Olympiacos Piraeus

Faliro

Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.

Festivus

Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Faliro

Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Bryan.

Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima


Faliro

#4729
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI

Covenant

Fernando Santos never was close to sign for Olympiakos?

Faliro

Citação de: Covenant em 26 de Maio de 2017, 11:50
Fernando Santos never was close to sign for Olympiakos?

Never read a rumour concerning him being close. Too defensive minded and heavily associated with PAOK, AEK and PAO - all of which he coached fairly successfully.

Festivus

Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:33
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

OmarLittle

Quique Setien would be an incredible fit for you guys. I reckon he could make Oly a contender for an Europa League!

Faliro

Citação de: OmarLittle em 26 de Maio de 2017, 22:07
Quique Setien would be an incredible fit for you guys. I reckon he could make Oly a contender for an Europa League!

He chose Betis over us:

http://www.espnfc.com/real-betis/story/3134238/real-betis-appoint-quique-setien-as-new-head-coach

Faliro

#4735
Citação de: Festivus em 26 de Maio de 2017, 19:24
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:33
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

It is an interesting topic. I noticed every single Greek referee and linesman crosses themselves - not just at at the full time whistle but also at the half time whistle. Most Greek players cross themselves even if they receive a yellow card or miss a easy chance to score. The most hardcore religious coach was the former PAOK coach Angelos Anastasiadis but from what I can see many of them are religious. I remember being quite interested how much Dellas talked about a God after winning Euro 2004.

I agree also that the northern Europeans dont do all this most the time. I also noticed most the muslim players do that weird pretending to wash their face thing before kick-off.

I always felt Greeks were more superstitious than religious and that Greek orthodoxy was more of a national marker of Greekness and a Greek identifier than an actual belief system. However - I am not fully Greek and was not raised in a purely Greek household. I mean it was as Greek as fuck because of my mother and I was christened Greek Orthodox, but my father is an Englishman of  English/Spanish/Irish decent and quite an atheist... so all my observations on Greeks are from living with them in the summer holidays... and watching every move.. every expression - every nuance.

But thinking about it...considering nearly every Greek household has around a dozen Panagias on the walls (icons of the virgin and child) - some in the lounge - some in the bedrooms etc.. I would say they are very religious compared to say northern Europeans - with many superstitions - aware of unlucky days like Tuesday - on which day they will never get married - sign anything etc...(due to the fact Constantinople fell on a Tuesday), feeling exceptionally guilty to throw away bread - a big sin, telling crows to go away, Spitting to remove bad spirits, never falling asleep under a cypress tree.. and 100s more..
Greeks are very aware of spirits and omens. Good and bad luck - and they have 100s of traditions to protect themselves at all times. If you watch Greeks very closely (not obviously - they will get highly offended) - but out the corner of you eye - you can usually catch them doing something quite weird. Well weird to a non-Greek.. I also get the feeling they get religious as they get older. All the younger Greeks I knew never cared about stuff - their interests were porn - getting a girlfriend, hobbies etc.. but just as 99% of Greek girls become incredibly ugly after 30 and start covering their faces in an inch of white makeup - many guys slowly become more religious in their 30s.


Festivus

Citação de: Faliro em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:35
Citação de: Festivus em 26 de Maio de 2017, 19:24
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:33
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

It is an interesting topic. I noticed every single Greek referee and linesman crosses themselves - not just at at the full time whistle but also at the half time whistle. Most Greek players cross themselves even if they receive a yellow card or miss a easy chance to score. The most hardcore religious coach was the former PAOK coach Angelos Anastasiadis but from what I can see many of them are religious. I remember being quite interested how much Dellas talked about a God after winning Euro 2004.

I agree also that the northern Europeans dont do all this most the time. I also noticed most the muslim players do that weird pretending to wash their face thing before kick-off.

I always felt Greeks were more superstitious than religious and that Greek orthodoxy was more of a national marker of Greekness and a Greek identifier than an actual belief system. However - I am not fully Greek and was not raised in a purely Greek household. I mean it was as Greek as fuck because of my mother and I was christened Greek Orthodox, but my father is an Englishman of  English/Spanish/Irish decent and quite an atheist... so all my observations on Greeks are from living with them in the summer holidays... and watching every move.. every expression - every nuance.

