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Panathinaikos F.C.

Panathinaikos Football Club (Greek: ΠΑΕ Παναθηναϊκός Α.Ο. [panaθinaiˈkos] (listen)), known as Panathinaikos, or by its full name, and the name of its parent sports club, Panathinaikos A.O. or PAO (Παναθηναϊκός Αθλητικός Όμιλος; Panathinaïkós Athlitikós Ómilos, "All-Athenian Athletic Club"), is a Greek professional football club based in Athens, Greece.

Panathinaikos
Full nameΠαναθηναϊκός Αθλητικός Όμιλος
Panathinaïkós Athlitikós Ómilos
(Pan-Athenian Athletic Club)
Nickname(s)Οι Πράσινοι-I Prasini (The Greens)
Το Τριφύλλι-To Tryfili (The Shamrock)
Founded3 February 1908; 115 years ago (1908-02-03) as Football Club of Athens
GroundApostolos Nikolaidis Stadium
Capacity15,000[1]
OwnerGiannis Alafouzos
PresidentGiannis Alafouzos[2]
ManagerIvan Jovanović
LeagueSuper League Greece
2021–22Super League Greece, 4th
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Created in 1908 as "Podosfairikos Omilos Athinon" (Football Club of Athens) by Georgios Kalafatis,[3][4] they play in the Super League Greece, being one of the most successful clubs in Greek football and one of the three clubs which have never been relegated from the top division. Amongst their major titles are 20 Greek Championships, 19 Greek Cups, achieving eight times the Double, and 3 Greek Super Cups.[5][6] They are also one of the two clubs that won a championship undefeated, going without a loss in a top-flight campaign in the 1963–64 season.

Panathinaikos is also the most successful Greek club in terms of achievements in European competitions. It is the only Greek team that has reached the European Cup (later renamed UEFA Champions League) final in 1971 (which they lost to Ajax 2–0), and also the semi-finals twice, in 1985 and 1996.

It is also the only Greek team that has played for the Intercontinental Cup (1971). Furthermore, they have reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League on another two occasions (in 1992 and 2002), as well as the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup twice (1988 and 2003). They have also won the Balkans Cup in 1977. Panathinaikos is a member of the European Club Association.

Since the 1950s, the club maintains some of the oldest and most successful academies in Greece, producing talent for the first team and feeding the Greece national football team. They have played their home games in the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium, considered their traditional home ground, and the Athens Olympic Stadium.

According to research and polls, Panathinaikos is the second most popular football team in Greece, behind Olympiacos.[7][8][9]

They hold a long-term rivalry with Olympiacos, the clash between the two teams being referred to as the "derby of the eternal enemies".[10]

History

Early years

According to the official history of the club, Panathinaikos was founded by Giorgos Kalafatis on 3 February 1908, when he and 40 other athletes decided to break away from Panellinios Gymnastikos Syllogos following the club's decision to discontinue its football team.[11] The name of the new club was "Podosferikos Omilos Athinon" (Football Club of Athens). It was founded with the aim of spreading and making more known this new sport (football) to the Athenian and Greek public in general. Also, the intention of the founders was to create a team for all of Athens and to be connected with the rest of the European football movement, which was already active.[12] The first president elected was Alexandros Kalafatis, brother of Giorgos. The ground of the team was in Patission Street.[13] Oxford University athlete John Cyril Campbell was brought in as coach, the first time that a foreigner was appointed as the coach of a Greek team.[13] Konstantinos Tsiklitiras, the great Greek athlete of the early 20th century, played as goalkeeper for the new team.

 
The first team of 1908

In 1910, after a dispute among a number of board members, Kalafatis with most of the players—also followed by Campbell—decided to pull out of POA and secured a new ground in Amerikis Square. Subsequently, the name of the club changed to Panellinios Podosferikos Omilos ("Panhellenic Football Club") and its colours to green and white. By 1914, Campbell had returned to England but the club was already at the top of Greek football with players such as Michalis Papazoglou, Michalis Rokkos and Loukas Panourgias.

In 1918, the team adopted the trifolium (shamrock) as its emblem, as proposed by Michalis Papazoglou.[14] In 1921 and 1922, the Athens-Piraeus FCA organized the first two post-WWI championships, in both of which PPO was declared champion. By that stage, the club had outgrown both the grounds in Patission Street and Amerikis Square, due mainly to its expansion in other sports, and began to look at vacant land in the area of Perivola on Alexandras Avenue as its potential new ground.[14] After long discussions with the Municipality of Athens, an agreement was finally reached and in 1922 Leoforos ("Avenue" in Greek) was granted to the club.[13]

The move to a permanent home ground also heralded another—final—name change to Panathinaikos Athlitikos Omilos (PAO), "All-Athenian Athletic Club", on 15 March 1924,[13] from now on a multi-sport club. However, the decision was already taken by 1922.

In 1926, the Hellenic Football Federation (HFF) was founded and the first Greek Championship under its authority took place in 1927.

 
Angelos Messaris, the legendary player of the '30s
 
The champion team of 1930

Panathinaikos won undefeated the Championship of 1929–30 under the guidance of József Künsztler and Angelos Messaris as the team's star player.[15] Other notable players of this Belle Époque period of the team were Antonis Migiakis, Diomidis Symeonidis, Mimis Pierrakos and Stefanos Pierrakos, among others. They thrashed rivals Olympiacos 8–2, a result that still remains the biggest win either team has achieved against its rival, with Messaris scoring three goals.[16] The team also defeated Aris 1–4 away in Thessaloniki. Messaris, who scored again three goals, became a hero and chant for the fans.

Crisis and WWII years

In 1931, a serious disagreement between leading board member Apostolos Nikolaidis from one side, and some players (most notably Angelos Messaris) and club's officials on the other side,[14] regarding the professionalization in the Greek football, which lasted two years, damaged the club and led to a counterproductive period. In the meantime, the HFF Greek Cup had commenced in 1932. The last bright moment for the Greens before World War II was winning the Cup for the first time in 1940 against Aris, 3–1.

In 1940, with the break out of the Greco-Italian War, many players of the club joined the Hellenic Army. Mimis Pierrakos was killed during the war (later, during the 1950s, his bones were transferred from Albania back to Athens). During the Axis Occupation of Greece from 1941 to 1944, many players of the team became members of United Panhellenic Organization of Youth (PEAN) resistance organization.,[17] while Michalis Papazoglou had a leading role in the resistance group of Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz.P

After this long crisis period, Panathinaikos had to wait until 1949 to win again a Greek Championship under the guidance of the Austrian coach Johann Strnad. That same year, Vangelis Panakis and Kostas Linoxilakis came to the club and quickly became the side's new star players. Panathinaikos was again champion for the 1952–53 Panhellenic Championship.

Until 1959, the team had also won seven of the last eight Athens Championships, the regional championships organised in Greece. In 1959, Mimis Domazos, the emblematic captain of the team, made his first appearance with Panathinaikos and the same year took place the first season under the new system of Alpha Ethniki (1959–60 Alpha Ethniki). Panathinaikos was the champion team.

1960s: The Golden Decade, the Bobek's rejuvenation

During the next years, Panathinaikos were again champions in 1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1969 and 1970. Moreover, the team won two more Greek Cups, in 1967 and 1969. Also, during these years, a long process of rejuvenation took place in the club. Notable players retired, such as Panakis, Linoxilakis, Takis Loukanidis and Andreas Papaemmanouil, and the team had to count on young players like Domazos, Antonis Antoniadis, Anthimos Kapsis, Kostas Eleftherakis and Takis Ikonomopoulos.

Stjepan Bobek was the main contributor to this process. In 1963, he became the club's head coach, changing the playing style of the team to a 4–3–3 and created a new team based on young players (the "Bobek's rejuvenation"). Under his guidance, Panathinaikos won the Championship of 1964 without a loss, making them one of the two teams that has won the Greek Championship (with its modern system) undefeated.[11] Notable players of the team included Panakis, Domazos, Takis Ikonomopoulos, Totis Filakouris, Frangiskos Sourpis and Aristidis Kamaras.

With the establishment of the Greek military regime, the president of the club, Loukas Panourgias, was forced out of the presidency. The contract of Bobek was canceled by the State, while Apostolos Nikolaidis, the old player, manager and official of the club, went on trial.[18]

In 1967, the great Béla Guttmann came as coach, but he soon left and ex-player Lakis Petropoulos was appointed. Under his guidance, Panathinaikos won the championships of 1969 (with a double) and 1970.

Puskás years and the epic road to Wembley

 
Line-up of the 1971 European Cup Final.
 
The team in the 1971 European Cup Final against Ajax.

1970–71 European Cup finalists

In 1971, under the guidance of Ferenc Puskás, Panathinaikos were 1970–71 European Cup finalists, the first and only Greek team until today, losing 2–0 to Ajax at Wembley Stadium.[11] In the road to the final, they eliminated Jeunesse Esch, Slovan Bratislava, Everton and Red Star Belgrade.[11][19] Notable players included the captain Mimis Domazos, Anthimos Kapsis, Aristidis Kamaras, Kostas Eleftherakis, Totis Filakouris and the goalkeepers Takis Ikonomopoulos and Vasilis Konstantinou. Antonis Antoniadis was the top scorer in the competition scoring ten goals.

In the same year, Panathinaikos played for the 1971 Intercontinental Cup (due to the refusal of Ajax to participate), where they lost to Uruguayan club Nacional (1–1 in Greece, 2–1 in Uruguay).[20] Totis Filakouris was the scorer for the Greek club.

During the last amateur years of Greek football, the Trifolium won one more Championship in 1972. Antonis Antoniadis was again top scorer with 39 goals (also second in Europe). His record remains until today in the Greek league.

With the collapse of the military regime, Apostolos Nikolaidis became again active for the club and was appointed honorary president of Panathinaikos. In 1975, one of the greatest coaches of his era, the Brazilian Aymoré Moreira, who mainly worked in Brazil (World Cup Champion with the Brazil national team in 1962), was appointed. After a year and a half of poor results, however, he was replaced by Kazimierz Górski. With Górski, Panathinaikos won the double in 1977, followed by a Balkans Cup victory in the same year.[21] Notable foreign players who played for the team during the late 1970s include Juan Ramón Verón, Araquem de Melo and Óscar Álvarez.

Vardinogiannis era (1979–2012)

 
Dimitris Saravakos (2009). Top scorer in the 1987–88 UEFA Cup, one of the best players in the club's history and Greek football.

In 1979, Greek football turned professional. The Vardinogiannis family purchased PAO's football department and Giorgos Vardinogiannis became president.[14] Panathinaikos were one of the first Greek clubs that formed a women's team in 1980, but that department is currently inactive.

The transformation period lasted a few years, but in 1982 the club won its first professional era trophy, the Greek Cup, and during the 1980s they would go on winning two championships (1984, 1986), four more Greek Cups (1984, 1986—with a 4–0 against Olympiacos in the final—, 1988, 1989) and the Greek Super Cup in 1988. The great star of the team during these years was Dimitris Saravakos, nicknamed "The Kid." Saravakos, a high-technique explosive midfielder and iconic captain of Panathinaikos, was the alsolute idol for the fans during the 1980s, while other players included Nikos Sarganis, Spiros Livathinos, Velimir Zajec, Juan Ramón Rocha, Christos Dimopoulos and Giannis Kyrastas.

In the 1984–85 season, Panathinaikos, with coach Jacek Gmoch and stars Dimitris Saravakos, Velimir Zajec, Juan Ramón Rocha and Ioannis Kyrastas, made a run in Europe, eliminating Feyenoord, Linfield and IFK Göteborg to reach the semi-finals of the European Cup, where they were knocked out by Liverpool.[11]

In 1987–88, they made it also to the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup, eliminating Juventus, Auxerre and Budapest Honvéd. Dimitris Saravakos was top scorer of the competition.

