PAS Giannina F.C.

PAS Giannina
Full name Πανηπειρωτικός Αθλητικός Σύλλογος Γιάννινα 1966
(Panepirotic Athletic Club Giannina)
Nickname(s) Άγιαξ της Ηπείρου (Ajax of Epirus)
Short name PAS
Founded 8 July 1966 (1966-07-08)
Ground Zosimades Stadium
Ground Capacity 7,652
Owner Giorgos Christovasilis
Chairman Giorgos Christovasilis
Manager Giannis Petrakis
League Superleague Greece
2016–17 Superleague Greece, 9th
Website Club website

PAS Giannina F.C. (Greek: ΠΑΕ ΠΑΣ Γιάννινα 1966), or with its full name Panepirotikos Athlitikos Syllogos Giannina (Greek: Πανηπειρωτικός Αθλητικός Σύλλογος Γιάννινα, Panepirotic Athletic Club Giannina) is a Greek football club based in the city of Ioannina, the capital of Epirus region.

PAS Giannina was formed in 1966 as a result of the union of the two local teams – AO Ioanninon (union of Atromitos Ioanninon and Olympiacos Ioanninon in 1962) and PAS Averof.[1][2] As emblem of the new team was chosen the bull, as appeared on the ancient coin of the Epirote League.The club have competed several times in the Superleague. The club is probably best known among Greek football spectators for its loyal support and its status as the most successful football club in Epirus region.

History

The beginning (1966–1971)

The first match was a friendly one against Olympiacos because of Siontis' transfer.the result was 2–1 for Olympiacos.The first official match was for the Greek cup against Pindos Konitsas.The result was 4–0 for PAS Giannina.[3][4]

PAS Giannina was a mid-table club of the Second Division until 1971. In 1966–67 the club finished 6th.[5] In 1967–68 it finished 10th.[5] In 1968-69 it finished 5th.[5] In 1969-70 it finished 7th.[5] In 1970–71 it finished 13th.[5]

The rise of "Ajax of Epirus" (1971–1983)

In 1971 the Portuguese Gómez de Faria was signed as manager.[6] In 1971–72 PAS Giannina finished 13th.[5] In the middle of the season three Argentine players were signed: Alfredo Glasman, Jose Pasternac and Eduardos Kontogeorgakis (who is Eduardo Rigani's son). At the end of the season three more Argentine players were signed: Juan Montes, Oscar Alvarez and Eduardo Lisa.[7] PAS Giannina was in the race for promotion. In 1972–73 the club finished second.[5] In 1973–74 it finished first[5] and promoted to the First division.[8]

PAS Giannina was in the First Division for 10 years. The club finished several times near the top of the First Division table, often earning victories over more established Greek teams such as Olympiacos, Panathinaikos, AEK Athens and PAOK. The effective and spirited play of the club during these years drew flattering comparisons with the famous Dutch club Ajax Amsterdam, and the moniker "Ajax of Epirus" has stuck with the team ever since.

In 1974–75 PAS Giannina finished 9th.[5] In 1975–76 PAS Giannina finished 5th for the first time.[5] This position is the record high for the club.In 1976–77 it fiished 11th.[5] In 1977–78 the club finished 5th again.[5] The club qualified for the Balkans Cup for the first time in its history. In 1978–79 it finished 14th. In 1979–80 it finished 6th.[5] In the middle of the season the former Poland national team coach Jacek Gmoch was signed from the Epirote club. It was a brief but reasonably successful tenure.In 1980–81 it finished 11th.[5] In 1981–82 it finished 14th.[5] In 1982–83 it finished 9th.[5]

In the doldrums (1983–1997)

The period following the aforementioned peak years of the club generally marked a sharp decline in the fortunes of it as many of its top stars moved on or retired outright without being satisfactorily replaced. In 1983–84 PAS Giannina finished 15th. It was in a tie with Panionios. There was a play out match in Larissa between the two clubs. Panionios won the match 2–0. PAS Giannina relegated in the Second Division.[9] In 1984-85 the club finished first[5] in the Second Division and promoted to the First Division. In 1985–86 it finished 13th.[5] In 1986–87 it finished 16th and relegated to the Second Division[5] In 1987-88 it finished 12th.[5] In 1988–89 it finished 4th.[5] The club qualified for the promotion playoffs with Ethnikos, Apollon Kalamarias, Korinthos, Diagoras and Veroia. It failed to get promoted.[10] In 1989–90 it finished third and promoted to the First Division.[5][11] In 1990–91 the club finished 18th and relegated to the Second Division.[5] In 1991–92 the club finished 14th.[5] In 1992–93 it finished 10th.[5] PAS Giannina qualified for the Balkans Cup for the second time in its history. In 1993–94 it finished 5th.[5] Also the club was runner up in the Balkans Cup 1993–94. In 1994–95 it finished 8th. In 1995–96 it finished 12th.[5] In 1996-97 it finished 16th.[5] PAS Giannina relegated to the Third Division for the first time in its history.

