2000–01 Greek Football Cup Explained

Greek Cup
Year:2000–01
Num Teams:50
Defending Champions:AEK Athens
Champions:PAOK (3rd title)
Runner-Up:Olympiacos
Matches:270
Top Goal Scorer:Giovanni
Sotiris Konstantinidis
(11 goals each)
Prevseason:1999–2000
Nextseason:2001–02

The 2000–01 Greek Football Cup was the 59th edition of the Greek Football Cup.

Tournament details

Totally 50 teams participated, 16 from Alpha Ethniki, 16 from Beta, and 18 from Gamma. It was held in 6 rounds, including the final. An additional round was held between First and Second, with 2 matches, in order that the teams who progress would be 16. In the Group stage, there were 8 groups with 6 teams each, while 2 teams qualified without matches.

For the first time, there were double(home and away) matches in the group stage, thus each team played 10 games. Because the tournament began very early in the summer, in a period where teams should play preparation friendlies, the HFF allowed at the 5 first matches a maximum of 7 substitutions, something unusual in Greece, very probably and internationally, for matches of an official competition.

After the group stage, there were very interesting confrontations, after drawing elected "strong" pairs. In the round of 16, Olympiacos eliminated AEK Athens with two wins. The first leg in Nikos Goumas Stadium was awarded to Olympiacos 2–0 in an eventful match[1] that was abandoned against AEK Athens and while the scoreline was 1–1 at the time. In the second leg, at Olympic Stadium, Olympiacos' home ground then, they shattered AEK Athens 6–1.[2] In the same round, in derby of Thessaloniki between PAOK and Aris, the black and whites were qualified with a 1–1[3] away draw and a 2–0[4] home victory. Remarkable in this round was also the qualification of Panathinaikos against Panionios with a 7–2 second leg demolition, while the first leg ended with a 1–0 win of Panionios.

In the quarter-finals followed the derby between Olympiacos and Panathinaikos. First leg ended 1–1[5] in Athens Olympic Stadium, while in the second leg the "reds" triumphed by 4–1[6] in Leoforos Alexandras Stadium against their arch-rivals. More exciting were the semi-finals between Olympiacos and Iraklis. Olympiacos with two victories, 1–0 away and 5–4[7] at home (in an impressive game where 10 minutes before the end the scoreline was 3–4), qualified for the final.

The final was held in Nikos Goumas Stadium, Athens on 12 May 2001. A draw was preceded on 19 April[8] to determine in which stadium and city the final would be hosted (Nikos Goumas Stadium at Athens or Kaftanzoglio Stadium at Thessaloniki). Olympiacos faced PAOK, 9 years after their last conflict in a cup final and for a 7th clash in total. Several days before the game, Olympiacos president Sokratis Kokkalis made a memorable statement using a Greek expression that Olympiacos would lose the upcoming final only if the devil would break his leg (meaning that it was almost impossible to lose). However, PAOK easily won the match 4–2[9] [10] with an impressive performance and earned the trophy 27 years after their last success, in the same stadium against the same opponent. During the awarding ceremony, former goalkeeper of PAOK Mladen Furtula and then member of the coaching staff whispered to Sokratis Kokkalis that the devil did break his leg that day and Kokkalis responded with a laugh. The manager of PAOK, Dušan Bajević became the first in history to win the trophy with three different teams, as je also won it with AEK Athens in 1996 and Olympiacos in 1999.

Calendar

Round Date(s) Fixtures Clubs New entries
Group stage 6, 9, 13, 17, 28, 30 August, 6 September,
9 October, 29 November & 13 December 2000
239 50 → 18 48
Additional Round 20 December 2000 2 18 → 16 2
Round of 16 10, 16, 17, 24, 30, 31 January 2001 16 16 → 8 none
Quarter-finals 7, 21 February & 7, 14, 21 March 2001 8 8 → 4 none
Semi-finals 4, 11 April 2001 4 4 → 2 none
Final 12 May 2001 1 2 → 1 none

Group stage

The teams play each other home and away.

