- Mirosław Trzeciak
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Mirosław Trzeciak Personal information Full name Mirosław Wojciech Trzeciak Date of birth April 11, 1968 Place of birth Koszalin, Poland Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) Playing position Striker Youth career Gwardia Koszalin Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1987–1995 Lech Poznań 162 (45) 1995 Young Boys 12 (3) 1995–1996 Lech Poznań 28 (6) 1996 Maccabi Tel Aviv 0 (0) 1996–1998 ŁKS Łódź 56 (27) 1998–2001 Osasuna 68 (10) 2001–2003 Poli Ejido 25 (3) National team 1991–1999 Poland 22 (8) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Mirosław Wojciech Trzeciak (born 11 April 1968 in Koszalin), nicknamed Franek, is a retired Polish footballer who played as a striker.
Football career
During his career Trzeciak, a Gwardia Koszalin trainee, also represented Lech Poznań - two different spells - BSC Young Boys (Switzerland), Maccabi Tel Aviv (Israel, for a few months), ŁKS Łódź, CA Osasuna and Polideportivo Ejido (both in Spain). In the latter country, his La Liga totals consisted of ten matches during the 2000–01 season, spent with the Navarrese.
The best years of his career were spent in Lech Poznań, where he won three leagues, one cup and one supercup. For eight years, he was also a Polish international (22 caps, eight goals), but his best period arrived towards the end, during the Janusz Wójcik era (1997–99).
After his football career was over, Trzeciak stayed in Andalusia, with former club Poli Ejido, coaching its junior teams. Subsequently, he became a sports commentator in Poland. In January 2007, he began working as director of sport development for Legia Warsaw.
External links
- 90Minut player profile (Polish)
- BDFutbol profile
- Mirosław Trzeciak at National-Football-Teams.com
Polish Ekstraklasa top scorers 1927: Reyman • 1928: Gintel • 1929: Nastula • 1930: Kossok • 1931: Kisieliński • 1932: Kryszkiewicz • 1933: Woźniak • 1934: Wilimowski • 1935: Matyas • 1936: Peterek / Wilimowski • 1937: Woźniak • 1938: Peterek • 1939: Wilimowski • 1948: Kohut • 1949: Anioła • 1950: Anioła • 1951: Anioła • 1952: Cieślik • 1953: Cieślik • 1954: Kempny / Pohl • 1955: Hachorek • 1956: Kempny • 1957: Brychczy • 1958: Soporek • 1959: Liberda & Pohl • 1960: Norkowski • 1961: Pohl • 1962: Liberda • 1962–63: Kielec • 1963–64: Brychczy / Gałeczka / Wilim • 1964–65: Brychczy • 1965–66: Lubański • 1966–67: Lubański • 1967–68: Lubański • 1968–69: Lubański • 1969–70: Jarosik • 1970–71: Jarosik • 1971–72: Szymczak • 1972–73: Lato • 1973–74: Kapka • 1974–75: Lato • 1975–76: Kmiecik • 1976–77: Mazur • 1977–78: Kmiecik • 1978–79: Kmiecik • 1979–80: Kmiecik • 1980–81: Adamczyk • 1981–82: Kapica • 1982–83: Okoński / Tłokiński • 1983–84: Ciołek • 1984–85: Iwanicki • 1985–86: Zgutczyński • 1986–87: Leśniak • 1987–88: Dziekanowski • 1988–89: Warzycha • 1989–90: Juskowiak • 1990–91: Dziubiński • 1991–92: Podbrożny / Waligóra • 1992–93: Podbrożny • 1993–94: Burzawa • 1994–95: Cygan • 1995–96: Koniarek • 1996–97: Trzeciak • 1997–98: Bąk / Czereszewski / Śrutwa • 1998–99: Frankowski • 1999–00: Kompała • 2000–01: Frankowski • 2001–02: Żurawski • 2002–03: Svitlica • 2003–04: Żurawski • 2004–05: Frankowski • 2005–06: Piechna • 2006–07: Reiss • 2007–08: Brożek • 2008–09: Brożek / Chinyama 2009–10: Lewandowski 2010-11: Frankowski
Categories:- 1968 births
- Living people
- People from Koszalin
- Polish footballers
- Association football forwards
- Ekstraklasa players
- Lech Poznań players
- ŁKS Łódź players
- Swiss Super League players
- BSC Young Boys players
- Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. players
- La Liga footballers
- CA Osasuna footballers
- Polideportivo Ejido footballers
- Poland international footballers
- Polish expatriate footballers
- Expatriate footballers in Switzerland
- Expatriate footballers in Israel
- Expatriate footballers in Spain
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