But thinking it about...considering nearly every Greek household has around a dozen Panagias on the walls (icons of the virgin and child) - some in the lounge - some in the bedrooms etc.. I would say they are very religious compared to say northern Europeans - with many superstitions - aware of unlucky days like Tuesday - on which day they will never get married - sign anything etc...(due to the fact Constantinople fell on a Tuesday), feeling exceptionally guilty to throw away bread - a big sin, telling crows to go away, Spitting to remove bad spirits, never falling asleep under a cypress tree.. and 100s more..
Greeks are very aware of spirits and omens. Good and bad luck - and they have 100s of traditions to protect themselves at all times. If you watch Greeks very closely (not obviously - they will get highly offended) - but out the corner of you eye - you can usually catch them doing something quite weird. Well weird to a non-Greek..


I remember watching Euro 2012 and Karagounis crossing himself when the ref didn't award a penalty after he fell in the area. It's as if he was offended by the suggestion that he had dived instead of having been legitimately fouled.

Btw, a few days ago I found this very interestingg website full of maps: http://www.atlasofeuropeanvalues.eu/new/europa-regio2.php?c2=religion&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=6&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&button=

The latest ones are from 2008 though, but still interesting nonetheless :)

Faliro

Citação de: Festivus em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:41
Citação de: Faliro em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:35
Citação de: Festivus em 26 de Maio de 2017, 19:24
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:33
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

It is an interesting topic. I noticed every single Greek referee and linesman crosses themselves - not just at at the full time whistle but also at the half time whistle. Most Greek players cross themselves even if they receive a yellow card or miss a easy chance to score. The most hardcore religious coach was the former PAOK coach Angelos Anastasiadis but from what I can see many of them are religious. I remember being quite interested how much Dellas talked about a God after winning Euro 2004.

I agree also that the northern Europeans dont do all this most the time. I also noticed most the muslim players do that weird pretending to wash their face thing before kick-off.

I always felt Greeks were more superstitious than religious and that Greek orthodoxy was more of a national marker of Greekness and a Greek identifier than an actual belief system. However - I am not fully Greek and was not raised in a purely Greek household. I mean it was as Greek as fuck because of my mother and I was christened Greek Orthodox, but my father is an Englishman of  English/Spanish/Irish decent and quite an atheist... so all my observations on Greeks are from living with them in the summer holidays... and watching every move.. every expression - every nuance.

But thinking it about...considering nearly every Greek household has around a dozen Panagias on the walls (icons of the virgin and child) - some in the lounge - some in the bedrooms etc.. I would say they are very religious compared to say northern Europeans - with many superstitions - aware of unlucky days like Tuesday - on which day they will never get married - sign anything etc...(due to the fact Constantinople fell on a Tuesday), feeling exceptionally guilty to throw away bread - a big sin, telling crows to go away, Spitting to remove bad spirits, never falling asleep under a cypress tree.. and 100s more..
Greeks are very aware of spirits and omens. Good and bad luck - and they have 100s of traditions to protect themselves at all times. If you watch Greeks very closely (not obviously - they will get highly offended) - but out the corner of you eye - you can usually catch them doing something quite weird. Well weird to a non-Greek..


I remember watching Euro 2012 and Karagounis crossing himself when the ref didn't award a penalty after he fell in the area. It's as if he was offended by the suggestion that he had dived instead of having been legitimately fouled.

Btw, a few days ago I found this very interestingg website full of maps: http://www.atlasofeuropeanvalues.eu/new/europa-regio2.php?c2=religion&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=6&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&button=

The latest ones are from 2008 though, but still interesting nonetheless :)

Yea that map seems about right. Although as the muslim populations increase (they double every 10 years in the UK) - Northern Europe will become increasingly red..

yea I remember Karagounis doing that. He would also cross himself every time he got booked for diving (happened a lot - you even touch the guy and he is already flying through the air). Samaras also crossed himself if ever he was booked or a foul wasn't given. Gekas did the same a lot.

I remember sitting in the stands at the Karaiskaki and noticing a lot of fans in the cheap seats I was sitting in - were all doing various rituals to help Olympiacos win. Cancelling jinxes, prayers - various stuff - wearing lucky shirts etc.

