- Football in Poland
In
Poland ,football (soccer) is the most popular sport. Over 400,000 Poles play football regularly, while millions more play occasionally. The first professional clubs were founded in the early 1900s and thePolish national football team played its first international match in 1921.There are hundreds of professional and amateur football teams in Poland. The football teams are organized into the national 1st league and 2nd league, 4 regional 3rd leagues, 18 regional 4th leagues, 49 regional 5th leagues and many more lower level leagues. There are also Polish Cup and Polish Supercup competitions.
History
The history of football in Poland started in the late 19th century with the rising popularity of the new sport. At the time, Polish state was Partitioned though.The first decades of Polish football are connected with the history of
Football in Austria and theAustrian Football Association which was founded in 1904.The first Polish
football club s wereLechia Lwów (1903),Czarni Lwów (1903),Pogoń Lwów (1904),Cracovia Kraków (1906) andWisła Kraków (1906). The Polish national federation called thePolish Football Union (Polski Związek Piłki Nożnej, PZPN) was founded onDecember 20 ,1919 , inWarsaw when 31 delegates electedEdward Cetnarowski as the first president. PZPN joinedFIFA in 1923 andUEFA in 1955.Much like in other European states, football appeared in Poland in the late 19th century. In 1888 Prof.
Henryk Jordan , a court physician of theHabsburg s and the pioneer of sports in Poland, opened a sports park inKraków 's "Błonia ", a large open space surrounding the demolished city walls of that town. The park, along with theSokół 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 1890pl icon cite journal | author=Leszek Mazan | title= Buffalo Bill na Błoniach | journal=Polityka | year=2006 | volume=2544 | issue=9 | pages= 82–84 | url=http://www.polityka.pl/polityka/index.jsp?place=Lead10&news_cat_id=17&news_id=172346&layout=1&forum_id=3270&fpage=Threads&page=text ] . Other sources pl icon cite journal | author=Zbigniew Chmielewski | title= Obok Czarnych znak Pogoni | journal=Polityka | year=2003 | volume=2414 | issue=33 | pages= | url=http://www.lwow.home.pl/sport/sport.html ] mention Dr.Edmund Cenar as the one to bring the first ball and the one to translateThe Cambridge Rules and parts of theInternational Football Association Board regulations toPolish language .On
July 14 ,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 historyIn fact there was a previous meeting mentioned by the press in Kraków in 1892, though no details are known] . It was won by the Lwów team afterWłodzimierz Chomicki scored the only goal - and the first known goal in Polish history.This match incited 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 toCzarni Lwów . In the same season theLechia Lwów was also formed. It is uncertain which of the clubs was created first as they were initially little organized, however the Czarni Lwów are usually credited as being the first Polish professional football team. The following year popularity of the new sport spread to nearbyRzeszów whereResovia Rzeszów was formed, while in German-held part of Poland the1. FC Katowice andWarta Poznań were formed.On
June 6 ,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. OnAugust 5 ,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 byStanisław 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,Cracovia Kraków - initially composed primarily of students of the Jan Sobieski Gymnasium. By the autumn of that year there were already 16 teams in Kraków, includingWisła Kraków . In 1911 a Kraków-basedUnion of Polish Football for Galicia was formed and entered theAustrian Football Federation . The union inspired the creation of a number of teams, includingPolonia Warszawa formed later that year as the first football club inWarsaw .After the outbreak of
World War I , most of the Galician football players, many of them members of eitherStrzelec orSokół , joined Piłsudski's Polish Legions. The unit, fighting alongside theAustro-Hungarian Army , fought mostly in various parts of Russian-held Poland, which led to popularisation of the new sport in other parts of Poland. Among the notable clubs started during the war was "Legia", initially a club of the Legions and after the war renamed toLegia Warszawa . After Poland regained her independence, onDecember 21 ,1919 thePolish Football Association (PZPN) was formed. Headed byEdward Centrarowski , it united most of the then-existent Polish football clubs. The league could not be formed due to thePolish-Bolshevik War , but in 1922 the PZPN published the rules of footballpl icon cite book | author =Francis Percy Addington | coauthors =Rudolf Wacek | title =Teorja piłki nożnej (football); praktyczny i teoretyczny przewodnik gry wraz z prawidłami Polskiego Związku Piłki Nożnej | year =1922 | editor = | pages =96 | chapter = | chapterurl = | publisher =M. Bodek | location =Lwów | id = ] and the following year it joinedFIFA . In 1921 the league was resumed and the first Champion of Poland wasCracovia Kraków , followed byPogoń Lwów in 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926. As Poland was then a fully independent state, in 1921 thePolish national football team was formed. OnDecember 18 ,1921 it played its first international match inBudapest against the Hungarian team and was defeated 1:0. In the third international match inStockholm onMay 28 ,1922 Poland defeated Sweden 1:2, scoring its first international victory.In 1955 the PZPN became one of the founding members of
UEFA .European Competitions
UEFA Champions League
The following teams have qualified for elimination rounds in the
UEFA Champions League .*
Legia Warsaw (1995-96 - Quarter-finals)Notes and references
See also
*
Sports in Poland
*Polish national football team
*Orange Ekstraklasa
*Młoda Ekstraklasa
*Polish Championship in Football
*Polish Cup
*Polish SuperCup
*Polish Cup (women)
*Polish women's national football team
*
*Polish Roster in World Cup Soccer France 1938
*
*Polish soccer (football) in interwar period
*Football Junior Championships of Poland
*Polish Football League 1927-1939
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