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ŁKS Łódź

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ŁKS Łódź
Full nameŁódzki Klub Sportowy Spółka Sportowa
Nickname(s)Rycerze wiosny (Knights of Spring)
Founded1908
2008 (first reformation)
2013 (second reformation)
GroundStadion ŁKS,
Łódź, Poland
Capacity2200
ChairmanŁukasz Bielawski
ManagerRobert Szwarc
LeagueIII liga (4th level)

ŁKS Łódź (Łódzki Klub Sportowy; Polish pronunciation: [ˌɛwkaˈɛs ˈwut͡ɕ]) is a Polish sports club that is owned by Łódź city council. They are best known for their football club, but are represented in many sports such as basketball, volleyball, tennis, athletics and in the past ice hockey. The club is based at Al. Unii Lubelskiej 2 in the West of Łódź. The club was founded in 1908. The football section had since been sold to private investors as the city could no longer afford to support it.[1] After years of financial hardships, the club declared bankruptcy in May 2013.[2] It will start from Fifth Category the next season, when it will be re-founded by a partnership between fans and local investors. It is still based at the Stadion LKS.

Their nickname "Rycerze Wiosny" ("Knights of Spring") has been given to them due to their usually strong performance in the second round of the league, after Winter break.

Facilities

1936 ŁKS side.
Club crest 2008–2013

In 2009 the new Atlas Arena[3][4] was completed adjacent to the football stadium. It is an indoor arena and has already hosted international events in basketball, volleyball and boxing.

The City council still intend to construct a brand new stadium on the site of the current football stadium. It was intended to be complete in time for UEFA Euro 2012, but now is expected to be finished in late 2013-early 2014. Although Łódź is not a Euro 2012 host city, it had been believed that a failure by Ukraine to be ready on time[5] would lead to Poland hosting the entire tournament on its own and therefore requiring more host cities. There were four Polish host cities (Warsaw, Gdańsk, Poznań and Wrocław) involved in hosting the tournament. It was envisioned the new stadium will hold approximately 34,000 seats, as required by UEFA.[6] Due to their rivalry, Widzew Łódź have ruled out using this new stadium and instead intend to rebuild their own stadium. Support for the project was undermined by the successful re-call of the Łódź city president in early 2010. The city has also announced a public auction for their stake in the club as they can no longer afford to cover the clubs loses. Due to financial constraints and lack of demand from LKS fans, the stadium size was scaled down to 16,500 in 2012.[7][8]

As part of renovations, a new 3,000 seat arena was supposed to be built to compliment the existing Atlas Arena. All work was expected to cost 218 million PLN.

All plans to provide the club with new facilities, however, have been abandoned as of 2013, due to financial constraints and the bankruptcy of the club in May 2013.[9]

Rivalries

The club has a fierce rivalry with cross-town club Widzew Łódź, with the derby match between the two clubs being intense both on and off the field. See Łódź derby

Achievements

The new ground
  • Ekstraklasa (First division):
    • 1st Place (2): 1958, 1998
    • 2nd Place (1): 1954
    • 3rd Place (3): 1922, 1957, 1993
  • Polish Cup:
    • Winner (1): 1957
    • Finalist (1): 1994
  • Polish SuperCup:
    • Finalist (2): 1994, 1998
  • Youth Teams:
    • Polish U-19 Champion: 1962, 1983, 1999
    • Polish U-19 Runner-up: 1953, 1955, 1973, 2002
    • Polish U-19 Bronze Medal: 1971, 1981
    • Polish U-17 Champion: 1994, 1999

Current squad

As of 4 April 2016

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Poland POL Adam Sekuterski
2 MF Poland POL Michał Stryjewski
3 MF Poland POL Damian Nowacki
4 MF Poland POL Marcin Kacela
5 DF Poland POL Mariusz Cichowlas
6 DF Poland POL Damian Pawlak
7 MF Poland POL Artur Golański
8 DF Poland POL Kamil Rozmus
9 FW Poland POL Rafał Barzyc
10 FW Poland POL Adam Patora
11 MF Brazil BRA Maurício Martins Rodrigues
12 GK Poland POL Mikołaj Gorzelański
13 MF Poland POL Fabian Woźniak
14 MF Poland POL Patryk Bryła
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 MF Poland POL Przemysław Kocot
16 MF Poland POL Dawid Sarafiński
17 DF Poland POL Bartosz Placek
18 DF Poland POL Aleksander Ślęczka
19 MF Poland POL Mateusz Krysiński
20 DF Poland POL Aleksander Ślęzak
21 DF Poland POL Paweł Pyciak
22 MF Poland POL Tomasz Ostalczyk
23 DF Poland POL Radosław Jacek
24 FW Poland POL Adrian Świątek
25 GK Poland POL Michał Kołba
26 MF Poland POL Damian Henc
28 DF Poland POL Marcin Zimoń

ŁKS in Europe

The old ground
Season Competition Round Club Score
1959–60 European Cup Q Luxembourg Jeunesse Esch 0–5, 2–1
1994–95 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R Portugal Porto 0–2, 0–1
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup GR Russia KAMAZ 0–3
Bulgaria Spartak Varna 1–1
Germany 1860 Munich 0–5
Czech Republic Kaučuk Opava 0–3
1998–99 UEFA Champions League 1Q Azerbaijan Kapaz 4–1, 3–1
2Q England Manchester United 0–2, 0–0
UEFA Cup 1R France Monaco 1–3, 0–0

Notable players

Managers

See also

References