PAOK F.C. Information & PAOK F.C. Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Fulham FC | Maximuscle
Fulham FC | Maximuscle
maximuscle.com
 TYTIN? FC - Kerr, Pearson Dental Supplies
TYTIN? FC - Kerr, Pearson Dental Supplies
pearsondental.com
 Systems, Inc. - APG-3045-FC...
Systems, Inc. - APG-3045-FC...
biocompression.com
 Summit FC 46 Freezer, Summit FC -46 Chest Freezer, FC 46 Summit Freezer
Summit FC46 Freezer, Summit FC-46 Chest Freezer, FC46 Summit Freezer
blockscientific.com
 
PAOK
Athletic Club emblem
Full name Panthessalonikeios Athlitikos
Omilos Konstantinoupoliton
Founded 1926
Ground Toumba Stadium
Thessaloniki, Greece
(Capacity: 28,701)
Chairman Greece Zisis Vryzas
Manager Portugal Fernando Santos
League Super League Greece
2008-09 Super League Greece, 2nd in regular season, 4th after play-offs
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

PAOK F.C. (Greek: Π.Α.Ο.Κ. - Πανθεσσαλονίκειος Αθλητικός Όμιλος Κωνσταντινουπολιτών, Panthessalonikeios Athlitikos Omilos Konstantinoupoliton, meaning "Panthessalonikian Athletic Club of Constantinopolitans") is a Greek association football club based in Thessaloniki. The club currently competes in the Super League Greece. PAOK has spent its entire history playing in the top division, winning two league championships (1976, 1985) and four cups (1972, 1974, 2001, 2003). PAOK also holds the record as a runner-up in the Greek cup (12 times). According to a 2007 research[1], about 9% of all active Greek football fans support PAOK, with the club's strength being mainly in Thessaloniki, where support is 38%, and the rest of Northern Greece, where support is 30%.


Contents

[edit] History

  • Foundation[2]

PAOK is the historical continuation of the Hermes (Greek: Ερμής) Sports Club, which was formed in 1875 by the Greek community of Pera, a district of Constantinople. It was the need of Constantinople's Greek residents to express and support their Greek spirit within Turkey that led to the creation of this club. The club won cup after cup proving that although the Greeks were a minority they continued to have a strong presence in the sporting sector. However, that situation did not last long and most players were forced to flee leaving behind a team consisting of residents of Constantinople renamed Politakia. Those who fled settled in Thessaloniki and in 1926 established PAOK which translated means the Panthessalonikian Athletic Club of Constantinopolitans. A double-headed eagle,combined with mourning black and white. This club history stretching back to the 19th century in effect makes PAOK one of Greece's oldest athletic clubs.

The club's first charter was approved on 20 April 1926 by means of decision of the Thessaloniki Court of First Instance (No. 822). PAOK's first emblem adopted in 1926 was a four-leaved clover and a horseshoe. The leaves were green with the letters PAOK marked on each of them, a symbol devised by Kostas Koemtzopoulos (president of Pera Club) who took the idea from a packet of cigarettes he smoked.

The club's founding members were:

T. Triantafyllidis (1st Chairman), F. Vyzantinos (2nd Chairman), A. Angelopoulos, A. Athanasiadis, K. Anagnostidis, M. Ventourellis, A. Dimitriadis, D. Dimitriadis, N. Zoumboulidis, M. Theodosiadis, T. Ioakimopoulos, P. Kalpaktsoglou, T. Kartsambekis, D. Koemtzopoulos, K. Koemtzopoulos, P. Kontopoulos, K. Kritikos, M. Konstantinidis, P. Maletskas, I. Nikolaidis, L. Papadopoulos, F. Samantzopoulos, T. Tsoulkas, M. Tsoulkas, S. Triantafyllidis

  • Local

After two months of preparation by the team following the club's establishment, it was decided that the team should compete against the other teams in Thessaloniki. The first match of the club was a win against Iraklis on 26 July 1925 by 2-1. Two weeks later, PAOK lost 5-2 to their worst rivals, Aris.

The vision of the club's founders and the whole PAOK community of establishing a home ground became reality in 1928 following much effort and thus on December 12, 1930 the Syntrivaniou Football Ground was officially opened. This was followed by a friendly match against Aris with PAOK winning 2-1.

