Panachaiki F.C.





























































Panachaiki
Panachaikis' emblem.png
Full name Panachaiki 1891 Football Club
Nickname(s)
Kokkinómavri (The Red and Blacks)
I Megáli Kyría tis Peloponnísou (The Great Lady of the Peloponnese)
Short name PFC
Founded 14 June 1891; 127 years ago (1891-06-14)
as Panachaikos Gymnastikos Syllogos
Ground Kostas Davourlis Stadium
Capacity 11,321
Owner Panachaean Alliance
Chairman Kostas Apostolopoulos
Manager Sakis Tsiolis
League Football League
2017–18 Football League, 3rd
Website Club website

















Home colours














Away colours




Current season







Panachaiki 1891 Football Club (Greek: ΠΑΕ Παναχαϊκή 1891) is a football club based in Patras, Greece. Founded in 1891, they have reached the Greek Cup semi-finals twice (1979, 1997), as well as the quarter-finals on ten occasions. Moreover, they were the first Greek club outside Athens (including Piraeus) and Thessaloniki to represent Greece in a European competition, the 1973–74 UEFA Cup.


Panachaiki FC is the football department of Panachaiki Gymnastiki Enosi (P.G.E.), a multi-sport club. In 1979, the department became professional and independent. They have played their home games in various grounds since their first official game in 1899, mainly the Kostas Davourlis Stadium, their traditional home ground, and the Pampeloponnisiako Stadium.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Establishment


    • 1.2 First years


      • 1.2.1 1923–1940


      • 1.2.2 1940–1953




    • 1.3 1954–1961: National championships


    • 1.4 1961–1975


    • 1.5 1976–2004


    • 1.6 2004–2015


    • 1.7 Modern years




  • 2 Stadiums


  • 3 Honours


    • 3.1 Domestic


      • 3.1.1 Leagues


      • 3.1.2 Cups






  • 4 European matches


  • 5 Season to season


  • 6 Players


    • 6.1 Current squad


    • 6.2 Out on loan




  • 7 Notable players


  • 8 Personnel


    • 8.1 Ownership and current board


    • 8.2 Technical staff




  • 9 Sponsorships


  • 10 See also


  • 11 Notes


  • 12 References


  • 13 External links





History



Establishment


The history of Panachaiki began in 1891, when Panachaikos Gymnastikos Syllogos (Pan-Achaean Gymnastic Club) was founded. In 1894, a rival sports club, Gymnastiki Eteria Patron (Gymnastic Company of Patras), was founded in Patras by former Panachaikos' members.[1]


The football department was founded in 1899 by a Brit, Arthur Morphy, and played its first friendly game against a team of British sailors the same year, winning 4–2. Since 1902, he has created a football team and the Gymnastics Company, giving many friendly games to each other and the other clubs of Patras that were created.



First years



1923–1940


The first divisions of Panachaiki were founded in 1923. The players on the football team were athletes from the Club's other departments, Italian immigrants and members of the British community of Patras, such as Poulos Ant., Antonopoulos Themist., Martijian Mardik, Liakopoulos A., Goliidis A., Konstantinos K., Kostopoulos Eleftherias, Katsanos G., Dilon Edouardos, McLin, Ochan Ochanian, Evangelion Stavros, Belegris Chr., Moulas A., Kekkos P., Kostopoulos P., Maniatopoulos Andreas, Argyropoulos Andreas, Schinas K., Kostopoulos Al., Moushochoritis Andr., Sukovetis G., and others. Due to the lack of rivals, the first games were made with the crews of foreign warships arriving in Patras.


In 1924, Panachaiki had two equivalent soccer teams, A and B, since both the Panachaikos and the Gymnastics Company had football sections. As a result, some players left Panachaiki and created other clubs in the years to come. At the same time, in 1922, with the Asia Minor Catastrophe, thousands of refugees arrive in Patras, bringing with them their love for football, also establishing several new football clubs. This situation has as a consequence the secession of the associations by SEGAS and the establishment of the Hellenic Football Federation of Patras in 1927. Since 1927, the new association has begun the organization of a championship, in which Panachaiki is the leading player and which conquers many times until 1959, when the National Football Federation (National Football Association). Before the FCA Patras the championship was organized by Panachaiki, from 1923–24 to 1925–26. At that time, the Greek championship was a tournament of the Athens, Piraeus and Thessaloniki champions, with the Hellenic Football Federation for many years has excluded provincial groups. Patras, due to disagreements of the clubs and disobedience to the Epirus Achaia, failed to organize a regular championship and this resulted in her exclusion from the Greek championship.