The 1990s were an even more successful period for the club, both nationally and internationally. Four Greek championships (1990, 1991, 1995, 1996), four Greek Cups (1991, 1993, 1994, 1995) and two Greek Super Cups (1993, 1994) were awarded to the club.

In the 1991–92 season, Panathinaikos reached also the last eight of the European Cup and took part in the first ever European tournament to have a group stage.[22]

In 1995–96, with Juan Ramon Rocha as coach and key players Krzysztof Warzycha, Józef Wandzik, Stratos Apostolakis, Georgios Georgiadis, Dimitris Markos, Giannis Kalitzakis, Giorgos Donis and Juan Jose Borrelli, Panathinaikos reached the Champions League semi-finals, finishing first in the group stage against Nantes, Porto, Aalborg BK and eliminating Legia Warsaw in the quarter-finals.

In the semi-finals, Panathinaikos faced Ajax, recording an impressive 0–1 first leg away victory with Krzysztof Warzycha scoring the winning goal. Ajax had a record of 22 undefeated international matches until then, with Panathinaikos breaking their series. The Greek team, however, suffered a 0–3 defeat on the second leg. Thus, Panathinaikos was denied entry to a Champions League final once more.

 
Giorgos Karagounis, captain of Panathinaikos and the Greece national football team.

In the summer of 2000, President Giorgos Vardinogiannis resigned from his duties with complaints for the refereeing situation in Greece and passed his shares to his nephew Giannis Vardinogiannis, who changed the style of the club's management. Angelos Anastasiadis was initially appointed coach of the team and later the ex-player Giannis Kyrastas.

With the arrival of coach Sergio Markarian, Panathinaikos reached the quarter-finals of the 2001–02 UEFA Champions League, being eliminated by Barcelona. Panathinaikos had passed the first group stage as the top club against Arsenal, Mallorca and Schalke 04, and the second group stage as second against Real Madrid, Porto and Sparta Prague.

In the first leg of the quarter-finals, Panathinaikos managed to defeat Barcelona by 1–0 in Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium.[23] The second leg in Camp Nou was to be an eventful one. Panathinaikos scored first thanks to a beautiful goal by Michalis Konstantinou but eventually was eliminated as Barcelona scored three goals.[24]

Ιn Europe, Panathinaikos made it to the quarter-finals of UEFA Cup quarter-finals. En route, the Greek team had knocked-out Litex Lovech, Fenerbahçe (with an impressive 4–1 win in Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium), Slovan Liberec and Anderlecht. During the quarter-finals, although winning the first match in Estádio das Antas against eventual winners of the trophy FC Porto of José Mourinho, with the header of Emmanuel Olisadebe, they were eliminated in the second leg after extra time.[25]

Notable players of this team included Takis Fyssas, Giorgos Karagounis, Antonis Nikopolidis, Angelos Basinas, Nikos Lyberopoulos, Michalis Konstantinou, Giourkas Seitaridis, Sotirios Kyrgiakos, Paulo Sousa, Goran Vlaović, Rene Henriksen, Joonas Kolkka, Jan Michaelsen and Emmanuel Olisadebe, considered by the fans one of the best teams in the club's history.

During 2002–03 Alpha Ethniki season, they lost the Greek championship in the last two games by arch-rivals Olympiacos.

Under the guidance of Israeli coach Itzhak Shum, Panathinaikos managed to win the championship in 2004.[26] They won also the Cup, beating Olympiacos 3–1 in the final, making the double.[27] New players like Ezequiel González, Lucian Sanmartean and Markus Münch had signed the summer before. In the Champions League, they came third in the group stage facing Manchester United, VfB Stuttgart and Rangers.

However, Shum was unexpectedly fired early in the next season (2004–05) and Zdeněk Ščasný succeeded him on the bench. Panathinaikos finished second in the championship, while in the Champions League they came again third in the group stage facing Rosenborg, PSV and Arsenal. They continued in the UEFA Cup, where they were eliminated by Sevilla.

In 2005, major changes were made in the team's roster. Players like Angelos Basinas and Michalis Konstantinou departed, while others like Flávio Conceição, Igor Bišćan and Andreas Ivanschitz arrived. Ščasný gave his seat to Alberto Malesani. At the start of the 2006–07 season, Malesani left the team and was replaced by Hans Backe, who left only three months after his appointment; Víctor Muñoz was his replacement. For the 2007–08 season, Panathinaikos hired José Peseiro.

On 22 April 2008, and under pressure from the fan base, main shareholder Giannis Vardinogiannis gave a press conference in which he announced the decision of his family to reduce their share in the club to 50%—after 30 years of full ownership—through an €80 million increase of the company's capital stock. After the negotiations and the share capital increase, the Vardinogiannis family would hold 56% of the club, the amateur Club 10% and the other shareholders 34% (with main investors Andreas Vgenopoulos, Pavlos Giannakopoulos, Adamantios Polemis and Nikos Pateras). Nikos Pateras was selected to be the new president of the club.

 
Djibril Cissé, two seasons in row top scorer for the Greek league

Following the major changes in 2008, Panathinaikos hired Henk ten Cate as coach and bought many expensive players, such as Gilberto Silva from Arsenal and Gabriel from Fluminense. In the 2008–09 season, the Greens proved that they could hold their weight in the Champions League by reaching the last 16. However, they disappointed in the Greek Championship, finishing third in the regular season, though they managed to come second overall after the playoff mini-league.

The 2009–10 season was a successful one for Panathinaikos. During the summer transfer period, the club bought Djibril Cissé from Marseille, Kostas Katsouranis from Benfica, Sebastián Leto from Liverpool and various other players, spending more than €35 million in total. Henk ten Cate left in December to be replaced by Nikos Nioplias. The team managed to reach the last 16 of the Europa League, eliminating A.S. Roma after two amazing matches in Olympic Stadium of Athens and Stadio Olimpico.[28] Panathinaikos also won both the Greek Championship and the Greek Cup, beating Aris by 1–0 in the final of the latter, thanks to a goal by Sebastián Leto.[29]

In 2011, due to financial problems and management disagreements, Panathinaikos sold Cissé for €5.8 million to Lazio and first-choice goalkeeper Alexandros Tzorvas to Palermo to reduce the budget.[30][31] New players then entered, such as Quincy Owusu-Abeyie, Toché, Vitolo and Zeca. The club also changed their president and chose Dimitris Gontikas to be the new chairman. Panathinaikos failed to qualify to the group stage of 2011–12 Champions League after they were knocked out by Odense BK 4–5 on aggregate.

Recent years (2012–)

Panathinaikos' downfall continued as a result of the serious riots in the Panathinaikos–Olympiacos derby of 18 March 2012. The entire board quit and Panathinaikos remained headless for about two months.[32] However, the owner of Skai TV, Giannis Alafouzos, devised a plan to take Vardinogiannis' shares (54.7%) and make them available to fans around Greece so that everyone could contribute a desired amount, so that Panathinaikos could overcome the crisis.[33] His plan seemed to be working, as a new 20-member board was elected with Dimitris Gontikas at the president's chair again,[34] though it was yet to be seen how the fans would respond to Panathinaikos' call for help.

On 2 July 2012, the PAO Alliance 2012[35] finally opened to the public so that everyone could be a member and contribute a desired amount in return for privileges. After a few weeks of operation, 8,606 members had signed up, some of which were current or former Panathinaikos players, including Jean-Alain Boumsong, Sotiris Ninis, Gilberto Silva and Djibril Cissé, among others.

On 18 July 2012, marked a historical day in Panathinaikos history, as Giannis Vardinogiannis gave his shares—54.7% of Panathinaikos—to the Panathinaikos Alliance, thereby allowing Panathinaikos to have a fresh start with their own fans at the steering wheel, who through elections (amongst the members of the Alliance) they compose the board of directors and elect the club's president. The first president elected was Giannis Alafouzos.

The first season with the Panathinaikos Alliance at the helm was nothing short of abysmal for the club. While still enduring financial troubles, Panathinaikos finished sixth in the championship and failed to qualify for the European competition for the first time in 16 years.

For the 2013–14 season, the membership had risen up to 9,305 members. Starting the football year, both fans and journalists were very skeptical of Panathinaikos' chances of a successful season, and many people expected the team to suffer relegation from the Super League Greece.[citation needed] In May 2013, Yannis Anastasiou was appointed manager, and he planned a team based on players from the Panathinaikos Youth Academies joined by experienced foreign players looking to revive their careers. Despite the early skepticism, Panathinaikos' fans supported the team through the rough start, and the season turned out to be a massive success in light of the dire financial situation of the club and the young and inexperienced squad. The club finished fourth in the regular season and second after the playoffs (meaning they qualified for the 2014–15 Champions League), with Marcus Berg the top scorer of the team. Panathinaikos also won the 2013–14 Greek Football Cup after a 4–1 win over PAOK.[36]

On 2 November 2015, after bad performances and a home draw with AEK Athens, manager Yannis Anastasiou was sacked and replaced by Andrea Stramaccioni. Further successive poor results under the latter's reign, combined with loss of dressing room control, led to the dismissal of Stramaccioni on 1 December 2016, with former Panathinaikos player and Greece international Marinos Ouzounidis taking over the management at the club. Ouzounidis had some great moments with Panathinaikos and was generally liked by the fans. His resignation, due to problems with owner Giannis Alafouzos sparked another wave of disappointment and hatred against Alafouzos from the fans.

On 24 April 2018 UEFA decided to exclude Panathinaikos FC from participating in the next UEFA club competition for which it would otherwise qualify in the next three seasons as a result of Financial Fair Play breaches[37]

Giorgos Donis was announced as the new coach on 3 July 2018.[38] Coach Donis had a great start of the season despite beginning with −6 points in the championship, counting 6 consecutive wins that put Panathinaikos on top of the table. However, due to problems with his salary and a clash with Giannis Alafouzos, he was forced to resign in 2019. This situation made the relations between Alafouzos and the fans worse,[39] with protests and demonstrations during games against him. Panathinaikos remained one of the top clubs in Greece, but its absence from European tournaments was a major factor in the fans' disappointment with the ownership. During the summer of 2020, a series of bad decisions were made from Giannis Alafouzos, who chose to let most of the players that had contributed to a very good season go.[40]

Spaniard Dani Poyatos signed on as head of the club on 22 July 2020 for two years, taking over from George Donis' work.[41] Poyatos was sacked after a poor start of the season on 12 October and was replaced by László Bölöni.[42] After a disappointing fifth position in the league and the failure to guide them to a European qualification spot Bölöni was sacked and replaced by Ivan Jovanović.[43]

During the 21-22 season under the management of Ivan Jovanović, the team achieved its major goal of returning to European Competitions finishing fourth, and won their 19th Greek Cup, beating PAOK 1-0 in the final ending an eight-year trophy drought.[44] Ivan Jovanović was offered a two year extension to his contract, which he accepted.

For the third qualifying round of the 2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League, Panathinaikos FC drew Czech football club SK Slavia Prague with the first leg taking place in Eden Arena - Prague on Thursday the 4th of August and the second leg in Athens a week later. These were the first matches in European Competition for the club in five years. SK Slavia Prague won the tie 3-1, thanks to a 2-0 victory in home soil and a 1-1 draw in Athens. Contrary to the disappointment in Europe, Panathinaikos had a very strong start to the season in the domestic league, winning twelve and drawing one matche by until the break for the World Cup.

Crest and colours

Crest evolution

White was the colour that was first used by the team in 1908 (probably like that of the first crest). The first symbol of the club was an association football ball of the era.

