
Olympic Football Club is a semi-professional soccer club based in Brisbane, Queensland. The club was founded in 1967 and currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Queensland, with home matches played at Goodwin Park. The club has grown tremendously in the past 15 years growing from 190 registered players to over 950 players.
Olympic FC are the inaugural 2013 NPL Champions of Queensland.
Club Olympic FC
Founded: 1967
Colours: Red and White
Home Ground: Goodwin Park, Yeronga
Recent Honours:
2003 Division 1 Grand Finalist,
2004 Division 1 Grand Finalist,
2006 Division Grand Finalist,
2008 Silver Boot Winners,
2013 Silver Boot Finalist,
2013 NPL Premiers of Queensland.
2014, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 NPL Queensland Finalists
2014 FFA Cup Round of 16
2018 FFA Cup Round of 32
2019 FFA Cup Round of 16
2024 Australia Cup Round of 32

Brisbane Olympic Football Club was established in 1967. It started life as Pan Rhodian FC, affiliated with the Queensland Soccer Association and playing at Pineapple Park, a field behind the Pineapple Hotel near the Gabba. The first president was Tom Carnavas and the first coach was John Tsombaras. The first of many fundraisers was a BBQ at the Nicolou residence in Louisa Street, Highgate Hill.
The following
year (1968), Pan Rhodian FC applied to join the Queensland Soccer Federation.
As a condition of joining the Federation, the name of our club needed to be
changed and the name ‘OLYMPIC’ was adopted by mutual agreement.
We started with one team and were placed in Division 8. The main fundraising activities were backyard BBQ’s where up to 200 supporters and guests would get together and talk all things football, eat, dance and enjoy themselves.
The sale of doubles at our games also provided much needed financial support. Our main rival in the late 60s was a club called Dnipro, established by supporters whose cultural background was Russian.

In the early
seventies we moved from Pineapple Park to Dutton Park. From here began the long
climb from Division 8 to Division 1, which we were promoted to in 1979. Each
year the club topped its division and was promoted up to the next division,
subject to meeting QSF requirements. We formed a reserve grade, a youth
sub-committee and even had a cheer squad. The facilities at Dutton Park
consisted of two small dressing sheds and an extremely small canteen.
To provide more space we managed to acquire a large caravan which had been converted into a canteen (the process of getting this van to Dutton Park was a comedy of errors – a story for another day).
Fundraising
activities expanded to include dances, cake stalls, stalls at local festivals
(the largest of which were the Spring Hill Fair and the Stanthorpe Apple and
Grape festival), and raffles. Olympic House (Kafenion) was opened in Boundary
Street West End. This served as a coffee shop, function centre and meeting
place. In those days sponsorships were difficult to get. The most we could hope
for was for some kind soul to sponsor the playing outfits for a few hundred
dollars.
In 1980,
Olympic established junior and women’s football at Dutton Park. The Under-12
side was coached Andy Economou while the Under-14 team was coached by Les
Diakoelias. The women’s team was coached by Michael Kassiou and managed by Con
Papadimos.

When St.
George (formerly HELLENIC) folded in 1982 we moved from Dutton Park to our
current home at Goodwin Park. Goodwin Park was initially shared by St. George
and South Athletics. The lease was eventually solely owned by Olympic after 15
dedicated committee members and supporters guaranteed the loan to buy-out the
Athletics club.
The highlight of the 1980s was Olympic’s win over Brisbane Lions in the QSF Grand Final in 1983. The Ian Brusasco Cup is probably the last major piece of silverware won by the Olympic senior team in this decade. Fortunately our juniors and women’s teams have done us proud since then.
In the early
eighties Olympic was promoted to the first State League in Queensland. However,
the league folded after a few years because of the costs associated with
travelling a state as big as ours.
The period
from the mid-’80s to the mid-’90s saw a steady growth in the number of teams
and players representing our Club. Junior teams increased to twelve and a
second women’s team was formed. Substantial works were performed at Goodwin
Park, including the relocation of the main field, building our first grandstand
(constructed by Antonios Nicolaidis), upgrading the lighting, reconfiguring the
grounds so that we had four fields to accommodate both junior and senior teams,
locating the entrance and road into the field, resurfacing the fields in
stages, and adding about a foot of ash along with sand and top dressing to
improve drainage. Some might even remember the road that ran down where the
main field is now located.
The Olympic kafenion was moved from West End to Goodwin Park. The canteen at Goodwin was converted to suit a kafenion style venue.
Finally, the
main bank loan was paid off, the guarantors released from their obligation and
thoughts turned to the construction of a new clubhouse.
