[3] In the United States, but only got the first series, which had been aired in weekly first-run syndication in the United States in the 1990s as part of Bohbot Entertainment's Amazin' Adventures strand, and later rerun on Pax TV in 1999 as part of DIC and PAX's "Cloud Nine" block.
The series was rerun again in 2012, when it was added to the weekday morning schedule of the Cookie Jar-controlled This Is for Kids lineup on the This TV digital subchannel network.
Unlike Stavros Garkos, Amanda always respects the integrity of the game and believes in fair play.
Jock Stone: The wise, no-nonsense Scottish head coach of the Hurricanes, notably based on Celtic F.C.
His main priority is football, and he's so strict that he tends to be upset when the team is late for or skips out on his training.
If the team faces an issue outside of football or if the Gorgons are up to no good, Cal is usually there to help set things right.
Plato Quiñones: A naive Brazilian who believes in superstitions like vampires and has a heart for animals.
Helmut and Jorg Beethoven: A pair of German twin brothers who, despite being confident in their abilities as the team's strikers, often have a feud with each other.
In "Team Spirit", he injured his leg and was replaced in the Hurricanes' game against the Eagles with Little Bear.
Georgie Wright: An English footballer who always calls the coin toss at the start of the match.
Papillon: The team's talented French striker with a one-word name similar to Pelé.
He runs Garkos Enterprises and is known for using the name Medusa as a pseudonym for some of his companies and breaking his Medusa-head staff whenever he is angered.
In most of his appearances, he tries to steal the Hurricanes' status as world's greatest football team and/or make large sums of money.
Garkos' interests also include damaging the Hurricanes' image (even when he doesn't seem to gain anything from this) and his attempts at 'proving' football is a Greek sport.
Wyn Smithe and Genghis Khan: The Gorgons' two best players, they also serve as Stavros Garkos' right-hand men enlisted to assist him with his schemes.
A lesson that he later practiced at his home country, this enhanced his popularity for a price Stavros Garkos didn't like to pay.
What could be noticed from his first appearance in "Stowaway", when he was revealed to be the coach of the Gorgons' Youth Team, the Police Chief of the Island of Garkos and the head of Child Welfare.
In "Around the World in 90 Minutes", Spiro is the admiral of the Garkos Navy and helped his brother take over the aircraft carrier the Hurricanes were using to play football at sea.
He also makes a cameo appearance in "There's Only One Jock Stone" as captain of Stavros Garkos's cruise ship.
Her low acts include making people ruined by Stavros Garkos sell their homes to him ("Water, Water, Everywhere"), stealing artifacts from an Egyptian pyramids ("Serpents of the Nile"), passing herself as the legendary Medusa ("The Curse of the Gorgon"), and helping the Gorgons forge evidence to blackmail the referee ("Dino's Snapshot").
To revert this situation, Stavros IV sent a robot player named The Relegator to change the game results.
Stavros Garkos was unwilling about this because he couldn't have a great-grandson for not even having grandchildren, as he stated, but he started believing when the bet (something he never expected to meet someone who already knew about) was mentioned.
The robot failed and the Plan B destroyed a factory, forcing Garkos to pay for the damages, creating an alternate future where Stavros IV washes the Hurricanes' uniforms.
Medusa Gold-Mining Company: First seen in "Team Spirit", Garkos utilized it to extract gold from a piece of land stolen from Native Americans.
Note: Edit this list with the names of the teams from their corresponding countries The series was first announced to be in development on April 21, 1992, with a $26 million budget.