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Greece pays tribute to goalkeeping legend Sarganis

football08 December 2024 17:00| © AFP
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Nikos Sarganis © X (@HellasFooty)

Greek sport and politics on Sunday paid tribute to the country's top-scoring goalkeeper and penalty legend Nikos Sarganis, who died at the age of 70.

Nicknamed 'Phantom' after the US-made warplane owing to his skill in the air, Sarganis was a spot-kick specialist who also scored a record six goals against rival keepers in a two-decade career.

Greek minister for sport Ioannis Vroutsis said the country was "deeply hurt" by the loss of Sarganis, who died in an Athens hospital after a long illness.

The Greek communist party said Sarganis was "a top goalkeeper who stood out both for his impressive reflexes in goal and for his composure in penalty kicks against opposing goalkeepers."

A winner of five league championships and five league cups between 1980 and 1989, Sarganis also had 58 caps with the Greek national team, among them a pair of historic clean sheets against Denmark and England in Copenhagen and London.

Originally a right-back, he was also one of few players of the era to switch from Olympiacos to cross-town rivals Panathinaikos in 1985.

Olympiacos on Sunday said Sarganis was "one of the goalkeepers who changed the specific position through the way he played".

After retiring in 1992, Sarganis was a national federation youth coach and was elected to the Athens regional council last year.

The Greek football federation said Sarganis was "invincible" in many games, including a 1991 Uefa Cup Winners' Cup fixture against Alex Ferguson's Manchester United, and a "role model for generations of young goalkeepers."

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