The manager: Fernando Santos
THE PORTUGUESE IS popular in his adopted country, having taken over from Otto Rehhagel in 2010 and overseen a successful qualifying campaign for the European Championships in Poland and Ukraine.
His career as a player ended at the age of 21, but he has managed some big names in European football, including Porto, Sporting, AEK Athens and Benfica.
Santos has enjoyed a successful spell with PAOK before the Hellenic Football Federation stepped in and snaffled him for the Greek team.
The star player: Giorgos Samaras
Just when you think that the handsomely appointed Samaras is a complete waste of space, up he pops to score the winner in his club’s first Champions League away victory.
Samaras is guilty of drifting in and out of games and the tendency of various managers to play him out wide doesn’t help, but he can be a lethal finisher when he wants to be. Now 27, he has scored eight goals in his 62 appearances for the national team.
One for the future: Sotiris Ninis
To lazily steal from the 22-year-old’s FIFA blurb, he “possesses a dizzying range of skills to go with sublime vision, an electrifying change of pace and fearsome long-range shooting skills.”
That might make him sound like Lionel Messi, and he’s not that good, but he was twice voted Greece’s young player of the year and moved from Panathinaikos to Parma in the summer (having been tracked by Manchester United at one point.)
(YouTube credit: Castana33)
Euro 2012?
Better than they would have expected. They drew with Poland in the opening game, beat the disappointing Russians, and only lost 2-1 to table toppers the Czech Republic.
Greece made it into the quarter-finals but could not get past Germany, who beat them 4-2.
Brazil 2014 prospects?
Very good. They currently lie joint top of their group on ten points, along with Bosnia.
Having started the group with a 1-0 win against Slovakia, they drew 0-0 with Bosnia before recording successive wins over Lithuania and Latvia.
Squad:
Goalkeepers: Orestis Karnezis (Panathinaikos), Kostas Peristeridis (Panionisos);
Defenders: Kostas Manolas (Olympiakos), Kyriakos Papadopoulos (Schalke04), Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Werder Bremen), Kostas Stafylidis (PAOK), Nikos Spyropoulos (Panathinaikos), Vasilis Torosidis (Olympiakos), Loukas Vyntra (Panathinaikos);
Midfielders: Elini Dimoutsos (Atromitos), Kostas Fortounis (Kaiserslautern), Panagiotis Kone (Bologna), Giannis Maniatis (Olympiakos), Sotiris Ninis (Parma), Panagiotis Tachtsidis (Roma), Alexandros Tziolis (APOEL);
Strikers: Stefanos Athanasiadis (PAOK), Lazaros Christodoulopoulos (Panathinaikos), Kostas Mitroglou (Olympiakos), Cholempas, Dimitris Salpingidis (PAOK), Giorgos Samaras (Celtic).
if you did your research properly you’d have known since Samaras was moved to the wing for Celtic he has flourished and probably become their most important player, especially in big European games.
Ireland Vs Greece
The metaphors just keep rolling for Irish Soccer – after getting lessons at the Euros and having been hit for six by the Germans we now get to face the Greeks in what promises to be a footballing tragedy. It is not clear whether this game is going to start 0-0 or whether the scoreboard will reflect the deficits faced by both countries before the game even starts. Greece are expected to start with 11 strikers and Ireland with none – it is likely the winner will be the one who scores the least own goals and also kisses up to the German referee. A small crowd of indifferent home supporters are expected while the riot squad will be posted in Lansdowne road to deal with the Greeks. A tragedy indeed.