Ergotelis F.C.

Ergotelis
Full name Γυμναστικός Σύλλογος «Ο Εργοτέλης» Ηρακλείου Κρήτης
Gymnastikós Sýllogos «Ó Ergotélis» Iraklíou Krítis
(Gymnastics Club «Ergotelis» Heraklion Crete)
Nickname(s) ĺ Kritikí (The Cretans)
ĺ Kitrinómavri (The Yellow-Blacks)
Founded 7 August 1929 (1929-08-07)
as Athlitikí Énosis «Ó Ergotélis»
Ground Pankritio Stadium
Capacity 26,240
Owner Maged Samy
President Maged Samy
Manager Nikki Papavasiliou
League Football League
2017–18 Football League, 9th
Website Club website
Active departments of
Gymnastics Club Ergotelis
Football (Men's) Football (Women's) Basketball (Men's)
Basketball (Women's)

The Gymnastics Club «Ergotelis» Heraklion Crete (Greek: Γυμναστικός Σύλλογος «O Εργοτέλης» Ηρακλείου Κρήτης, Γ.Σ. Εργοτέλης), commonly known simply as Ergotelis (Greek: Εργοτέλης), is a Greek association football club, department of the multi-sport club Gymnastics Club Ergotelis, which is based in Heraklion, Crete. It is the club's oldest and most successful department, officially established in 1929 and named after the famous ancient Cretan expatriate Olympic runner Ergoteles of Himera. The club currently competes in the Football League, the second tier of the Greek football league system, and hosts its home games at the Pankritio Stadium, the city's largest and most modern sports venue. Ergotelis is one of the two Heraklion-based football clubs to have competed in the Greek Superleague, the country's top-level football competition, having made a total of 9 appearances during 2004–2015. The club's best finish in the competition is 7th place during the 2013–14 season. It has also won the Beta Ethniki (second tier of the Greek football league system) once, in 2006, as well as the Greek Football Amateur Cup in 1983. Its traditional colors are yellow and black.

History

Early years

Ergotelis was established as an amateur club of Cretan footballers in 1929 by prominent Heraklion citizens, mainly refugees from Asia Minor. The club's foundation, as well as its first ever recorded game, a friendly 4–0 win against local side Leon (Greek: Λέων) held at Chandax (Greek: Χάνδαξ) stadium on August 4, 1929, was reported onto local newspaper 'Eleythera Skepsis' (Greek: Ελευθέρα Σκέψις) on Wednesday, 7 August 1929.[1] Since its early days, Ergotelis showed the progressive ideals of its founders, being one of the first sports clubs in Greece to allow women into its sporting divisions, as well as its board of directors.[2][3] The club temporarily shut down in 1935, following the involvement of its leading executives in political movements of the time.[3] Ergotelis was re-established in 1937, developing a remarkable athletics department along with a strong football team, that went on to place 1st in the 1940 Heraklion Football Clubs Association Championship, which was never finished due to World War II.[3]

After the war, the club emerged as the most powerful competitor to regular Heraklion Football Clubs Association champions OFI, shaping up a new football and social rivalry in local sport.[3] Ergotelis eventually gained its own football ground in 1946, the Ergotelis Stadium (also known as Martinengo Stadium, after the Martinengo Bastion), located on the Venetian Era walls surrounding the city's center, and would mostly play in Heraklion's local championship and Greece's national Second Division, after the latter was founded in the early 1960s. Ergotelis actually came close to achieve a historic promotion to the First Division during the very first Beta Ethniki season held in 1960, finishing 3rd in the Southern Group, just 4 points behind Group Champions Atromitos Piraeus.[4] The club was demoted to the newly established Gamma Ethniki in 1964−65 after finishing 9th in Group 2,[5] and subsequently won the Group 1 Gamma Ethniki championship in 1966, the club's first ever national honour, to top off instant re-promotion to the Beta Ethniki.

Junta years, Theodorakis concert and repercussions (1966–1974)

Ergotelis' squad in the 1966−67 Beta Ethniki season.

