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Spanoulis: “The Shot” That Sealed History and Diamantidis’s Emotional Farewell.Phuong

June 10, 2025 by mrs y

 


Some moments in sports transcend the game itself, becoming part of folklore that fans carry with them for generations. May 30, 2016, was one such night at the Olympic Athletic Center of Athens (OAKA), where basketball history was written in the most dramatic fashion possible.

The Shot That Silenced OAKA

Who could forget that shot? Years may pass, but everyone remembers that evening for their own reasons. Vassilis Spanoulis “killed” Panathinaikos in Game 4 of the 2016 Finals, celebrating with his teammates right in the heart of enemy territory as Olympiacos claimed the Basket League championship.

The quote that became legendary came from Dimitris Diamantidis himself, who with his characteristic humor had said: “You won’t miss this one, will you, Vassilara?” referring to Spanoulis’s final shot of that Game 4. Spanoulis didn’t miss, and with that shot, he sealed the championship for Giannis Sfairopoulos’s Olympiacos against Argiris Pedoulakis’s Panathinaikos (3-1 series victory).

The Context: A Farewell Game Like No Other

WHO: Vassilis Spanoulis (Olympiacos)
WHERE: OAKA Arena
WHEN: May 30, 2016
SCORE: Panathinaikos 81 – Olympiacos 82 (2nd OT)
SIGNIFICANCE: Game 4 of the Finals

This was the final game of the career of Panathinaikos’s emblematic captain, “3D” Dimitris Diamantidis – a farewell that certainly didn’t end the way he would have ideally wanted.

The Series That Had Everything

The series had been a rollercoaster from the start. Panathinaikos had managed to take Game 1 at the Peace and Friendship Stadium (SEF) with an 83-81 victory, securing home-court advantage in the finals and making them the heavy favorites for the title.

However, Olympiacos gave everything they had in the next game, eventually managing the series-tying break (1-1) with Vassilis Spanoulis sealing that game with a last-second three-pointer that made it 68-66. The “Reds” then took a 2-1 lead at SEF, setting up Game 4 at OAKA to potentially be the series finale.

Double Overtime Drama

The match required not one but two overtimes and what could only be described as a miracle to be decided. Nine years ago, the scoreboard showed 81-79 in favor of the home team (regulation had ended 63-63, first overtime 71-71), OAKA Arena was on fire with tension, and everyone watching was on the edge of their seats.

But Vassilis Spanoulis had the answer.

In those final moments, with the weight of history and his rival’s farewell game bearing down on him, Spanoulis delivered what would become known simply as “The Shot” – a three-pointer that not only won the championship but also provided a bittersweet ending to one of Greek basketball’s greatest rivalries.

The Magnitude of the Moment

What made this shot even more significant was the context surrounding it. This wasn’t just any game – it was Dimitris Diamantidis’s farewell to professional basketball. The legendary point guard, who had given everything to Panathinaikos and Greek basketball, was playing his final minutes on the court where he had created so many magical moments.

The irony wasn’t lost on anyone: Diamantidis, known for his clutch performances and incredible basketball IQ, had to watch as his greatest rival delivered the final blow to his career. Yet, in true sportsmanlike fashion, his comment to Spanoulis showed the respect these two legends had for each other, even in the heat of the fiercest rivalry in Greek basketball.

Legacy of a Single Shot

Years later, “The Shot” remains a defining moment in Greek basketball history. It represents the pinnacle of clutch performance, the intensity of the Olympiacos-Panathinaikos rivalry, and the emotional complexity of sport – where one player’s triumph becomes another’s heartbreak.

For Spanoulis, it was the culmination of his legendary career’s most pressure-filled moments. For Diamantidis, it was a reminder that even in defeat, greatness is measured not just by victories, but by how one handles the most difficult moments with grace and dignity.

The shot itself lasted mere seconds, but its impact on Greek basketball will last forever – a testament to the power of sport to create moments that transcend the game itself and become part of our collective memory.

 

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