Regardless of this, the Athenian clubs held friendly games in the city, culminating on August 11, 1945, when Panachaiki confronted Greece on its field and was defeated by 7–1. In 1928, Panachaiki faced Panathinaikos, who won with 4–3, in 1929 AEK losing 0–1, 0–2 and 0–6, while against Olympiacos he was defeated the same year 2–5, in 1930 1–7 and in 1934 0–7. The significant difference in capacity was due, among other things, to the fact that the Athens and Piraeus teams had already a 25-year football tournament with tournament events. Other Athens-friendly teams: 27/3/1927 Panachaiki 2–3 Peloponnese Athens - 27/11/1927 Panachaiki 3–1 AT Group Atromitos - 18/4/1928 Panachaiki 2–3 Greek-Russian - 25/4/1928 Panachaiki 5–2 Piraeus Group of Fans - 2/7/1928 Panachaiki 5–3 Bank of America Group - 25/12/1928 Atromitos Athens 5–1 Panachaiki - 14/1/1929 National 0–0 Panachaiki - 29/6/1929 Palaio Faliro 2–3 Panachaiki - 2/12/1929 Panathinaikos 3–0 Panachaiki - 3/1/1930 Piraeus Defense 1–0 Panachaiki.



1940–1953


In 1940, Greece enters World War II and stops every sporting activity. Some friendly games are played during the occupation, while in 1943 a cup of Patras is organized. Upon the end of the war, the local championship is restarted. During the Greek-Italian war the following athletes of Panachaiki fell: Kapatos Fotis, Niaros Dimitris, Polymeris Nikos, Tsiros Philipas, Mavromatis. During this period Panakaiiki participates in the Patras Championship by giving some chronic qualifying matches to the Pan-Hellenic Championship, without success. The team during the war coached the well-known duo Raptis-Skondras, Reveliotis-Zoumpos.



1954–1961: National championships


In 1954, Panachaiki participates for the first time in the Pan-Hellenic Championship and occupies the 6th and last place. In 1955, Panetolikos was eliminated in the qualifiers of the Southern Greece Championship, in 1956 he took third place in the South Championship behind Olympic and National Piraeus with 13 points, while in 1957 he is again third in the South Championship. 1958 is second in the South, 1959 is excluded in the qualifiers from Panegialios in the South Championship, as in 1960. In order to compete a team in qualifying for the league of southern Greece had to conquer the local first, as Panahaiki did all of them the years. After the South or Northern Greece Championship, the final phase of the Greek Championship was followed. The case of Panegialios and Panetolikos, belonging to the same association, was due to the fact that the EPPS of Patras organized two championships, one for the teams of Patras and one for the groups of the Region (ie Aitoloakarnania, Zakynthos, Kefallinia , Ilia, Rest of Achaia). Thus, the association each year had two different champions.



1961–1975


In 1961, Panachaiki won the South League and participated for the first time in the history in the Football League. From then until 2007 Panachaiki will not again compete in a lower league. Panachaiki immediately starred in the Football League, targeting on the rise every year, which it secured in 1969. But Panachaiki's virgin presence in the big category is downgraded as she is accused of attempting to bribe with Aris. Consequently, it is zero in 13 races. The following year, however, Panachaiki starred in the Football League and returned.


In 1972, Panachaiki returns to Super League and starts the course of the golden team of Davourlis, Rigas, Stravopodis, Michalopoulos and others towards the successes, culminating in the UEFA cup. That same year ended 6th with 11 wins, 14 draws, 9 defeats, and a total of 40–35 goals. A typical feature of the team was the average of 8,773 tickets, the second highest among the provincial teams (Larissa's first champion in 1988).