I remember around 6 years ago I was sitting in a Greek church with my girlfriend - was showing her the architecture etc and an old woman in black came up to me - with filthy looks and verbally attacking me. Turns out I had crossed my legs while sitting down - like this:



Apparently this was insulting to the lord. Your legs have to apart. I thought that was kinda weird.

Festivus

Citação de: Faliro em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:52
Citação de: Festivus em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:41
Citação de: Faliro em 27 de Maio de 2017, 00:35
Citação de: Festivus em 26 de Maio de 2017, 19:24
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:33
Citação de: Bryan. em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:26
Citação de: Faliro em 26 de Maio de 2017, 00:05
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:37
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:34
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:27
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:23
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:18
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:16
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 23:04
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:57
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:54
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:52
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:36
Citação de: Faliro em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:35
Citação de: Festivus em 25 de Maio de 2017, 22:32
Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

It is an interesting topic. I noticed every single Greek referee and linesman crosses themselves - not just at at the full time whistle but also at the half time whistle. Most Greek players cross themselves even if they receive a yellow card or miss a easy chance to score. The most hardcore religious coach was the former PAOK coach Angelos Anastasiadis but from what I can see many of them are religious. I remember being quite interested how much Dellas talked about a God after winning Euro 2004.

I agree also that the northern Europeans dont do all this most the time. I also noticed most the muslim players do that weird pretending to wash their face thing before kick-off.

I always felt Greeks were more superstitious than religious and that Greek orthodoxy was more of a national marker of Greekness and a Greek identifier than an actual belief system. However - I am not fully Greek and was not raised in a purely Greek household. I mean it was as Greek as fuck because of my mother and I was christened Greek Orthodox, but my father is an Englishman of  English/Spanish/Irish decent and quite an atheist... so all my observations on Greeks are from living with them in the summer holidays... and watching every move.. every expression - every nuance.

But thinking it about...considering nearly every Greek household has around a dozen Panagias on the walls (icons of the virgin and child) - some in the lounge - some in the bedrooms etc.. I would say they are very religious compared to say northern Europeans - with many superstitions - aware of unlucky days like Tuesday - on which day they will never get married - sign anything etc...(due to the fact Constantinople fell on a Tuesday), feeling exceptionally guilty to throw away bread - a big sin, telling crows to go away, Spitting to remove bad spirits, never falling asleep under a cypress tree.. and 100s more..
Greeks are very aware of spirits and omens. Good and bad luck - and they have 100s of traditions to protect themselves at all times. If you watch Greeks very closely (not obviously - they will get highly offended) - but out the corner of you eye - you can usually catch them doing something quite weird. Well weird to a non-Greek..


I remember watching Euro 2012 and Karagounis crossing himself when the ref didn't award a penalty after he fell in the area. It's as if he was offended by the suggestion that he had dived instead of having been legitimately fouled.

Btw, a few days ago I found this very interestingg website full of maps: http://www.atlasofeuropeanvalues.eu/new/europa-regio2.php?c2=religion&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=6&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&button=

The latest ones are from 2008 though, but still interesting nonetheless :)

Yea that map seems about right. Although as the muslim populations increase (they double every 10 years in the UK) - Northern Europe will become increasingly red..

yea I remember Karagounis doing that. He would also cross himself every time he got booked for diving (happened a lot - you even touch the guy and he is already flying through the air). Samaras also crossed himself if ever he was booked or a foul wasn't given. Gekas did the same a lot.

I remember sitting in the stands at the Karaiskaki and noticing a lot of fans in the cheap seats I was sitting in - were all doing various rituals to help Olympiacos win. Cancelling jinxes, prayers - various stuff - wearing lucky shirts etc.

I remember around 6 years ago I was sitting in a Greek church with my girlfriend - was showing her the architecture etc and an old woman in black came up to me - with filthy looks and verbally attacking me. Turns out I had crossed my legs while sitting down - like this:



Apparently this was insulting to the lord. Your legs have to apart. I thought that was kinda weird.
Yeah that is pretty overkill of Greek players and fans to do lol. Same for that woman to give you shit for crossing your legs.

I  remember being a kid and asking an old woman after she told me a short story "is that a real story or a biblical one?" and her answer being "everything that's written in the bible is true" lol


Faliro

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Who is your favourite Olympiacos coach ever since you've joined our forum?

