Full name | PAE Panionios Gymnastikos Syllogos Smyrnis (Pan-Ionian Gymnastic Association of Smyrna) |
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Nickname(s) | Kyanerythri (Blue-Reds) Istorikos (Historic) |
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Founded | 1890 | ||
Ground | Panionios Stadium, Nea Smyrni, Athens, Greece (Capacity: 11,700 (all-seated)) |
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Chairman | Gerasimos Ventouris [1] | ||
Head Coach | Apostolos Mantzios | ||
League | Super League Greece | ||
2010–11 | Super League Greece, 9th | ||
Website | Club home page | ||
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Panionios GSS (Greek: Πανιώνιος Γυμναστικός Σύλλογος Σμύρνης – Panionios Gymnastikos Syllogos Smyrnis), the Pan-Ionian Gymnastic Association of Smyrna, is a Greek association football club based in the Athenian suburb of Nea Smyrni, Greece. The club currently competes in the Super League Greece.
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The club was founded in 1890 in Smyrna (Σμύρνη) currently İzmir, under the name of "Orpheus Music and Sports Club" by part of the large Greek population living in the city at the time. In 1893 some Orpheus members keen on sports formed a separate organization, the "Gymnasion Club", and started holding yearly sports competitions. In 1898, Orpheus and Gymnasion merged again to form Panionios GSS. Members of the Panionios sports club represented Greece in all international track & field games until these developed in the modern Olympic Games.
After the Greek military defeat in 1922 the club was forced to transfer firstly in Athens and later to the Athenian suburb of New Smyrna where lots of the population of Smyrna immigrated. The club has a tradition of cultivating all major sports and was the first Greek club to establish a track and field division for women, in 1925. Another major example of the club's contribution to Greek sports rests in the fact that it was Panionios that introduced Basketball and Volleyball in Greek sports society.
With the gradual transformation of men's football and basketball into professional sports, Panionios FC and Panionios BC became privately owned clubs operating under the auspices of the traditional "amateur sports" Panionios GSS. To date, Panionios remains the only sports club in Greece that was awarded the Golden Cross from the Athens Academy as a recognition of the club's rich and continuous enrichment of Greek sports.[2]
Panionios has spent nearly its entire history in the Greek First Division (now called 'Superleague'), having missed out from competing in Greek football's top division only twice in its more than 100-year history. Within this, Panionios rose quite often to high levels, with top achievement in terms of the league being the 2nd position that the club reached in 1971, losing the title to AEK.
Panionios has produced all three major Greek strikers of the 1980s, namely Nikos Anastopoulos (later of Olympiakos), Thomas Mavros (later of AEK), and Dimitris Saravakos (later of Panathinaikos). Other notable players coming out of the club in the 1990s include Nikos Tsiantakis (later of Olympiacos) and Takis Fyssas, later of Panathinaikos, Benfica and member of Greek national team. Within the 2000s another four Greek national team players came out from the club, namely Alexandros Tziolis, Evangelos Mantzios, Nikos Spiropoulos and Grigoris Makos.
The club had faced financial difficulties which triggered the transfer of the ownership to the municipality of Nea Smyrni in 1992. Those difficulties remained all through the 1990s forcing the team's league performance to drop. Yet, it remained in a high level and managed to win the Greek Football Cup competition in 1998 and participate successfully in the UEFA Cup Winners Cup the year after, reaching the quarterfinals. In December 2001 large part of the club's shares moved away from the Municipality back to private hands, where working around bankruptcy legislation the club was renamed to Neos ("New") Panionios FC, to avoid the threat of relegation from the first division.
