Błękitni Stargard

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Błękitni Stargard
Blekitni stargardsz.gif
Full nameKlub Sportowy
Błękitni Stargard
Founded18 May 1945; 76 years ago (1945-05-18)
GroundMunicipal Stadium
Stargard, Poland
Capacity2,850 seated
ChairmanPoland Robert Gajda
ManagerPoland Adam Topolski (men's)
LeagueIII liga (men's)
III liga, group II (women's)
IV liga, West Pomeranian group (men's reserves)

Błękitni Stargard is a Polish association football sports club from Stargard. The men's team is currently playing in the fourth-tier III liga, following their 2020–21 relegation from the II liga, the reserve men's team in the fifth division whereas the women's team is in the fourth division. There are also 11 different youth teams. It was formerly a multi-sports club.

History[]

On 18 May 1945, on the initiative of the athlete Tadeusz Świniarski, a participant of the 1946 European Athletics Championships, Błękitni, the first Polish sports club in Western Pomerania, was founded.[1] The football, boxing and athletics sections were all officially launched in 1945. Two years later, a volleyball section was added. Table tennis and swimming sections followed in 1948 and 1949, respectively.[1]

League history[]

In 1980–81, Błękitni finished second behind Gryf Słupsk at the third tier and won promotion to the II liga.[2] During the 1981/82 season, the team played in the second division[1] where they finished 15th out of 16 teams and were relegated back to the third tier.[3]

The club played the next 16 seasons in the III liga, managing to finish second on four separate occasions. However, none of these granted them promotion. In 1998, the club was relegated from the third tier having finished 10th.[4][Note 1] Błękitni spent the next two seasons at the fourth tier - in 1998/99 they were denied promotion by Kotwica Kołobrzeg but won their group next season. However, they didn't manage to keep their spot at the third tier and returned to the fourth level one year later.

After two promotions in succession, in 2002–03, the club returned to the second division [1] but was withdrawn at the halfway stage of the season, their results annulled.[5]

After being withdrawn from the second tier, Błękitni joined the IV liga, the fourth tier of Polish association football, in 2004 and played for the next nine seasons at that level.[Note 2] In 2013, the club won promotion to the third division and has been playing at the third tier since.

In the Polish Cup[]

The club had an unprecedented cup run during the 2014–15 season, reaching the semifinals of the Polish Cup. The club was playing in the third division at the time. In the first round, Błękitni won 6–1 with Małapanew Ozimek, lower-tier team. In the second round, the club already eliminated its first higher-level opponent winning 3–1 with Pogoń Siedlce and went on to win against Chojniczanka 1–0 the following round. Both of these opponents were playing in the second division at the time. In the 16th-finals eliminated a fourth-division team, Gryf Wejherowo, 2–1. The following round, Błękitni won with another second-tier team, GKS Tychy, 3–2 and advanced to the quarterfinals which were held in the spring of 2015. Then, having managed to achieve two surprise 2–0 wins, home and away, against Ekstraklasa side Cracovia in the quarterfinals, the team progressed to the semifinals, where they faced Lech Poznań. While Błęktini did win against Lech 3–1 at home, they were eventually knocked out by Lech in the return leg, after losing 1–3 in regular time. In extra time, Lech scored two goals to win the tie 6–4 on aggregate.[6]

Achievements[]

Association football (men's)[]

Table tennis[]

  • Second division: 1957, 1990–2000[1]

Current squad[]

As of 5 October 2020

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Poland POL Pawel Pelikan
3 MF Poland POL Tomasz Purczynski
4 DF Poland POL Błażej Klimek
5 DF Poland POL Jakub Sawczak
6 MF Poland POL Pawel Bednarski
7 MF Poland POL Michał Cywiński
8 DF Poland POL Hubert Krawczun
9 FW Poland POL Damian Niedojad
10 FW Poland POL Dawid Polkowski
11 MF Poland POL Oskar Ryk (on loan from Arka Gdynia)
12 GK Poland POL Konrad Skuza
13 DF Poland POL Jakub Mosakowski (on loan from Stomil Olsztyn)
14 DF Poland POL Bartosz Sitkowski
15 FW Poland POL Przemysław Brzeziański
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 FW Poland POL Wiktor Grzeszczak
17 DF Poland POL Aleksander Theus
18 MF Poland POL Błażej Starzycki (on loan from Pogoń Szczecin)
19 DF Poland POL Marcin Konopski
20 MF Poland POL Tomasz Kaczmarek
21 MF Poland POL Marcin Rajch
22 GK Poland POL Dominik Sasiak
23 MF Poland POL Mateusz Bochnak
24 DF Poland POL Krystian Kujawa
25 MF Poland POL Filip Karmański (on loan from GKS Jastrzębie)
26 FW Poland POL Dominik Lis
27 DF Poland POL Jakub Ostrowski
57 GK Poland POL Mariusz Rzepecki

Notes[]

  1. ^ After the 1997/98 season, more than half of the clubs at the third level were relegated due to the number of third league groups being reduced from 8 to 4.
  2. ^ In 2008, the fourth level was renamed to from IV liga to III liga. Since then, the division called IV liga is actually the fifth tier.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Historia Klubu Błękitni Stargard". Błękitni Stargard (in Polish). Archived from the original on 29 May 2018. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Błękitni Stargard Szczeciński - sezon 1980/81". Historia Polskiej Piłki Nożnej (in Polish). Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Błękitni Stargard Szczeciński - sezon 1981/82". Historia Polskiej Piłki Nożnej (in Polish). Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  4. ^ "Błękitni Stargard Szczeciński - sezon 1997/98". Historia Polskiej Piłki Nożnej (in Polish). Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  5. ^ "II liga 2003/2004". 90minut.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  6. ^ Paweł Mogielnicki. "Puchar Polski 2014/2015". 90minut.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 29 May 2018.

External links[]

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