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

----------------------------The referee Giannadakis was replaced at the 27th minute by Zografos.--------

Group 5

------------------------------------

Group 6

------------------------------------

Group 7

Group 8

Knockout phase

Each tie in the knockout phase, apart from the additional round and the final, was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advanced to the next round. If the aggregate score was level, the away goals rule was applied, i.e. the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs advanced. If away goals were also equal, then extra time was played. The away goals rule was again applied after extra time, i.e. if there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team advanced by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the winners were decided by a penalty shoot-out. In the additional round and the final, which were played as a single match, if the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time was played, followed by a penalty shoot-out if the score was still level.
The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows:

Additional round

Summary

|}

Matches

----

Round of 16

The draw took place on 7 December 2000.[11]

Summary

|}

Matches

Panathinaikos won 7–3 on aggregate.----Match abandoned at the 73rd while the game was at 1–1. It was awarded 0–2 to Olympiacos.[12] Olympiacos won 8–1 on aggregate.----Xanthi won on away goals.----Iraklis won 4–2 on aggregate.----PAOK won 3–1 on aggregate.----Panachaiki won 2–0 on aggregate.----Paniliakos won 3–2 on penalties.----Apollon Athens won on away goals.

Quarter-finals

The draw took place on 1 February 2001.[13]

Summary

|}

Matches

Apollon Athens won 4–1 on aggregate.----Olympiacos won 5–2 on aggregate.----Iraklis won 2–1 on aggregate.----PAOK won 4–1 on aggregate.

Semi-finals

The draw took place on 22 March 2001.

Summary

|}

Matches

PAOK won 5–3 on aggregate.-----Olympiacos won 6–4 on aggregate.

Final

See main article: 2001 Greek Football Cup final.

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 GiovanniOlympiacos11
Sotiris KonstantinidisAEK Athens
3 Alexis AlexandrisOlympiacos9
4 Gabriel Álvez8
5 Vangelis KaounosKozani / Skoda Xanthi7
6 Ilias IoannouPanionios6
Lampros ChoutosOlympiacos
Vasilios LakisAEK Athens
Darko TešovićEthnikos Asteras
10 Demis NikolaidisAEK Athens5
Saša JovanovićPanionios
Igor SypniewskiPanathinaikos
Georgios GeorgiadisPAOK
Michalis KonstantinouIraklis
Luciano de SouzaOlympiacos

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Οταν οι παίκτες της ΑΕΚ έκαναν τους τραυματίες κόντρα στον Ολυμπιακό. gazzetta.gr. 10 January 2016. el.
  2. Web site: Ολυμπιακός–ΑΕΚ 6–1 το 2001. gazzetta.gr. 24 January 2018. el.
  3. Web site: Πήρε αυτό που ήθελε ο ΠΑΟΚ στο Χαριλάου, Αρης – ΠΑΟΚ 1-1 στο Κύπελλο Ελλάδας. in.gr. 17 January 2001. el.
  4. Web site: "Δικέφαλος αετός" ο ΠΑΟΚ στους «8» του Κυπέλλου Ελλάδας – Νίκησε με 2-0 τον Αρη. in.gr. 31 January 2001. el.
  5. Web site: Σε αναμονή για την πρόκριση Ολυμπιακός – Παναθηναϊκός μετά το 1-1. in.gr. 7 February 2001. el.
  6. Web site: Σαν σήμερα: Το θριαμβευτικό 1-4 του Ολυμπιακού στη Λεωφόρο. sdna.gr. 21 March 2016. el.
  7. Web site: Ποίημα του Τζιοβάνι και τα συγχαρτηρήρια του Αναστασιαδη. gazzetta.gr. 11 April 2018. el.
  8. Web site: Κλήρωση έδρας Τελικού. in.gr. 19 April 2001. el.
  9. Web site: Κυρίαρχος ο ΠΑΟΚ νίκησε με 4–2 τον Ολυμπιακό και κατέκτησε το Κύπελλο Ελλάδας. in.gr. 12 May 2001. el.
  10. Web site: Η κατάκτηση του κυπέλλου από τον ΠΑΟΚ το 2001. gazzetta.gr. 12 May 2016. el.
  11. Web site: Ντέρμπι ΑΕΚ – Ολυμπιακού και Αρη – ΠΑΟΚ ανέδειξε η κληρωτίδα του Κυπέλλου. in.gr. 7 December 2000. 29 December 2022. el.
  12. Web site: Οταν οι παίκτες της ΑΕΚ έκαναν τους τραυματίες κόντρα στον Ολυμπιακό. gazzetta.gr. el.
  13. Web site: Ντέρμπι αιωνίων στο Κύπελλο. tanea.gr. 2 February 2001. 29 December 2022. el.