In 2004, shipowner Constantinos Tsakiris was elected president of the "amateur sports" Panionios GSS. Panionios won the women's Basketball Championship in 2006, the club's first in a team sport, and the women's volleyball team advanced to the first division. In 2006, Tsakiris acquired 85% of Neos Panionios FC stock and started restructuring the team from scratch. He changed the name of the club back to the original "Panionios GSS" FC and hired German coach Ewald Lienen who, during his first year created a team that made it to the top 5 of the Greek Super League and on to the UEFA Cup. Tsakiris has also unveiled an ambitious plan to have the aging football ground and athletics track demolished, and build a modern multi-sport arena in its place. Apart from a 12.000 capacity football stadium, the proposed complex would include facilities for basketball, volleyball, aquatic sports, track & field, boxing, gymnastics, wrestling and more.[3]
On the summer transfer window of 2008, the club signed Uruguay national team members Álvaro Recoba and Fabián Estoyanoff, but shortly after Lienen resigned by mutual consent on November 11, 2008, reason being disagreement with the Panionio's board.[4] On November 12, 2008 Greek coach Takis Lemonis was hired [5] and resigned on December 3, 2008 after the refuse of Panionio's board to accept Lemoni's request to dismiss three members of Panionio's coaching and management staff.[6][7] Assistant coach Joti Stamatopoulos lead the club until the end of the season. He was replaced by Belgian manager Emilio Ferrera.
Under the Tsakiris presidency, the club built its own training facility just outside Athens in the region of Koropi. The training ground is operating since 2008 but was fully completed in 2009.
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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(2) 1979, 1998
Runners-up: 1952, 1961, 1967, 1989.
(1) 1951
(1) Winners: 1971
Runners-up: 1986
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Season | Competition | Round | Club | Home | Away |
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1964-65 | Intertoto Cup | Group C1 | Malmö FF | 1-1 | 1-5 |
NK Dinamo Zagreb | 2-2* | ||||
Toulouse FC | 0-3* | ||||
1969–70 | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup | 1st Round | F.C. Hansa Rostock | 2-0 | 0-3 |
1971-72 | UEFA Cup | 1st Round | Atlético Madrid | 1-0 | 1-2 |
2nd Round | Ferencvárosi TC | 0-2 (α.α.) | 0-6 | ||
1979-80 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1st Round | FC Twente | 4-0 | 1-3 |
2nd Round | IFK Göteborg | 1-0 | 0-2 | ||
1987-88 | UEFA Cup | 1st Round | Toulouse FC | 0-1 | 1-5 |
1998-99 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1st Round | FC Haka | 2-0 | 3-1 |
2nd Round | Apollon Limassol | 3-2 | 1-0 | ||
Quarter-finals | S.S. Lazio | 0-4 | 0-3 | ||
2003-04 | UEFA Cup | 1st Round | FC Nordsjælland | 2-1 | 1-0 |
2nd Round | FC Barcelona | 0-3 | 0-2 | ||
2004-05 | UEFA Cup | 1st Round | Udinese Calcio | 3-1 | 0-1 |
Group stage | Newcastle United F.C. | 0-1 | 4th | ||
Sporting Clube de Portugal | 1-4 | ||||
FC Dinamo Tbilisi | 5-2 | ||||
FC Sochaux-Montbéliard | 0-1 | ||||
2007-08 | UEFA Cup | 1st Round | FC Sochaux-Montbéliard | 0-1 | 2-0 |
Group stage | Helsingborgs IF | 1-1 | 4th | ||
Galatasaray S.K. | 0-3 | ||||
FK Austria Wien | 1-0 | ||||
FC Girondins de Bordeaux | 2-3 | ||||
2007-08 | UEFA Intertoto Cup | 2nd round | OFK Beograd | 3-1 | 0-1 |
3rd round | S.S.C. Napoli | 0-1 | 0-1 |
Season | Achievement | Notes | |
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UEFA Cup Winners Cup | |||
1979–80 | Second Round | eliminated by IFK Göteborg | |
1998–99 | Quarter-finals | eliminated by S.S. Lazio | |
UEFA Cup | |||
1971–72 | Second Round | eliminated by Ferencváros | |
1987–88 | First Round | eliminated by Toulouse FC | |
2003–04 | Second Round | eliminated by FC Barcelona | |
2007–08 | Group Stage | 4th Position in Group H | |
UEFA Intertoto Cup | |||
2008 | Third Round | eliminated by S.S.C. Napoli |
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