The gleam (1997–2002)

PAS Giannina was in the Third Division for the first time in its history. In 1997–98 it finished first[5] and promoted to the Second division. In 1998–99 it finished 4th,[5] failing to get promoted to the First Division. In 1999–00 it finished third[5] and qualified for the promotion playoffs with Aigaleo and Panserraikos.PAS Giannina won Panserraikos 3–1 and draw with Aigaleo 1–1. After that the club promoted to the First Division.[12] In 2000-01 it finished 13th[5] and qualified to the relegation playoffs. The club relegated after a 3-game playoff with OFI Crete.[13] In 2001–02 PAS Giannina finished first and promoted to the First Division.[5]

Crisis (2002–2007)

PAS experienced a fair degree of instability in these years. In 2002–03 PAS Giannina finished 14th. After the penalty of 90 points the club finished 16th and relegated. The penalty of 90 points imposed on it by the Greek football association (EPO) for financial reasons.[14] There were a lot of financial problems in season 2003–04. The club finished 14th and qualified to playout with Ilisiakos. The club lost 3–1 and relegated in the Third division for the second time in its history. The club turned on a semi-professional status. The control of the club switched over to attorney Alexis Kougias. In 2004–05 the club finished second and failed to get promoted.[5][15] In 2005–06 it finished second[5] and promoted to Second Division.[15] In 2006–07 PAS Giannina finished 5th.[5] Also, PAS Giannina reached the semifinals of the Greek Cup 2006–07 against AE Larissa FC. PAS Giannina lost 2–0 both home and away match. On the quarter-final PAS Giannina won Olympiacos, 2–0 at home and lost 2–1 in Karaiskakis Stadium of an extra-time goal from Evangelos Kontogoulidis before a hostile crowd.[16]

Recent years (2007–Today)

PAS Giannina finished 4th in the Second Division in the 2007–08 season, failing to get promoted.

In the summer of 2008 ownership of the club was passed over to Giorgos Christovasilis, a businessman from Athens whose roots are from the Epirus region. He signed Guillermo Ángel Hoyos as manager and some great players such as Luciano. In the 2008–09 season, the club promoted as second in Superleague. In the summer of 2009 the club signed players such as Dimitrios Eleftheropoulos, Ibrahima Bakayoko, Konstantinos Mendrinos, Ilias Kotsios. In 2009–10 the club finished 15th and relegated one more time.[5] On the other hand, the club was successful in the Greek cup. PAS Giannina reached the semifinals for the second time in its history. In the quarter final PAS Giannina won PAOK 4–0 in Zosimades. In the semifinals, the club lost from Panathinaikos on aggragate 2–4.

In the 2010–11 season, PAS Giannina was promoted as second again to Super League.[5] The club takes part in Super League every year. In 2011–12 PAS Giannina finished 8th.[5] In 2012-13 PAS Giannina finished 5th and qualified for the playoffs with Atromitos, Asteras Tripolis and PAOK for the first time in its history. It started with 2 wins but at the end it finished 4th. The club qualified for Europa League. PAS Giannina were not licensed to play in the Europa League and therefore were replaced by the next Europa League licensed team in the table, not already qualified for any European competition, which was Skoda Xanthi. In 2013–14 the club finished 11th, a safe mid-table position. In 2014–15, the club finished 6th. Also that year, there were awards for the manager and two players. G. Petrakis won the best manager of the year award. Charis Charisis won the best young player of Greek Superleague award and Markos Vellidis won the best goalkeeper award.[17] In 2015–16, the club finished 6th again. PAS Giannina qualified for UEFA Europa League 2016–17 because Panionios was excluded from participating in the 2016–17 European competitions by UEFA for financial reasons.[18] The club qualified for European competitions, except Balkans Cup, for the first time in its history.

