos Piraeus appoint Spaniard Oscar Garcia as head coach U K Archived from the original on 7 October 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2018 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Anakoinwse Pedro Martins o Olympiakos Archived from the original on 11 April 2018 Retrieved 10 April 2018 O Karlos Kormperan einai o neos proponhths toy Olympiakoy in Greek Archived from the original on 1 August 2022 Retrieved 1 August 2022 Olympiacos team olympiacos org Archived from the original on 25 September 2011 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Find out more about Olympiacos arsenal com Archived from the original on 12 September 2014 Retrieved 29 May 2013 sentragoal gr Archived 27 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Greek Olympiakos kai Unicef synexizoyn mazi kai sth fanela Archived 27 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine 26 June 2015 in Greek Official Website Olympiacos 2 October 2015 To Stoiximan gr megalos xorhgos ths PAE Olympiakos Anakoinwsh ths PAE Olympiakos gia thn enar3h ths synergasias ths me thn koryfaia etaireia stoixhmatismoy Stoiximan gr in Greek Archived from the original on 4 November 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Velodrome amp Karaiskaki Stadium 1895 1964 2003 stadia gr Archived from the original on 4 September 2017 Retrieved 26 August 2013 New Karaiskaki Stadium stadia gr Archived from the original on 15 January 2018 Retrieved 4 January 2009 The museum of Olympiacos Olympiacos org Archived from the original on 18 September 2013 Retrieved 4 August 2013 a b Football First 11 Do or die derbies CNN 22 October 2008 Archived from the original on 17 October 2014 Retrieved 7 February 2009 a b Olympiacos Piraeus vs Panathinaikos Footballderbies com Archived from the original on 16 October 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2009 1 Archived 15 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Elabon 2022 OSFP 34 PAO 28 AEK 25 PAOK 10 Arhs 3 Ystera apo 15eth ereyna dyo panepisthmiakoi sto biblio toys katagrafoyn thn istoria kai gewgrafia toy ellhnikoy podosfairoy 30 June 2009 TA NEA tanea gr in Greek 2 Archived 27 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Perissoteroys fila8loys h Mpartselona prwth ellhnikh omada o Olympiakos in Greek a b c Ghpedo eisai koinwnia kai soy moiazw in Greek Eleftherotypia 23 May 2004 Archived from the original on 29 September 2008 Retrieved 4 February 2009 Protimhsh podosfairikhs omadas in Greek AEK Empire 2005 Archived from the original on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 4 February 2009 Ellas attendances EFS Attendances Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 4 February 2009 Portugal celebrates as Benfica smashes world record AIPS website 2006 Archived from the original on 5 July 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2009 Spontes dhmosioy in Greek www sport24 gr 14 April 2006 Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 5 February 2009 To filiko toy 1994 Ery8ros Asteras Olympiakos in Greek 1925 gr 30 October 2012 Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 27 May 2013 Tony Cottee Channel 5 broadcast of the UEFA Cup match Olympiacos vs Newcastle Live 10 March 2005 Away Game Against Olympiacos Will Be A Bit Like Hell Bordeaux Midfielder Jaroslav Plasil www goal com 28 January 2010 Archived from the original on 4 March 2010 Retrieved 26 February 2010 Impraimobits Den arkoyse o kosmos toy Olympiakoy in Greek onsports gr 18 September 2013 Archived from the original on 13 February 2021 Retrieved 5 February 2021 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.