The first professional contract was a document of historic importance. It was signed by the Club on 5 September 1928. The contract stipulated that the footballer Etien who had come from the Constantinople club Peraclub would be paid 4,000 drachmas per month. The contract was signed by Dr. Meletiou (PAOK Chairman) and Mr. Sakellaropoulos, Hon. Secretary.

Until 20 March 1929, the two clubs were rivals, competing against each other although both had been established by refugees from Constantinople. It was the Chairman of AEK Thessaloniki's which had been established in 1924–25 by the first wave of refugees who had come to Thessaloniki from Constantinople in 1922, Dr. Musa, who brokered the merger between Thessaloniki's two refugee teams.

Following the merger with AEK Thessaloniki's in 1929, PAOK changed its emblem. The new emblem became the double-headed eagle, which it remains to this day, indicating the heritage of the refugees (Constantinople). The difference between the PAOK eagle and the Byzantine eagle is that PAOK's emblem has its wings folded and the colors are black and white, signifying mourning for expulsion from the homeland.

The first foreign coach in the history of the team was the German Rudolph Ganser, who served with PAOK for the 1931–32 season.

Following World War II and the German occupation of Greece, the team known as the "Two-Headed Eagle of the North" entered upon a shining chapter in its career starting at the beginning of the 1950s. Willi Sevcik, an Austrian coach (1950–1952) who had worn the PAOK jersey in 1931–32, established a young talent academy within the club which gave rise to leading names who later left their mark, such as Leandros, Symeonidis, Giannelos, Margaritis, Giorgos Havanidis, and others.

1953 marked the beginning of PAOK's golden age. During the summer transfer period, Kouiroukidis, Petridis, Progios, Geroudis, Kemanidis, Hourvouliadis, Hasiotis and Angelidis all joined the club. PAOK became all-powerful, winning the Thessaloniki championship for three successive years and becoming a worthy representative of Greece's second largest city in the national championship.

In 1957, the club managers envisioned a new football ground worthy of the team's performance since the old ground had been annexed by the state. The search for a site led to the choice of a piece of land belonging to the National Defence Fund in the Toumba neighbourhood of eastern Thessaloniki, which in addition to offering unlimited free space was also an area closely associated with refugees from Asia Minor. A total area of 30,000 x2 was acquired by PAOK for a significant price, and construction of the new football ground began. Lottery tickets were even issued to aid construction of the new stadium, which was eventually opened on 6 September 1959 by the Minister of National Defence, Mr. G. Themelis. Before the first kick-off, an Air Force plane dropped a ball on a fly-past as a symbolic donation from the armed forces. Thanks to its new, large football ground, PAOK was ready to start a brilliant career which has lasted to this day, starting with the First Division established in October 1959.

At the opening of the 1st Division's first championship on 25 October 1959, PAOK welcomed the Katerini team Megas Alexandros, beating them 3-1. The team line-up was as follows: Zarko Mihailović (Serbian) and Progios, Hasiotis, Raptopoulos, Giannelos, Kemanidis, Havanidis, Leandros, Kiourtzis, Kouiroukidis, Salousto and Nikolaidis.

The success of the 1950s was followed by a decade during which PAOK had an average performance. One could say that it was as if it were building up its strength in the 1960s to unleash it during the 1970s.

  • European

The team became established as one of the best ever to play at Greek football grounds with players whose names became legendary for the Greek football. It was a team which set several records, organised by the legendary president Giorgos Pantelakis. During that time, when the democratic political system had collapsed (1967–1974), PAOK was not only a football power, but it also became an anti-dictatorship power and Toumba stadium a place where the citizens-fans used Anti-junta slogans. PAOK managed to strike a blow to the traditional football powers of Athens, winning the Championship in 1976 and the Cup twice, in 1972 and 1974. In Europe, PAOK made their best performance ever, qualifying for the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1973–74, where they were knocked out by the Italian team AC Milan. In PAOK in 1976 Gate 4 was created.

PAOK's excellent performance continued during the 1980s with very few unsuccessful seasons. The high point came mid-decade when the team won its second Greek Championship in 1985, its first title since Greek football turned professional. Another characteristic of the 1980's was the excessive fanaticism of the fans, which reached levels of hooliganism never seen before yet began to move beyond Greece becoming a Europe-wide phenomenon. However, the obsession shown by fans also had a downside, translating in quite a few cases into episodes which entailed penalties being imposed on the club.