In 1911, the colours changed to green and white. In 1918, Michalis Papazoglou proposed the trifolium, symbol of harmony, unity, nature and good luck, as emblem of Panathinaikos.[45] The officials of the club were looking for a universal, non-nationalistic or localistic, symbol aiming to represent the whole Athens at the country and further at the world.[46] Papazoglou used to have it sewn on his shirt since he was competing for a club in his native Chalcedon, Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey).[47] He was possibly inspired by Billy Sherring, an Irish Canadian athlete who had won the Athens 1906 Olympic marathon (1906 Intercalated Games) wearing a white outfit with a big green shamrock on the chest.[48][49][50]

Georgios Chatzopoulos, member—and later president—of the club and director of the National Gallery, took over to design the new emblem for the team. Up to the end of the 1970s, a trifolium (green or white) was sewed on heart's side of the jersey and was big in size. With the beginning of professionalism, the crest of the F.C. was created, accompanied by the club initials and the year of founding, 1908.[47]

Until today, the team's traditional colours are green and white (green for health, nature, such as physiolatry, and white for virtue), although the white sometimes is omitted, used as trim or as an alternative. During the first years after the establishment of green as Panathinaikos' primary colour, players were wearing green shirts, white shorts and green socks. During the 1930s, an appearance with characteristic horizontal strips was established. This motive was used also in the next decades as primary or second choice. Since then, the uniform style has changed many times, but green has always remained the team's primary colour.

Shirt sponsors and manufacturers

Since 1979, when football became professional in Greece, Panathinaikos had a specific kit manufacturer and since 1983 a specific shirt sponsor as well. The following table shows in detail Panathinaikos kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors by year:

 
Panathinaikos FC shirt history
 
Panathinaikos alternative shirt (2008)
Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1979–1980 Adidas
1980 Puma
1980–1981 ASICS Tiger
1981–1982 Admiral
1982–1983 ASICS Tiger
1983–1985 Citroën
1986–1987 Interamerican
1988–1993 ASICS
1993–1995 Kappa
1995–1997 Adidas
1997–1999
1999–2000 Motor Oil Hellas
2000–2001 Piraeus Bank
2001–2004 OTE
2004–2011 Cosmote
2011–2014 OPAP
2014–2015 Pame Stoixima
2015–2017 Puma
2017–2019 Nike
2019–2023 Kappa
2022– Stoiximan
2023- Adidas

Stadiums and facilities

Panathinaikos' traditional home ground since the early 1920s is the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium, the oldest active football stadium in Greece, in the Ampelokipoi district of central Athens. The stadium is located on Alexandras Avenue and is most commonly referred to as Leoforos (Greek for "Avenue"). It is considered one of the most historic stadiums in Greece, as it was used by the Greece national football team as home ground for many years (most recently for the UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying matches) and even by Panathinaikos' biggest rivals, AEK Athens and Olympiacos, on various occasions.

Panathinaikos left Leoforos in 1984 to play in the newly built Athens Olympic Stadium. In 2000, then-club president Angelos Filippidis announced a return to the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium, following a €7 million renovation. Capacity was reduced from 25,000 to 16,620, new dressing rooms were built and modular stand roofing was added in compliance with UEFA requirements, but in 2004, stricter standards were announced and the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium would need further expansion were it to remain suitable for UEFA-sanctioned matches. This was precluded by local zoning regulations and the team had to return to the Olympic Stadium once more until a new stadium, the proposed Votanikos Arena, was built. The Leoforos ground was due for demolition.

On 27 January 2007, the board of Panathinaikos decided to reuse the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium for the team's 2007–08 domestic league and UEFA Cup home games. Additionally, the club officials decided to install new lawn, new seats and upgrade the press conference room and the restrooms.

As of October 2013, and due to the club's and the country's financial troubles, the construction of the Votanikos Arena has stopped and consequently the plans for the demolition of the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium have been put on hold. After another five-year spell at the Olympic Stadium, the team has returned to its traditional home ground once again.

The current president of the club, Giannis Alafouzos, declared his intention for another renovation of the stadium and the capacity increase, while the Panathinaikos Movement made its propositions for a total reconstruction.

In 2019 the owner of Panathinaikos basketball team presented a funding plan for the construction of the new football and basketball stadiums. The Greek government confirmed in 2022 the construction of the new stadiums in the Votanikos area near Eleonas metro station to be completed by 2026.

Stadium Capacity Years
Votanikos Stadium 40,000 after 2026
Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium 15,000 1923–1984
1988–1989

2000–2005
2007–2008
2013–2018

2020–present

Athens Olympic Stadium 69,618 1984–1988
1989–2000

2005–2007
2008–2013
2018–2020

Paiania used to be the training ground of Panathinaikos since 1981, the same year that the Panathinaikos F.C. Academy was reorganized into one of the best in Greece. It became the farm that trained its top tier teams' notable players, such as Giorgos Karagounis, Angelos Basinas, Sotirios Kyrgiakos, Sotiris Ninis, and the Greece national team. In 2013, the club and academy would be moved from Paiania to that of the new Georgios Kalafatis Sports Center in Koropi, to be owned by the club and academy.

Financial information

Until 1979, football was in Greece amateur. The team, such as the other departments of Panathinaikos A.O., depended on the financial support of the club's members, while the president (responsible for all athletic departments) was elected by the Board members. In 1979, Greece's football turned professional and the Vardinogiannis family purchased the football department. Giorgos Vardinogiannis became the new president.[14] Vardinogiannis family were the owners of the club the next decades.

On 22 April 2008, growing pressure of the fan base over the past 30 years compelled the main shareholder representative of the club, Giannis Vardinogiannis, to announce at a press conference the family would reduce their financial stake in the club from 100 percent to 50 percent through an €80 million increase issue of the company's capital stock. Negotiations followed and the following were agreed: Nikos Pateras was selected to be the new president; the Vardinogiannis family would hold 56 percent of the club, the amateur club 10 percent (same as before) and a group of new shareholders 34 percent (Pavlos Giannakopoulos, Nikos Pateras, Adamantios Polemis and Andreas Vgenopoulos, plus other minor shareholders).

In 2011, financial problems and management disagreements caused the club to reduce the budget and sell many players. In 2012, the owner of Skai TV, Giannis Alafouzos, devised a plan to take Vardinogiannis' shares (54.7%) and make them available to fans around Greece so that everyone could contribute, so that Panathinaikos could overcome the crisis.[33] His intention was to create a new, for the Greek athletic standards, supporter-owned football club. On 2 July 2012, the Panathenaic Alliance finally opened to the public so that everyone could be a member and contribute a desired amount in return for privileges. A few days later, Giannis Vardinogiannis gave his shares—54.7% of Panathinaikos—to the Alliance, while the other shareholders maintained their percentage. The members of the Alliance elected a board of directors and club president. The first president elected was Giannis Alafouzos. In 2013, was decided the move of the team from the previous training center of Paiania to a new one, owned by the club. Located in the area of Koropi, Georgios Kalafatis Sports Center became the new training ground and academy base of Panathinaikos.

For the 2014–15 season, the membership had risen up to 8,495 members contributing a total of €2,680,041.

Season Members % Difference Contribution
2012–13 8,606 €2,325,608
2013–14 9,305 +8.1% €2,580,836
2014–15 8,495 -8.7% €2,680,041
2015–16 8,802 +3.6% €905,265
2016–17 8,060 -8.4% €1,027,748

Panathinaikos currently is a partially supporter-owned football club. According to the latest accounts in 2016 Panathenaic Alliance shares have been reduced to (15%), Giannis Alafouzos through Sortivo International Ltd and his own shares is the largest shareholder at (74%).[51] Giannis Alafouzos suddenly decided to quit the team in September 2017, announcing his departure in a written statement and inviting potential investors to express their interest in buying the team. With rapidly growing doubts about the commitment and the sporting progression of the club, Alafouzos eventually decided to re-invest in the playing and coaching staff around June 2021.

Current sponsorships:

Supporters

 
Fans of Panathinaikos at the Olympic Stadium of Athens

Panathinaikos was founded by middle class athletes (with Giorgos Kalafatis as a key figure) aiming of spreading and making more known football to the Athenian and Greek public in general. Also, their intention was to create a team for all of Athens and to be connected with the rest of the European football movement, which was already active.[12]

Today, according to UEFA and numerous polls and researches by the biggest newspapers and poll companies in a span of 20 years, Panathinaikos is the second most popular football team in Greece, with the difference behind Olympiacos to be varied between 2% to 9% among the fans.[7][52][53][8][54][9] They have the highest popularity in Athens metropolitan area[55] according to many of the corresponding polls, having also a large fanbase in all Greek prefectures, in Cyprus and in the Greek diaspora. They historically have a large fanbase among the highly-educated Greek upper class (traditionally representing the old Athenian society), while they are also very popular among the middle and lower classes.

Panathinaikos supporters hold both records of the most season tickets sales (31,091 in 2010) and highest average attendance for a unique season (44,942 in the 1985–86 season) in the history of Greek football.

The main organized supporters of Panathinaikos are known as Gate 13 (established in 1966),[56] the oldest fan association in Greece, which consists of around 80 clubs alongside Greece and Cyprus.[57] Gate 13 style of supporting includes the use of green fireworks, large and small green flags, displaying of banners and especially the creation of colorful and large choreographies, noisy and constant cheering and other supporters stuff. Gate 13 has over the years become a part of the club by affecting club decisions and by following the club on all occasions.

They share a traditional friendship with the Hungarian club Ferencváros and Ultras Rapid Wien,[58] based mainly on the common green and white colours. Moreover, they have been sharing since the early 10s' close relations with Dinamo Zagreb's Bad Blue Boys[59] (based on their common rivalry with Red Star and Olympiacos fans, capital city teams and mutual respect for each other's ultras achievements) and also with Fedayin of A.S. Roma based on the capital city team factor, their mutual respect and the ancient Athens and ancient Roma cultural connection.[60][61]

PALEFIP (Panhellenic club of Panathinaikos friends) is another supporters organization.[62]

Panathenaic Alliance, a collective organisation of the fan base, is the major shareholder of the football club, making it currently the only supporter-owned football club in Greece. The members of the Alliance, through elections, compose the board of directors and elect the club's president.

Panathinaikos Movement, founded in 2012, is also a Greek political party founded by people with an initial common their love for the sports club of Panathinaikos and the wish for a new stadium for the football team, despite the bureaucracy of the Greek state.

Seasons in the 21st century

Season Category Position Cup
2000–01 Alpha Ethniki 2nd QF
2001–02 Alpha Ethniki 3rd R16
2002–03 Alpha Ethniki 2nd QF
2003–04 Alpha Ethniki 1st C
2004–05 Alpha Ethniki 2nd R16
2005–06 Alpha Ethniki 3rd R32
2006–07 Super League 3rd RU
2007–08 Super League 2nd R16
2008–09 Super League 2nd QF
2009–10 Super League 1st C
2010–11 Super League 2nd QF
2011–12 Super League 2nd R16
2012–13 Super League 6th R16
2013–14 Super League 2nd C
2014–15 Super League 2nd R16
2015–16 Super League 3rd QF
2016–17 Super League 3rd SF
2017–18 Super League 11th R16
2018–19 Super League 8th R16
2019–20 Super League 4th QF
2020–21 Super League 5th QF
2021–22 Super League 4th C
2022–23 Super League QF

Key: R32 = Round of 32, R16 = Round of 16, QF = Quarter-finals, SF = Semi-finals, RU = Runners up, C = Champions.