In 2016–17 the club takes part in Superleague.The club finished 9th. An important moment was the charity match for the refugees between the veterans of the club and FC Barcelona. The charity match and activities were organized by the Barça Players Association in collaboration with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and with the support of PAS Giannina CF.[19]

Stadium-Facilities

PAS Giannina have only had one home ground, Zosimades, where they have played since its foundation. The capacity is 7500 seats. The stadium is in the downtown of Ioannina. The highest attendance (14557 fans) was in a match with Olympiacos in season 1974–75.[20]

The training facilities are in PEAKI. There are three football fields and a car parking with capacity of 500 cars.[21]

Honours and distinctions

Over the years, PAS has competed in the Superleague for a total of 22 seasons (plus 2016–17). The club has never won the Superleague or the Greek Cup, but it has won lower division titles throughout its history and represented Greece in the 1978–79 and 1993–94 Balkans Cup tournaments. During its history in the Superleague, the club finished 3 times in the 5th position (1975–76, 1977–78, 2012–13 seasons) and 3 times in the 6th position (1979–80, 2014–15, 2015–16 seasons).

On January 31, 2007, PAS clinched a spot in the Greek Cup semifinals by virtue of an extra-time goal from Evangelos Kontogoulidis before a hostile crowd in Karaiskakis Stadium. With an aggregate score of 3–2, PAS Giannina also is the first ever lower division club that eliminated Olympiacos from the Greek Cup tournament.

The most famous player to have donned the blue and white PAS jersey in recent years is defender Giourkas Seitaridis, who later played for Panathinaikos, FC Porto, Dynamo Moscow, and Atlético Madrid as well as the triumphant Euro 2004 Greece squad.

National

International

European competitions record

UEFA Europa League

Last update: 5 August 2016

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2016–17 UEFA Europa League 2Q Norway Odd 3–0[22] 1–3[23] 4–3
3Q Netherlands AZ 1–2[24] 0–1[25] 1–3

Balkans Cup

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1979–80 Balkans Cup Group Stage Albania FK Partizani Tirana 3–0 0–2 -
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia NK Rijeka 1–3 1–2
1993–94 Balkans Cup Semi-finals Albania Besa Kavajë 2–0 3–1 5–1
Final Turkey Samsunspor 0–2 0–3 0–5

Rivalries

PAS Giannina fans feel deep antipathy towards the clubs from Athens, Olympiacos and Panathinaikos, AEK Athens.

There is a rivalry with OFI Crete based on the events surrounding their 2001 playoffs. In contrast, derby matches against AE Larissa FC are competitive in the sporting sense but do not evoke the same feelings of enmity from PAS Giannina supporters. The other important rivals are Panachaiki, Panetolikos F.C., AO Kerkyra (now A.O.Kassiopis)

In the past there were local derbies in Epirus.These were with Anagennisi Artas and PAS Preveza.

There was a rivalry with Panionios based on 1984 playout match. This rivalry has been increased since the summer of 2016, when Panionios was not granted a license by UEFA to compete in the Europa League following a claim by PAS Giannina. UEFA ruled that PAS Giannina take Panionios’ place in the 2016 2nd qualifying round of the Europa League.

Supporters and Nickname

The team is well known for its passionate supporters, mainly from the city of Ioannina and the whole Epirus region. The biggest union of fans are the Blue Vayeros, Azzurra Familia, and Apei Rotan.

PAS Giannina was given the nickname Ajax of Epirus (Greek: Άγιαξ της Ηπείρου) in the 1970s, thanks to their impressive football style which was linked licentia poetica to the style of the famous Dutch club.

Crest and colours

The colours of the team are blue or cyan and white. The crest depicts an ancient bull with an oak wreath, as appeared in an ancient coin (238–168 BC) of the Epirote League plus the word "ΑΠΕΙΡΩΤΑΝ" meaning "people of Epirus".