During the Greek military junta of 1967–1974, Ergotelis was 'branded' as an unpatriotic organization, and its officials were accused for «deviating from the purposes for which they were elected, turning the club into an instrument servicing political, and sometimes unpatriotic objectives», after the club's board of directors allowed renowned songwriter and composer Mikis Theodorakis, a key voice against the right-wing government, to perform a concert on Martinengo stadium.[6] After the conclusion of the 1966–1967 Beta Ethniki season, the club was forcibly relegated to amateur status through a legislation, that allowed each regional city of Greece to be represented in the country's Second national Division by a single team only.[6] Furthermore, to add insult to injury, any local clubs remaining in the Beta Ethniki had the right to demand the transfer of any number of players from the relegated clubs, bypassing official transfer regulations. As a result, five of Ergotelis' best considered players at the time (Konstantinos Theodorakis, Dimitrios Papadopoulos, Manolis Stavroulakis, Konstantinos Zouraris and Georgios Skandalakis), were signed by local rival OFI – who remained in the national competitions.[6][7] Shortly after, a court decision in favor of Ergotelis was overruled by the junta-controlled Hellenic Football Federation, which finally approved OFI's contracts with the players and threatened Ergotelis officials with eviction from their home turf in Martinengo Stadium.[7] After members of the club's board of directors were either demoted or prosecuted, Ergotelis was practically dismantled in 1967.[6][7] The club made a brief comeback to the Second Division after winning the 1969−70 local Heraklion Championship, but the weakened roster and administration were too inexperienced to be competitive, and the club was therefore instantly relegated at the end of the 1970−71 season, after finishing in last place.[8]

Post-Junta period and the 80s sporadic breakthroughs (1974–1999)

After the junta's collapse in 1974, several attempts were made to bring the team back to Greek football reality, however most of these were met with failure. As a result, Ergotelis struggled between the lower regional and national competitions for over 30 years.[9] Ergotelis managed not to go completely unnoticed during these years however, achieving some notable breakthroughs in the 80s, along the way to a rebirth.

During the 1982–83 season, the club won the Greek Football Amateur Cup, by defeating AO Arta 2–0 in the competition final held at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium,[10] thus becoming the first Cretan club to win the competition.[11] The 1984–85 season saw the club finishing at the top of the Delta Ethniki Group 1 table to promote to the Gamma Ethniki as champions.[12] However the most notable feat of this period came during the 1985–86 season, when Ergotelis, at the time playing in the Gamma Ethniki, managed to reach the Greek Cup quarterfinals, which, to this day, remains the best performance of the club in the competition. Being the sole representative of the Gamma Ethniki still remaining in the competition, Ergotelis consecutively eliminated Niki Volos, Alpha Ethniki side Panserraikos and Ethnikos Olympiakos Volos to reach the quarterfinals, where the club squared off against eventual title winners Panathinaikos. Though giving the "Greens" a tough match to eventually go down 2–3 in the first leg held at the Theodoros Vardinogiannis Stadium in Heraklion, Ergotelis were completely dominated in the second leg, where they lost to the eventual Greek champions with an emphatic 7–1 score at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium on 9 April 1986.[13] This feat marked the end of Ergotelis' attempts at a return during this period, as the club was relegated back to the Delta Ethniki two years later, at the end of the 1987–88 season.[14]

Ergotelis briefly resurfaced in the mid-90s, spending two consecutive seasons in the Gamma Ethniki during 1996–98, after winning the Delta Ethniki 1995–96 Group 2 championship.[15] It would then take another 5 years for the club to re-emerge, and this time complete a full comeback.

Rebirth and rise to top-flight (1999–2008)

Greece
Makrydakis
Greece
Argyrakis
Greece
Economakis
Greece
Soutzis
Greece
Spyridakis
Greece
Goniotakis
Ergotelis lineup May 30, 2004 (3–5–2)[16]

In the late 90s Ergotelis' came under the ownership of veteran football directors Georgios Soultatos and Nikos Tzortzoglou, who took over the club for the third time after two relatively successful tenures during the 90s.[17] Learning from past experience, the duo established the Ergotelis Youth Academy at Martinengo Stadium, intending to boost the men's team with promising young talent.[17] Within a couple of years, Ergotelis grew into a strong, competitive team composed mostly of Cretan players, that would celebrate three consecutive promotions from the 4th Division to reach the Alpha Ethniki, the highest professional football league in Greece for the first time in club history.

