Nikos Goumas Stadium

Coordinates: 38°2′13.01″N 23°44′28.89″E / 38.0369472°N 23.7413583°E / 38.0369472; 23.7413583
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Nikos Goumas Stadium
Grass
ScoreboardYes
Construction
Broke ground1928
Built1930
Renovated1998
Expanded1979
ClosedMay 2003
DemolishedMay 2003
Tenants
AEK (1930–1985, 1987–2003)
Greece national football team

Nikos Goumas Stadium (

football matches and was the home stadium of AEK. It is now replaced by Agia Sophia Stadium
built at the same site.

Name

The stadium was named "AEK Stadium" (Greek: Γήπεδο ΑΕΚ), but was also known as "Nea Filadelfeia Stadium" (Greek: Στάδιο Νέας Φιλαδέλφειας).

In 7 September 1991 it was officially named "Nikos Goumas Stadium" after former club president Nikos Goumas, who contributed to its building and later upgrading.[1]

Construction

With actions of the first president of the club, Konstantinos Spanoudis, in 1926, a piece of land in the suburb of Nea Filadelfeia, that was originally set aside for refugee housing, was donated as a training ground for the refugees. AEK Athens F.C. began using the ground as training ground (albeit unofficially) and by 1930 the property was signed over to the club.

The stadium was finished in 1929 and was officially opened in 1930 in a ceremony with the presence of Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos. The first home game, in November 1930, was an exhibition match against Olympiacos which ended in a 2–2 draw.[2] The stadium had a horseshoe shape (with stands in three of its four sides).

Expansion

In 1979 chairman Loukas Barlos started building the double-tiered south stand, the addition of which made it the largest stadium in Athens at the time as its capacity was over 35,000 after the construction of this new stand. This stand, and particularly its lower tier known as "Skepasti" (meaning "roofed"), and became the new home of the AEK ultras who until then resided in the opposite "Gate 21" stand.

Renovation

In 1998, AEK Athens F.C. decided to install new seats, thereby reducing the stadium's capacity from 35,000 to 24,729 (not including the press and VIP stands).[3]

Demolition

Giannis Granitsas, then president of

Aris. The game ended in a 4–0 win for AEK with Ilija Ivić
scoring the last goal in the 77th minute.

Plans for new venue

The club's initial plan was to build a modern arena on the same site, complete with underground parking and an innovative underground basketball court. This ambitious plan was halted after various objections were raised by local residents.

After

Mount Parnitha
. Nevertheless, this drew a great deal of controversy with Original 21 who opposed this plan.

The land of the former Nikos Goumas stadium is still owned by

AEK
and plans for building a new stadium in the Nikos Goumas area still exist.

On October 2, 2013, the AEK Athens board, under Dimitris Melissanidis, presented plans of the new stadium to the municipality of Nea Filadelfeia, in order to gain permission to build. A new 4 star UEFA system stadium will be built, seating between 32500 and 35000 spectators. The cost of this project has yet to be unveiled, but AEK has been granted 20 million euros by the government as a contribution to the stadium and the rest of the funding will be done privately. It is modelled after the Hagia Sophia church in Constantinople, as AEK has its roots there. Around 1000–1500 new jobs will become available and the neighbourhood is expected to benefit largely from this endeavour. [4]

Record

Team Competition Matches Wins Draws Losses
AEK Athens
League
715 570 93 52
Cup 165 137 17 11
EPSA 162 105 29 28
Balkans Cup 12 8 2 2
UEFA 64 36 17 11
Total 1,118 856 158 104

Attendance Record

Date Attendance Score Competition Opponent
21/2/1982 36,766 1 – 0
Alpha Ethniki
Panathinaikos

Concerts

Rory Gallagher performed at the stadium in 1981. Iron Maiden and Bryan Adams also had a performance at the stadium in 1988 and the group The Cure in 1989. In 1990 Tina Turner gave a concert in the stadium. In 1992 the group Simply Red and in 1993 Elton John and Sting performed at Nikos Goumas Stadium. In the mid-80s David Hasselhoff entered and performed in the ground of the stadium along with KITT.

References

  1. ^ "OUR OLD HOME". aekfc.gr.
  2. ^ "OUR OLD HOME". aekfc.gr.
  3. ^ "Νίκος Γκούμας: Όταν η ιστορία… γκρεμίστηκε". 4 May 2019.
  4. ^ "AEK, αυτό είναι το σπίτι σου! (Pics, vid) | Gazzetta".

External links

38°2′13.01″N 23°44′28.89″E / 38.0369472°N 23.7413583°E / 38.0369472; 23.7413583