In 1973, Panachaiki took the 4th position in the league with 16 wins, 12 draws, 6 defeats, 42–27 goals, and wins the exit to UEFA Cup. Panachaiki was the first provincial team to succeed, defeating the championship from PAOK, who won in the Toumba Stadium with 5–3 in the last game, when PAOK would be a champion.


Panachaiki lived its greatest football glory in the early and mid 1970s, when a team led by Kostas Davourlis impressed Greece and took part in the 1973–74 UEFA Cup, eliminating Austrian Grazer AK before losing to Dutch Twente.[2] Former Manchester United manager Wilf McGuinness took over as head coach for the 1974–75 season, before he returned to England eighteen months later.


In 1974, Panachaiki finished 6th with 13 wins, 12 draws and 9 defeats, goals 42–37. Kostas Davourlis' transcription instead of a record 10 million drachmas in Olympiacos is a powerful blow to the dreams of red-black fans for a championship. In 1975, Panachaiki took 7th place with 11 wins, 11 draws and 12 defeats, goals 41–39.



1976–2004


In 1976, Panachaiki finishes 10th and begins its downward course as its big stars begin and leave, while the years weigh their legs. Thus, every year the team finishes in the last positions of the scoreboard until 1980–81, when Panachaiki relegated to the Football League. Since then, Panachaiki has been struggling between the Super League and the Football League, largely lacking in significant discrimination.


In 1988, Panachaiki plays in the league but is zero in the match against Panserraikos and is relegated. At the same time, Panachaiki's fans are demonstrating on the main streets of the city, setting up barricades and colliding with the police, causing episodes that have a bad account of 15 injured. In the summer of 1996, Panachaiki participated in the Intertoto Cup, taking part for the second time in its history in a European event and results: 1–1 with Stabaek home, 1–2 with Dinamo Moscow away, 4–2 with Torshavn in and 2–4 from Genk away. In 2003, with the intervention of the then Venizelos Minister, Panachaiki is punished for debts and is eliminated from the Football League in the 9th game.



2004–2015


In 2004, Panachaiki had to fight under the law in D Ethniki. Last minute, however, it is decided and absorbed by Patraikos FC, also a Football League's team without any debts. This creates the "Panahaiki GI 2005" which is regularly taking part in the Football League in 2005. Nevertheless, the team is relegated and since 2006 is in the Gamma Ethniki.


Although, it managed to rise to the Football League in 2011, it ended up being the first in its club, the Football League's and Football League's 2 Primary Disciplinary Committee decided to relegate the squad and a fine of EUR 300,000 for a case bribe in a fight with the Olympiakos Chersonissos. At the same time, for the same case, a fine was imposed and a five-year blockade on the chairman Alexis Kougias. However, the EPAA Appeals Committee decided to leave the team in the second category and replace the penalty by subtracting 5 points from the new championship and acquitted its chairman A. Kougias.


In 2015, then Panachaiki's chairman of the group leaves and in his post leaves the general manager until that time. The team is relegated the same year in Gamma Ethniki counting only 13 players in the roster.



Modern years


In 2016, Panachaiki, due to its demise in Gamma Ethniki Category, goes to the hands of the amateur Panachaikis. Fifteen city entrepreneurs create the "Panachaean Alliance" in order to take over the reins of the group and start efforts to clear their debts from previous team administrations. In the post of technical director, the veteran international footballer and sometimes the player of the team Kostas Katsouranis, who takes over the organization of the football section, is hired by the "alliance". The team crowned champion the same year and returned to the Football League and the professional categories of the country.


On June 21, 2017, the Deputy Minister of Sports tabled an amendment to Hellenic Parliament concerning article 10 of the new Sport Law, which states inter alia that from the 2016–17 season onwards, any A.A.E. it is demoted in amateur category and put into liquidation if new A.A.E. is set up for the same sport by the same founding sports club, any liability goes to the natural persons who are responsible. The amendment is voted by a majority in the Parliament a few days later, paving the way for a new Football Club under the name "PAE Panachaiki 1891" and the creation of the group's current signal.