In 2001, the Soultatos−Tzortzoglou duo hired manager Myron Sifakis and after managing promotion to the Gamma Ethniki in 2002 signed Nigerian striker Patrick Ogunsoto, both of whom left their personal mark in Ergotelis' eventual rise to top-flight. The club finished second in the 2002−03 Gamma Ethniki, in which Ogunsoto scored 30 goals in 32 games, allowing the club to return to the Beta Ethniki after 31 years. Next season, Ergotelis came in third in the Beta Ethniki, earning a chance at promotion in a single promotion play-off match against the club that would finish 14th in the 2003–04 Alpha Ethniki season. On May 30, 2004 Ergotelis won that match by defeating Athens-based club Akratitos 1−0 at the neutral Makedonikos Stadium in Thessaloniki thanks to an injury time goal by Jean Marie Sylla, thus making its debut in the Greek Alpha Ethniki and becoming the second team to have represented Heraklion in the highest professional football league in Greece, alongside club rival OFI.[18] Hundreds of Ergotelis supporters took to the streets that night in celebrations, escorting the victors' bus from the Heraklion International Airport to Martinengo Stadium.[16] Ergotelis' promotion coincided with the completion of the Pankritio Stadium for the 2004 Summer Olympics, and due to the stricter regulations for football venues in the Alpha Ethniki, the team left Martinengo Stadium and moved to the Pankritio, which still remains the club's home ground to this day.

Mario Hieblinger, most capped player for Ergotelis in the Greek Superelague (149).

Due to a lack of experience, Ergotelis failed to avoid relegation in its debut season in the Alpha Ethniki, finishing in 15th place and thus returning to the Beta Ethniki once again. However, after a rough start, the 2005–06 Beta Ethniki season saw Ergotelis return to good form after Greek manager Nikos Karageorgiou took over in mid-season, achieving instant promotion back to top-flight and even winning the division title.[19] Ergotelis' squad for the 2006–07 Superleague season was bolstered with quality players in all positions, such as former Real Madrid forward Perica Ognjenović, Austrian international centre-back Mario Hieblinger and Brazilian midfielder Silva Júnior, many of whom stayed at the club for many years, forming a competitive team that spent several consecutive seasons in top-flight.

Papoutsakis era (2008–2016)

Ergotelis vs. Panthrakikos during the 2009–10 season.
Nikos Karelis promoted from youth squad in 2008.

In January 2008, Ergotelis came under the ownership of Heraklion businessman Apostolos Papoutsakis.[20] During Papoutsakis' presidency, the club rose to prestigious standards in Greek football, which eventually earned Ergotelis the 2008–09 Fair Play award,[21] making Papoutsakis extremely popular amongst the fans of the club. Karageorgiou remained manager of the club for six seasons, in which the club saw a steady financial growth, mainly due to the transfers of promising young Greek players Dimitrios Kiliaras [22] and Vasilios Koutsianikoulis[23] to prestigious clubs Panionios and PAOK respectively. During these years, Ergotelis would achieve some memorable results against Greece's traditional football giants Panathinaikos and Olympiacos, including a 2–3 away competition win in the Athens Olympic Stadium against Panathinaikos on October 29, 2008[24] and a stunning 5–0 win against reigning champions Olympiacos in a friendly game held at the Pankritio Stadium, commemorating Ergotelis' 80th anniversary on September 6, 2009.[25] Outside the pitch, the club's board of directors would gain praise from the media for its initiative to sign international partnerships with Dutch side FC Utrecht[26] and State-side Philadelphia Union.[27] Moreover, Ergotelis organized a series of social and beneficial activities, which culminated in a concert held at Pankritio Stadium on September 19, 2011, honoring Mikis Theodorakis in commemoration of the 45 years passed since the controversial concert at Martinengo Stadium in 1966.[28]

Despite the club's gradual financial growth and status, which allowed room for signing stars such as Latvia's all-time top scorer Māris Verpakovskis[29] and renowned former Benfica midfielder Beto, most of the six seasons under Karageorgiou management saw Ergotelis struggling to avoid relegation, along with a successive string of deliberate eliminations from the Greek Cup, often from clubs playing in lower divisions. The most notable achievement of this period was an 8th-place finish in the 2010–11 season.[30] For the 2011–12 season, the club's board of directors decided to cut down the team's budget, a direct result of the Greek economic crisis of the late 2000s. While the season took off on a promising start, subsequent weak performances, along with rising tensions between several of the club's players and the manager, ultimately failed to keep Ergotelis in top-flight. The team was relegated in the end of the season, after a disastrous second round which saw the club win only 2 of the total 15 matches, and thus return to the Football League after finishing in 14th place. To further add to the fans' pain, club president Papoutsakis died on July 23, 2012 at the age of 60.[31]

Dimitris Diamantakos, season top scorer (2013−14).

