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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Club career  



1.1  Early years  





1.2  AEK Athens  







2 Managerial career  





3 Personal life  





4 Honours  





5 References  














Georgios Daispangos







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Georgios Daispangos
Georgios Daispangos
Personal information
Full name Georgios Daispangos
Date of birth 1910
Place of birth Piraeus, Greece
Date of death 27 July 1987(1987-07-27) (aged 77)[1]
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
1924–1929 Asteras Piraeus
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1929–1935 AEK Athens
Managerial career
1936–1948 AEK Athens Academy
1948 AEK Athens (caretaker)
1948 AO Kifisia
Daphni Athens
1951–1953 Apollon Athens
1953–1955 AEK Athens Academy
1954 AEK Athens (caretaker)
1955–1956 Chalandri
1956–1957 Athinaikos
1957–1958 Atromitos
1958–1959 Argos
1959–1960 Atromitos
1961–1971 AEK Athens Academy
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Georgios Daispangos (Greek: Γεώργιος Νταϊσπάγγος; 1910 –27 July 1987) was a Greek footballer who played as a defender for AEK Athens in the 1930s. Throughout different periods of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, he served as the manager of the first team and all the departments of the academies of AEK. He was one of the pioneers of Greek football and one of the "Patriarchs" of the club. He was renowned for his huge service to AEK Athens.

Club career[edit]

Early years[edit]

Daispangos was born in 1910 in Piraeus and fate brought him at the age of 14 to Neo Faliro as a footballer of Asteras Piraeus, to watch a newly founded team with origins from Constantinople, AEK Athens. The 14-year-old Daispangos was "enchanted" from the technical football AEK were playing at the time and set a goal to one day wear the yellow-black jersey and become a teammate with the players that looked like heroes, in his childish eyes. His admiration for AEK was proverbial and as he narrated, in 1927 at the age of 17, he ran away from his home to follow the team on a trip. It was Clean Monday and Daispangos lied to his mother that he was going to the tailor shop, only to follow the team that he loved from Piraeus to Chelidonou in Kifissia, a distance that in those years was very long, as Kifissia was considered countryside for the Athenians, furthermore to people from Piraeus, like Daispangos.

AEK Athens[edit]

AEK at 1932 Cup.

He was invited to AEK in 1929 by the then coach, Josef Sveg and played for the club for 6 consecutive years next to the legends of the club, such as Kostas Negrepontis, Stavros Emmanouilidis, Robert Mallios Galić and Themos Asderis. On 8 November 1931, AEK won their first ever trophy, defeating Aris with 5–3 at Leoforos Alexandras Stadium in the Greek cup final, with Daispangos being one of the protagonists of the game alongside Giamalis, Negrepontis and Baltas, who scored a brace.[2] In parallel with football, he worked in his family tailor shop in Piraeus and in fact, was a gifted craftsman as a tailor, until 1928, as he was invited through AEK to work at ULEN (the later EYDAP) in order to have more free time to devote to football. Simultaneously with his job at ULEN, Daispangos also worked at AEK, helping wherever he was asked to. He served from caretaker to masseur and clothing manager. He said that he was very happy at that period in AEK, as he considered it the time that he bonded to the club, since he saw something big was being made in his hands. He retired as a footballer at the age of only 25.[3]

Managerial career[edit]

Daispangos experienced the golden age of AEK Athens, before the Occupation of Greece which destroyed everything, including the club. He collected the belongings of AEK and kept the club's property in the small room in his house in Piraeus,[4] before they moved to the house of Rangavis in Kapnikarea square. He lost touch with AEK during that period, but he kept enacting with football coaching Koukouvaounes, until end of the WW2 and the release of Greece, when AEK invited him back to the club. He undertook the task to reorganize the club's academies from the beginning, since Daispangos was also a pioneer for the club and in 1934 managed to create a youth team that produced huge figures of its later history, such as Kleanthis Maropoulos, Michalis Delavinias and Tryfon Tzanetis.

AEK's first youth team in 1934.

