Takis Ikonomopoulos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Takis Ikonomopoulos
Takis Ikonomopoulos Panathinaikos.jpg
Takis Ikonomopoulos wearing Iribar's shirt with an eagle on it
Personal information
Full name Panagiotis Ikonomopoulos
Date of birth (1943-10-19) 19 October 1943 (age 78)
Place of birth Greece
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
1959–1961 Kallithea
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1961–1962 Apollon Smyrni
1962–1963 Proodeutiki
1963–1976 Panathinaikos 303 (0)
1976–1977 Panachaiki 25 (0)
1977–1979 Apollon Smyrni 32 (0)
National team
1965–1974 Greece 25 (0)
Teams managed
2002 Panathinaikos
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 9 October 2016
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 9 October 2015

Panagiotis "Takis" Ikonomopoulos (Greek: Παναγιώτης "Τάκης" Οικονομόπουλος; born 19 October 1943) is a Greek former footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

Career[]

In 1963, a month after coach Stjepan Bobek arrived at Panathinaikos, Takis Ikonomopoulos was transferred to Panathinaikos from Proodeftiki. He was nicknamed "The Bird" after his impressive dives, and had a glorious career wearing the colours of PAO.

While playing for Panathinaikos, he managed to not concede a single goal for 1,088 minutes (in a span of 13 consecutive games—a record for Greece which remains unbroken). The record spanned from 17 January 1965 until 9 May 1965. Takis Ikonomopoulos' record places him in spot number 19 in the World's Top Division Goalkeepers of all time with the longest time without conceding a goal (the second highest for Greece, ranking at world spot 38 is Vasilis Konstantinou of Panathinaikos who went 988 minutes without giving up a goal, from 30 December 1979 until 16 March 1980).

He played for Panathinaikos at the 1971 European Cup Final. He played the whole European competition using the shirt of his idol Jose Angel Iribar, legendary keeper nicknamed "El Txopo" from Athletic Club of Bilbao and the Spanish national team, which he got from a Spain-Greece game in 1970.[1]

Ikonomopoulos had set up a gym at home and used to put extra hours of training there. One of the boys who used to hang out and watch the bird train was Giannis Kyrastas.

Besides Proodeftiki and Panathinaikos, Ikonomopoulos also played for Apollon Athens and Panachaiki. After retiring as a football player, he went on to work with Panathinaikos as a goalkeeping coach.

In 2002, Takis Ikonomopoulos became responsible for coaching Panathinaikos' first team during the four last matches of the season—after coach Sergio Markarian had been barred from entering any stadium for 40 days following an incident with Olympiakos Piraeus FC.

References[]

  1. ^ Gondra, Aner (8 November 2015). "Una "Pajaro" disfrazado de "Txopo"". deia.com.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""