Statistics and records

 
Mimis Domazos, nicknamed the General. A tireless central midfielder and the emblematic captain of Panathinaikos
 
Antonis Antoniadis, top scorer in the 1970–71 European Cup and a record five times top scorer for the Greek league

Mimis Domazos holds the record for Panathinaikos appearances, having played 502 first-team matches between 1959 and 1980.[63] Striker Krzysztof Warzycha comes second, having played 390 times.[64] The record for a goalkeeper is held by Takis Ikonomopoulos, with 303 appearances.[65]

Krzysztof Warzycha is the club's top goalscorer with 288 goals in all competitions between 1989 and 2004,[66] having surpassed Antonis Antoniadis' total of 180 in January 1998.[67]

Panathinaikos record home attendance is 74,493, for a Greek League match against AEK Athens in 1986 at the Olympic Stadium.[68] The record attendance for a Panathinaikos match at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium is from 1967, when 29,665 spectators watched the Cup Winners' Cup game between Panathinaikos and Bayern Munich.[69]

Panathinaikos is one of the two clubs in the history of Greek football to finish a top-flight (after 1959) campaign unbeaten. This happened in the 1963–64 season.[70]

League top scorers

Most league appearances

One-Club players

Player Nationality Position Debut Last Match
Vangelis Panakis   FW 1950 1965
Anthimos Kapsis   DF 1969 1984
Giannis Goumas   DF 1994 2009
Giannis Papantoniou   MF 1945 1958
Frangiskos Sourpis   DF 1962 1973

Super League top scorers

Rank. Nationality Player Times Seasons
1   Antonis Antoniadis 5 (Greek record) 1970, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975
2   Krzysztof Warzycha 3 1994, 1995, 1998
3   Djibril Cissé 2 2010, 2011
4   Dimitris Saravakos 1 1991
5   Nikos Liberopoulos 1 2003
6   Angelos Messaris 1 1930
7   Filippos Asimakopoulos 1 1955
8   Tasos Kritikos 1 1936
9   Marcus Berg 1 2017

Most goals in a season

Rank. Nationality Player Goals Season
1   Antonis Antoniadis 39 goals (Greek record) 1971–72 (also second -less one goal- in Europe, "Silver Boot")

Top scorers in European competitions

Uefa Champions League

Rank. Nationality Player Times Seasons
1   Antonis Antoniadis 1 1970–71

UEFA Cup

Rank. Nationality Player Times Seasons
1   Dimitris Saravakos 1 1987–88

Domestic team's records

Outline Record
Champions without a loss 2 (1929–30, 1952–53)
Champions without a loss in a top-flight campaign (after 1959) once (1963–64)
Biggest win in a Greek Super Cup match 3–0 (vs AEK, 1994)

International record

Honours

Domestic

European competitions

Worldwide competitions

Doubles

  • Winners (8): 1968–69, 1976–77, 1983–84, 1985–86, 1990–91, 1994–95, 2003–04, 2009–10

Trebles

  • Winners (1): 1976–77

1976–77 Alpha Ethniki, 1976–77 Greek Football Cup, 1977 Balkans Cup

Regional

Players

Current squad

As of 26 January 2023[79]

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

Panathinaikos B and Academy

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF   GRE Dimitris Serpezis
24 DF   GRE Georgios Sideras
26 MF   GRE Tasos Symeonidis
45 MF   ARG Valentín Mancini (on loan from Aldosivi)
49 MF   BRA Gustavo Furtado
54 DF   CYP Evagoras Antoniou
No. Pos. Nation Player
60 MF   GRE Georgios Kyriopoulos
63 DF   GRE Dimitrios Pitsotis
64 MF   GRE Christos Kryparakos
65 DF   GRE Georgios Pavlakis
90 MF   ALB Leandro Frroku
95 FW   EGY Bilal Mazhar

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
MF   BRA Jonas Toró (at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023)
MF   POR António Xavier (at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023)
FW   SWE Alexander Jeremejeff (at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023)

Retired numbers

13 – Ιn honour of Gate 13

Former players

Contribution to the Greece national team

 
Kalafatis with the national colours (1919)

Overall, Panathinaikos has a significant contribution to the Greece national football team. Giorgos Kalafatis, the founder of Panathinaikos, was the member of the Greece national team that participated in the Inter-Allied Games in Paris, while later he was also a player/manager for Greece in the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp. During the next decades, Panathinaikos highlighted some of the best Greek players in the history of Greek football, who contributed also to the national team (Migiakis, Linoxilakis, Loukanidis, Domazos, Antoniadis, Kapsis, Ikonomopoulos, Saravakos etc.). Six Panathinaikos players were members of the first appearance of the national team in a World Cup in 1994 (Saravakos, Kolitsidakis, Apostolakis, Kalitzakis, Nioplias, Marangos).

Five players of the club were part of the golden team of 2004 that won the UEFA Euro 2004 (UEFA Euro 2004): Giourkas Seitaridis, Angelos Basinas, Giannis Goumas, Dimitris Papadopoulos, Kostas Chalkias

Personnel

Technical staff

Position Staff
Manager   Ivan Jovanović
Assistant manager   Christos Kontis
Assistant coach   Nikos Kolompourdas
Assistant coach   Predrag Erak
Goalkeeper trainer   Giorgos Mountakis
Fitness trainer   Dimitrios Daniilidis
Fitness trainer   Giannis Stavrinos
Analyst   Stefanos Anagnostou
Analyst   Dimitris Brousalis
Analyst   Dimitris Kapralos

Club staff

Position Staff
Football Department Coordinator   Dimitris Saravakos
Team Administrative Manager   Grigoris Papavasiliou
Medical Doctor   Panagiotis Alexandropoulos
Medical Doctor   Angelos Ntinas
Physiotherapist   Arsenis Kontos
Physiotherapist   Michael Papamichail
Physiotherapist   Xenofon Konstantakis
Physiotherapist   Odisseas Paya
Physiotherapist   Panagiotis Stefanis
Physiotherapist   Giorgos Kalopitas
Nutritionist   Giorgos Papadimitriou
Nutritionist   Giannis Tsekouras
Kit assistants   Giannis Giannakopoulos
Kit assistants   Nektarios Diamantakos
Kit assistants   Thodoris Katsas
Scout   Makis Livathinos
Scout   Alexandros Zafiriou
Scout   Spyros Marangos

Management

Position Staff
Ownership   Giannis Alafouzos (45%)
   Sortivo International Ltd (45%)
President   Giannis Alafouzos
Vice-President & CEO   Manos Mavrokoukoulakis
Vice-President   Giannis Panagiotidis
Vice-President   Leonidas Boutsikaris
Board member   Dimitris Saravakos
Board member   Anna Loumidi
Board member   Giorgos Mathiopoulos
Board member   Spyros Vlachos
Board member   Dimitris Vranopoulos

Gallery

See also

Sports
Other

References

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External links

Official websites

News sites

  • Panathinaikos on newspao.gr
  • Panathinaikos on panathinaikos24.gr
  • Panathinaikos on leoforos.gr 28 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • from Nova Sports