1968–69
1985–86
2015–16 third
2016–17

Players

Current squad

As of 10 August 2017[26]

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

No. Position Player
2 Greece DF Michalis Boukouvalas
3 Albania MF Andi Lila (3rd captain)
4 Greece DF Thodoris Berios
5 Greece MF Iraklis Garoufalias
6 Greece DF Alexios Michail (captain)
7 Greece FW Evripidis Giakos
8 New Zealand DF Themistoklis Tzimopoulos (2nd captain)
9 Spain FW Pedro Conde
12 Greece GK Kostas Peristeridis
17 Spain DF David Nadales
20 Greece DF Nikos Karanikas
22 Greece MF Chrysovalantis Kozoronis
33 Brazil MF Higor Vidal
No. Position Player
42 Greece DF Konstantinos Mavropanos
44 Greece DF Apostolos Skondras
55 Serbia FW Enes Dolovac
88 Greece MF Alexandros Nikolias
93 Republic of the Congo FW Christopher Maboulou
Greece GK Markos Vellidis
Greece MF Bruno Chalkiadakis
Greece DF Alexis Apostolopoulos
Greece MF Lampros Zacharos
France FW Franck Betra
Argentina FW Jonathan Rodríguez
Greece GK Thodoris Venetikidis
Greece GK Serafeim Giannikoglou

Dual nationality

New ZealandGreece Themistoklis Tzimopoulos
FranceRepublic of the Congo Christopher Maboulou
GreeceBrazil Bruno Chalkiadakis

Notable former players

Greece
Albania
Algeria
Argentina
Belgium
Brazil
Cameroon
Chile
Côte d'Ivoire
Croatia
France
Georgia
Guatemala
Liberia
Mali
Morocco
Netherlands
Portugal
Senegal
Serbia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Uruguay
Zimbabwe

Managerial history

  • Greece Kostas Choumis (1966–67)
  • Greece Konstantinos Kokkas (1966–67)
  • Greece Adam Pitsioudis (1966–67)
  • Greece Christoforidis (1967–68)
  • Greece Chrisochoou (1968–69)
  • Greece Karalazos (1969–70)
  • Greece Panagiotis Deligiorgis (1969–70)
  • Portugal Gómez de Faria (1971–73)
  • Greece Nikos Alefantos (1973–74)
  • Argentina Eduardo Rigani (1974)
  • Greece Antonis Georgiadis (1974–76)
  • Bulgaria Dobromir Zhechev (1976–77)
  • Greece Antonis Georgiadis (1977–79)
  • Greece Nikos Alefantos (1979)
  • Greece Paulos Tzamakos (1979)
  • Greece Giorgos Siontis (1979)
  • Poland Jacek Gmoch (December, 1979 – June 30, 1981)
  • Greece Giorgos Siontis (1981–1982)
  • Bulgaria Petar Argirov (1982–1983)
  • Greece Andreas Karamanolakis (1983–84)
  • Germany Gerhard Prokop (1983–84)
  • Greece Giorgos Siontis (1983–84)
  • Greece Christos Archontidis (July 1, 1984 – June 30, 1985)
  • Germany Gerhard Prokop (July 1, 1985 – Dec 29, 1986)
  • Greece Takis Geitonas (Dec 30, 1986 – Jan 7,1987) Care taker
  • Netherlands Ab Fafié (Jan 7, 1987 – June 30, 1987)
  • Greece Kostas Karapatis (1987–88)
  • Greece Thomas Tsourlidas (1987–88)
  • Greece Stefanos Vasileiadis (1987–88)
  • Greece Giorgos Siontis (1987–88)
  • Greece Thanasis Loukanidis (1988–89)
  • Greece Takis Loukanidis (1988–89)
  • ArgentinaGreece Alfredo Glasmanis (1988–89)
  • Greece Paulos Tzamakos (1988–89)
  • Greece Stavros Diamantopoulos (July 1, 1989 – April 23, 1990)
  • Greece Thanasis Dimitriadis (April 24, 1990 – June 8, 1990)
  • Poland Włodzimierz Lubański (June 9, 1990 – July 6, 1990)
  • BelgiumHungary Tom Frivalski (July 6, 1990 – Sep 6, 1990)
  • Greece Stefanos Vasileiadis (Sep 6, 1990 – Sep 14, 1990) Care taker
  • Czech Republic Petr Packert (Sep 14, 1990 – June 2, 1991)
  • Netherlands Barry Hulshoff (July 1, 1991 – Dec 5, 1991)
  • Greece Stefanos Vasileiadis (Dec 5, 1991 – Dec 13, 1991) Care taker
  • Greece Giorgos Siontis (Dec 13, 1991 – Jan 20, 1992)
  • Greece Thanasis Dimitriadis (Jan 24, 1992 – June 30, 1992)
  • Greece Anthimos Kapsis (July 1, 1992 – Jan 24, 1993)
  • Greece Lazaros Giotis (Jan 25, 1993 – June 30, 1993)
  • Serbia Dragan Kokotović (July 1, 1993 – February 19, 1994)
  • Greece Nikos Kirgios (Feb 19, 1994 – Feb 25, 1994) Care taker
  • Greece Makis Katsavakis (February 25, 1994 – April 11, 1994)
  • Greece Vasilis Konstantinou (April 13, 1994 – June 30, 1994)
  • Bulgaria Dobromir Zhechev (July 1, 1994 – August 1, 1994)
  • Greece Takis Grammeniatis (Aug 1, 1994 – Jan 7, 1995)
  • Greece Dimitris Seitaridis (Aug 1, 1994 – Sep 14, 1994) with Grammeniatis

