Football in Poland

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Template:Infobox sport overview

The Stadion Miejski in Gdańsk.

Football is the most popular sport in Poland. Over 400,000 Poles play football regularly, with millions more playing occasionally. 67% of the Poles are interested in football<ref>https://thechamplair.com/soccer/popularity-study/</ref> and 27% are very interested in it.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The first professional clubs were founded in the early 1900s, and the Poland national football team played its first international match in 1921.

There are hundreds of professional and amateur football teams in Poland; which are under the auspices of the national 1st league, 2nd level, 3rd level, 4 parallel divisions of 4th level, 16 regional parallel divisions of 5th level and a variety of other lower-level leagues. Additionally, there are the Polish Cup and Polish Super Cup competitions.

History

Template:Original research

Polish fans during the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

The history of football in Poland started in the late 19th century with the rising popularity of the new sport. At the time, the Polish state was partitioned. The first decades of Polish football are therefore connected with the history of Football in Austria and the Austrian Football Association, which was founded in 1904.

The first Polish football clubs were Lechia Lwów (1903), Czarni Lwów (1903), Pogoń Lwów (1904), KS Cracovia (1906) and Wisła Kraków (1906). The Polish national federation, called the Polish Football Union (Polski Związek Piłki Nożnej, PZPN), was founded on 20 December 1919, in Kraków when 31 delegates elected Edward Cetnarowski as the first president. The PZPN joined FIFA in 1923 and UEFA in 1955.

In a similar fashion to other European states, football appeared in Poland in the late 19th century. In 1888 Prof. Henryk Jordan, a court physician of the Habsburgs and the pioneer of sports in Poland, opened a sports park in Kraków's Błonia, a large open space surrounding the demolished city walls of that town. The park, along with the Sokół society founded in 1867, became the main centres to promote sports and healthy living in Poland. It was Jordan who began promoting football as a healthy sport in the open air; some sources also credit him with bringing the first football to Poland from his travels to Brunswick in 1890.<ref name="Buffalo_Bill">Template:Cite journal</ref> Other sources<ref name="Czarni_Pogoń">Template:Cite journal</ref> mention Dr. Edmund Cenar as the one to bring the first ball and the one to translate The Cambridge Rules and parts of the International Football Association Board regulations to Polish language.

On 14 July 1894 during the Second Sokół Jamboree in Lwów a short football match was played between the Sokół members of Lwów and those from Kraków. It lasted only six minutes and was seen as a curiosity rather than a potentially popular sport. Nevertheless, it was the first recorded football match in Polish history.Template:Efn It was won by the Lwów team after Włodzimierz Chomicki scored the only goal - the first known goal in Polish history.

This match precipitated the popularity of the new sport in Poland. Initially the rules and regulations were very simplified, with the size of the field and the ball varying greatly. Despite being discouraged by many educational societies and the state authorities, the new sport gained extreme popularity among pupils of various gymnasiums in Galicia. The first football teams were formed and in 1903–1904, four Lwów-based gymnasiums formed their own sport clubs: the IV Gymnasium for Boys formed a club later renamed to Pogoń Lwów, while the pupils of the I and II State Schools formed the Sława Lwów club, later renamed to Czarni Lwów.Template:Cn

On 6 June 1906 a representation of Lwów youth came to Kraków for a repeat match, this time composed of two already organized teams, the Czarni and the team of the IV Gymnasium. Kraków's representation was badly beaten in both meetings (4-0 and 2-0 respectively). The same summer the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show set up camp at Kraków's Błonia, right outside of the traditional playground area and Jordan's garden. On 5 August 1906 the team of the Kraków-based Jan Sobieski Gymnasium played a match against the British and American members of Buffalo Bill's troupe, winning 1–0. The only goal scored by Stanisław Szeligowski was also the first goal scored by a Polish team in an international meeting. The success led to the popularisation of football in Kraków and to creation of the first Kraków-based professional football team, KS Cracovia - initially composed primarily of students of the Jan Sobieski Gymnasium.<ref name="Buffalo_Bill" /> By the autumn of that year there were already 16 teams in Kraków, including Wisła Kraków (It is said that actually Wisła Kraków was the first professional football team and not Cracovia). In 1911, a Kraków-based Union of Polish Football for Galicia was formed and entered the Austrian Football Association. The union inspired the creation of a number of teams.

After the outbreak of World War I, most of the Galician football players, many of them members of either Strzelec or Sokół, joined Piłsudski's Polish Legions. The unit, fighting alongside the Austro-Hungarian Army, fought mostly in various parts of Russian-held Poland, which led to popularisation of the new sport in other parts of Poland. After Poland regained her independence, on 21 December 1919 the Polish Football Association (PZPN) was formed. Headed by Edward Centrarowski, it united most of the then-existent Polish football clubs. The league could not be formed due to the Polish-Bolshevik War, but in 1922 the PZPN published the rules of football<ref name="Addington">Template:Cite book</ref> and the following year it joined FIFA. In 1921 the league was resumed and the first champions of Poland were KS Cracovia, followed by Pogoń Lwów in 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926. As Poland was then a fully independent state, in 1921 the Poland national football team was formed. On 18 December 1921 it played its first international match in Budapest against the Hungarian team and was defeated 1–0. In the third international match in Stockholm on 28 May 1922 Poland defeated Sweden 2–1, scoring its first international victory.

During World War II, football in occupied Poland was subject to significant restrictions (see Football in occupied Poland (1939–1945)) for more.

In 1955, the PZPN became one of the founding members of UEFA.