Media

  • Official YouTube channel

panathinaikos, panathinaikos, football, club, greek, ΠΑΕ, Παναθηναϊκός, panaθinaiˈkos, listen, known, panathinaikos, full, name, name, parent, sports, club, panathinaikos, Παναθηναϊκός, Αθλητικός, Όμιλος, panathinaïkós, athlitikós, Ómilos, athenian, athletic, . Panathinaikos Football Club Greek PAE Pana8hnaikos A O pana8inaiˈkos listen known as Panathinaikos or by its full name and the name of its parent sports club Panathinaikos A O or PAO Pana8hnaikos A8lhtikos Omilos Panathinaikos Athlitikos omilos All Athenian Athletic Club is a Greek professional football club based in Athens Greece PanathinaikosFull namePana8hnaikos A8lhtikos OmilosPanathinaikos Athlitikos omilos Pan Athenian Athletic Club Nickname s Oi Prasinoi I Prasini The Greens To Trifylli To Tryfili The Shamrock Founded3 February 1908 115 years ago 1908 02 03 as Football Club of AthensGroundApostolos Nikolaidis StadiumCapacity15 000 1 OwnerGiannis AlafouzosPresidentGiannis Alafouzos 2 ManagerIvan JovanovicLeagueSuper League Greece2021 22Super League Greece 4thWebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonCreated in 1908 as Podosfairikos Omilos Athinon Football Club of Athens by Georgios Kalafatis 3 4 they play in the Super League Greece being one of the most successful clubs in Greek football and one of the three clubs which have never been relegated from the top division Amongst their major titles are 20 Greek Championships 19 Greek Cups achieving eight times the Double and 3 Greek Super Cups 5 6 They are also one of the two clubs that won a championship undefeated going without a loss in a top flight campaign in the 1963 64 season Panathinaikos is also the most successful Greek club in terms of achievements in European competitions It is the only Greek team that has reached the European Cup later renamed UEFA Champions League final in 1971 which they lost to Ajax 2 0 and also the semi finals twice in 1985 and 1996 It is also the only Greek team that has played for the Intercontinental Cup 1971 Furthermore they have reached the quarter finals of the Champions League on another two occasions in 1992 and 2002 as well as the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup twice 1988 and 2003 They have also won the Balkans Cup in 1977 Panathinaikos is a member of the European Club Association Since the 1950s the club maintains some of the oldest and most successful academies in Greece producing talent for the first team and feeding the Greece national football team They have played their home games in the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium considered their traditional home ground and the Athens Olympic Stadium According to research and polls Panathinaikos is the second most popular football team in Greece behind Olympiacos 7 8 9 They hold a long term rivalry with Olympiacos the clash between the two teams being referred to as the derby of the eternal enemies 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Crisis and WWII years 1 3 1960s The Golden Decade the Bobek s rejuvenation 1 4 Puskas years and the epic road to Wembley 1 4 1 1970 71 European Cup finalists 1 5 Vardinogiannis era 1979 2012 1 6 Recent years 2012 2 Crest and colours 2 1 Crest evolution 2 2 Shirt sponsors and manufacturers 3 Stadiums and facilities 4 Financial information 5 Supporters 6 Seasons in the 21st century 7 Statistics and records 7 1 Super League top scorers 7 2 Most goals in a season 7 3 Top scorers in European competitions 7 4 Domestic team s records 8 International record 9 Honours 9 1 Domestic 9 2 European competitions 9 3 Worldwide competitions 9 4 Doubles 9 5 Trebles 9 6 Regional 10 Players 10 1 Current squad 10 2 Panathinaikos B and Academy 10 3 Out on loan 10 4 Retired numbers 11 Former players 12 Contribution to the Greece national team 13 Personnel 13 1 Technical staff 13 2 Club staff 14 Management 15 Gallery 16 See also 17 References 18 External linksHistory EditEarly years Edit According to the official history of the club Panathinaikos was founded by Giorgos Kalafatis on 3 February 1908 when he and 40 other athletes decided to break away from Panellinios Gymnastikos Syllogos following the club s decision to discontinue its football team 11 The name of the new club was Podosferikos Omilos Athinon Football Club of Athens It was founded with the aim of spreading and making more known this new sport football to the Athenian and Greek public in general Also the intention of the founders was to create a team for all of Athens and to be connected with the rest of the European football movement which was already active 12 The first president elected was Alexandros Kalafatis brother of Giorgos The ground of the team was in Patission Street 13 Oxford University athlete John Cyril Campbell was brought in as coach the first time that a foreigner was appointed as the coach of a Greek team 13 Konstantinos Tsiklitiras the great Greek athlete of the early 20th century played as goalkeeper for the new team The first team of 1908 In 1910 after a dispute among a number of board members Kalafatis with most of the players also followed by Campbell decided to pull out of POA and secured a new ground in Amerikis Square Subsequently the name of the club changed to Panellinios Podosferikos Omilos Panhellenic Football Club and its colours to green and white By 1914 Campbell had returned to England but the club was already at the top of Greek football with players such as Michalis Papazoglou Michalis Rokkos and Loukas Panourgias In 1918 the team adopted the trifolium shamrock as its emblem as proposed by Michalis Papazoglou 14 In 1921 and 1922 the Athens Piraeus FCA organized the first two post WWI championships in both of which PPO was declared champion By that stage the club had outgrown both the grounds in Patission Street and Amerikis Square due mainly to its expansion in other sports and began to look at vacant land in the area of Perivola on Alexandras Avenue as its potential new ground 14 After long discussions with the Municipality of Athens an agreement was finally reached and in 1922 Leoforos Avenue in Greek was granted to the club 13 The move to a permanent home ground also heralded another final name change to Panathinaikos Athlitikos Omilos PAO All Athenian Athletic Club on 15 March 1924 13 from now on a multi sport club However the decision was already taken by 1922 In 1926 the Hellenic Football Federation HFF was founded and the first Greek Championship under its authority took place in 1927 Angelos Messaris the legendary player of the 30s The champion team of 1930 Panathinaikos won undefeated the Championship of 1929 30 under the guidance of Jozsef Kunsztler and Angelos Messaris as the team s star player 15 Other notable players of this Belle Epoque period of the team were Antonis Migiakis Diomidis Symeonidis Mimis Pierrakos and Stefanos Pierrakos among others They thrashed rivals Olympiacos 8 2 a result that still remains the biggest win either team has achieved against its rival with Messaris scoring three goals 16 The team also defeated Aris 1 4 away in Thessaloniki Messaris who scored again three goals became a hero and chant for the fans Crisis and WWII years Edit In 1931 a serious disagreement between leading board member Apostolos Nikolaidis from one side and some players most notably Angelos Messaris and club s officials on the other side 14 regarding the professionalization in the Greek football which lasted two years damaged the club and led to a counterproductive period In the meantime the HFF Greek Cup had commenced in 1932 The last bright moment for the Greens before World War II was winning the Cup for the first time in 1940 against Aris 3 1 In 1940 with the break out of the Greco Italian War many players of the club joined the Hellenic Army Mimis Pierrakos was killed during the war later during the 1950s his bones were transferred from Albania back to Athens During the Axis Occupation of Greece from 1941 to 1944 many players of the team became members of United Panhellenic Organization of Youth PEAN resistance organization 17 while Michalis Papazoglou had a leading role in the resistance group of Jerzy Iwanow Szajnowicz PAfter this long crisis period Panathinaikos had to wait until 1949 to win again a Greek Championship under the guidance of the Austrian coach Johann Strnad That same year Vangelis Panakis and Kostas Linoxilakis came to the club and quickly became the side s new star players Panathinaikos was again champion for the 1952 53 Panhellenic Championship Until 1959 the team had also won seven of the last eight Athens Championships the regional championships organised in Greece In 1959 Mimis Domazos the emblematic captain of the team made his first appearance with Panathinaikos and the same year took place the first season under the new system of Alpha Ethniki 1959 60 Alpha Ethniki Panathinaikos was the champion team 1960s The Golden Decade the Bobek s rejuvenation Edit During the next years Panathinaikos were again champions in 1961 1962 1964 1965 1969 and 1970 Moreover the team won two more Greek Cups in 1967 and 1969 Also during these years a long process of rejuvenation took place in the club Notable players retired such as Panakis Linoxilakis Takis Loukanidis and Andreas Papaemmanouil and the team had to count on young players like Domazos Antonis Antoniadis Anthimos Kapsis Kostas Eleftherakis and Takis Ikonomopoulos Stjepan Bobek was the main contributor to this process In 1963 he became the club s head coach changing the playing style of the team to a 4 3 3 and created a new team based on young players the Bobek s rejuvenation Under his guidance Panathinaikos won the Championship of 1964 without a loss making them one of the two teams that has won the Greek Championship with its modern system undefeated 11 Notable players of the team included Panakis Domazos Takis Ikonomopoulos Totis Filakouris Frangiskos Sourpis and Aristidis Kamaras With the establishment of the Greek military regime the president of the club Loukas Panourgias was forced out of the presidency The contract of Bobek was canceled by the State while Apostolos Nikolaidis the old player manager and official of the club went on trial 18 In 1967 the great Bela Guttmann came as coach but he soon left and ex player Lakis Petropoulos was appointed Under his guidance Panathinaikos won the championships of 1969 with a double and 1970 Puskas years and the epic road to Wembley Edit Line up of the 1971 European Cup Final The team in the 1971 European Cup Final against Ajax 1970 71 European Cup finalists Edit In 1971 under the guidance of Ferenc Puskas Panathinaikos were 1970 71 European Cup finalists the first and only Greek team until today losing 2 0 to Ajax at Wembley Stadium 11 In the road to the final they eliminated Jeunesse Esch Slovan Bratislava Everton and Red Star Belgrade 11 19 Notable players included the captain Mimis Domazos Anthimos Kapsis Aristidis Kamaras Kostas Eleftherakis Totis Filakouris and the goalkeepers Takis Ikonomopoulos and Vasilis Konstantinou Antonis Antoniadis was the top scorer in the competition scoring ten goals In the same year Panathinaikos played for the 1971 Intercontinental Cup due to the refusal of Ajax to participate where they lost to Uruguayan club Nacional 1 1 in Greece 2 1 in Uruguay 20 Totis Filakouris was the scorer for the Greek club During the last amateur years of Greek football the Trifolium won one more Championship in 1972 Antonis Antoniadis was again top scorer with 39 goals also second in Europe His record remains until today in the Greek league With the collapse of the military regime Apostolos Nikolaidis became again active for the club and was appointed honorary president of Panathinaikos In 1975 one of the greatest coaches of his era the Brazilian Aymore Moreira who mainly worked in Brazil World Cup Champion with the Brazil national team in 1962 was appointed After a year and a half of poor results however he was replaced by Kazimierz Gorski With Gorski Panathinaikos won the double in 1977 followed by a Balkans Cup victory in the same year 21 Notable foreign players who played for the team during the late 1970s include Juan Ramon Veron Araquem de Melo and oscar Alvarez Vardinogiannis era 1979 2012 Edit Dimitris Saravakos 2009 Top scorer in the 1987 88 UEFA Cup one of the best players in the club s history and Greek football In 1979 Greek football turned professional The Vardinogiannis family purchased PAO s football department and Giorgos Vardinogiannis became president 14 Panathinaikos were one of the first Greek clubs that formed a women s team in 1980 but that department is currently inactive The transformation period lasted a few years but in 1982 the club won its first professional era trophy the Greek Cup and during the 1980s they would go on winning two championships 1984 1986 four more Greek Cups 1984 1986 with a 4 0 against Olympiacos in the final 1988 1989 and the Greek Super Cup in 1988 The great star of the team during these years was Dimitris Saravakos nicknamed The Kid Saravakos a high technique explosive midfielder and iconic captain of Panathinaikos was the alsolute idol for the fans during the 1980s while other players included Nikos Sarganis Spiros Livathinos Velimir Zajec Juan Ramon Rocha Christos Dimopoulos and Giannis Kyrastas In the 1984 85 season Panathinaikos with coach Jacek Gmoch and stars Dimitris Saravakos Velimir Zajec Juan Ramon Rocha and Ioannis Kyrastas made a run in Europe eliminating Feyenoord Linfield and IFK Goteborg to reach the semi finals of the European Cup where they were knocked out by Liverpool 11 In 1987 88 they made it also to the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup eliminating Juventus Auxerre and Budapest Honved Dimitris Saravakos was top scorer of the competition The 1990s were an even more successful period for the club both nationally and internationally Four Greek championships 1990 1991 1995 1996 four Greek Cups 1991 1993 1994 1995 and two Greek Super Cups 1993 1994 were awarded to the club In the 1991 92 season