Nikos Milas

Nikolaos "Nikos" Milas (Greek: Νικόλαος "Νίκος" Μήλας; 9 July 1928 – 22 July 2019) was a Greek basketball player and coach. He was born in Athens.[1]

Nikos Milas
Personal information
Born(1928-07-09)9 July 1928
Athens, Greece
Died22 July 2019(2019-07-22) (aged 91)
Nea Smyrni, Athens, Greece
NationalityGreek
Coaching career1960–1976
Career history
As player:
0000Panathinaikos
As coach:
1960–1961,
1963–1965
Panathinaikos
1967–1974AEK Athens
1975–1976Panathinaikos
Career highlights and awards
As a player:

As a head coach:

Medals
Representing  Greece
EuroBasket
Bronze medal – third place 1949 Egypt As player

Playing career

Club career

Milas was a skilled technical player, with good dribbling and shooting ability.[2][3] He played with Panathinaikos in his club career. He won three Greek League championships (1949–50, 1950–51, 1953–54).

Greece national team

Milas played on the Greece men's national basketball team in 8 games at the EuroBasket 1949 in Egypt (where they won a bronze medal), and at the EuroBasket 1951. Milas also played at the 1951 Mediterranean Games, and the 1952 Summer Olympics basketball tournament of Helsinky, (two loses against Hungary and Israel).

Coaching career

In 1961, Milas won the Greek League championship from the post of head coach of Panathinaikos.[4] He was the head coach of AEK, in 1968, when they won the FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup's 1967–68 season championship, in Kallimármaro, Athens, against the Czechoslovak League powerhouse of the sixties, Slavia VŠ Praha.[5]

On the bench of AEK, he also won two Greek League national domestic championships in the 1967–68 and 1969–70 seasons (the 1969–70 title was the last for the club until the 2001–02 season).[6] In the 1969–70 season, Milas also led AEK to the semifinals of the 1969–70 FIBA European Cup Winners' Cup, where his team was defeated by the French League club, Vichy, in a two legged aggregate score series (consisting of a 60–78 loss in France, and a 74–65 win in Athens).

Personal life

Milas died on 22 July, 2019, in Nea Smyrni, Athens, Greece. He was 91 years old.[7][8]

References

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