  • Greece Vasilis Papachristou (Jan 10, 1995 – June 30, 1995)
  • Germany Timo Zahnleiter (July 1, 1995 – January 10, 1996)
  • Greece Dimitris Seitaridis (Jan 10, 1996 – Sep 27, 1996)
  • Greece Thanasis Dimitriadis (Sep 27, 1996 – Mar 12, 1997)
  • Greece Vasilis Papachristou (Mar 12, 1997 – June 30, 1998)
  • Greece Makis Katsavakis (July 1, 1998 – October 29, 1998)
  • Greece Nikos Kirgios (Oct 29, 1998 – Nov 3, 1998) Care taker
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (Nov 3, 1998 – May 3, 1999)
  • Greece Vasilis Papachristou (May 3, 1999 – June 30, 1999)
  • Greece Andreas Michalopoulos (July 1, 1999 – Feb 15, 2000)
  • Greece Giorgos Foiros (February 15, 2000 – June 30, 2000)
  • Greece Georgios Paraschos (July 1, 2000 – Jan 11, 2001)
  • Greece Andreas Bonovas (Jan 11, 2001 – Jan 13, 2001) Care taker
  • Greece Nikos Kovis (Jan 13, 2001 – Jan 29, 2001)
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (Jan 29, 2001 – June 30, 2001)
  • Greece Stavros Mentis (July 1, 2001 – Aug 20, 2001)
  • Argentina Horacio Cordero (Aug 20, 2001 – Sep 23, 2001)
  • Greece Giorgos Foiros (September 24, 2001 – May 22, 2002)
  • Greece Giorgos Vazakas (June 1, 2002 – June 7, 2002)
  • Greece Vasilis Papachristou (July 1, 2002 – Nov 5, 2002)
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (Nov 8, 2002 – June 30, 2003)
  • Greece Pantelis Kolokas (July 1, 2003 – Aug 7, 2003) Care taker
  • Sweden Bo Petersson (Aug 7, 2003 – Jan 12, 2004)
  • Greece Sotiris Zavogiannis (Jan 12, 2004 – Jan 15, 2004) Care taker
  • Georgia (country) Jemal Gugushvili (Jan 15, 2004 – April 1, 2004)
  • Georgia (country) Goderdzi Natroshvili (Feb 11, 2004 – April 1, 2004)
  • Greece Pantelis Kolokas (April 1, 2004 – April 18, 2004) Care taker
  • Greece Thanasis Charisis (April 22, 2004 – June 30, 2004)
  • Republic of Macedonia Zoran Smileski (July 1, 2004 – Feb 22, 2005)
  • Greece Petros Michos (Feb,22 2005 – April 10, 2005)
  • Greece Giorgos Ladias (April 10, 2005 – June 30, 2005)
  • Greece Vasilis Xanthopoulos (July 1, 2005 – Oct 26, 2005)
  • Greece Giorgos Ladias (Oct 26, 2005 – Jan 11, 2006)
  • Greece Ioannis Gounaris (Jan 12, 2006 – Aug 3, 2006)
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (Aug 5, 2006 – Jan 15, 2007)
  • Greece Giannis Papakostas (Jan 15, 2007 – June 30, 2007)
  • Greece Georgios Chatzaras (July 1, 2007 – March 2, 2008)
  • Greece Periklis Amanatidis (March 3, 2008 – May 28, 2008)
  • Greece Thanasis Charisis (May 28, 2008 – 30 June 2008) Care Taker
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (June 23, 2008 – June 30, 2008)
  • Argentina Guillermo Ángel Hoyos (July 1, 2008 – April 29, 2009)
  • Greece Miltos Mastoras (April 29, 2009 – May 25, 2009) Care Taker
  • Greece Georgios Paraschos (July 1, 2009 – Dec 7, 2009)
  • Greece Thimios Georgoulis (Dec 7, 2009 – Jan 13,2010) Care taker
  • Greece Nikos Anastopoulos (Jan 14, 2010 – June 30, 2010)
  • Belgium Stéphane Demol (July 1, 2010 – Nov 23, 2011)
  • Greece Giannis Christopoulos (Nov 23, 2011 – Dec 4, 2011) Care taker
  • Greece Angelos Anastasiadis (Dec 4, 2011 – June 8, 2012)
  • Greece Giannis Christopoulos (June 8, 2012 – June 16, 2013)
  • Greece Savvas Pantelidis (June 24, 2013 – Oct 31, 2013)
  • Greece Sakis Tsiolis (Nov 5, 2013 – Jan 22, 2014)
  • Greece Giannis Petrakis (Jan 28, 2014–present)