The next season saw Ergotelis go through a major overhaul on all fronts. Nikos Karageorgiou terminated his contract on mutual consent after six years of service,[32] and former renowned Cypriot striker Siniša Gogić took over as manager of the team.[33] The roster was rebuilt with youngsters from the club's training academies, as most of the club's veterans were either released, or refused to follow the team in the lower division. During mid-season, the club came to know financial instability after major shareholders announced they were stepping down.[34] Despite these facts however, Ergotelis managed to secure a second-place finish in the 2012–13 Football League marathon procedure, thus celebrating a third promotion to the Super League.[35] Ergotelis' third tenure in top-flight proved to be short-lived however. Despite an all-time best 7th-place finish in the 2013–14 season, the club was once again relegated in 2015.[36]

The next season turned out to be one of the most difficult in the club's recent history, as there were many open issues regarding which competition the club would be participating in at the start of the season. Open legal issues with Super League clubs Kerkyra [37] and Veria [38] left the relegation status of Ergotelis ambiguous, as club officials made a final effort for the club to remain in top-flight by taking both cases in court.[39] After both cases resolved,[40][41] and left Ergotelis relegated, there was much speculation on whether the club would follow in the footsteps of clubs such as AEK Athens, Larissa and local rival OFI, who chose to dissolve and voluntarily play in the Gamma Ethniki in an attempt to start anew and clear their financial debts.[42] Despite the unebarable financial obligations tied to the decision to keep playing in the Football League, Ergotelis' major shareholder and son of the late Apostolos Papoutsakis Dimitrios, took the decision to keep the club in professional level and attempt a fourth promotion to the Super League, gathering past board members and financiers under one banner.[43] The club hired Bosnian manager Jasminko Velić and began preparations for the Football League almost a month after the season was officially declared started.[44] Despite high hopes however, the club soon fell behind in the League table, while its financial status worsened. As players started filing claims against the club in the winter transfer window of 2016, thus releasing themselves of their contracts due to unpaid wages,[45] Papoutsakis announced his resignation as club president.[46] The remaining board members along with a group of 17 players who refused to let the team die, managed to keep the club running until 19 January 2016, when club officials finally decided to withdraw the team from the competition.[47] After 14 consecutive years playing in professional divisions, Ergotelis was once again relegated to amateur status.[48]

Restart (2016–current)

After its withdrawal from professional competitions, the football department of Ergotelis reinstated its amateur status, thus merging with the parent multi-sport club, Gymnastics Club Ergotelis. The latter's officials decided that the Football Club should thus be dissolved and enter into liquidation, a process that would allow Ergotelis to compete in amateur competitions under new leadership, free of the financial obligations of the previous administration.[49] The decision was fiercely rivaled by major shareholder Papoutsakis, who instead opted for liquidation without dismantling the company, in operation under the provisions of the bankruptcy code.[50] After the Gymnastics Club's administration reached out on the matter to the Deputy Minister for Sport Stavros Kontonis, joined by fellow Football League withdrawn competitors Olympiacos Volou,[51] elections were held in April 2016 appointing Georgios Vrentzos as the new president of the Gymnastics Club, and head of all its football departments.[52] After the Hellenic Football Federation, the Greek Professional Sports Commission and the Greek Ministry of Development all ruled in favor of the Gymnastics Club case and reassured its officials that the club would compete in the Gamma Ethniki, the third tier of the Greek football league system,[53][54] the club's new administration was free to open up winding-up proceedings and appoint liquidators, while at the same time rebuilding the football department and attempt a swift return to professional competitions. As the club brought in former Ergotelis stars such as Sergio Leal and Nikolaos Katsikokeris to lead the effort on the pitch and filled the roster with veteran Football League players, the new administration's project eventually paid off. Ergotelis finished at the top of the 2016–17 Gamma Ethniki Group 4 Table, thus managing instant promotion back to pro-level competitions.[55] After celebrations on securing the Division title ended, club president Vrentzos announced he could no longer financially support the football club on his own and that he had initiated talks with external parties to secure the required funds to form a new Ergotelis professional Football Club department, eligible to compete in the Football League. Eventually, after a full week of negotiations during the end of July 2017, and with Georgios Vrentzos set to retire, the club's General Assembly agreed to transfer the ownership of Ergotelis' professional football department to Egyptian businessman Maged Samy, owner of Egyptian Premier League club Wadi Degla and Belgian B Division side Lierse S.K..[56]

