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Lysandros Dikaiopoulos

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Lysandros Dikaiopoulos
Dikaiopoulos with Panathinaikos
Personal information
Full name Lysandros Dikaiopoulos
Date of birth 1916
Place of birth Smyrna, Ottoman Empire
Date of death 3 May 1938(1938-05-03) (aged 21–22)
Place of death Athens, Greece
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
–1933 Argonaftes Kallithea
1933–1934 Mikrasiatiki Dourgouti
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1934–1935 A.E. Irakleio
1935–1937 AEK Athens 23
1937–1938 Panathinaikos
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Lysandros Dikaiopoulos (Greek: Λύσανδρος Δικαιόπουλος; 1916 – 3 May 1938) was a Greek footballer who played as a defender. He died playing in a football match following a fatal head injury in May 1938.[1] It was the second incident in Greece where a footballer suffered a fatal accident while playing in a match, six years after the death of the 17-year-old goalkeeper of Apollon Patras, Giannis Fotiou.[2][3]

Early life

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Dikaiopoulos was born at Smyrna, from where his family came in 1922 during the Asia Minor disaster. His family was relatively wealthy. His father had passed away at a young age. He lived with his mother and simblings in the area of Agios Sostis in Neos Kosmos at 171 Andrea Syngrou Avenue. As a citizen he worked as a pianist, while at the time of his death he was serving his term as a flight attendant at the Naval Air Base of Phalerum.[4] One of his brothers was also a footballer who later played at AEK Athens from 1937 to 1939.[5]

Club career

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Dikaiopoulos started playing football at an early age in unofficial clubs near his home area, first at Argonaftes Kallithea and then at Mikrasiatiki Dourgouti, which was crowned AFCA champion in the division of unofficial clubs in 1934. The following season he played for the first time in an official league with A.E. Irakleio in the third division. He particularly distinguished himself by helping his club reach the final stage of the league. His appearances were noticed by the officials of AEK Athens and in 1935 he signed for the yellow-blacks, where he played for three seasons having 9, 10 and 4 league appearances, respectively.[5]

In 1937 he was transferred to Panathinaikos, where he was established in the starting line-up as a full-back. He was noted for his speed and self-sacrifice and he had the potential to become an international footballer with Greece, but fate had other plans for him.

Death

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On 1st May 1938, and while the AFCA championship had ended, a friendly match between Panathinaikos and AEK was organized at Leoforos Alexandras Stadium, which ended 0–0.[6][7] At the 7th minute of the match, Dikaiopoulos, in his attempt to clear an opponent's attack with a header, strongly collided with Tryfon Tzanetis, who jumped at the same time. While Tzanetis fell on his face, managed to protect himself with his hands and got up almost immediately a little dazed with minor bruises, but Dikaiopoulos fell awkwardly and hit the ground with the back of his head, remaining motionless.[8] The match was temporarily suspended, as the doctor and former athlete, M. Marsellos who was watching the match, rushed to the pitch and diagnosed the seriousness of the hit.[9] The player was taken to the "Red Cross" hospital in a state of aphasia, accompanied by his devastated mother who had come to watch him play. In the hospital, the doctors determined that the wound was fatal, since he had suffered a fracture at the base of the skull and a concussion. He was punctured to remove the internal hematoma but the athlete never regained consciousness. He survived for almost 48 hours thanks to his strong hold and passed away at 10:30 a.m. on 3 May in the arms of his mother and his teammates, Tasos Kritikos and Kostas Zogas who had come to visit him.[10]

His death moved the society of Athens and especially the sports world. His funeral at the first cemetery of Athens was public and it was attended by official authorities led by the Minister-Commander of the Capital, Konstantinos Kotzias. His teammates at Panathinaikos, his former teammates at AEK, many footballers from other clubs, an agema of Aircraftmen that gave honors, the boards of the HFF, AFCA, Panathinaikos, AEK Athens, P.A.O. Dafni, Apollon Athens, Asteras Athens, Olympiacos, Atromitos, Mikrasiatiki Dourgouti, Poseidon Glyfada, while representatives of the newspapers "Athlitismos" and "Athlitiko Vima" also laid wreaths. AFCA has decided to observe a minute's silence in the upcoming matches and for the players to compete with black armbands. Telegrams were also sent by clubs of the countryside. The consequence of the death of Dikaiopoulos was the decision of the state to oblige the clubs from now on to insure their eleven football players anonymously, so that those who compete have insurance.[11] The state granted a special pension for his widowed mother and gave a dowry his unmarried sister.[1][12]

Tributes

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In May 1939, one year after his death, his relatives and a few sports fans from Kallithea, decided to found a football club dedicated to the memory of the late football player. They named it "Lysandros Kallithea". The Board of Directors of the new club were formed by: Ioannis Kouskounas, Spyros Pithamitsis, Athanasios Fotakis, Vasilios Sakopoulos, Vrasidas Dikaiopoulos, Lazaros Ermeidis, Nikolaos Fallieros, Athanasios Bandounas, Andreas Valves, Anastasios Kritikos, Venis Apostolidis, Athanasios Kapitsas. The club was active until October 1940, when the WW2 started, when it was dissolved. The team operated as a football section of the "National Refugee Team Nea Zoi Kallithea", which is why it is also referred to as "Lysandros N. Zoi Kallithea".[13][12]

Honours

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Mikrasiatiki Dourgouti

References

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  1. ^ a b ""Τα θύματα της μοίρας", εφ. "Αθλητικό Βήμα", 6/5/1938, ψηφ. σελ. 269" (in Greek). 19 February 2015. Archived from the original on 19 February 2015.
  2. ^ "Πάγωσε το γήπεδο: Το καταραμένο ματς ΠΑΟ- ΑΕΚ που χάθηκε ο δεύτερος παίκτης στην Ελλάδα εν ώρα αγώνα". menshouse.gr.
  3. ^ ""Αθλητικόν πένθος εις Πάτρας", εφ. "Αθλητικός Τύπος", 1/6/1932, ψηφ. σελ. 216" (in Greek). 15 April 2021. Archived from the original on 15 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Ο θάνατος του 22χρονου που τάραξε την Ελλάδα. Δεν πρόλαβε να γίνει ούτε ποδοσφαιριστής, ούτε πιανίστας..." newsbreak.gr. 1 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b Αγγελίδης, Νικόλας (1 May 2016). "Μια πρωτομαγιάτικη, θλιβερή… ιστορία συμφιλίωσης ΑΕΚ – Παναθηναϊκού". aek-live.gr.
  6. ^ Καζαντζόγλου, Σταύρος (1 May 2022). "Η μαύρη Πρωτομαγιά της ΑΕΚ!". enwsi.gr.
  7. ^ "Πεθαίνοντας στο χορτάρι των γηπέδων". avgi.gr.
  8. ^ Papakyriakoy, Dimitris (30 April 2024). "10 γεγονότα που συνέβησαν σαν σήμερα, 1 Μαΐου". mixanitouxronou.gr.
  9. ^ "Πεθαίνοντας στον αγωνιστικό χώρο". contra.gr. 14 April 2012.
  10. ^ "Σαν σήμερα «έφυγε» για τη φανέλα ο Δικαιόπουλος". inpao.gr.
  11. ^ "Λύσανδρος Δικαιόπουλος: Ο προπολεμικός ήρωας του Παναθηναϊκού". overfm.gr. 4 February 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Λύσανδρος Δικαιόπουλος (ποδόσφαιρο)". paopedia.gr. 11 November 2019.
  13. ^ ""Αθλητισμός", ψηφ. σελ. 141". Archived from the original on 4 February 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
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