Panathinaikos reached also the last eight of the European Cup and took part in the first ever European tournament to have a group stage 22 In 1995 96 with Juan Ramon Rocha as coach and key players Krzysztof Warzycha Jozef Wandzik Stratos Apostolakis Georgios Georgiadis Dimitris Markos Giannis Kalitzakis Giorgos Donis and Juan Jose Borrelli Panathinaikos reached the Champions League semi finals finishing first in the group stage against Nantes Porto Aalborg BK and eliminating Legia Warsaw in the quarter finals In the semi finals Panathinaikos faced Ajax recording an impressive 0 1 first leg away victory with Krzysztof Warzycha scoring the winning goal Ajax had a record of 22 undefeated international matches until then with Panathinaikos breaking their series The Greek team however suffered a 0 3 defeat on the second leg Thus Panathinaikos was denied entry to a Champions League final once more Giorgos Karagounis captain of Panathinaikos and the Greece national football team In the summer of 2000 President Giorgos Vardinogiannis resigned from his duties with complaints for the refereeing situation in Greece and passed his shares to his nephew Giannis Vardinogiannis who changed the style of the club s management Angelos Anastasiadis was initially appointed coach of the team and later the ex player Giannis Kyrastas With the arrival of coach Sergio Markarian Panathinaikos reached the quarter finals of the 2001 02 UEFA Champions League being eliminated by Barcelona Panathinaikos had passed the first group stage as the top club against Arsenal Mallorca and Schalke 04 and the second group stage as second against Real Madrid Porto and Sparta Prague In the first leg of the quarter finals Panathinaikos managed to defeat Barcelona by 1 0 in Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium 23 The second leg in Camp Nou was to be an eventful one Panathinaikos scored first thanks to a beautiful goal by Michalis Konstantinou but eventually was eliminated as Barcelona scored three goals 24 In Europe Panathinaikos made it to the quarter finals of UEFA Cup quarter finals En route the Greek team had knocked out Litex Lovech Fenerbahce with an impressive 4 1 win in Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium Slovan Liberec and Anderlecht During the quarter finals although winning the first match in Estadio das Antas against eventual winners of the trophy FC Porto of Jose Mourinho with the header of Emmanuel Olisadebe they were eliminated in the second leg after extra time 25 Notable players of this team included Takis Fyssas Giorgos Karagounis Antonis Nikopolidis Angelos Basinas Nikos Lyberopoulos Michalis Konstantinou Giourkas Seitaridis Sotirios Kyrgiakos Paulo Sousa Goran Vlaovic Rene Henriksen Joonas Kolkka Jan Michaelsen and Emmanuel Olisadebe considered by the fans one of the best teams in the club s history During 2002 03 Alpha Ethniki season they lost the Greek championship in the last two games by arch rivals Olympiacos Under the guidance of Israeli coach Itzhak Shum Panathinaikos managed to win the championship in 2004 26 They won also the Cup beating Olympiacos 3 1 in the final making the double 27 New players like Ezequiel Gonzalez Lucian Sanmartean and Markus Munch had signed the summer before In the Champions League they came third in the group stage facing Manchester United VfB Stuttgart and Rangers However Shum was unexpectedly fired early in the next season 2004 05 and Zdenek Scasny succeeded him on the bench Panathinaikos finished second in the championship while in the Champions League they came again third in the group stage facing Rosenborg PSV and Arsenal They continued in the UEFA Cup where they were eliminated by Sevilla In 2005 major changes were made in the team s roster Players like Angelos Basinas and Michalis Konstantinou departed while others like Flavio Conceicao Igor Biscan and Andreas Ivanschitz arrived Scasny gave his seat to Alberto Malesani At the start of the 2006 07 season Malesani left the team and was replaced by Hans Backe who left only three months after his appointment Victor Munoz was his replacement For the 2007 08 season Panathinaikos hired Jose Peseiro Gilberto Silva Kostas Katsouranis On 22 April 2008 and under pressure from the fan base main shareholder Giannis Vardinogiannis gave a press conference in which he announced the decision of his family to reduce their share in the club to 50 after 30 years of full ownership through an 80 million increase of the company s capital stock After the negotiations and the share capital increase the Vardinogiannis family would hold 56 of the club the amateur Club 10 and the other shareholders 34 with main investors Andreas Vgenopoulos Pavlos Giannakopoulos Adamantios Polemis and Nikos Pateras Nikos Pateras was selected to be the new president of the club Djibril Cisse two seasons in row top scorer for the Greek league Following the major changes in 2008 Panathinaikos hired Henk ten Cate as coach and bought many expensive players such as Gilberto Silva from Arsenal and Gabriel from Fluminense In the 2008 09 season the Greens proved that they could hold their weight in the Champions League by reaching the last 16 However they disappointed in the Greek Championship finishing third in the regular season though they managed to come second overall after the playoff mini league The 2009 10 season was a successful one for Panathinaikos During the summer transfer period the club bought Djibril Cisse from Marseille Kostas Katsouranis from Benfica Sebastian Leto from Liverpool and various other players spending more than 35 million in total Henk ten Cate left in December to be replaced by Nikos Nioplias The team managed to reach the last 16 of the Europa League eliminating A S Roma after two amazing matches in Olympic Stadium of Athens and Stadio Olimpico 28 Panathinaikos also won both the Greek Championship and the Greek Cup beating Aris by 1 0 in the final of the latter thanks to a goal by Sebastian Leto 29 In 2011 due to financial problems and management disagreements Panathinaikos sold Cisse for 5 8 million to Lazio and first choice goalkeeper Alexandros Tzorvas to Palermo to reduce the budget 30 31 New players then entered such as Quincy Owusu Abeyie Toche Vitolo and Zeca The club also changed their president and chose Dimitris Gontikas to be the new chairman Panathinaikos failed to qualify to the group stage of 2011 12 Champions League after they were knocked out by Odense BK 4 5 on aggregate Recent years 2012 Edit Panathinaikos downfall continued as a result of the serious riots in the Panathinaikos Olympiacos derby of 18 March 2012 The entire board quit and Panathinaikos remained headless for about two months 32 However the owner of Skai TV Giannis Alafouzos devised a plan to take Vardinogiannis shares 54 7 and make them available to fans around Greece so that everyone could contribute a desired amount so that Panathinaikos could overcome the crisis 33 His plan seemed to be working as a new 20 member board was elected with Dimitris Gontikas at the president s chair again 34 though it was yet to be seen how the fans would respond to Panathinaikos call for help On 2 July 2012 the PAO Alliance 2012 35 finally opened to the public so that everyone could be a member and contribute a desired amount in return for privileges After a few weeks of operation 8 606 members had signed up some of which were current or former Panathinaikos players including Jean Alain Boumsong Sotiris Ninis Gilberto Silva and Djibril Cisse among others On 18 July 2012 marked a historical day in Panathinaikos history as Giannis Vardinogiannis gave his shares 54 7 of Panathinaikos to the Panathinaikos Alliance thereby allowing Panathinaikos to have a fresh start with their own fans at the steering wheel who through elections amongst the members of the Alliance they compose the board of directors and elect the club s president The first president elected was Giannis Alafouzos The first season with the Panathinaikos Alliance at the helm was nothing short of abysmal for the club While still enduring financial troubles Panathinaikos finished sixth in the championship and failed to qualify for the European competition for the first time in 16 years Marcus Berg For the 2013 14 season the membership had risen up to 9 305 members Starting the football year both fans and journalists were very skeptical of Panathinaikos chances of a successful season and many people expected the team to suffer relegation from the Super League Greece citation needed In May 2013 Yannis Anastasiou was appointed manager and he planned a team based on players from the Panathinaikos Youth Academies joined by experienced foreign players looking to revive their careers Despite the early skepticism Panathinaikos fans supported the team through the rough start and the season turned out to be a massive success in light of the dire financial situation of the club and the young and inexperienced squad The club finished fourth in the regular season and second after the playoffs meaning they qualified for the 2014 15 Champions League with Marcus Berg the top scorer of the team Panathinaikos also won the 2013 14 Greek Football Cup after a 4 1 win over PAOK 36 On 2 November 2015 after bad performances and a home draw with AEK Athens manager Yannis Anastasiou was sacked and replaced by Andrea Stramaccioni Further successive poor results under the latter s reign combined with loss of dressing room control led to the dismissal of Stramaccioni on 1 December 2016 with former Panathinaikos player and Greece international Marinos Ouzounidis taking over the management at the club Ouzounidis had some great moments with Panathinaikos and was generally liked by the fans His resignation due to problems with owner Giannis Alafouzos sparked another wave of disappointment and hatred against Alafouzos from the fans On 24 April 2018 UEFA decided to exclude Panathinaikos FC from participating in the next UEFA club competition for which it would otherwise qualify in the next three seasons as a result of Financial Fair Play breaches 37 Giorgos Donis was announced as the new coach on 3 July 2018 38 Coach Donis had a great start of the season despite beginning with 6 points in the championship counting 6 consecutive wins that put Panathinaikos on top of the table However due to problems with his salary and a clash with Giannis Alafouzos he was forced to resign in 2019 This situation made the relations between Alafouzos and the fans worse 39 with protests and demonstrations during games against him Panathinaikos remained one of the top clubs in Greece but its absence from European tournaments was a major factor in the fans disappointment with the ownership During the summer of 2020 a series of bad decisions were made from Giannis Alafouzos who chose to let most of the players that had contributed to a very good season go 40 Spaniard Dani Poyatos signed on as head of the club on 22 July 2020 for two years taking over from George Donis work 41 Poyatos was sacked after a poor start of the season on 12 October and was replaced by Laszlo Boloni 42 After a disappointing fifth position in the league and the failure to guide them to a European qualification spot Boloni was sacked and replaced by Ivan Jovanovic 43 During the 21 22 season under the management of Ivan Jovanovic the team achieved its major goal of returning to European Competitions finishing fourth and won their 19th Greek Cup beating PAOK 1 0 in the final ending an eight year trophy drought 44 Ivan Jovanovic was offered a two year extension to his contract which he accepted For the third qualifying round of the 2022 23 UEFA Europa Conference League Panathinaikos FC drew Czech football club SK Slavia Prague with the first leg taking place in Eden Arena Prague on Thursday the 4th of August and the second leg in Athens a week later These were the first matches in European Competition for the club in five years SK Slavia Prague won the tie 3 1 thanks to a 2 0 victory in home soil and a 1 1 draw in Athens Contrary to the disappointment in Europe Panathinaikos had a very strong start to the season in the domestic league winning twelve and drawing one matche by until the break for the World Cup Crest and colours EditCrest evolution Edit 1908 1995 presentWhite was the colour that was first used by the team in 1908 probably like that of the first crest The first symbol of the club was an association football ball of the era In 1911 the colours changed to green and white In 1918 Michalis Papazoglou proposed the trifolium symbol of harmony unity nature and good luck as emblem of Panathinaikos 45 The officials of the club were looking for a universal non nationalistic or localistic symbol aiming to represent the whole Athens at the country and further at the world 46 Papazoglou used to have it sewn on his shirt since he was competing for a club in his native Chalcedon Constantinople present day Istanbul Turkey 47 He was possibly inspired by Billy Sherring an Irish Canadian athlete who had won the Athens 1906 Olympic marathon 1906 Intercalated Games wearing a white outfit with a big green shamrock on the chest 48 49 50 Georgios Chatzopoulos member and later president of the club and director of the National Gallery took over to design the new emblem for the team Up to the end of the 1970s a trifolium green or white was sewed on heart s side of the jersey and was big in size With the beginning of professionalism the crest of the F C was created accompanied by the club initials and the year of founding 1908 47 Until today the team s traditional colours are green and white green for health nature such as physiolatry and white for virtue although the white sometimes is omitted used as trim or as an alternative During the first years after the establishment of green as Panathinaikos primary colour players were wearing green shirts white shorts and green socks During the 1930s an appearance with characteristic horizontal strips was established This motive was used also in the next decades as primary or second choice Since then the