Personnel

Management

Position Staff
Ownership Greece Giorgos Christovasilis
President and CEO Greece Giorgos Christovasilis
Vice-President Greece Christos Papageorgiou
Director of Football Greece Dimitris Niarchakos
Director of Office Greece Alexandros Potsis
Head of Ticket Department Greece Andreas Potsis

Coaching staff

Position Name
Head Coach Giannis Petrakis
Assistant Coach Giannis Taousianis
Fitness Coach Vasilis Alexiou
Goalkeepers Coach Christos Tseliopoulos
Head doctor Stavros Restanis
Physio Filippos Skordos

Sponsorships

References

  1. "Οι αναμνήσεις και το αρχείο του Κώστα Κόκκα (greek)".
  2. "8 Ιουλίου 1966- 45άρης ΠΑΣ Γιάννινα (video) (greek)". 8 July 2011.
  3. "8 Ιουλίου 1966- 48άρης ΠΑΣ Γιάννινα (video) (greek)". 8 July 2014.
  4. "Καλοκαίρι 1966: Η ίδρυση".
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 "Συγκεντρωτική Πορεία".
  6. "1971: Ερχομός των Αργεντίνων".
  7. "1971: Ερχομός των Αργεντίνων".
  8. "1974: 1η άνοδος στην ΄Α Εθνική (greek)".
  9. "19.05.1984: Το μπαράζ της Λάρισας (greek)".
  10. "Καλοκαίρι 1989: Η διπλή χαμένη ευκαιρία του ΠΑΣ για άνοδο (greek)".
  11. "Καλοκαίρι 1990: Η ανέλπιστη άνοδος (greek)".
  12. "Ιούνιος 2000: Επιστροφή μέσω μπαράζ μετά από 10 χρόνια (greek)".
  13. "Ιούνιος 2001: Τα μπαράζ της Ρόδου με τον ΟΦΗ (greek)".
  14. "Ιούνιος 2003: Ο υποβιβασμός λόγω χρεών (greek)".
  15. 1 2 "Ιούνιος 2006: Επιστροφή στη Β’ Εθνική (greek)".
  16. "31.01.2007: Πρόκριση στους 4 του κυπέλου επί του Ολυμπιακού (greek)".
  17. "Μεγάλες διακρίσεις για την ομάδα μας στα βραβεία ΠΣΑΠ (greek)". 1 February 2016.
  18. "Εκτός Ευρώπης ο Πανιώνιος". 17 June 2016.
  19. "Former FC Barcelona players visit refugees in Greece". 18 November 2016.
  20. "Στάδιο "Ζωσιμάδες" (greek)".
  21. "Προπονητικό κέντρο".
  22. "PAS Giannina 3-0 Odd Grenland". Sky Sports. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  23. "Odd Grenland 3-1 PAS Giannina". Sky Sports. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  24. "Giannina-AZ (uefa.com)".
  25. "AZ Alkmaar 1-0 PAS Giannina". Sky Sports. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  26. ΠΑΣ ΓΙΑΝΝΙΝΑ 1966 (in Greek). Superleague Greece. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
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