Kavala Football Club[1] (Greek: Αθλητικός Όμιλος Καβάλα, lit.'Athletic Club Kavala') is a Greek professional football club based in the city of Kavala, Greece. They compete in the Super League Greece 2, the second tier of the Greek football league system. The club's home ground is the Anthi Karagianni Stadium.

Kavala
Full nameΑθλητικός Όμιλος Καβάλα
(Athletic Club Kavala)
Nickname(s)Argonauts
Light Brigade of the North
Short nameAOK
Founded1965; 59 years ago (1965)
GroundAnthi Karagianni Stadium
Capacity10,550
InvestorGiannis Diamantidis
ChairmanAntonis Antoniou
ManagerTimos Kavakas
LeagueSuper League Greece 2
2023–24Gamma Ethniki (Group 1), 1st (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History edit

The club was formed in 1965 from the merger of Phillipoi Kavala, Iraklis Kavala and A.E. Kavala.[2]

They have had a few runs in the top division of the Greek League. They were promoted to Alpha Ethniki for the first time in 1969 and stayed up for six years (1970 through 1975). They returned to the top division in 1976 and played again for six seasons.

In 1982 the club were relegated to the Beta Ethniki (second tier of Greek football). After 11 years in Beta Ethniki and one year in Gamma Ethniki (third tier – 1988–89) they were promoted to Alpha Ethniki. Their "black" period began for the team in which they played only in Beta Ethniki and Gamma Ethniki.

2009–2010 season edit

Wilson Oruma
Charles Itandje

In 2009 they signed Miltiadis Sapanis and EURO 2004 winner Fanis Katergiannakis. Kavala were promoted for the first time in 9 years to Greeces top division. In their quest to remain in the top flight they have signed Pepe Reina's back up at Liverpool, Charles Itandje and recently acquired Brazilian Denílson (January 2010 transfer window) a 2002 World Cup Winner. Additional season signings include Craig Moore, Željko Kalac, Ebi Smolarek, Diogo Rincón, Sotiris Leontiou, Serge Dié, Wilson Oruma and Frédéric Mendy. This combined with coach Aad de Mos meant that Kavala set the league alight. They subsequently achieved notable victories in the 2009–2010 season against Iraklis FC, Panionios, AEK FC and Panathinaikos FC.

2010–2011 season edit

Ending in 6th place, the team entered the transfer season. In July, the Spanish goalkeeper, Javier Lopez Vallejo (who played in Real Zaragoza) was added to the roster. The team's owner sought the new manager throughout Europe and settled on the Serbian coach Dragomir Okuka who lasted until November, when he was replaced by Henryk Kasperczak. In Kasperczak's debut as a coach, Kavala beat AEK, 2–1, in what was considered a very good appearance.

But in March 2011, Kasperczak, retired as the coach of this team, and he was replaced by Ioannis Matzourakis, who was the coach in Kavala FC team in the seasons 1985–1986. Kavala finished 7th and later faced the threat of relegation to Football League (Greece) due to the match-fixing scandal.[3] After an appeal, the team managed to avoid relegation by starting the new league with 8 points less.[4] On 23 August, however, the Professional Sports Committee stripped both Kavala and Olympiakos Volou from their professional licence and demoted them to the Delta Ethniki.[5]

2011–2012 season edit

Kavala competed in Delta Ethniki Group 1. They only finished 4th, but were promoted two divisions to the Football League for 2012/13 after it was ruled that their demotion to Delta Ethniki in 2011 was as a result of government intervention and should not have been implemented by the football authorities.[6]

2013–2014 season edit

Ιn September 2013 Germans investors take the management of Kavala F.C. The agreement provides that the new investors will "catch" and a significant part of its debts to old players.

Indeed, the Germans will be able to buy a majority stake of the shares of FC paying €500,000 clause of the first season and €700,000 for the second, respectively.

Crest edit

The emblem of the club is the ancient trireme, as architecture engineer Christos Batsis designed it. According to the instigator of the emblem of Kavala, the boat is a trireme, where the oars are the footballers, the cloth the administration and the fancy the fans of the club.These three elements together lead Kavala to the harbors that are the targets the team puts each time. All of this certainly has to do with the fact that Kavala is a coastal city and its world closely related to the wet element. The original element of the emblem of Kavala was hanging on the door of the design of the late Christos Batsis until he died.

For a while, the emblem contained the then name of the "Puma Nea Kavala Football Club" team.

Stadium edit

The Anthi Karagianni Stadium, formerly the Kavala National Stadium, is a multi-purpose stadium in Kavala, Greece. It is the homebase of Kavala FC. The stadium was built in 1970, and currently has a seating capacity of 10,500. It is named after the paralympic athlete, Anthi Karagianni, who won three silver medals in the 2004 Paralympic Games.