That is an easy one for me Festivus. Michel. 100%. I was stunned when he was sacked. He was stunned. He actually cried. To this day I am disgusted at what happened concerning him. I loved the way played under him.
And least favourite? Paulo bento?

Bento played around 3 teenagers per game. How can anyone hate that?

Worst was Jardim for me. Playing defensive at home against teams like Levadiakos is not acceptable - even if we got the result we needed.
Had a feeling you weren't a huge fan of Bento tbh, but I do remember you not liking Jardim much. He's a defensive coach but it seem Monaco has scored lots of goals this season.

What did you think of marco Silva?

Marco Silva - highly professional. Polite. No obvious criticism. He is a solid manager and he seems intelligent.
I forgot Vitor Pereira coached you as well lol. What about him?

Btw, now that the Euro 2016 euphoria is gone... no I don't think Santos became a good coach overnight. I wont' forget his poor job at Porto, Sporting and Benfica.

Vitor Pereira was an alfa male to the point that if he, Marco Silva, Jardim and Bento all shared the same cell - I get the feeling he would easily make Bento and Silva his bitch. Jardim would probably fight him however.

I actually liked Vitor Pereira - I felt he was a superb motivator - he was also quite arrogant and brave - which adds to the entertainment.

I spose we all see football in different ways. For example - if I only cared about results and stability - Marco Silva would be my favourite. However for me football is escapism. I like lots of goals - fights, skill etc. Emotion. So I suppose I tend to gravitate towards a Vitor Pereira type character over the other Portuguese at our club. I didn't follow what happened to Pereira after he left - but I remember his essence.

As for Santos - I never liked him as a coach. I know to many that may sound ridiculous. I watched him coach all over Greece and then the Greek national team. Never really liked the way he set out teams.
Fernando Santos at Benfica after we'd lose away games by 3-0/3-1(quite often):

"Jeez, I told the players not to concede goals. But they didn't listen to me!"

...

He actually say that?

:2funny:

Yes...

Plus he always waited to get fired. He'd never be humble or self-aware enough to resign from any of his clubs.

And some people in the last few years said "I wouldn't mind having Santos back at Benfica". Well I say HELL NO

Yea. A weird character. Quite religious too.
had no idea about his religion.

But seriously, coaching the big 3 Portuguese clubs and getting fired from all of them is quite a feat.

Yea Santos is a devout Catholic. Mentioned how important his faith is to him quite a few times in Greek interviews - especially how this interacts with football etc.

Come to think of it - there is a definite theme with the 4 Portuguese coaches we had - it is even noticeable with Sa Pinto who is now in his second spell at Atromitos. There is a definite Portuguese school. Quite defensive - stringent formation shapes. Everyone has their place etc and defined role. Not too much invention or risk taking.

Vitor Pereira is also insanely religious.

I don't care about anyone's faith obviously but I always found it very odd to see a manager praying or doing weird rituals in the bench instead of showing trust in his work and his players and I saw Pereira doing that in Fenerbahçe quite often.

He even did a 200 km pilgrimage to celebrate his portuguese title and not to the referees association, to the actual Fátima sanctuary. http://www.maisfutebol.iol.pt/fotos-vitor-pereira-em-peregrinacao-a-fatima

It is quite interesting - I had no idea Vitor Pereira was like that. He came across as quite a hard ass. 

I think if Greek coaches were allowed to bring icons to games they would. Something this size.



Olympiacos gets blessed or sanctified before each season. Can see Ibagaza and Michel smiling a little here. Fuster is serious as usual - he really loved the culture in Greece. Mitroglou also in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s1mT46sDBI
Pretty sure Mourinho said a couple of times before that the only thing he feared was God. I wonder if Leonardo Jardim and Marco Silva are religious as well.

Come to think of it, lots of players and referees bless themselves during games. Players tend to do it when they enter the pitch. it's mostly noticeable during substitutions. Referees seem to do it more often after they blow the final whistle.

I'm not sure if it's more related to wanting a win or hoping they don't get seriously injured on pitch. And notice how players of certain nationalities do it more often than others. I don't really see German, English or Dutch players blessing themselves often like I see Southern European players and especially Latin American ones do.