Crest and colors

Early photographs of Ergotelis' football department and fans depict the club's first logo, simply the letter E possibly framed within a circle. In recent years, Ergotelis' emblem depicts a football player wearing the club's traditional colors (yellow and black), surrounded by a laurel wreath, similar to the ones awarded to the ancient Olympic Games victors. The football player, possibly a reference to Ergotelis' original establishment as a football club, honors the athlete in general, while the Olympic crown is a reference to the Olympic champion Ergoteles of Himera, whom the club is named after.[57] Since the early 2000s, the club's logo is framed within a yellow shield.

Multiple versions of the club's latter logo have been issued, primarily for sponsorship reasons. For instance, during the 2006–07 season and up until the 2013–14 season, Ergotelis' crest included its major sponsor's title "DIETHNIS ENOSIS". (Greek: «ΔΙΕΘΝΗΣ ΕΝΩΣΙΣ»).[58] In 2009, the club issued an anniversary logo, which used a slightly darker palette and featured a smaller version of the laurel wreath and athlete, framed within a golden 80, part of the phrase "80 ΧΡΟΝΙΑ 1929–2009" (English: "80 YEARS 1929–2009").[59] As of the 2013–14 season, the club's crest simply read "PAE Ergotelis", and since 2016, "G.S. Ergotelis" (Greek: Γ.Σ. Εργοτέλης).

Kit evolution

Ergotelis' original home colours. Variations of this basic kit have been used throughout the 1950s and 60s.

As previously mentioned, the team's jersey colours are yellow and black. Early kits resembled the kit depicted in the club's crest, with black shorts and a yellow shirt, while black stripes and variations thereof were introduced in later years. Ergotelis' kits during the club's first seasons in the Super League were supplied by French company Le Coq Sportif. Afterwards, the team signed a contract with Italian company Lotto, which resulted in several iconic kits that in some cases have been re-used throughout multiple seasons. Ergotelis' partnership with Lotto was interrupted during the 2011–12 season in which the club wore kits produced by Macron. In 2013, Ergotelis started a two-year partnership deal with fellow Italian company Eye Sportwear, which designed and produced two custom kits, one for each of the 2013–14 and 2014–15 seasons, both patented by Ergotelis. In the summer of 2018, the club announced a three-year sponsor partnership with American sports manufacturing company Capelli Sport.[60]

Manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
2001–2002 Kelme Cava Protypo
2002−2003 Puma No sponsor
2003–2004 Le Coq Sportif Piraeus Bank
2004–2005 Almaco Aluminium
2005–2006 Admiral
2006–2007 Le Coq Sportif OPAP
2007–2008 Lotto Diethnis Enosis
2008–2009 OPAP
2009–2011 Lotto
2011–2012 Macron
2012–2013 Lotto
2013–2015 Eye
2015–2016 Macron Pame Stoixima
2016–2017 Lotto No sponsor
2017–2018 Be My Hero
2018− Capelli TBD
Current sponsorships
  • Great Shirt Sponsor: TBD
  • Official Sport Clothing Manufacturer: Capelli
  • Official Sponsor: TBA

Stadiums and facilities

Ergotelis' traditional home ground is the Nikos Kazantzakis Stadium, previously known as Ergotelis Stadium or "Martinengo Stadium", located on the Venetian-era fortifications surrounding the city of Heraklion. Built in 1946,[74] Martinengo Stadium has been used as the home ground of multiple Heraklion amateur football clubs, and currently hosts Ergotelis' football academies, the largest training academies center on the island, and one of the largest training centers in Greece.[75] The stadium has been used by Ergotelis during the club's tenure in lower amateur and regional competitions until the club's promotion to the Alpha Ethniki in 2004, and has also been the stage of a controversial Mikis Theodorakis concert on 6 August 1966, which many hold as the foremost reason for Ergotelis' eventual disbandment by the ruling military junta in 1967.

