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Paok FcPAOK FC, Panthessalonikios Athlitikos Omilos Konstantinoupoliton Football Club (Greek: ΠΑΕ ΠΑΟΚ, Ποδοσφαιρική Αθλητική Ένωση Πανθεσσαλονίκειος Αθλητικός Όμιλος Κωνσταντινουπολιτών) stands for Panthessalonikian Athletic Club of Constantinople and is a Greek football club, founded in Thessaloniki in 1926. It was a continuation of the Hermes Athletic and Cultural Association of Constantinople (Istanbul) which was founded in 1875, and transferred to Thessaloniki when the Greek population of Turkey was expelled in the 1920s. History PAOK is the historical continuation of the Hermes Athletic and Cultural Association from Constantinople established by Greek residents of the city in 1875. It is located in the very heart of the city, in the Pera area. The need of Constantinople’s Greek residents to express and support their Hellenism within Turkey was what led to the creation of this club. In 1923 following the Asia Minor Catastrophe when the Turks expelled countless Greeks from the coastal regions of Turkey, the Greeks of Constantinople renamed their club Peraclub in line with the new constitution adopted by Kemal Ataturk. Despite this blow to Hellenic culture in Turkey, which was forced to take the path of the refugee and to abandon its traditional home, Peraclub continued its sporting struggle, promising to continue to do so as long as there were Greeks left in Constantinople. 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 Constantinople, retaining the symbols of their ‘Greekness’, the twin-headed eagle of the Byzantine Empire combined with mourning black to symbolize the tragic history of the Greeks in Turkey and white, the colour of optimism, a window onto the future, symbolizing their struggle for tomorrow and the victories they intended to win. This club history stretching back to the 19th century in effect makes PAOK one of Greece’s oldest athletic clubs but also means that it shoulders a heavy historical burden. The club’s first charter was approved on 20th April 1926 by means of decision of the Thessaloniki Court of First Instance (No. 822). However, PAOK had in effect been established a year earlier when it took part in the Thessaloniki Championship where it was unfortunately demoted to the 2nd Division, a demotion which forced the founders of the club to bolster it substantially. 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 who took the idea from a packet of cigarettes he smoked. The club’s founding members were A. Angelopoulos, A. Athanassiadis, K. Anagnostidis, M. Ventourellis, F. Vyzantinos (second Chairman), 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, T. Triantafyllidis (who was also its first Chairman). PAOK’s first Board of Directors serving between 1926 and 1927 consisted of : 1) T. Triantafyllidis (Chairman), 2) P. Kalpaktsoglou (1st Vice-Chairman), 3) A. Athanassiadis (2nd Vice Chairman), 4) K. Kritikos (Hon. Secretary), 5) M. Tsoulkas (Secretary), 6) T. Ioakimopoulos (Treasurer), 7) A. Angelopoulos (Football Steward), 8) M. Konstantinidis (Director) and 9) S. Triantafyllidis (Director). After 2 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 desire to see the new team compete led many to the Iraklis Football Ground on 26th July 1925 where it won 2-1. Two weeks later PAOK lost to the champion of Thessaloniki, ARIS 5-2. In 1927 PAOK’s first anthem was heard: "We are the praiseworthy children of Constantinople who play outstanding football; overflowing with joy like no other team. Our system is to pass the ball, and at the season’s end to reckon up how many goals we have scored and how many we have let in. We have everything, yes everything: studs, boots, shorts, black tops and kneepads, to drive the young girls crazy. We fear no one not even ARIS or Iraklis, because we have skilful Ventourellis as our chief." The vision of the club’s founders and fans of the team of establishing a home base became reality in 1928 following much effort and thus on 12th December 1930 the Syntrivaniou Football Ground was officially opened. This was followed by a friendly match against ARIS with the home team winning 2-1. The first professional contract was a document of historic importance. It was signed by the Club on 5th 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 singed by Dr. Meletiou (PAOK Chairman) and Mr. Sakellaropoulos, Hon. Secretary The decision to merge with the club AEK Thessaloniki can also be considered to be of historic importance. Until 20th 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, Dr. Karamaounas, who brokered the merger between Thessaloniki’s two refugee teams. The main figures behind the idea and its implementation were Fanourios Vyzantios and Pantelis Kalpaktsoglou who had defected from AEK Thessaloniki, which had been established in 1924-25 by the first wave of refugees who had come to Thessaloniki from Constantinople in 1922. Certain members of AEK Thessaloniki headed south to the capital upon the merger to found the modern-day team AEK. Following the merger with AEK in 1929, PAOK changed its emblem. The new emblem became the Eagle, which it remains to this day, and symbolizes the arrival of the club and the return to the roots and heritage of the refugees (Byzantium and Constantinople). The Eagle holds a sword and a crown with its two heads looking East and West. The difference between this emblem and that of AEK (which is also the symbol of the Eastern Orthodox Church) is that PAOK’s emblem has its wings folded signifying mourning for expulsion from the homeland. The first foreign coach in the history of the team, German Rudolph Ganser, who served with PAOK for the 1931-1932 season. Following World War II and the German Occupation of Greece, the team known as the ‘Twin-Headed Eagle of the North’ entered upon a shining chapter in its career starting at the beginning of the 1950s. Willi, an Austrian coach (1950-1952) who had worn