At European level, PAOK made a memorable appearance against Bayern Munich, where it was knocked out on penalties, possibly one of the best-ever performances by a Greek team in a European cup. The 1990s started well with PAOK firmly among the top three teams in Greece. However, it was stigmatized by an extremely average-to-poor team performance under the chairmanship of Thomas Voulinos, who came into direct conflict with the fan club following serious hooliganism episodes during a PAOK-Paris Saint-Germain match in UEFA Cup, which led to PAOK's exclusion from UEFA European competitions for five years and very soon to financial ruin. In 1996, the change long demanded by PAOK fans came about. Voulinos handed over the reins of the club to Giorgos Batatoudis and an air of optimism was tangible everywhere in Thessaloniki. Numerous transfers of well-known players such as Zisis Vryzas, Spyros Marangos, Kostas Fratzeskos, and others took place from the first season under new management. In 1997, PAOK eventually found a place in the UEFA Cup and team coach Angelos Anastasiadis (a legendary PAOK footballer from the past) made his debut on the PAOK bench. The team's reappearance at European level was marked by the team's appetite for wins. After the elimination of legendary team Arsenal with a 1-0 win in Toumba Stadium and a 1-1 draw at Arsenal's home ground historic Highbury stadium. PAOK was eliminated on the next round by the then powerful Atlético Madrid.

The following year Angelos Anastasiadis was dismissed and Oleg Blokhin took his place only for a few months, as fans demanded the urgent return of Anastasiadis. He stayed for a season, was then succeeded by Ari Haan and then in December by Dušan Bajević(Serbian) who took over the reins.

PAOK had firmly established its position among the teams that play in Europe every year but that was no longer enough. A place in the UEFA Champions League was the next target. The team's next steps were taken in 2001 with a win in the Greek Cup after 25 years in an unforgettable final against Olympiacos. Playing at Nea Philadelphia, Athens, PAOK thrashed the then champions 2-4.

However, financial problems continued to plague the club and the team started to underachieve. Angelos Anastasiadis returned to the PAOK bench as coach in the summer of 2002. The season led to winning of yet another Cup (the second in the last three years) at the Toumba Stadium by defeating arch-rivals Aris 1-0.

Nevertheless, the following season PAOK — under the excellent management of Anastasiadis and although in accordance to a tight financial policy (in order to decrease its debts) many key players were bought by then league champion Olympiacos (Georgiadis, Okkas, Kafes) - managed to secure its participation in the qualifying rounds of following year's Champions League by finishing third in the championship.

Despite great optimism among PAOK fans, the team failed to qualify for the 2004–05 UEFA Champions League group stage, as they were knocked out by Maccabi Tel Aviv after the Greek club fielded a suspended player (Liassos Louka, a Cypriot midfield player who was still serving a two-match ban for his sending-off in a UEFA Intertoto Cup tie for former club Nea Salamis against Austria Wien on 8 July 2000) during the 1-2 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round first-leg defeat by the Israeli team. PAOK was punished with 3-0 loss and didn't manage to "turn the tables" in the second leg match (4-0 aggregate loss). After several more bad results, coach Angelos Anastasiadis resigned.

  • The Renaissance

In the summer of 2007, Theodoros Zagorakis became the new chairman of the club, replacing Yiannis Goumenos and thus ushered in a new era. One of the first actions was to create a plan for tackling PAOK's massive crippling debts and bring in an established manager in the form of Fernando Santos. In addition to that Zisis Vryzas decided to retire in the middle of the 2007-08 season and on January 6, 2008 played his last game. On the following day Vryzas became the Technical Manager of the team. PAOK became a well-organised club and as a result widely known players (like Sérgio Conceição, Pablo Contreras, Zlatan Muslimović, Pablo García) were transferred to the team for the "rebirth". A new training center was announced to be built in Nea Mesimvria, Thessaloniki. In the 2008-09 season PAOK is doing perfectly well in the league, surprisingly being in the second position, after Olympiacos.