uniform style has changed many times but green has always remained the team s primary colour Shirt sponsors and manufacturers Edit Since 1979 when football became professional in Greece Panathinaikos had a specific kit manufacturer and since 1983 a specific shirt sponsor as well The following table shows in detail Panathinaikos kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors by year Panathinaikos FC shirt history Panathinaikos alternative shirt 2008 Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1979 1980 Adidas 1980 Puma1980 1981 ASICS Tiger1981 1982 Admiral1982 1983 ASICS Tiger1983 1985 Citroen1986 1987 Interamerican1988 1993 ASICS1993 1995 Kappa1995 1997 Adidas1997 1999 1999 2000 Motor Oil Hellas2000 2001 Piraeus Bank2001 2004 OTE2004 2011 Cosmote2011 2014 OPAP2014 2015 Pame Stoixima2015 2017 Puma2017 2019 Nike2019 2023 Kappa2022 Stoiximan2023 AdidasStadiums and facilities EditSee also Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium Olympic Stadium Athens Panathinaikos F C New Stadium Paiania training ground and Georgios Kalafatis Sports Center Olympic Stadium of Athens Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium Panathinaikos traditional home ground since the early 1920s is the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium the oldest active football stadium in Greece in the Ampelokipoi district of central Athens The stadium is located on Alexandras Avenue and is most commonly referred to as Leoforos Greek for Avenue It is considered one of the most historic stadiums in Greece as it was used by the Greece national football team as home ground for many years most recently for the UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying matches and even by Panathinaikos biggest rivals AEK Athens and Olympiacos on various occasions Panathinaikos left Leoforos in 1984 to play in the newly built Athens Olympic Stadium In 2000 then club president Angelos Filippidis announced a return to the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium following a 7 million renovation Capacity was reduced from 25 000 to 16 620 new dressing rooms were built and modular stand roofing was added in compliance with UEFA requirements but in 2004 stricter standards were announced and the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium would need further expansion were it to remain suitable for UEFA sanctioned matches This was precluded by local zoning regulations and the team had to return to the Olympic Stadium once more until a new stadium the proposed Votanikos Arena was built The Leoforos ground was due for demolition On 27 January 2007 the board of Panathinaikos decided to reuse the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium for the team s 2007 08 domestic league and UEFA Cup home games Additionally the club officials decided to install new lawn new seats and upgrade the press conference room and the restrooms As of October 2013 and due to the club s and the country s financial troubles the construction of the Votanikos Arena has stopped and consequently the plans for the demolition of the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium have been put on hold After another five year spell at the Olympic Stadium the team has returned to its traditional home ground once again The current president of the club Giannis Alafouzos declared his intention for another renovation of the stadium and the capacity increase while the Panathinaikos Movement made its propositions for a total reconstruction In 2019 the owner of Panathinaikos basketball team presented a funding plan for the construction of the new football and basketball stadiums The Greek government confirmed in 2022 the construction of the new stadiums in the Votanikos area near Eleonas metro station to be completed by 2026 Stadium Capacity YearsVotanikos Stadium 40 000 after 2026Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium 15 000 1923 19841988 19892000 20052007 20082013 20182020 presentAthens Olympic Stadium 69 618 1984 19881989 20002005 20072008 20132018 2020Paiania used to be the training ground of Panathinaikos since 1981 the same year that the Panathinaikos F C Academy was reorganized into one of the best in Greece It became the farm that trained its top tier teams notable players such as Giorgos Karagounis Angelos Basinas Sotirios Kyrgiakos Sotiris Ninis and the Greece national team In 2013 the club and academy would be moved from Paiania to that of the new Georgios Kalafatis Sports Center in Koropi to be owned by the club and academy Financial information EditUntil 1979 football was in Greece amateur The team such as the other departments of Panathinaikos A O depended on the financial support of the club s members while the president responsible for all athletic departments was elected by the Board members In 1979 Greece s football turned professional and the Vardinogiannis family purchased the football department Giorgos Vardinogiannis became the new president 14 Vardinogiannis family were the owners of the club the next decades On 22 April 2008 growing pressure of the fan base over the past 30 years compelled the main shareholder representative of the club Giannis Vardinogiannis to announce at a press conference the family would reduce their financial stake in the club from 100 percent to 50 percent through an 80 million increase issue of the company s capital stock Negotiations followed and the following were agreed Nikos Pateras was selected to be the new president the Vardinogiannis family would hold 56 percent of the club the amateur club 10 percent same as before and a group of new shareholders 34 percent Pavlos Giannakopoulos Nikos Pateras Adamantios Polemis and Andreas Vgenopoulos plus other minor shareholders In 2011 financial problems and management disagreements caused the club to reduce the budget and sell many players In 2012 the owner of Skai TV Giannis Alafouzos devised a plan to take Vardinogiannis shares 54 7 and make them available to fans around Greece so that everyone could contribute so that Panathinaikos could overcome the crisis 33 His intention was to create a new for the Greek athletic standards supporter owned football club On 2 July 2012 the Panathenaic Alliance finally opened to the public so that everyone could be a member and contribute a desired amount in return for privileges A few days later Giannis Vardinogiannis gave his shares 54 7 of Panathinaikos to the Alliance while the other shareholders maintained their percentage The members of the Alliance elected a board of directors and club president The first president elected was Giannis Alafouzos In 2013 was decided the move of the team from the previous training center of Paiania to a new one owned by the club Located in the area of Koropi Georgios Kalafatis Sports Center became the new training ground and academy base of Panathinaikos For the 2014 15 season the membership had risen up to 8 495 members contributing a total of 2 680 041 Season Members Difference Contribution2012 13 8 606 2 325 6082013 14 9 305 8 1 2 580 8362014 15 8 495 8 7 2 680 0412015 16 8 802 3 6 905 2652016 17 8 060 8 4 1 027 748Panathinaikos currently is a partially supporter owned football club According to the latest accounts in 2016 Panathenaic Alliance shares have been reduced to 15 Giannis Alafouzos through Sortivo International Ltd and his own shares is the largest shareholder at 74 51 Giannis Alafouzos suddenly decided to quit the team in September 2017 announcing his departure in a written statement and inviting potential investors to express their interest in buying the team With rapidly growing doubts about the commitment and the sporting progression of the club Alafouzos eventually decided to re invest in the playing and coaching staff around June 2021 Current sponsorships Shirt sponsor Stoiximan Sport clothing manufacturer Kappa Official sponsors Cosmote Vivartia Piraeus Bank Avance Supporters Powerade Marks amp SpencerSupporters Edit Fans of Panathinaikos at the Olympic Stadium of Athens Panathinaikos was founded by middle class athletes with Giorgos Kalafatis as a key figure aiming of spreading and making more known football to the Athenian and Greek public in general Also their intention was to create a team for all of Athens and to be connected with the rest of the European football movement which was already active 12 Today according to UEFA and numerous polls and researches by the biggest newspapers and poll companies in a span of 20 years Panathinaikos is the second most popular football team in Greece with the difference behind Olympiacos to be varied between 2 to 9 among the fans 7 52 53 8 54 9 They have the highest popularity in Athens metropolitan area 55 according to many of the corresponding polls having also a large fanbase in all Greek prefectures in Cyprus and in the Greek diaspora They historically have a large fanbase among the highly educated Greek upper class traditionally representing the old Athenian society while they are also very popular among the middle and lower classes Panathinaikos supporters hold both records of the most season tickets sales 31 091 in 2010 and highest average attendance for a unique season 44 942 in the 1985 86 season in the history of Greek football The main organized supporters of Panathinaikos are known as Gate 13 established in 1966 56 the oldest fan association in Greece which consists of around 80 clubs alongside Greece and Cyprus 57 Gate 13 style of supporting includes the use of green fireworks large and small green flags displaying of banners and especially the creation of colorful and large choreographies noisy and constant cheering and other supporters stuff Gate 13 has over the years become a part of the club by affecting club decisions and by following the club on all occasions They share a traditional friendship with the Hungarian club Ferencvaros and Ultras Rapid Wien 58 based mainly on the common green and white colours Moreover they have been sharing since the early 10s close relations with Dinamo Zagreb s Bad Blue Boys 59 based on their common rivalry with Red Star and Olympiacos fans capital city teams and mutual respect for each other s ultras achievements and also with Fedayin of A S Roma based on the capital city team factor their mutual respect and the ancient Athens and ancient Roma cultural connection 60 61 PALEFIP Panhellenic club of Panathinaikos friends is another supporters organization 62 Panathenaic Alliance a collective organisation of the fan base is the major shareholder of the football club making it currently the only supporter owned football club in Greece The members of the Alliance through elections compose the board of directors and elect the club s president Panathinaikos Movement founded in 2012 is also a Greek political party founded by people with an initial common their love for the sports club of Panathinaikos and the wish for a new stadium for the football team despite the bureaucracy of the Greek state Seasons in the 21st century EditSeason Category Position Cup2000 01 Alpha Ethniki 2nd QF2001 02 Alpha Ethniki 3rd R162002 03 Alpha Ethniki 2nd QF2003 04 Alpha Ethniki 1st C2004 05 Alpha Ethniki 2nd R162005 06 Alpha Ethniki 3rd R322006 07 Super League 3rd RU2007 08 Super League 2nd R162008 09 Super League 2nd QF2009 10 Super League 1st C2010 11 Super League 2nd QF2011 12 Super League 2nd R162012 13 Super League 6th R162013 14 Super League 2nd C2014 15 Super League 2nd R162015 16 Super League 3rd QF2016 17 Super League 3rd SF2017 18 Super League 11th R162018 19 Super League 8th R162019 20 Super League 4th QF2020 21 Super League 5th QF2021 22 Super League 4th C2022 23 Super League QFKey R32 Round of 32 R16 Round of 16 QF Quarter finals SF Semi finals RU Runners up C Champions Statistics and records Edit Mimis Domazos nicknamed the General A tireless central midfielder and the emblematic captain of Panathinaikos Antonis Antoniadis top scorer in the 1970 71 European Cup and a record five times top scorer for the Greek league Takis Ikonomopoulos Mimis Domazos holds the record for Panathinaikos appearances having played 502 first team matches between 1959 and 1980 63 Striker Krzysztof Warzycha comes second having played 390 times 64 The record for a goalkeeper is held by Takis Ikonomopoulos with 303 appearances 65 Krzysztof Warzycha is the club s top goalscorer with 288 goals in all competitions between 1989 and 2004 66 having surpassed Antonis Antoniadis total of 180 in January 1998 67 Panathinaikos record home attendance is 74 493 for a Greek League match against AEK Athens in 1986 at the Olympic Stadium 68 The record attendance for a Panathinaikos match at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium is from 1967 when 29 665 spectators watched the Cup Winners Cup game between Panathinaikos and Bayern Munich 69 Panathinaikos is one of the two clubs in the history of Greek football to finish a top flight after 1959 campaign unbeaten This happened in the 1963 64 season 70 League top scorers Player Nationality GoalsKrzysztof Warzycha 244Antonis Antoniadis 180Mimis Domazos 134Dimitris Saravakos 128Kostas Eleftherakis 85 Most league appearances Player Nationality MatchesMimis Domazos 510Krzysztof Warzycha 390Kostas Antoniou 320Anthimos Kapsis 319Frangiskos Sourpis 311One Club players Player Nationality Position Debut Last MatchVangelis Panakis FW 1950 1965Anthimos Kapsis DF 1969 1984Giannis Goumas DF 1994 2009Giannis Papantoniou MF 1945 1958Frangiskos Sourpis DF 1962 1973Super League top scorers Edit Rank Nationality Player Times Seasons1 Antonis Antoniadis 5 Greek record 1970 1972 1973 1974 19752 Krzysztof Warzycha 3 1994 1995 19983 Djibril Cisse 2 2010 20114 Dimitris Saravakos 1 19915 Nikos Liberopoulos 1 20036 Angelos Messaris 1 19307 Filippos Asimakopoulos 1 19558 Tasos Kritikos 1 19369 Marcus Berg 1 2017Most goals in a season Edit Rank Nationality Player Goals Season1 Antonis Antoniadis 39 goals Greek record 1971 72 also second less one goal in Europe Silver Boot Top scorers in European competitions Edit Uefa Champions League Rank Nationality Player