From January 2019, in PAE Panachaiki 1891 has put in place a new administrative model. Messrs. Bakalaros, Polydropopoulos, Chrysanthopoulos, Kefalas, Kolokythas, Lambropoulos, Michalakos and Vassilopoulos are now compiling the new shareholders' scheme that "run" the developments. Dimitris Drosos, who has taken responsibility for decisions concerning the football section, is also actively involved in this effort. The goal of all, inside and out of administration, fans, veterans and the whole of Patras, of which it is a symbol, is soon to be found in the position it deserves in Greek football.



Stadiums



The team's privately owned arena is the Kostas Davourlis Stadium, holding a capacity of 11,321 speactators.[3] Panachaiki has also been using the municipality-operated Pampeloponnisiako Stadium, which has a capacity of 23,588.[4]






Honours




Shirt of the team



Domestic



Leagues


  • Football League


Winners (6) (record): 1964, 1969, 1971, 1982, 1984, 1987

  • Gamma Ethniki


Winners (2): 2011, 2017


Cups


  • Greek Cup


Semi-finals (2): 1979, 1997


European matches

























































Season
Competition
Round
Club
Home
Away
Aggregate


1973–74

UEFA Cup

First round

Austria Grazer AK
2–1
1–0

3–1

Symbol keep vote.svg

Second round

Netherlands Twente
1–1
0–7

1–8

Symbol delete vote.svg


1997–98

UEFA Intertoto Cup

Group 5

Norway Stabæk
1–1


4th

Symbol delete vote.svg

Russia Dynamo Moscow

1–2

Faroe Islands B36 Tórshavn
4–2


Belgium Racing Genk

2–4


Season to season

























































































































































































































Season Division Pos. Season Division Pos. Season Division Pos. Season Division Pos. Season Division Pos. Season Division Pos.
1960–61 Div 2 2nd 1970–71 Div 2 1st 1980–81 Alpha Ethniki 17th 1990–91 Alpha Ethniki 13th 2000-01 Alpha Ethniki 11th 2010–11 Div 3 1st
1961–62 Div 2 4th 1971–72 Alpha Ethniki 6th 1981–82 Div 2 1st 1991–92 Alpha Ethniki 15th 2001–02 Alpha Ethniki 13th 2011–12 Div 2 4th
1962–63 Div 2 5th 1972–73 Alpha Ethniki 4th 1982–83 Alpha Ethniki 16th 1992–93 Alpha Ethniki 11th 2002–03 Alpha Ethniki 15th 2012–13 Div 2 15th
1963–64 Div 2 1st 1973–74 Alpha Ethniki 6th 1983–84 Div 2 1st 1993–94 Alpha Ethniki 16th 2003–04 Div 2 16th 2013–14 Div 2 6th
1964–65 Div 2 4th 1974–75 Alpha Ethniki 7th 1984–85 Alpha Ethniki 14th 1994–95 Div 2 2nd 2004–05 Div 2 12th 2014–15 Div 2 6th*
1965–66 Div 2 8th 1975–76 Alpha Ethniki 10th 1985–86 Alpha Ethniki 16th 1995–96 Alpha Ethniki 15th 2005–06 Div 2 15th 2015–16 Div 2 16th
1966–67 Div 2 2nd 1976–77 Alpha Ethniki 15th 1986–87 Div 2 1st 1996–97 Alpha Ethniki 15th 2006–07 Div 3 10th 2016–17 Div 3 1st
1967–68 Div 2 6th 1977–78 Alpha Ethniki 10th 1987–88 Alpha Ethniki 16th 1997–98 Alpha Ethniki 16th 2007–08 Div 3 5th 2017–18 Div 2 3rd
1968–69 Div 2 1st 1978–79 Alpha Ethniki 15th 1988–89 Div 2 16th
1998–99
Div 2 2nd 2008–09 Div 3 3rd
1969–70 Alpha Ethniki 18th 1979–80 Alpha Ethniki 13th 1989–90 Div 2 2nd 1999–00 Alpha Ethniki 14th 2009–10 Div 3 3rd

* Finished 2nd in the South Group and 6th in the promotion play offs


Players



Current squad


As of 14 February 2019

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








































































































No.

