ŁKS Łódź

ŁKS Łódź
fullname = Łódzki Klub Sportowy Spółka Sportowa
Nickname(s) Rycerze wiosny (Spring Knights)
Founded 1908
Ground Stadion ŁKS,
Łódź, Poland
(Capacity: 12,160 [1])
Chairman Jakub Urbanowicz
Manager Ryszard Tarasiewicz
League Ekstraklasa
2010/2011 Polish First League, 1st,
Home colours
Away colours
Current season

ŁKS Łódź (Łódzki Klub Sportowy) (Polish pronunciation: [ˌɛwkaˈɛs ˈwut͡ɕ]) is a Polish Sports Club which is publicly 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, Poland. The club was founded in 1908.

In 2009 the new Atlas Arena [2][3] 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 intend to construct a brand new stadium on the site of the current football stadium. It is intended to be complete in time for Euro 2012. Although Lodz is not a host city it is hoped the failure by the Ukraine to be ready on time [4] will lead to Poland hosting the entire tournament on its own and therefore requiring more host cities. There are currently 4 Polish host cities (Warsaw, Gdańsk, Poznań, Wrocław)and 2 back-up cities (Kraków, Chorzów), but 7-8 stadia would be required to host the tournament. It is envisioned the new stadium will hold approx 34,000 seats as required by UEFA.[5] 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 has been undermined by the re-call election of the Lodz City President in early 2010. The interim president has questioned the cost of the stadium. 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. The future of the project is therefore uncertain.[6]

Contents

Football Club

They have 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.

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

Achievements

Current squad

As of 30 August 2011

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

No. Position Player
2 DF Cezary Stefańczyk
3 MF Antoni Łukasiewicz
4 MF Tomasz Nowak
5 DF Marcin Adamski
6 DF Piotr Klepczarek
7 FW Maciej Bykowski
8 DF Michał Łabędzki
9 MF Marcin Smolinski
10 FW Marek Saganowski
11 FW Marcin Mięciel
12 GK Adrian Olszewski
13 GK Pavle Velimirović
14 MF Dariusz Kłus
No. Position Player
15 MF Radosław Pruchnik
18 DF Szymon Salski
19 MF Aghvan Papikyan
20 MF Artur Gieraga
21 FW Rafał Kujawa
22 MF Robert Szczot
23 MF Bartosz Romańczuk
25 MF Marcin Kaczmarek
26 FW Artur Golański
27 FW Patryk Kubicki
29 MF Mladen Kašćelan
30 GK Bogusław Wyparło (Captain)
44 DF Paweł Golański

Players out on loan

ŁKS in Europe

Season Competition Round Club Score
1959/60 European Cup Q Jeunesse Esch 0-5, 2-1
1994/95 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R FC Porto 0-2, 0-1
1996 Intertoto Cup GR KAMAZ Naberezhnye Chelny 0-3
PFC Spartak Varna 1-1
TSV 1860 München 0-5
Kaucuk Opava 0-5
1998/99 UEFA Champions League 1Q FC Kapaz Gandja 4-1, 3-1
2Q Manchester United 0-2, 0-0
UEFA Cup 1R AS Monaco 1-3, 0-0

Notable players

See also

References

External links