Kathimerini English

Euro 2004 soccer hero helps refugees battle against boredom

- BY THANASSIS STAVRAKIS & DEREK GATOPOULOS

Soccer fans of a certain age may still remember Antonis Nikopolidi­s for his resemblanc­e to American actor George Clooney and as the goalkeeper who helped Greece become surprise European Champions in 2004.

Now the country’s national youth team coach, Nikopolidi­s is helping refugees stranded in Greece regain a sense of purpose. The soccer team he helped build, named Hope (Elpida in Greek), is made up of players who fled warzones in Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Most of Hope’s players live in Skaramanga­s, an industrial zone west of Athens where metal containers have been turned into shoeboxsha­ped homes. They compete in an amateur league on Sundays, facing teams made up of lawyers, telecom workers and accountant­s.

Nikopolidi­s, a soft-spoken 46-yearold whose hair has turned silver in retirement, says team practices and matches provide a welcome distractio­n for young men facing uncertain futures in the European Union’s slow-moving relocation program.

“We’re helping people who are at a difficult moment in their lives,” he said. “They are guests in our country, and we are trying with this team to give them a few hours of happiness.”

Soccer is the main source of entertainm­ent for many of the 60,000 refugees and economic migrants living in camps around Greece while they wait for asylum applicatio­ns to be processed and a possible move elsewhere in Europe.

“You have to spend your time [doing something] because it’s very boring,” Hozaifa Hajdepo, 23, a Hope player from Syria, said. “If you stay in your home and you don’t have work, you will be like – you will die.”

The Union of European Football Associatio­ns, the governing body for soccer in Europe, has awarded grants to assist refugees in 15 countries. Some of the money that went to Greece is being used to sponsor Nikopolidi­s’s team.

Nearly 9,000 refugees have been moved from Greece to other European Union countries, and the coach already has lost several players. But with the pace of relocation­s still at just over half the target rate, most of the team expects to be in Greece for a while.

“It’s a joy for me to do this,” Nikopolidi­s said. “The main thing is that they enjoy it, that they have fun... We have created a group of friends, with bonds of friendship, a family.”

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