Honours edit

Domestic edit

League edit

Cup edit

  • Kavala FCA Cup
    • Winners: 2017–18

European edit

Achievements edit

  • Greek Cup
    • Semi-finals: 1964–65, 1994–95, 2009–10

League participation edit

  • First Division (19): 1969–1975, 1976–1982, 1994–1995, 1996–2000, 2009–2011
  • Second Division (23): 1965–1969, 1975–1976, 1982–1989, 1990–1994, 1995–1996, 2000–2001, 2002–2003, 2008–2009, 2012–2014, 2021–2022
  • Third Division (15): 1989–1990, 2001–2002, 2003–2008, 2014–2021, 2022–present
  • Fourth Division (1): 2011–2012

Sources:[8][9]

Recent seasons edit

SeasonCategoryPositionCup
2000–01Beta Ethniki (2nd division)13th ↓GS
2001–02Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)4th ↑GS
2002–03Beta Ethniki (2nd division)14th ↓1R
2003–04Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)17th1R
2004–05Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)3rd1R
2005–06Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)7th3R
2006–07Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)5th1R
2007–08Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)1st ↑1R
2008–09Beta Ethniki (2nd division)3rd ↑4R
2009–10Super League (1st division)6thSF
2010–11Super League (1st division)7th ↓5R
2011–12Delta Ethniki (4th division)4th ↑
2012–13Football League (2nd division)11th4R
2013–14Football League (2nd division)13th ↓1R
2014–15Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)3rd
2015–16Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)4th
2016–17Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)6th
2017–18Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)3rd
2018–19Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)1st1R
2019–20Football League (3rd division)6th5R
2020–21Football League (3rd division)2nd ↑
2021–22Super League 2 (2nd division)14th ↓
2022–23Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)2nd
2023–24Gamma Ethniki (3rd division)1st ↑

Best position in bold.

Key: 1R = First Round, 2R = Second Round, 3R = Third Round, 4R = Fourth Round, 5R = Fifth Round, GS = Group Stage, QF = Quarter-finals, SF = Semi-finals.

Notable wins edit

SeasonMatchScore
1979–80KavalaOlympiacos1–0
1980–81Kavala – Olympiacos1–0
1970–71KavalaPanathinaikos1–0
1973–74Kavala – Panathinaikos1–0
1976–77Kavala – Panathinaikos1–0
1998–99Kavala – Panathinaikos2–1
2009–10Panathinaikos – Kavala0–2
1971–72KavalaAEK Athens1–0
1980–81Kavala – AEK Athens1–0
1998–99Kavala – AEK Athens2–1
2009–10Kavala – AEK Athens2–1
2010–11Kavala – AEK Athens2–1
2012–13AEK AthensKavala (for Greek Cup)0–1
1970–71KavalaPAOK1–0
1973–74Kavala – PAOK1–0
1980–81Kavala – PAOK1–0
1985Kavala – PAOK (friendly match)4–1
2010–11PAOK – Kavala0–2
1965–66KavalaAris (for Greek Cup)1–0
1970–71Kavala – Aris2–1
1972–73Kavala – Aris3–1
1977–78Kavala – Aris1–0
1981–82Kavala – Aris3–2
1996–97Kavala – Aris3–1
1996–97Aris – Kavala1–3
1998–99Kavala – Aris3–1
1999–00Kavala – Aris1–0
2004–05KavalaAris (for Greek Cup)2–1

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 16 April 2022

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
1GK  GREPanagiotis Stathakis
2DF  GREGiannis Kazantzidis (captain)
4DF  SRBDragan Nedeljković
7MF  GREMichalis Marinakis
11FW  SRBLazar Stakić
13MF  GREAndreas Giannakos
16DF  GREVangelis Thalassinos
17FW  NGASunday Alimi
No.Pos. NationPlayer
18MF  GREDimitrios Thomaidis
19MF  GREChristos Retsos
20GK  GREKonstantinos Papapostolou
22DF  GREApostolos Stikas
26DF  ISROrel Cohen
28DF  GREChristoforos Karagiannis
31DF  SRBStefan Jaraković
47MF  GREPavlos Grosdanis

Managers edit

Notable Managers edit

The following managers won at least one national trophy when in charge of Kavala F.C.:

NamePeriodTrophies
Jane Janevski1975–1977Football League
Georgios Paraschos1995–1996Football League
Stratos Voutsakelis2007–2008Gamma Ethniki
Konstantinos Anyfantakis2017–2018Kavala FCA Cup
Pavlos Dermitzakis2018–2019Gamma Ethniki

Most Serving Managers edit

NamePeriodDays
Béla Pálfi1969–19752065
Georgios Paraschos1995–1997, 1999–2000941
Vasilios Daniil1979–1981911
Pavlos Dermitzakis2018–2020730
Jane Janevski1975–1977730

Gallery edit

Record players edit

NameApps
Georgios Mallios171
Georgios Koltsis124
Konstantinos Vakirtzis117
Georgios Peglis114
Anestis Athanasiadis109
Leszek Pisz101
Kyrillos Kallimanis91
Ivan Mitev85
Anastasios Tsapanidis82
Panagiotis Logaras79
NameGoals
Leszek Pisz26
Benjamin Onwuachi24
Nikos Soultanidis23
Anestis Athanasiadis22
Giorgos Papandreou21
Georgios Nasiopoulos19
Georgios Mallios10
Bartosz Tarachulski8
Serge Dié7
Dimitrios Orfanos7

Source:[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Kavala FC. uefa.com.
  2. ^ "Kavala's History". Archived from the original on 2009-05-21.
  3. ^ "Relegation for Olympiakos Volou and Kavala" (in Greek). Contra.gr. 28 July 2011. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  4. ^ "Olympiakos Volou and Kavala escape relegation" (in Greek). Contra.gr. 10 August 2011. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
  5. ^ "Olympiakos Volou and Kavala to Delta Ethniki" (in Greek). Contra.gr. 23 August 2011. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
  6. ^ "EPO - Hellenic Football Federation".
  7. ^ "Balkan Cup".
  8. ^ Abbink, Dinant & Mastrogiannopoulos, Alexander (2003-08-07). "Greece – Final Tables 1959–1999". RSSSF.
  9. ^ Abbink, Dinant & Mastrogiannopoulos, Alexander (2005-05-18). "Greece – List of Second Level Final Tables". RSSSF.

External links edit