As Martinengo Stadium was not fit for use in Alpha Ethniki matches, Ergotelis' home ground was relocated to the newly-built Pankritio Stadium in 2004, with local rival OFI's neighboring Theodoros Vardinogiannis Stadium being declared the club's alternate home ground. During its first season in the competition, Ergotelis averaged almost 10,000 supporters during home games, and consequently set the Pankritio Stadium's attendance record on 20 February 2005, in a 2−1 Super League victory over reigning champions Olympiacos with 27,950 tickets being sold-out.[76] Over the years however, attendances dropped significantly, limiting Ergotelis to a small, yet fiercely loyal fanbase. Ergotelis' core fanbase is currently organized into two supporters' unions, namely the Daltons Club and the Alternatives Fans of Ergotelis. They both attend Ergotelis' home games, usually occupying the Pankritio Stadium's Gate 19.

Stadium Capacity Years
Nikos Kazantzakis Stadium1,000 (~600 seated)1946–2004
Pankritio Stadium26,4002004–

Rivalry with OFI

The two Superleague clubs based in Heraklion, Ergotelis and OFI, maintain a rivalry that can be traced back to socio-political roots. Characteristic of this animosity, the first ever game between the two teams, a friendly match in 1929, ended after 35 minutes. Ergotelis were ahead by 1–0, when the game had to be abandoned after violence between the players broke out.[77]

During the Greek military junta of 1967–1974 a government legislation determined that every regional Greek city should be represented in professional divisions by a single football team. At that time, both OFI and Ergotelis used to play in the Second National division, and at the end of the 1966–1967 season, had finished in 3rd and 10th place respectively. Despite both clubs having secured their place in next year's edition of the tournament, Ergotelis was relegated to amateur status by law. Furthermore, the teams remaining in the second division were granted the rights to sign any number of players from the relegated clubs, and thus OFI signed contracts with 5 of Ergotelis' best considered players at the time. Ergotelis' side claimed their relegation to be retaliation for allowing renowned left-liberal songwriter and composer Mikis Theodorakis to perform a concert in Martinengo Stadium, giving political dimensions to the already strained relations between the two clubs. In the years to come Ergotelis languished in the lower leagues, while OFI prospered. These facts have led to various controversies among the fans of the two clubs, especially since Ergotelis' come back, at the early 00's.

In recent years, both sides have shown good will in maintaining this rivalry on the pitch only. Furthermore, OFI fans celebrated Ergotelis' promotion and attended home games during the club's first season in the Super League. Ergotelis on the other hand, loaned their longtime scoring legend Patrick Ogunsoto to a financially weakened Beta Ethniki side OFI in 2010 for no fee, as an attempt to assist their prestigious rival in their struggle to once again return to the Super League.[78]

Titles & honours

Domestic

Regional

Statistics

Player records

League top scorers

Rank Player Nationality Goals
1Patrick OgunsotoNigeria85
2Sergio LealUruguay30
3Nikos KatsikokerisGreece25
4Mario BudimirCroatia241
5Hugo CuypersBelgium22
6Stavros Labrakis2Greece20

Most league appearances

Rank Player Nationality Matches
1Patrick OgunsotoNigeria162
2Fragiskos EconomakisGreece158
3Mario HieblingerAustria1491
Diego RomanoArgentina149
5JúniorBrazil1471

Club appearances and goals counted for domestic Greek professional football leagues. Players indicated in bold are currently active with the club.
1.^ All in the Super League.
2.^ Labrakis has scored an additional 26 goals for Ergotelis in two Delta Ethniki seasons (2000−2002).

Former Inter Milan midfielder Pelé earned Ergotelis a €500K transfer in just 12 caps.

Transfer records

Record transfer fees received by Ergotelis F.C.
Rank For Fee Received from Date Ref
1 Greece Vasilios Koutsianikoulis €1,2m Greece PAOK 26 May 2009 [81]
2 Greece Dimitrios Kiliaras €500k Greece Panionios 16 May 2008 [82]
Portugal Pelé Greece Olympiacos 30 December 2013 [83]
3 Greece Dimitrios Grammozis €150k Cyprus Omonia 8 December 2008 [84]
Greece Nikolaos Katsikokeris Greece AEK 26 August 2012 [85]
Greece Andreas Bouchalakis Greece Olympiacos 13 May 2013 [86]

