ATHENS – The trial of Greece’s Olympiacos, Evangelos Marinakis, and dozens of shas fans begun in Greece, the biggest case of its kind linked to sports-related violence that authorities have vowed to crack down on.

In total, 142 fans face charges of participating in a criminal organisation and causing life-threatening explosions at sporting events. Seven of them are accused of leading the group. They have all denied wrongdoing.

Marinakis, a shipping and media tycoon who also owns English Premier League club Nottingham Forest, and another four board members are accused of supporting the alleged criminal group from 2019-2024 and instigating violence due to a 2023 statement. They have dismissed the misdemeanour charges as groundless.

Marinakis was not present in Athens’s high-security Korydallos prison and was represented by his lawyer. Masked police officers guarded a few defendants still in detention.

More than 210 people will testify before the three-member bench during the trial, which lawyers estimate could last years. The court adjourned for November 25 after the presiding judge read out the names of the defendants and witnesses.

Advertisement ยท Scroll to continue

Violence has plagued sport in Greece in recent years. Hardcore supporters, following the same club across different sports, frequently clash with police outside stadiums and with rival fans in arranged street brawls. Hooliganism is also a major concern for European soccer governing body UEFA.

The probe was launched after the 2023 fatal injury of 31-year-old riot police officer George Lyngeridis in clashes outside a women’s volleyball match between Olympiacos and Panathinaikos, a normally low-risk game.

The fans were arrested in 2024.

###