[edit] General View

Season Pos. W. - D. - L. Goals Points Season Pos. W. - D. - L. Goals Points
1959–60 7 10 - 9 - 11 32-32 59 1984–85 1 19 - 8 - 3 54-26 46
1960–61 10 7 - 15 - 8 31-33 59 1985–86 10 10 - 7 - 13 33-38 27
1961–62 6 12 - 6 - 12 32-43 60 1986–87 5 13 - 9 - 8 39-23 29 (3 Nullified, -6 Points)
1962–63 4 13 - 8 - 9 44-34 64 1987-88 3 17 - 5 - 8 60-27 39
1963–64 8 10 - 7 - 13 22-30 56 (1 Nullified, -1 Point) 1988–89 8 11 - 10 - 9 34-30 32
1964–65 8 9 - 10 - 11 29-33 58 1989–90 3 19 - 8 - 7 49-26 46
1965-66 6 10 - 9 - 11 43-49 59 1990-91 4 16 - 9 - 9 56-39 38 (1 Nullified, -3 Points)
1966-67 4 13 - 11 - 6 36-20 67 1991-92 4 13 - 13 - 8 44-44 39
1967-68 9 13 - 7 - 14 45-40 67 1992-93 5 17 - 6 - 11 52-38 57
1968-69 5 16 - 10 - 8 58-37 76 1993-94 5 14 - 9 - 11 45-38 51
1969-70 5 12 - 17 - 5 52-25 75 1994-95 3 20 - 5 - 9 55-29 65
1970-71 9 12 - 10 - 12 38-32 68 1995-96 14 10 - 11 - 13 42-46 38 (1 Nullified, -3 Points)
1971-72 5 18 - 10 - 6 53-27 80 1996-97 4 19 - 9 - 6 53-28 66
1972-73 2 27 - 4 - 3 75-24 92 1997-98 4 21 - 7 - 6 74-41 70
1973-74 4 16 - 11 - 7 62-32 43 1998-99 4 19 - 5 - 10 52-31 62 (1 Nullified)
1974-75 3 19 - 8 - 7 73-28 46 1999-00 5 15 - 10 - 9 64-44 55
1975-76 1 21 - 7 - 2 60-17 49 2000-01 4 14 - 9 - 7 66-48 51
1976-77 3 21 - 10 - 3 63-27 52 2001-02 4 14 - 6 - 6 55-45 48
1977-78 2 16 - 14 - 4 48-24 46 2002-03 4 16 - 5 - 9 59-38 53
1978-79 4 18 - 9 - 7 73-23 45 2003-04 3 18 - 6 - 6 47-27 60
1979-80 5 17 - 7 - 10 53-33 41 2004-05 5 13 - 7 - 10 43-39 46
1980-81 4 15 - 12 - 7 52-31 42 2005-06 6 13 - 7 - 10 44-31 46
1981-82 3 18 - 10 - 6 55-22 46 2006-07 6 13 - 6 - 11 32-29 45
1982-83 4 18 - 6 - 10 49-28 42 2007-08 9 10 - 5 - 15 29-35 35
1983–84 5 11 - 13 - 6 33-29 45 2008–09 2 18 - 9 - 3 39-16 63 (4th after Playoffs)

[edit] European Campaigns

PAOK have played in the UEFA Cup and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup on many occasions, and made a name for themselves — both for eliminating a handful of famous European teams, and for their fanatically obsessed fans, massively following the club to almost every away game.

PAOK's best Cup Winner's cup performance was in the 1973–74 season, when PAOK reached the quarter-finals of the competition. Eliminating Legia Warsaw and Olympique Lyonnais on the way, PAOK were finally eliminated by AC Milan. After a 3-0 defeat at the San Siro, PAOK was confined to a thrilling 2-2 draw at Toumba Stadium. Milan would later reach the final, only to lose it to FC Magdeburg.

PAOK's most memorable appearance in the UEFA cup was on 30 September 1997, when PAOK managed to qualify to the second round at the expense of Arsenal. Having won by a single goal in Thessaloniki, PAOK was facing the prospect of going into extra time with 10 men and in foreign ground, with Arsenal leading 1-0 at Highbury with an early goal by Dennis Bergkamp. Yet, three minutes from the end, a great individual effort from Zisis Vryzas provided the equaliser and PAOK qualified by 2-1 on aggregate.
After that, PAOK were tied with then-strong Atlético Madrid, yet everybody expected that PAOK would prove a difficult opponent for the Spaniards. This was not the case, however, as PAOK were demolished 5-2 at Vicente Calderon, paying dearly for their childish defensive errors, with Christian Vieri scoring a hat-trick. Despite this, PAOK chased what little chances they had in the return leg, and managed a memorable 4-4 draw. These games featured two spectacular free-kicks, one home and one away, scored by PAOK's dead-ball specialist, Kostas Frantzeskos.