Players

Current squad

As of 13 September 2018[87]

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

No. Position Player
1 Greece GK Dimitrios Katsimitros
4 Greece DF Konstantinos Ikonomou
5 Greece DF Christos Batzios (captain)
6 Greece MF Vasilios Vogiatzis (4th captain)
7 Greece FW Georgios Manousakis
8 Greece DF Kyriakos Mazoulouxis
9 United States FW Joseph Efford
10 Greece MF Antonis Bourselis (vice-captain)
11 Greece FW Manolis Rovithis (3rd captain)
12 Greece DF Stelios Labakis
14 Ghana DF Yakubu Issahaku
15 Greece DF Dimitris Voutsas
17 Albania MF Oresti Kacurri
No. Position Player
18 Greece GK Georgios Chaniotakis
19 Greece FW Antonis Stathopoulos
20 Greece MF Giannis Iatroudis
21 Ghana MF Albert Bruce
22 Greece DF Nikolaos Patas
23 Greece MF Giannis Boutsakis
27 Ghana FW Charles Kwateng
29 Greece FW Antonis Kapnidis
31 Greece GK Manolis Kalogerakis
38 Greece MF Ilias Tselios (on loan from AEK Athens)
44 Greece MF Chrysovalantis Kozoronis
77 Greece FW Christos Antoniou (on loan from AEK Athens)
99 Greece MF Konstantinos Chatzidimpas

Other players under contract

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

No. Position Player
Greece FW Georgios Lydakis
Belgium FW Hugo Cuypers

Ergotelis U19 squad

Ergotelis U19 is the youth team of Ergotelis. They participate in the Football League U19 Championship. They play their home games at the Nikos Kazantzakis Stadium in the centre of Heraklion.

P. ^ Players with professional contract.
As of 12 December 2017[88]

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

No. Position Player
Greece GK Manolis Kornilakis
Greece GK Panagiotis Savouidakis
Albania DF Renato Myftari
Albania DF Roberto Lushi
Greece DF Giannis Manioudakis
Greece DF Georgios Mavroidis
Greece DF Arkadios Plaitakis
Greece DF Nikos Stavrakakis
Greece DF Vasilis Psarakis
Greece DF Nikitas Sfakianakis
Greece MF Dimitris Kefaloukos
No. Position Player
Greece MF Nikos Klinakis
Greece MF Pavlos Koutentakis
Greece MF Keivi Tsakani
Greece MF Dimitris Psalidakis
Greece FW Michalis Zervakis
Greece FW Manolis Koutsogiannakis
Greece FW Thomas Mavromatidis
Greece FW Charalabos Saitakis
Greece FW Marinos Serafimidis
Greece FW Giannis Koutantos

Affiliated clubs

Current affiliations

Past affiliations

Personnel

Position Name
PresidentEgypt Maged Samy
Vice-presidentGreece Georgios Toutzaris
Board MemberGreece Dionysios Bovoletis
General ManagerGreece Stavros Labrakis
Football Academies DirectorGreece Kostas Kalpakidis

Technical staff

Nikki Papavasiliou was appointed manager in May 2018
Position Name Nationality
Head CoachNikki PapavasiliouCyprus
Assistant CoachAntonis IoannouCyprus
Fitness CoachAntonis AndroulakisGreece
Goalkeepers CoachGiannis BakopoulosGreece
General ManagerStavros LabrakisGreece
Medical staff
Club doctor Sifis ChristoforakisGreece
Assistant doctor Nikos AndroulakisGreece
Physiotherapist Aposotolos FyrgadisGreece
Masseur Dimitris DarivianakisGreece
Caretaker Svetlozar GospodinovBulgaria

Managerial History

[89]

References

  1. "Ιστορία (Greek)". Ergotelis F.C.
  2. "Αναγεννήθηκε από τις... στάχτες του (Greek)". onsports.gr. 12 August 2011.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Zaimakis, Yiannis (2012). "Δίκτυα κοινωνικότητας και σωματειακός αθλητισμός στο Ηράκλειο (1898-1940) (Greek)". academia.edu.
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Further reading

  • Yiannis Zaimakis (2010). Εργοτέλης 1929-2009: Ψηφίδες της αθλητικής και κοινωνικής ιστορίας ενός φιλοπρόοδου σωματείου. Αλεξάνδρεια. ISBN 96-022-1503-8.

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