I've heard American sports teams sometimes hold prayers in the locker rooms.

How religious would you say the average Greek is, Faliro?

It is an interesting topic. I noticed every single Greek referee and linesman crosses themselves - not just at at the full time whistle but also at the half time whistle. Most Greek players cross themselves even if they receive a yellow card or miss a easy chance to score. The most hardcore religious coach was the former PAOK coach Angelos Anastasiadis but from what I can see many of them are religious. I remember being quite interested how much Dellas talked about a God after winning Euro 2004.

I agree also that the northern Europeans dont do all this most the time. I also noticed most the muslim players do that weird pretending to wash their face thing before kick-off.

I always felt Greeks were more superstitious than religious and that Greek orthodoxy was more of a national marker of Greekness and a Greek identifier than an actual belief system. However - I am not fully Greek and was not raised in a purely Greek household. I mean it was as Greek as fuck because of my mother and I was christened Greek Orthodox, but my father is an Englishman of  English/Spanish/Irish decent and quite an atheist... so all my observations on Greeks are from living with them in the summer holidays... and watching every move.. every expression - every nuance.

But thinking it about...considering nearly every Greek household has around a dozen Panagias on the walls (icons of the virgin and child) - some in the lounge - some in the bedrooms etc.. I would say they are very religious compared to say northern Europeans - with many superstitions - aware of unlucky days like Tuesday - on which day they will never get married - sign anything etc...(due to the fact Constantinople fell on a Tuesday), feeling exceptionally guilty to throw away bread - a big sin, telling crows to go away, Spitting to remove bad spirits, never falling asleep under a cypress tree.. and 100s more..
Greeks are very aware of spirits and omens. Good and bad luck - and they have 100s of traditions to protect themselves at all times. If you watch Greeks very closely (not obviously - they will get highly offended) - but out the corner of you eye - you can usually catch them doing something quite weird. Well weird to a non-Greek..


I remember watching Euro 2012 and Karagounis crossing himself when the ref didn't award a penalty after he fell in the area. It's as if he was offended by the suggestion that he had dived instead of having been legitimately fouled.

Btw, a few days ago I found this very interestingg website full of maps: http://www.atlasofeuropeanvalues.eu/new/europa-regio2.php?c2=religion&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=6&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&map%5B%5D=&button=

The latest ones are from 2008 though, but still interesting nonetheless :)

Yea that map seems about right. Although as the muslim populations increase (they double every 10 years in the UK) - Northern Europe will become increasingly red..

yea I remember Karagounis doing that. He would also cross himself every time he got booked for diving (happened a lot - you even touch the guy and he is already flying through the air). Samaras also crossed himself if ever he was booked or a foul wasn't given. Gekas did the same a lot.

I remember sitting in the stands at the Karaiskaki and noticing a lot of fans in the cheap seats I was sitting in - were all doing various rituals to help Olympiacos win. Cancelling jinxes, prayers - various stuff - wearing lucky shirts etc.

I remember around 6 years ago I was sitting in a Greek church with my girlfriend - was showing her the architecture etc and an old woman in black came up to me - with filthy looks and verbally attacking me. Turns out I had crossed my legs while sitting down - like this:



Apparently this was insulting to the lord. Your legs have to apart. I thought that was kinda weird.
Yeah that is pretty overkill of Greek players and fans to do lol. Same for that woman to give you shit for crossing your legs.

I  remember being a kid and asking an old woman after she told me a short story "is that a real story or a biblical one?" and her answer being "everything that's written in the bible is true" lol

I remember as a kid in a village in Viotias in Greece - some days I would get bored because everyone - including all living things - cats - dogs - sheep etc would all sleep from 1pm to 5pm in the summer due to the heat. Literally the town was dead quiet and if you went out in the sun - it was around 35 degrees and upwards on the plains.. it was dangerous for your health. You immediately felt the sun smash you down. Anyways a few times I would sneak out the house and explore the town. I remember one day I ran into an old lady all in black. For some reason - probably because my Greek was non existent - or for whatever the reason - she chased me round with her bastouni (walking stick), swearing like mad and I had a feeling she thought I was a demon or something? As I grew older I was amazed at how many guys I met who grew up across Greece, who had the exact same experience with various old crazy women all dressed in black.