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Adelaide Olympic FC

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Adelaide Olympic FC
Full nameAdelaide Olympic Football Club
Nickname(s)Olympic, AOFC
Founded1978; 46 years ago (1978)
GroundAPEX Football Stadium
Capacity3,000
PresidentArchie Christakos[1]
CoachAndrew Calderbank[1]
LeagueSA State League 1
2024NPL South Australia, 11th of 12 (relegated)
Websitehttp://www.aofc.com.au/

Adelaide Olympic F.C. is a football club from Adelaide, South Australia. The club competes in the National Premier Leagues South Australia.

Origins

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The club's origins can first be traced back to 1978, where it was founded under the name of Adelaide Asteras.

In 1982 the club changed its name to Thebarton Asteras. Six years later, the club was taken over by the Greek Orthodox Community of South Australia Incorporated who later changed its name to Olympians in 1989.

In 1998, the Greek Orthodox Community of South Australia Incorporated relinquished the Olympians soccer Club, which amalgamated with SAASL Club "Adelaide Rodos Soccer Club", while keeping the playing name of Olympians.

In 1999 Olympians amalgamated with the Regency Lions Sports and Social Club (SAASL Playing Name :Adelaide Hellenic Soccer Club).

In 2000, the name was changed to Olympic Football Club. In 2001, the club adopted its current name of Adelaide Olympic.

Club history

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The Early Years

The club played its first games as Adelaide Asteras in 1979 in the sixth division of the Amateur league. Its initial home games were played at Woodville West, and the club won the division amassing 104 goals – including a 15–0 victory over West End United.

In 1981, the club joined the SASF Metro League and won the league in its first season. They were promoted to the 2nd division, finished last and relegated back to the Metro League in 1982. In 1983, the club finished second and was promoted back up to the second division. The club struggled in the second division for the next eight years.

In 1992, Olympians dominated the second division finishing seven points clear at the top of the table and were promoted to the 1st division. In the same year the club won the top four play-off finals. The topsy turvy path continued over the coming years, which included the club being relegated back to the second division in 1994 (as a result of failing to meet new FFSA requirements, not because of results with the club finishing 8th in the ten team league), returning to the Premier League in 1996, dropping to the 2nd division in 2000 and finally returning to the Premier League in 2001.

The 2000s

The 2004 Premier League season was without a doubt the club's best year in terms of on-field performance. The club earned 2nd spot on the Premier League table and played in the grand final against Metro Stars eventually losing 2–1 after leading 0–1. Adelaide Olympic then continued with another good year in 2005 once again finishing second on the Premier League table and making the finals again however they lost to eventual champions Adelaide City in the semi-final.

Following the loss of several key and experienced players, Adelaide Olympic was relegated at the end of the 2006 season. Seasons 2007, '08, and '09 were spent languishing mid-table in the second division and a massive amount of debt being accumulated.

During the end of the 2009 season a number of key figures within the Adelaide Greek community joined forces to rescue Adelaide Olympic and return the club to the first tier of football. A new board was elected and got on with job of sorting out the club's finances. Former Socceroo Branko Milosevic was appointed as first team coach and number of former players returned to the club as it sought to challenge for promotion into the first division.

The 2010s

In 2011, Adelaide Olympic became the sole tenant of Ferryden Park Reserve which has become affectionately known as "Olympic Park". 2011 also saw the arrival of many talented young players to the u/19 squad providing strong competition to the Reserve & First team squads eventually winning titles amongst the younger brigade. The first team finished 5th only just losing the second promotion spot into the Super League to Enfield City 2–1 in the semi-final of the play-offs.

The 2012 season started with the appointment of Reserve team coach Shane Porter to the First team position however due to player discontent and a poor start to the season the board decided to part ways with Shane Porter and moved quickly to appoint former Blue Eagles coach Zoran Karadzic. Following a disappointing season, Adelaide Olympic later announced the appointment of former Olympians player and U18 coach George Konstandopoulos as First team coach for the coming 2013 season.

The appointment was primarily due to his successful work as the U18 coach and the club's expressed desire to promote youth. Despite to achieving promotion, the 2013 season was deemed successful given that many youth players were promoted to the first team with the lowest average age in a single game being 18.3yo. Many of these players were later selected to join Adelaide United in their youth development, and have gone on to play in the Hyundai A-League.

Season 2014 started with a continued focus on youth however eight rounds into the season, Adelaide Olympic parted ways with George Konstandopoulos. Branko Milosevic was appointed to the first team coaching position for the remainder of the season. The club finished in 5th position and made the play-offs, falling agonisingly short to Modbury away in the Semi-final.

The Campaign Towards Promotion in 2015

Preparations for 2015 commenced the day after with key figures involved at the club coming together to plan how Olympic was going to be promoted. A key appointment was the former Scottish Premier League star Alby Kidd to senior role with Branko Milosevic alongside. A slow start to the season looked daunting but a quick change of some personnel in the team sent the team on a winning spree for months with the team beating Adelaide Victory 2–3 to achieve top spot. Top goalscorer and Italian import Fausto Erba was to thank for most of Olympic's goals that season.