Simultaneously to his return and the organization of the team's academies, Daispangos practically acted as the coach of all the divisions of the club. In 1948, when Jack Beby arrived to coach AEK, he received a young team from Daispangos, such as Emmanouilidis, Parayios, Oikonomou, Sevastiadis, Darakis, Papatheodorou and Poulis, with some of players being already international. All the huge figures in the later history of AEK were products of his work. On his side throughout his career were the then curator, Nikos Goumas and the vice-president of AEK, Konstantinos Skouras, father-in-law of Sokratis Kokkalis, the later President of Olympiacos Piraeus. During 1948 the first rupture in his relations with AEK was created. He was fired and ended up at AO Kifisia and also worked at Daphni Athens, before Apollon Athens called him to coach the club in 1951.[5]

In 1953, AEK called him again and once more he undertook all the divisions of the club, with special emphasis on the departments of the academies, but left in 1955. During that period he produced players such as Vernezis, Melissis, Alafogiannis, Adamantidis and the Argyropoulos brothers.

He later worked for 6 years in clubs, such as Chalandri, Athinaikos, Atromitos,[6] Argos and back in Atromitos in 1960.[7]

A year later, in 1961, Goumas and Skouras returned to the administration of AEK and Daispangos was called to return to AEK, rejecting the proposals of PAOK and Aris. Daispangos came back to AEK on the condition that he would work together with Tzanetis asking Goumas to take over again the academies, considering them the weakness of the club. Goumas did not hesitate to assign him to take charge of all departments of the club. In his third and final term, he brought out footballers, such as Karafeskos, Stathopoulos, Simigdalas, Sevastopoulos, Pomonis, Kagianas, Andrikoulas, Kritikos, Lavaridis, Maniateas, Karapoulitidis, Sarris, Kyrmizas, Karakidis, Stefanou, Thivaios, Triantafyllou, Liakouris, Istorios, Psychogyios, Theodoridis, Moschakis, Papaioannou, Giannopoulos, Karoulias, the Karypidis brothers, Papagiannis and Kontopoulos.

In his 19-year presence on its infrastructure departments, AEK wοn 18 titles in total:[8]

Daispangos was one of the founding members of the Hellenic Coaches Association, which served for more than a decade as its General Secretary. He had also been in the first team coach of AEK Athens occasionally, after the 1940s and the 1950s. In 1967, he sat on the bench of the team in the away games of the Balkans Cup against Vardar, Farul Constanța and Olimpija, since the then coach, Jenő Csaknády could not enter the Eastern states. AEK left undefeated from all 3 matches with equal number of draws.[9] In 1971, Daispangos retired from football after a 42-year presence on and off the pitch.

Personal life[edit]

His son, Alekos, played for AEK for 2 seasons, from 1960 until 1962.[10] Daispangos died on 27 July 1987 at the age of 77.

Honours[edit]

AEK Athens

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ta Nea", 27-7-1987, page 45.
  • ^ "8/11/1931: Η ΑΕΚ αναδεικνύεται πρώτη Κυπελλούχος Ελλάδας στην ιστορία του θεσμού". 8 November 2020.
  • ^ "Γιώργος Νταϊσπάγγος". aekpedia.com.
  • ^ "Γιώργος Νταϊσπάγγος: Μάζεψε τα υπάρχοντα της ΑΕΚ σπίτι του στον Πειραιά στην κατοχή!". enwsi.gr (in Greek). 10 October 2019.
  • ^ "Για θυμήσου..." tanea.gr. 2 February 2002.
  • ^ "Ατρόμητος - Ιστορίες ομάδων Β εθνικής". sites.google.com. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  • ^ "Για θυμήσου..." tanea.gr. 19 June 1999.
  • ^ "Οι πιονιέροι του ποδοσφαίρου: Γιώργος Νταϊσπάγγος". athletestories.gr. 9 October 2019.
  • ^ "Γιώργος Νταϊσπάγγος". aekpedia.com.
  • ^ "Πού ήσουν ΓΙΩΡΓΟ ΝΤΑΪΣΠΑΓΓΟ..." aek-live.gr. 18 November 2020.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Georgios_Daispangos&oldid=1226460500"

    Categories: 
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