the PAOK jersey in 1931-1932 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, taking the Thessaloniki championship for 3 successive years and becoming a worthy representative of Greece’s second largest city in the national championship. The legendary trio Yientzis, Kouiroukidis and Papadakis went down in history! During 1957 the club managers envisioned a new football ground worthy of the team’s performance since the old ground had been compulsorily purchased. The search for a site led to the choice of a plot belonging to the National Defence Fund in the Toumba neighbourhood, which in addition to offering unlimited free space was also an area of Thessaloniki closely associated with refugees from Asia Minor. A total area of 30,000 m2 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 6th 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 over 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 1st Division established in October 1959. At the premier of the 1st Division’s first championship on 25th October 1959 PAOK welcomed the Katerini team Megas Alexandros beating it 3-1. The team line-up was as follows: Zarko Michailovic (Yugoslavian) and Progios, Hasiotis, Raptopoulos, Giannelos, Kemanidis, Havanidis, Leandros, Kiourtzis, Kouiroukidis, Salousto and Nikolaidis This was followed by a decade during which PAOK had an average performance. One could say that it was as if it was building up its strength only to unleash it during the 1970s when the team became established as one of the best ever to play at Greek football grounds with players whose names became legends for Greek football. It was a team and players who set records which even today are difficult to beat. Thanks to the team PAOK put together it managed to strike a blow to the traditional football powers of Athens and took the cup twice in 1972 in 1974 and a championship in 1976 and could have won more trophies if the circumstances were different. PAOK became established as Northern Greece’s greatest team with thousands of fanatical fans. In Europe it performed exceptionally well during the 1973-74 season qualifying for the quarter finals of the Cupholder’s Cup but was knocked out in the end by Italian team Milan. 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 and its first professional title since Greek football had changed course towards professional games Characteristic of the 1980s was the excessive fanaticism of the fans, which reached levels never seen before and which began to move beyond Greece becoming a European-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 moving appearance against Bayern Munich, where it was knocked out on penalties leaving in the mind of all Greeks one of the best appearances 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 T. Voulinos, who came into direct conflict with the fan club following serious episodes during the PAOK – Paris St. Germaine match, which led to PAOK’s exclusion and very nearly to financial ruin. In 1996 the change demanded by PAOK fans came about. Thomas Voulinos handed over the baton 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 Anastassiadis made his debut on the PAOK bench. The team’s reappearance at European level was accompanied by the resounding exclusion of legendary team Arsenal. The following year Anastassiadis was dismissed and Oleg Blachin took his place for a few months only since the fans demanded the urgent return of Anastassiadis. He stayed for a season, succeeded by Ari Haan and then in December by Dusan Bajievic who took over the reigns. 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 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 Olympiakos. Playing at Nea Philadelphia PAOK thrashed the former champions 4-2. However, financial problems continued to plague the club and acted as a brake on the efforts of the team’s footballers to achieve even greater targets. Angelos Anastassiadis returned to the PAOK bench as coach in the summer of 2002. The season led to another great triumph with a win in the Cup for a second time in three years at the Toumba Stadium against ARIS 1-0. However, it was the following season that held much more in store and which rocketed the team skyward. Although key players left over the summer (Georgiadis, Okkas, Kafes) PAOK managed to secure its participation in the qualifying rounds of the Champions League taking third place Toumba Stadium Name: Toumba Stadium Location: Toumba, Thessaloniki Year Built: 1959 Capacity: 28701 seats Ownership: PAOK Sports Club Spectator Record: 45.252 (19/12/1976, PAOK FC vs. AEK FC: 0-0) Information: The stadium was named from the location that it was built. The capacity of the stadium was for years over 40,000 seats. In 1998 seats were reduced to 32,000. The introduction of security zones in 2000 further reduced capacity to 28,701. Toumba's Stadium is one of the official Olympic Training Venues for the football tournament of the 2004 Olympic Games. Stadium will be renovated by the time of the Games. Toumba Stadium will be renovated by the time of the Games. The new stadium will include: a new four-floor building, which will be built behind gates 1, 2 and 3. This will host a number of VIP suites and lounge, presswork areas, press conference rooms, offices etc. a new metal roof, which will replace the old one over the west stand. An impressive metal construction will decorate the outside look of the new building and roof. This will hold a special net, on which advertising banners can be supported. repairs and a full renovation of the existing stadium facilities. Access: By car: From Egnatia Street to Gregoriou Lambraki Street. By bus: No. 14 or No. 37 from Egnatia Street to Saint Barbara's Church stop No. 30 from Martiou Street to Saint Barbara's Church stop No. 12 from Mitropoleos Street to PAOK's Stadium stop FC PAOK’s Training Center Nea Efkarpia, Thessaloniki External links
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