Dark
Light

Greece: PAOK’s title party postponed

17 April, 2019

The White Tower in central Thessaloniki was ready for the party. The flag and scarf sellers and the souvlaki makers had set up shop from the afternoon last Sunday.

The TV crews were picking their best angles from the spot where the PAOK following would converge to celebrate the club’s first league trophy in 34 years.

Similarly, hundreds of fans of the Thessaloniki giant were about to gather at Tempe, the narrow passage that separates Thessaly from Macedonia, to greet the new champions after their victory at Larissa.

Except that PAOK did not win after all.The fan gathering dissolved in disappointment, the flags and the scarves were tucked away quietly and the champagne remained on ice for now, just for one more week, until PAOK clinches mathematically the Super League crown, as Larissa snatched a 1-1 draw from the league leader and postponed celebrations, although some PAOK fans did stay at Tempe to greet the champions-to-be. PAOK will need just one point when it faces Levadiakos, that got mathematically relegated this with its 2-1 home loss to Panionios. It is following bottom team Apollon Smyrnis, that lost 1-0 at home to Panetolikos.

Olympiakos has therefore slashed the distance from the top to eight points, having also got a game in hand, after thrashing visiting Xanthi 4-0. AEK drew 2-2 at Lamia, as it led with Petros Mantalos, Jeronimo Barrales scored a brace for the hosts before Lucas Boye earned a point for the Athens team that lies third.

Atromitos confirmed it will not finish below fourth, beating fifth Aris 2-0 at Thessaloniki, while sixth Panathinaikos had Federico Macheda score on both ends, before conceding two more goals to Ismail Sassi and Giorgos Giakoumakis and lose 3-1 at home to OFI Crete.

Dark
Light

Latest News

How China could re-dollarise without funding US wars

How China could re-dollarise without funding US wars

China issued a US dollar-denominated bond in Saudi Arabia, directly

Australia pledges $50 million to improve impacts of climate change

Australia is contributing $50 million to a global fund aimed
TWO HOMELANDS: A Journey of Resilience and Hope

TWO HOMELANDS: A Journey of Resilience and Hope

Alongside the 50th anniversary of the Turkish invasion in Cyprus,