Giannis Ioannidis

Giannis Ioannidis (Greek: Γιάννης Ιωαννίδης; born 26 February 1945 in Thessaloniki, Greece) is a former Greek basketball coach and New Democracy (ND) politician.

He is considered to be the best Greek basketball coach, since he is the one with the most titles won (18 in total, 13 with Aris, and 5 with Olympiacos).

Biography

Ioannidis was born in Thessaloniki, and studied Agriculture in the Faculty of Geotechnical Sciences at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He is married and has one daughter.

Basketball career

Giannis Ioannidis as head coach of Olympiacos.

During his youth, he became a member of the Aris basketball team at the age of 15, and he later went on to coach and manage the club to conquer a total of 8 Greek League championships and 5 Greek Cups, and also to participate at 3 consecutive FIBA Champions' Cup Euroleague Final Fours. Later, he worked in Olympiacos, where he won 4 consecutive Greek League championships, 1 Greek Cup, and participated at 2 consecutive FIBA Euroleague Finals.

He was the architect of the most glorious victory of Olympiacos against Panathinaikos, in the final game of the 1995–96 Greek League playoffs, with a winning score 73-38, which was his last game with Olympiacos. The next year he joined AEK, where he stayed for 2 seasons, and managed to reach one more final of the FIBA Euroleague. After a short come-back at Olympiacos, he finished his coaching career in the senior men's Greek national basketball team, which he managed in the EuroBasket 2003.

Teams worked as a coach

Honors

Also:

Political career

He announced his retirement from professional basketball in the year 2004, before he was elected a New Democracy MP for the Thessaloniki A constituency in the 2004 general election, and re-elected in 2007. Since September 2007, he has been Deputy Minister Of Culture Responsible for Sports.

In the 2014 regional election, he challenged incumbent Apostolos Tzitzikostas as Regional Governor of Central Macedonia, after Tzitzikostas had lost his party's support. He was however clearly defeated in the second round.[1] At the January 2015 legislative election, he also lost his parliamentary seat.

External links

References

This page incorporates information from the Hellenic Parliament website

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.