Name
AEK

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AEK vs Olympiakos (31 Mar)

Head Coach
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League Position
2

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Established
1924 (100 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
Agia Sophia Stadium
(32,500 Capacity)

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Primary Colours

Location
Athens

Nicknames

Competitions
Greek Superleague Greece
UEFA Champions League
UEFA Europa League

Last Edit
zag: 06/Feb/24


Upcoming
31/03 AEK - Olympiakos
03/04 Panathinaiko - AEK
07/04 AEK - PAOK
14/04 AEK - Aris
21/04 Aris - AEK

Results
20/03 Apollon Lima 0 - 1 AEK
10/03 Lamia 0 - 4 AEK
03/03 Aris 3 - 3 AEK
28/02 AEK 4 - 2 Giannina
24/02 Lamia 1 - 3 AEK

Description
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AEK F.C. (Greek: ΠΑΕ ΑΕΚ), also known simply as AEK, AEK Athens (in european competitions), or with its full name Athlitiki Enosis Konstantinoupoleos (Greek: Αθλητική Ένωσις Κωνσταντινουπόλεως, Athletic Union of Constantinople), is a Greek association football club based in Nea Filadelfeia suburb of Athens.

Established in Athens in 1924 by Greek refugees from Constantinople in the wake of the Greco-Turkish War, A.E.K. is one of the most successful clubs in Greek football, winning 29 national titles (including 11 Championships, 14 Greek Cups, 1 League Cup and 3 Super Cups). The team has appeared several times in European (UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League) competitions. AEK is a member of the European Club Association.

The club was relegated from the Greek Superleague after the 2012–13 season for the first time in its history. In an effort to discharge the immense debt created by years of mismanagement, its directors chose for the team to compete in the third tier Football League 2 for the 2013-14 season, thus turning the club into an amateur club.

The large Greek population of Constantinople, not unlike those of the other Ottoman urban centres, continued its athletic traditions in the form of numerous athletic clubs. Clubs such as Enosis Tataoulon (Ένωσις Ταταούλων) and Iraklis (Ηρακλής) from the Tatavla district, Megas Alexandros (Μέγας Αλέξανδρος) of Vathyriakos, Hermes (Ερμής – Ermis) of Galata, Olympias (Ολυμπιάς) of Therapia, and Kati Kioi (Κατί Κίοϊ) of Chalcedon existed to promote Hellenic athletic and cultural ideals. These were amongst a dozen Greek-backed clubs that dominated the sporting landscape of the city in the years preceding World War I. After the war, with the influx of mainly French and English soldiers to Constantinople, many of the city clubs participated in regular competition with teams formed by the foreign troops. Taxim, Pera and Tatavla became the scene of weekly competitions in not only football, but of athletics, cycling, boxing and tennis.

Of the clubs in the city, though, football was dominated by Enosis Tataoulon and Hermes. Hermes, one of the more popular clubs, was formed in 1875 by the Greek community of Pera (Galata). Forced to change its name to Pera Club in 1921, many of its athletes, and those of most other sporting clubs, fled during the population exchanges at the end of the Greco-Turkish War, and settled in Athens and Thessaloniki.

Team Members


11

Amrabat



11

Araújo



33

Danchenko





Eliasson





Fransson



20

Gaćinović



25

Galanopoulos



7

Garcia



28

Hajsafi





Ikonomou





Jevtić



2

Jonsson



20

Mandalos



2

Moukoudi





Oliveira



31

Pineda



30

Pizarro



19

Ponce



44

Rota



44

Šabanadžović



29

Sidibe



1

Stanković



4

Szymański





Vida





Zuber



= Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 25 (Total: 25)



Stadium or Home

The Agia Sophia Stadium, also known as OPAP Arena for sponsorship reasons and as AEK Arena for UEFA competitions, is the home stadium of AEK Athens. With an all-seater capacity of 32,500, it is the third largest football stadium overall in Greece. It is located in Nea Filadelfeia, a northwestern suburb of Athens, Greece. The new arena was built on the site of the former Nikos Goumas Stadium stadium. The construction of the arena was completed in October 2022. Agia Sophia Stadium is the newest stadium built in Greece.

On 27 March 2023, the stadium began hosting the home matches of the Greece national football team after a 0-0 draw against Lithuania.

The stadium won the 13th edition of the Stadium of the Year award in the public vote for the best stadium opened in 2022.

Trophies

2022-2023

2022-2023

2017-2018

2015-2016

2010-2011

2001-2002

1999-2000

1996-1997

1995-1996

1993-1994

1992-1993

1991-1992

1988-1989

1982-1983

1978-1979

1977-1978

1977-1978

1970-1971

1967-1968

1965-1966

1963-1964

1962-1963

1955-1956

1949-1950

1948-1949

1939-1940

1938-1939

1938-1939

1931-1932


Fanart


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