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Stal Mielec

Coordinates: 50°17′55″N 21°26′9″E / 50.29861°N 21.43583°E / 50.29861; 21.43583
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Stal Mielec
Stal Mielec, Polish football club
Full nameFKS Stal Mielec
Nickname(s)Biało-niebiescy (White-blues)
FoundedApril 10, 1939
GroundStadion Stali Mielec
Solskiego 1 Street,
Mielec, Poland Poland
Capacity7,000[1]
ChairmanPoland Jacek Orłowski
ManagerPoland Zbigniew Smółka
LeagueI liga
2016-1710th
Websitehttp://www.stalmielec.com/

Stal Mielec (Polish pronunciation: [ˈstal ˈmjɛlɛt͡s]) is a Polish football club based in Mielec, Poland. The club was established on April 10, 1939. Historically, the club has enjoyed great successes within Poland's Ekstraklasa Premier League, winning the title twice (in 1973 and 1976) but has undergone significant management changes and financial difficulties within the past two decades that have forced the club from participation in the Premier League. After winning the Polish third-tier league title in 2016, Stal Mielec was promoted to I Liga, the second-tier league.

Old Ground: Stadion Stali Mielec
Old Ground: Stadion Stali Mielec

Achievements

  • Ekstraklasa
    • 1st place: 1973, 1976
    • 2nd place: 1975
    • 3rd place: 1974, 1979, 1982
  • Polish Cup
    • Finalists: 1976
  • Youth Teams:
    • Polish U-19 Runner Up: 1964, 2007
    • Polish U-19 Bronze Medal: 1968, 1969, 2006
    • Polish U-17 Champion: 2007
    • Polish U-17 Runner Up: 1996, 2012

Participation in European cups

Lower League Championships

  • B Class: 1949
  • A Class: 1950, 1954
  • II Liga: 1955, 1968–69, 2015–16
  • I Liga: 1960, 1969-70 (as 2nd), 1984–85, 1987–88
  • V Liga: 1998-99
  • IV Liga: 2007-08 (as 4th)
  • III Liga: 2012-13

Stadium

New Ground: Stadion Stali Mielec

The construction of the club's current stadium, Stadion Stali Mielec at Solskiego 1, was concluded in 1953. The stadium went under a major renovation. It maintains a seating capacity for 7,000 spectators. Before the renovation, it maintained seating capacity for 30,000 spectators, and has hosted numerous European Champions Cup, UEFA Cup, and Polish national team matches, including FIFA World Cup and UEFA European Championship qualifiers.

Individual Player Awards

Ekstraklasa Premier League Top Goalscorer

  • 1973 - Grzegorz Lato - 13 goals
  • 1975 - Grzegorz Lato - 19 goals
  • 1995 - Bogusław Cygan - 16 goals

Award given by Piłka Nożna:

  • Player of the Year
  • Newcomer of the Year
    • 1975 - Zbigniew Hnatio
    • 1978 - Włodzimierz Ciołek

Award given by Przegląd Sportowy

  • Polish Athlete of the Year
    • 1974 - 4th place - Grzegorz Lato
    • 1977 - 5th place - Grzegorz Lato

Award given by Sport

  • Player of the Year
    • 1974 - Grzegorz Lato
    • 1976 - Henryk Kasperczak
    • 1977 - Grzegorz Lato

Award given by Tempo

  • Goalkeeper of the Year
    • 1979 - Zygmunt Kukla

Current squad

As of 6 February 2018.[2]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Poland POL Rafał Strączek
3 DF Poland POL Krzysztof Kiercz
4 DF Slovakia SVK Martin Dobrotka
5 DF Poland POL Szymon Przystalski
6 DF Brazil BRA Leândro
7 FW Poland POL Szymon Sobczak
8 MF Poland POL Tomasz Swędrowski
10 MF Poland POL Waldemar Gancarczyk
11 DF Poland POL Mateusz Gancarczyk
13 MF Poland POL Przemysław Lech
15 MF Poland POL Arkadiusz Górka
16 MF Croatia CRO Josip Šoljić
17 MF Poland POL Bartosz Nowak (on loan from Legia Warsaw)
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 FW Poland POL Jakub Arak (on loan from Lechia Gdańsk)
19 MF Poland POL Konrad Misztal
20 FW Slovenia SVN Dejan Djermanovic
22 MF Poland POL Michał Janota
23 DF Poland POL Krystian Getinger
26 DF Poland POL Dominik Sadzawicki
27 MF Poland POL Piotr Marciniec
30 FW Poland POL Łukasz Wroński
33 FW Poland POL Maksymilian Banaszewski
51 DF Poland POL Rafał Grodzicki
88 GK Poland POL Marek Kozioł
99 GK Poland POL Radosław Majecki (on loan from Legia Warsaw)
FW Slovenia SVN Žiga Škoflek

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Poland POL Tomasz Prejs (At KP Starogard Gdanski until 30 June 2018)

Famous players

Managers

Naming History

  • 1939 - KS PZL Mielec
  • 1946 - RKS PZL Zryw Mielec
  • 1949 - ZKS Stal Mielec
  • 1957 - FKS Stal Mielec
  • 1977 - FKS PZL Stal Mielec
  • 1995 - MKP Mielec
  • 1998 - MKP Lobo Stal Mielec
  • 1997 - MKP Stal Mielec
  • 2002 - KS Stal Mielec
  • 2003 - KS FKS Stal Mielec

See also

References

  1. ^ Stadion Stali Mielec at stalmielec.com
  2. ^ "Stal Mielec squad". Stal Mielec. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  3. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34
  4. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34&page=2
  5. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34&page=3
  6. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34&page=4
  7. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34&page=5
  8. ^ http://stalmielec.com/?page_id=34&page=7

50°17′55″N 21°26′9″E / 50.29861°N 21.43583°E / 50.29861; 21.43583