Women's football

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In 1979, a Polish women's football league, the Ekstraliga, was established.

On 3 December 2024, the Polish women's national team made history by defeating Austria 1–0 in Vienna via a 94th minute goal by captain Ewa Pajor, thereby defeating the Austrians 2–0 on aggregate in a home and away playoff tie, and qualifying for their first ever major international tournament, the 2025 UEFA Women's Euro.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Corruption in Polish football

In 2005, Polish authorities began an investigation into widespread corruption within Polish football.

In July 2006, the Polish sports minister criticized the PZPN (Polish Football Association) for failing to take adequate steps to fight corruption, and announced an audit of the organization. In January 2007, PZPN board member Wit Żelazko was arrested by Wrocław police. Shortly thereafter, the entire PZPN board was suspended by the sports ministry. This move displeased FIFA which announced that the principle of autonomy of football associations was of utmost importance. The Polish sports ministry, Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczyński, and most fans felt that the battle against corruption was more important,<ref name="higherimportance">Template:Cite news</ref> but when FIFA threatened sanctions, the sports ministry backed down and agreed to re-instate the PZPN board.

In September 2008, the Polish Olympic Committee made a request to the Polish Arbitration Tribunal to suspend the management of the PZPN a second time, stating that the PZPN was guilty of "[violating] its statutes in a continuous and flagrant fashion."<ref name=afp>Template:Cite news</ref> This request was granted and Robert Zawłocki was named as temporary administrator. However, FIFA again threatened to suspend Polish teams from international competition.

On 15 April 2009, the total number of arrests reached 200, including referees, observers, coaches, players as well as some high-ranking officials of the PZPN.<ref name="200arrests">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="redcard">Template:Cite news</ref> By the end of April 2009, only 15 referees remained who were allowed to preside over top-flight matches.<ref name="morearrests">Template:Cite news</ref>

World Cup

Template:Main Poland national football team have qualified for the finals on nine occasions, most recently for the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

Table

Year Result Position GP W D* L GS GA
Template:Flagicon 1930 did not enter
Template:Flagicon 1934
Template:Flagicon 1938 Round 1 11th 1 0 0 1 5 6
Template:Flagicon 1950 did not enter
Template:Flagicon 1954
Template:Flagicon 1958 did not qualify
Template:Flagicon 1962
Template:Flagicon 1966
Template:Flagicon 1970
Template:Flagicon 1974 Third place 3rd 7 6 0 1 16 5
Template:Flagicon 1978 Second group stage 5th 6 3 1 2 6 6
Template:Flagicon 1982 Third place 3rd 7 3 3 1 11 5
Template:Flagicon 1986 Round of 16 14th 4 1 1 2 1 7
Template:Flagicon 1990 did not qualify
Template:Flagicon 1994
Template:Flagicon 1998
Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon 2002 Group stage 25th 3 1 0 2 3 7
Template:Flagicon 2006 Group stage 21st 3 1 0 2 2 4
Template:Flagicon 2010 did not qualify
Template:Flagicon 2014
Template:Flagicon 2018 Group stage 25th 3 1 0 2 2 5
Template:Flagicon 2022 Round of 16 15th 4 1 1 2 3 5
Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon 2026
Total Third place 8/21 38 17 6 15 49 50

European competitions

UEFA Champions League

The following teams have qualified at least for the main phase of the European Cup/UEFA Champions League.

UEFA Europa League

The following teams have qualified for the main phase of the UEFA Europa League.

UEFA Conference League

The following teams have qualified for the main phase of the UEFA Conference League.

UEFA Euro

Template:Main Poland have participated in five UEFA European Championships so far: Euro 2008, Euro 2012, Euro 2016, Euro 2020 and Euro 2024.

On 18 April 2007, the President of UEFA, Michel Platini, announced that the hosts of the 2012 UEFA European Football Championship would be Poland and Ukraine. Both countries automatically qualified for the event.

Table

UEFA European Championship record
Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
Template:Flagicon 1960 Did not qualify
Template:Flagicon 1964
Template:Flagicon 1968
Template:Flagicon 1972
Template:Flagicon 1976
Template:Flagicon 1980
Template:Flagicon 1984
Template:Flagicon 1988
Template:Flagicon 1992
Template:Flagicon 1996
Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon 2000
Template:Flagicon 2004
Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon 2008 Group stage 14th 3 0 1 2 1 4
Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon 2012 Group stage 14th 3 0 2 1 2 3
Template:Flagicon 2016 Quarter-finals 5th 5 2 3 0 4 2
Template:Flagicon 2020 Group stage 21st 3 0 1 2 4 6
Template:Flagicon 2024 Group stage 23d 3 0 1 2 3 6
Total - - 17 2 8 7 14 21

Largest football stadiums in Poland

# Image Stadium Capacity Location Region Home Team Opened
1 Kazimierz Górski National Stadium 58,580 Warsaw Template:Flag Poland 2012<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
2 Silesian Stadium 55,211 Chorzów Template:Flag Poland 1956<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
3 Wrocław Stadium 45,105 Wrocław Template:Flag Śląsk Wrocław 2011<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
4 Poznań Stadium 42,837 Poznań Template:Flag Lech Poznań 1980<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
5 Error creating thumbnail: Gdańsk Stadium 41,620 Gdańsk Template:Flag Lechia Gdańsk 2011<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

Notes

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References

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Template:Football in Poland Template:Ekstraklasa seasons Template:Ekstraklasa teamlist Template:Polish 1st League Template:Polish Second League Template:Football in Europe