Times Seasons1 Antonis Antoniadis 1 1970 71UEFA Cup Rank Nationality Player Times Seasons1 Dimitris Saravakos 1 1987 88Domestic team s records Edit Outline RecordChampions without a loss 2 1929 30 1952 53 Champions without a loss in a top flight campaign after 1959 once 1963 64 Biggest win in a Greek Super Cup match 3 0 vs AEK 1994 International record EditMain article Panathinaikos F C in European footballHonours EditDomestic Edit Super League 71 72 73 74 Winners 20 1929 30 1948 49 1952 53 1959 60 1960 61 1961 62 1963 64 1964 65 1968 69 1969 70 1971 72 1976 77 1983 84 1985 86 1989 90 1990 91 1994 95 1995 96 2003 04 2009 10 Greek Cup 73 74 75 Winners 19 1939 40 1947 48 1954 55 1966 67 1968 69 1976 77 1981 82 1983 84 1985 86 1987 88 1988 89 1990 91 1992 93 1993 94 1994 95 2003 04 2009 10 2013 14 2021 22 Greek Super Cup 76 Winners 3 1988 1993 1994 6 5 Greater Greece Cup Winners 1 1970European competitions Edit European Cup UEFA Champions League Runners up 1 1971 Semi finals 2 1985 1996 Quarter finals 2 1992 2002 UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League Quarter finals 2 1988 2003 Balkans Cup Winners 1 1977Worldwide competitions Edit Intercontinental Cup Runners up 1 1971Doubles Edit Winners 8 1968 69 1976 77 1983 84 1985 86 1990 91 1994 95 2003 04 2009 10Trebles Edit Winners 1 1976 771976 77 Alpha Ethniki 1976 77 Greek Football Cup 1977 Balkans Cup Regional Edit SEGAS and FCA Championship 77 Winners 2 1910 11 1922 Athens FCA Championship 78 Winners 17 record 1925 1926 1927 1929 1930 1931 1934 1937 1939 1949 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1959Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 26 January 2023 79 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 GRE Georgios Vagiannidis3 DF ESP Juankar4 MF ESP Ruben Perez 3rd captain 5 DF NED Bart Schenkeveld vice captain 6 DF POL Tymoteusz Puchacz on loan from Union Berlin 7 FW GRE Fotis Ioannidis8 MF HUN Laszlo Kleinheisler9 FW SVN Andraz Sporar10 MF BRA Bernard11 DF ROU Cristian Ganea12 GK RUS Yuri Lodygin14 DF ARG Facundo Sanchez15 GK GRE Vasilios Xenopoulos16 MF SVN Adam Gnezda Cerin No Pos Nation Player17 MF ARG Daniel Mancini18 MF ALB Enis Cokaj19 MF FRA Alexis Trouillet21 MF GRE Dimitrios Kourbelis captain 22 MF ESP Aitor Cantalapiedra 4th captain 23 DF ISL Hordur Bjorgvin Magnusson27 DF GRE Giannis Kotsiras31 DF CRO Zvonimir Sarlija34 MF ARG Sebastian Palacios44 DF GRE Achilleas Poungouras77 MF SVN Benjamin Verbic91 GK ITA Alberto Brignoli99 FW GRE Argyris KampetsisPanathinaikos B and Academy Edit Main articles Panathinaikos B and Panathinaikos F C Academy Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player20 MF GRE Dimitris Serpezis24 DF GRE Georgios Sideras26 MF GRE Tasos Symeonidis45 MF ARG Valentin Mancini on loan from Aldosivi 49 MF BRA Gustavo Furtado54 DF CYP Evagoras Antoniou No Pos Nation Player60 MF GRE Georgios Kyriopoulos63 DF GRE Dimitrios Pitsotis64 MF GRE Christos Kryparakos65 DF GRE Georgios Pavlakis90 MF ALB Leandro Frroku95 FW EGY Bilal MazharOut 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 MF BRA Jonas Toro at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023 MF POR Antonio Xavier at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023 FW SWE Alexander Jeremejeff at Levadiakos until 30 June 2023 Retired numbers Edit 13 In honour of Gate 13Former players EditSee also List of Panathinaikos F C playersContribution to the Greece national team Edit Kalafatis with the national colours 1919 Overall Panathinaikos has a significant contribution to the Greece national football team Giorgos Kalafatis the founder of Panathinaikos was the member of the Greece national team that participated in the Inter Allied Games in Paris while later he was also a player manager for Greece in the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp During the next decades Panathinaikos highlighted some of the best Greek players in the history of Greek football who contributed also to the national team Migiakis Linoxilakis Loukanidis Domazos Antoniadis Kapsis Ikonomopoulos Saravakos etc Six Panathinaikos players were members of the first appearance of the national team in a World Cup in 1994 Saravakos Kolitsidakis Apostolakis Kalitzakis Nioplias Marangos Five players of the club were part of the golden team of 2004 that won the UEFA Euro 2004 UEFA Euro 2004 Giourkas Seitaridis Angelos Basinas Giannis Goumas Dimitris Papadopoulos Kostas ChalkiasPersonnel EditTechnical staff Edit See also List of Panathinaikos F C managers Position StaffManager Ivan JovanovicAssistant manager Christos KontisAssistant coach Nikos KolompourdasAssistant coach Predrag ErakGoalkeeper trainer Giorgos MountakisFitness trainer Dimitrios DaniilidisFitness trainer Giannis StavrinosAnalyst Stefanos AnagnostouAnalyst Dimitris BrousalisAnalyst Dimitris KapralosClub staff Edit Position StaffFootball Department Coordinator Dimitris SaravakosTeam Administrative Manager Grigoris PapavasiliouMedical Doctor Panagiotis AlexandropoulosMedical Doctor Angelos NtinasPhysiotherapist Arsenis KontosPhysiotherapist Michael PapamichailPhysiotherapist Xenofon KonstantakisPhysiotherapist Odisseas PayaPhysiotherapist Panagiotis StefanisPhysiotherapist Giorgos KalopitasNutritionist Giorgos PapadimitriouNutritionist Giannis TsekourasKit assistants Giannis GiannakopoulosKit assistants Nektarios DiamantakosKit assistants Thodoris KatsasScout Makis LivathinosScout Alexandros ZafiriouScout Spyros MarangosManagement EditSee also List of Panathinaikos F C presidents Position StaffOwnership Giannis Alafouzos 45 Sortivo International Ltd 45 President Giannis AlafouzosVice President amp CEO Manos MavrokoukoulakisVice President Giannis PanagiotidisVice President Leonidas BoutsikarisBoard member Dimitris SaravakosBoard member Anna LoumidiBoard member Giorgos MathiopoulosBoard member Spyros VlachosBoard member Dimitris VranopoulosGallery Edit Stjepan Bobek head coach 1963 67 Ferenc Puskas head coach 1970 74 See also Edit Association football portal Greece portalSportsPanathinaikos A O Panathinaikos B Panathinaikos F C Academy Panathinaikos B C Panathinaikos women s basketball Panathinaikos V C Panathinaikos women s volleyballOtherEuropean Club Association List of unrelegated association football clubsReferences Edit APOSTOLOS NIKOLAIDHS pao gr in Greek PROEDROS pao gr Shmera gr San H idrysh kai oi metamorfwseis toy Pana8hnaikoy Sansimera gr Retrieved 25 November 2021 Gewrgios Kalafaths To antio toy oramatisth toy Pana8hnaikoy Sport fm gr Retrieved 25 November 2021 a b Supercup Champions Worldfootball net Retrieved 25 November 2021 a b Soyper Kap Enas 3exasmenos 8esmos Sport fm gr Retrieved 25 November 2021 a b 1 Elabon OSFP 39 PAO 30 AEK 15 PAOK 11 Arhs 5 Ystera apo 15eth ereyna dyo panepisthmiakoi sto biblio toys katagrafoyn thn istoria kai gewgrafia toy ellhnikoy podosfairoy 30 June 2009 Tanea gr in Greek a b H pio prosfath apografh blog baggelhs mpraoydakhs SentraGoal Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2014 H pio prosfath apografh 36 Olympiakoi 1 677 ekatommyria 30 2 Pana8hnaikoi Sentragoal Baggelhs Mpraoydakhs in Greek a b O opadikos xarths ths Elladas Sdna gr Archived from the original on 21 March 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Greece Eternal Thespians Fifa com Archived from the original on 20 March 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2009 a b c d e History Pao gr Archived from the original on 29 December 2015 Retrieved 23 June 2011 a b To 1908 Paoabroad com Retrieved 25 November 2021 a b c d 103 xronia apo thn idrysh toy Pana8hnaikoy At this day Panathinaikos was founded 103 years ago To Vima in Greek 3 February 2011 a b c d e Kyriazis Christos 4 February 2008 The Golden Age of PAO Ethnosport in Greek Pegasus Publishing S A Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 28 March 2008 Alexopoulos Ilias 3 January 2008 Our best moments Athlitiki in Greek Archived from the original on 5 October 2009 Pana8hnaikos Olympiakos 8 2 E soccer gr in Greek Football during the War Xyzcontagion wordpress com in Greek History of PAO Palaimaxoipao1908 blogspot gr in Greek To epos toy Goyemplei E soccer gr in Greek Intercontinental Cup 1971 FIFA 10 December 2008 Archived from the original on 25 June 2012 Balkan Cup 1970 79 Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 24 April 2012 In the experimental Champions League pao gr Panathinaikos in driving seat uefa com 3 April 2002 Saviola goal crowns comeback uefa com 9 April 2002 Derlei double delights Porto uefa com 20 March 2003 The 19th Championship pao gr The 16th Cup pao gr Ninis takes Panathinaikos breath away uefa com 25 February 2010 Panathinaikos complete Greek double uefa com 24 April 2010 Cisse signing adds to Lazio s attacking options Uefa com 12 July 2011 Skokas Giannis 26 August 2011 Sikelos o die8nhs gkolkiper Ale3hs Tzorbas Alexis Tzorvas a Sicilian To Vima in Greek E3antlhsame ta peri8wria eipe o Gontikas gia thn omadikh paraithsh No tolerance anymore said Gontikas after mass resignation In gr in Greek Athens 23 March 2012 a b Etoimo to plano Alafoyzoy poy den exei polyteleia gia dixonoies Alafouzos plan is ready In gr in Greek Athens 30 April 2012 Exoyme polla 8emata kai ligo xrono dhlwse o Gontikas Gontikas We have many issues and little time In gr in Greek Athens 9 May 2012 paomprosta gr 24 July 2019 Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 25 November 2021 Panathinaikos beats PAOK 1 4 in Greek Cup final yahoo com 26 April 2014 CFCB Adjudicatory Chamber renders Panathinaikos FC decision uefa com 24 April 2018 Epoxh Dwnh ston Pana8hnaiko gazzetta gr in Greek 3 July 2018 Alafoyzos opadoi H sxesh orghs ta syllalhthria kai oi epi8eseis SDNA in Greek 13 February 2020 Retrieved 17 December 2020 Ti apeginan oi metagrafes toy Pana8hnaikoy apo to kalokairi toy 2018 Contra gr in Greek Retrieved 17 December 2020 Dani Poyatos is the new coach pao gr 22 July 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2020 Mr Lazlo Boloni is the new coach of Panathinaikos pao gr 20 October 2020 Retrieved 20 October 2020 Ivan Jovanovic is Panathinaikos new coach pao gr 17 June 2021 Panathinaikos ends eight year trophy drought lifting the Greek Cup ekathimerini com 22 May 2022 Retrieved 22 May 2022 1908 1920 Leoforos gr in Greek Archived from the original on 20 November 2014 Retrieved 23 June 2011 H dekaetia toy 1920 kai h emfanish newn a8lhtikwn swmateiwn Paoabroad com Retrieved 18 November 2017 a b Trifylli Pao gr Archived from the original on 26 July 2015 Five claims to fame Panathinaikos uefa com Pana8hnaikos 106 etwn vids in Greek Gazzetta gr Apo8ewsh toy Trifyllioy sto Stadio dyo xronia prin thn idrysh toy Pana8hnaikoy in Greek Palaimaxoipanathinaikou gr Ay3hse tis proswpikes metoxes o Alafoyzos Sport24 gr in Greek Retrieved 14 December 2016 2 Archived 8 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Perissoteroys opadoys o Olympiakos Akoloy8oyn PAO AEK PAOK 30 June 2009 Sport24 gr in Greek 3 Aytoi einai oi opadoi sthn Ellada O Olympiakos exei toys perissoteroys fila8loys sthn Ellada meta apo ekeinoys poy den yposthrizoyn kamia omada Deyteros o Pana8hnaikos trith h AEK kai akoloy8ei o PAOK 26 June 2012 Gazzetta gr in Greek SPORTSDNA DHMOSKOPHSH O opadikos xarths ths Elladas Archived from the original on 17 March 2015 Retrieved 17 March 2015 Archived copy Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Gate 13 is born Pao gr Retrieved 26 October 2016 Eparxia Gate 13 1966 Gate13 gr Retrieved 26 June 2015 Brothers Gate13 gr in Greek Zajec Drazen i borba da se nogomet vrati navijacima Sto veze Boyse i Gate 13 Croatian Index hr Retrieved 16 January 2019 Enrico Gregori 11 November 2012 Allarme derby infiltrati tra i tifosi ci sono anche gli ultra greci Il Messaggero Retrieved 16 February 2013 Sioytas 8odwrhs 27 September 2015 Symparastash stoys Ultras ths Roma pic Leoforos gr Retrieved 18 November 2017 PA LE FI P Palefip gr Archived from the original on 19 November 2017 Retrieved 18 November 2017 O strathgos toy Pana8hnaikoy kai ths E8nikhs Sport fm gr in Greek Oi koryfaioi se symmetoxes Express gr in Greek Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Symmetoxes Sentragoal gr in Greek Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Bazexa h prasinh shmaia Contra gr in Greek Archived from the original on 8 September 2010 Ta rekor toy Bazexa Sday gr in Greek Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 Opoy kai an paizeis mazi soy PAO Leoforos gr in Greek Archived from the original on 14 July 2013 Ghpedo Lewforoy Ale3andras Leoforos gr in Greek Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Ta xronia ths prasinhs yperoxhs 1960 1970 Pao gr in Greek Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 EPO Hellenic Football Federation Oi Prwta8lhtes Elladas apo to 1928 mexri shmera in Greek Hellenic Football Federation epo gr Karpati Tamas Schoggl Hans List of Greece championships RSSSF Retrieved 12 April 2012 a b Trophy Room Pao gr Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Retrieved 12 April 2012 a b Panathinaikos FC profile Uefa com Retrieved 12 April 2012 Greece List of Cup Winners Rsssf com Greece List of Super Cup and League Cup Finals RSSSF Greece Final Tables 1906 1959 Rsssf com Retrieved 18 November 2017 Mastrogiannopoulos Alexander Greek final tables 1906 1960 RSSSF Retrieved 12 April 2012 Squad Pao gr Retrieved 29 August 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Panathinaikos FC Official websites Official website in English and Greek Panathinaikos Archived 20 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine at Super League in English and Greek Panathinaikos at UEFA Panathinaikos at FIFANews sites Panathinaikos on newspao gr Panathinaikos on panathinaikos24 gr Panathinaikos on leoforos gr Archived 28 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Panathinaikos news from Nova SportsMedia Official YouTube channel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panathinaikos F C amp oldid 1145079537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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