PAOK's last good UEFA Cup campaign was in the 2001/2002 season, reaching the third round, only to be eliminated at the hands of PSV. Having eliminated FC Kärnten (4-0 on aggregate) and Marila Příbram (8-3 on aggregate), PAOK managed to defeat PSV in Toumba by 3-2. Yet, they were defeated 4-1 in the return leg in Eindhoven, leaving them two goals behind on aggregate, in a night that PAOK fans ponder as full of missed chances. This was the second time in two years that PAOK was eliminated in the competition by PSV.

  • PAOK holds the second place for consecutive participations in the UEFA Cup, one behind Club Brugge, having participated in the UEFA Cup nine times in a row from 1997–98 up to 2005–06. PAOK missed the chance to tie with Brugge in 2006, as the club was banned by UEFA from taking part in the 2006–07 season of the UEFA Cup, despite having qualified, because of the club's long-unsettled debts.

[edit] All the European games

Season Competition Round Club Home Away
1965–66 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1st Round Austria Wiener 2–1 0–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
1967–68 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1st Round Belgium Liège 0–2 2–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1st Round Romania Dinamo Bucureşti 1–0 0–5 Symbol delete vote.svg
1972–73 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Austria Rapid Wien 2–2 (a) 0–0 Symbol delete vote.svg
1973–74 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Poland Legia Warszawa 1–0 1–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round France Lyon 4–0 3–3 Symbol keep vote.svg
Quarter-finals Italy Milan 2–2 0–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
1974–75 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 1–0 0–2 (aet) Symbol delete vote.svg
1975–76 UEFA Cup 1st Round Spain Barcelona 1–0 1–6 Symbol delete vote.svg
1976–77 European Cup 1st Round Cyprus Omonia 1–1 2–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
Last 16 Soviet Union Dynamo Kyiv 0–2 0–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
1977–78 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Poland Zagłębie Sosnowiec 2–0 2–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Denmark Vejle 2–1 0–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
1978–79 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round Switzerland Servette 2–0 0–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
1981–82 Cup Winners' Cup 1st Round West Germany Eintracht Frankfurt 2–0 (4–5 p) 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
1982–83 UEFA Cup 1st Round France Sochaux 1–0 1–2 (aeta) Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Spain Sevilla 2–0 0–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
1983–84 UEFA Cup 1st Round Bulgaria Lokomotiv Plovdiv 3–1 2–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round West Germany Bayern Munich 0–0 0–0 (8–9 p) Symbol delete vote.svg
1985–86 European Cup 1st Round Italy Verona 1–2 1–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
1988–89 UEFA Cup 1st Round Italy Napoli 1–1 0–1 Symbol delete vote.svg
1990–91 UEFA Cup 1st Round Spain Sevilla 0–0 (3–4 p) 0–0 Symbol delete vote.svg
1991–92 UEFA Cup 1st Round Belgium KV Mechelen 1–1 1–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Austria Swarovski Tirol 0–2 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
1992–93 UEFA Cup 1st Round France Paris Saint-Germain 0–3 1 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
1997–98 UEFA Cup 2nd Qual. Round Slovakia Spartak Trnava 5–3 1–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
1st Round England Arsenal 1–0 1–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Spain Atlético Madrid 4–4 2–5 Symbol delete vote.svg
1998–99 UEFA Cup 2nd Qual. Round Scotland Rangers 0–0 0–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
1999–00 UEFA Cup 1st Round Georgia (country) Lokomotivi Tbilisi 2–0 7–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Portugal Benfica 1–2 2–1 (1–4 p) Symbol delete vote.svg
2000–01 UEFA Cup 1st Round Israel Beitar Jerusalem 3–1 3–3 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Italy Udinese 3–0 (aet) 0–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
3rd Round Netherlands PSV 0–1 0–3 Symbol delete vote.svg
2001–02 UEFA Cup 1st Round Austria Kärnten 4–0 0–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Czech Republic Příbram 6–1 2–2 Symbol keep vote.svg
3rd Round Netherlands PSV 3–2 1–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
2002–03 UEFA Cup 1st Round Portugal Leixões 4–1 1–2 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Switzerland Grasshopper 2–1 1–1 Symbol keep vote.svg
3rd Round Czech Republic Slavia Prague 1–0 0–4 Symbol delete vote.svg
2003–04 UEFA Cup 1st Round Norway Lyn Oslo 0–1 3–0 Symbol keep vote.svg
2nd Round Hungary Debrecen 1–1 (a) 0–0 Symbol delete vote.svg
2004-05 Champions League 3rd Qual. Round Israel Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–3 2 0–1 Symbol delete vote.svg
UEFA Cup 1st Round Netherlands AZ 2–3 1–2 Symbol delete vote.svg
2005–06 UEFA Cup 1st Round Ukraine Metalurh Donetsk 1–1 2–2 (a) Symbol keep vote.svg
Group Stage
(Group G)
Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 0–1 Symbol delete vote.svg
Germany Stuttgart 1–2
Romania Rapid Bucureşti 0–1
France Rennes 5–1
2009–10 Europa League 3rd Qual. Round Norway Vålerenga 0–1 2–1 (a) Symbol keep vote.svg
Play–Off Round Netherlands Heerenveen 1–1 (a) 0–0 Symbol delete vote.svg