Position
Player
1

Greece

GK

Vasilios Soulis
2

Greece

DF

Ilias Polimos
3

Canada

DF

James Stamopoulos
4

Greece

MF

Konstantinos Plegas
5

Greece

MF

Efthymios Argyropoulos
6

Greece

DF

Giannis Sotirakos (5th captain)
7

Greece

FW

Dimitris Mavrias
8

Greece

MF

Spyros Fourlanos (4th captain)
9

Greece

FW

Christos Eleftheriadis (3rd captain)
10

Argentina

MF

Israel Coll
11

Greece

FW

Michalis Bastakos
12

Tunisia

DF

Bilel Mohsni
14

Greece

MF

Athanasios Papatolios
15

Greece

MF

Alexandros Bitsakos
20

Greece

MF

Dimitris Polychronis






























































































No.

Position
Player
21

Greece

DF

Nikos Loumpardeas (captain)
22

Greece

MF

Georgios Moustakopoulos
23

Greece

DF

Georgios Dasios (vice-captain)
24

Greece

GK

Andreas Kolovouris
25

Greece

MF

Iason Stavropoulos
26

Greece

FW

Panagiotis Kynigopoulos
27

Greece

FW

Andreas Antonakopoulos
30

Paraguay

MF

José Montiel
33

Greece

FW

Nikos Masouras
45

Greece

FW

Panagiotis Moraitis
52

Greece

GK

Konstantinos Kapoutaglis
62

Greece

DF

Timotheos Tselepidis
77

Croatia

FW

Ivan Kovačec
99

Greece

GK

Vangelis Pantelidis



Out on loan


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
















No.

Position
Player


Greece

MF

Andreas Mastrantonakis (at Kalamata until 30 June 2019)



Notable players










Personnel



Ownership and current board



































































Position
Staff
Owner

Greece Panachaean Alliance
President

Greece Kostas Apostolopoulos
1st Vice-President

Greece Panagiotis Lampropoulos
2nd Vice-President

Greece Dimitris Drosos
CEO

Greece Kostas Apostolopoulos
CFO

Vacant
Executive Director

Vacant
Accounting department

Vacant
Communications Director

Greece Giorgos Sotiropoulos
Head of Administrative Organization

Vacant
Chief Scouting

Vacant
Technical Director

Greece Kostas Chalkias
Sports Director

Vacant
Board member

Greece Konstantinos Chrysanthopoulos
Amateur Panachaiki

Greece Dimitris Tsaousoglou


Technical staff



























Position
Staff
Manager

Greece Sakis Tsiolis
Assistant

Greece Ilias Kyriakidis
Goalkeeping coach

Greece Dimitris Komplas
Physical fitness coach

Greece Andreas Fousekis
Analyst

Greece Dimitris Xouris


Sponsorships



  • Great Shirt Sponsor: Bakalaros

  • Official Sport Clothing Manufacturer: Capelli



See also


  • Panachaiki G.E.


Notes






  1. ^ Patras' sports history Politis, N.G. (1994). Sports in Patras, Tome A, The first decade 1891-1900. Patras: Achaikes Ekdoseis. ISBN 960-7164-91-1..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation


  3. ^ "Γήπεδο Παναχαϊκής "Κώστας Δαβουρλής"" (in Greek). stadia.gr. Retrieved 11 May 2015.


  4. ^ "Παμπελοποννησιακό Στάδιο". stadia.gr. Retrieved 11 May 2015.




References



  • Papageorgiou, V.G., Patraikon Imerologion, 1906


  • Politis, N.G. (1994). Sports in Patras, Tome A, The first decade 1891-1900. Patras: Achaikes Ekdoseis. ISBN 960-7164-91-1.

  • Ιkonomopoulos, V., Patras Sports Panorama, 1994


  • Politis, N.G. (1997). Sports in Patras, Tome B, From the Tofalos period to the foundation of Panachaiki. Patras: Achaikes Ekdoseis. ISBN 960-7164-92-X.

  • Kokkovikas, K., The sports past of Achaia, 2004

  • Patras Municipality, 100 years of football in Patras, 2006



External links






Official websites



  • Official website (in Greek)

News sites


  • Panachaiki on sportfmpatras.gr (in Greek)

Media



  • Official Facebook page

  • Official YouTube channel













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