In the middle of the second half of the season, Olympic went into another slump only claiming 1 point in a month of playing sending the team as far back as 5th. Promotion looked lost, but once again the team rallied up and wasn't yet done and won the next 7 games. The last game at Noarlunga finished 2–4 in a win, but the result of promotion, play-off or nothing relied on Cumberland United vs Adelaide Hills & Adelaide United vs Adelaide Victory. The latter game finished 12–3 in United's favour, guaranteeing United a top-2 spot and Cumberland United were winning 2–0 at 89' minutes against a 10-man Adelaide Hills. All looked lost and the team began their goodbyes and congratulations to retiring players when a lifelong supporter burst into the change room announcing & screaming it was 2–2 at the Cumberland United vs Adelaide Hills game. 2 extra time goals took away not only promotion for Cumberland, but the State League Title and gave Adelaide Olympic one more chance for promotion. Olympic were sent into raptures.

Adelaide Olympic were to play two legs (home and away) against long-time rivals Port Pirates. A 1–1 draw at home with both sides looking dangerous gave Pirates an away goal advantage however the 2nd leg would be remembered forever. Adelaide Olympic rolled up to the Pirate Park with no intention less than winning and getting promoted. Even after James Dimopoulos, vice-captain was sent off, and a repeat of last season looked imminent, Adelaide Olympic turned that on its head. A power drive into the bottom corner from Sean Brennan gave Olympic the 0–1 and Pirates' away goal counted for nothing. With a spot-kick from Fausto Erba, it gave a 0–2 lead to Olympic at half time. With only another 45 minutes to play till promotion, Olympic didn't stop there. Arguably the goal of the season across all leagues was scored by Oliver Totani after turning four Pirates players inside out and curling the ball just under the apex leaving the keeper helpless, gave Olympic a 0–3 lead. Erba would again nail the coffin shut sending Pirates back down to the State League with a converted one-on-one with the keeper making it 0–4. After 10 years, Adelaide Olympic returned to the Premier League.

From 2016 onwards, Adelaide Olympic has cemented its place within the first tier of football within South Australia, the National Premier League.

On 22 June 2019, Olympic qualified for the Round of 32 of the FFA Cup for the first time by beating Adelaide City 3–2 in the FFSA Federation Cup final. [2] They advanced to the Round of 16 by defeating Floreat Athena 4–3 with Fausto Erba and Ioannis Simosis scoring twice each.[3]

Current squad

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As of 29 September 2021

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Australia AUS Jacob Jones
3 DF Australia AUS Paul Wilson
4 GK Australia AUS Samuel Dweh
5 MF Australia AUS Michael Cittadini
6 MF Australia AUS Kristin Konstandopoulos
7 MF Australia AUS Kody Maude
8 MF Australia AUS Jason Konstandopoulos
9 FW Australia AUS Christos Pountentis (c)
10 MF Japan JPN Hirofumi Kochi
11 MF Australia AUS Tito Bontor
12 DF Australia AUS Ross Harkotsikas
15 FW Australia AUS Kosta Styliadis
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 FW Italy ITA Fausto Erba
22 GK Australia AUS Joshua Kavenagh
24 DF Greece GRE Panagiotis Manidakis
44 FW Greece GRE Ioannis Simosis
DF Italy ITA Benkert Abdija
MF Australia AUS Melad Ahmad
MF Australia AUS Emile Damey
MF Australia AUS Charlie Devereux
DF Australia AUS Matthew Halliday
MF Australia AUS Julian Ionni

Notable former players

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Honours

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State

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Runner-up (1): 2004
Runner-up (1): 2004
Winners (3): 1992, 1995, 2000
Runner-up (2): 1991, 2015
Winners (1): 1992
Winners (1): 1981
Runner-up (1): 1983
Winners (2): 2019, 2021
Runner-up (1): 1993
  • Night Series[8]
Runner-up (1): 2005

Affiliated clubs

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  • Greece PAOK FC – Olympic developed a partnership with Super League Greece club PAOK FC which was announced on 11 July 2019.[9] The partnership allows the exchange of coaches between the two clubs and for Olympic youth to participate in PAOK youth tournaments.

References

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  1. ^ a b "2023 MEDIA GUIDE" (PDF). Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  2. ^ "Adelaidenow.com.au | Subscribe to The Advertiser for exclusive stories". www.adelaidenow.com.au. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  3. ^ Stogiannou, George (24 July 2019). "Adelaide Olympic overcomes Floreat to march into FFA Cup Rd of 16 | Neos Kosmos". English Edition. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  4. ^ a b "National Premier Leagues South Australia Champions". socceraust. Archived from the original on 29 September 2022.
  5. ^ a b "State League 1 South Australia Champions". socceraust. Archived from the original on 21 October 2021.
  6. ^ "State League 2 South Australia Champions". socceraust. Archived from the original on 21 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Federation Cup Finals". socceraust. Archived from the original on 29 September 2022.
  8. ^ "Night Series Winners". socceraust. Archived from the original on 21 October 2021.
  9. ^ "Adelaide Olympic strike partnership with Greek Champions PAOK". FFA Cup. 11 July 2019. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
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