1: Match forfeited. Paris Saint-Germain were awarded a 0–3 win.
2: The first leg finished 1–2 to Maccabi Tel-Aviv but was awarded 0–3 against PAOK for fielding a suspended player.

[edit] Honours

Domestic

Winners (2): 1976, 1985
 Runners-up (5): 1937, 1940, 1973, 1978, 2009 
Winners (4): 1972, 1974, 2001, 2003
Runners-up (12)*: 1939, 1951, 1955, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1992

(*) Record

[edit] Current squad

As of 31 August 2009[3]

No. Position Player
1 Greece GK Kostas Chalkias (1st VC)
2 Greece DF Nikos Arabatzis
3 South Africa DF Bryce Moon
5 Uruguay MF Pablo García
6 Spain MF Vitolo
7 Portugal MF Sérgio Conceição (captain)
8 Italy DF Bruno Cirillo
10 France MF Olivier Sorlin
11 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Zlatan Muslimović
13 Greece DF Stelios Malezas (3rd VC)
14 Greece FW Athanasios Papazoglou
15 Chile DF Pablo Contreras (2nd VC)
16 Brazil DF Lino
No. Position Player
18 Greece MF Georgios Fotakis
19 Greece MF Vasilios Koutsianikoulis
20 Portugal MF Vieirinha
21 Serbia MF Vladimir Ivić
22 Argentina MF Ricardo Verón
23 Uruguay DF Joe Bizera
27 Poland DF Mirosław Sznaucner
28 Ghana MF Mohammed Abubakari
30 Greece GK Fotis Koutzavasilis
31 Argentina FW Lucio Filomeno
36 Italy DF Mirko Savini
91 Croatia GK Dario Krešić
For recent transfers, see List of Greek football transfers summer 2009.

[edit] Out On Loan(Season 2009-10)

[edit] Foreign players

Only five Non-EU Nationals can be registered in the Greek Super league. Foreign players with an EU passport are registered as EU-Nationals

EU Nationals

EU Nationals (Dual citizenship)

Non-EU Nationals

[edit] Notable Players

Many famous players both Greeks and foreigners have served PAOK throughout its rich history.

See also category: PAOK FC players

Argentina
Bosnia & Hervegovina
Brazil
Cameroon
Colombia
Cyprus
Egypt
England
Georgia
Ghana


Greece
Hungary
Italy
Ivory Coast
Liberia
Nigeria
Peru
Poland
Portugal


Serbia
Slovakia

[edit] Notable Coaches

Many famous coaches both Greeks and foreigners have served PAOK throughout its rich history. Some of the most important and successful are the following:

1Anastasiadis is the only coach to win trophies with PAOK as both a player and coach. He won the 1974 Cup and the 1976 League Championship as a player and then the 2003 Cup as a coach.

2Lóránt died of a heart attack while coaching a PAOK-Olympiacos derby (0-0 at the time of the incident, final score 1-0) on 31 May 1981, in Toumba Stadium.

[edit] Managerial Executives

PAOK FC Board of Directors[5]

[edit] Stadium

Before the start of a Super League game.

Name: Toumba Stadium[6]

Location: Toumba District, Thessaloniki, Macedonia, Greece

Year Built: 1959

Capacity: 28,701 seats

Ownership: AS PAOK Thessaloniki

Used By: PAOK and PAOK Youth Team

[edit] Retired Numbers

Retired PAOK FC Numbers

  • 17 – in honour of Panagiotis Katsouris, a PAOK player that died in 1998 in a car accident.
  • 12 – in honour of the fans, considered the "twelfth player" of the team in the pitch.

[edit] References

[edit] External links




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots