Garbarnia Kraków

Garbarnia Kraków
Full nameRobotniczy Klub Sportowy
Garbarnia Kraków
Nickname(s)Brązowi (The Browns)
Młode Lwy (The Young Lions)
Garbarze (The Tanners)
Founded1921; 103 years ago (1921)
GroundStadion RKS Garbarnia
Capacity1,000[1]
ChairmanJacek Kaim
ManagersStanisław Śliwa & Dariusz Zawadzki
LeagueV liga Lesser Poland West
2023–24III liga, group IV, 10th of 18 (withdrew at the end of the season)
Websitehttps://garbarnia.krakow.pl

Garbarnia Kraków is a Polish football and sports club from Ludwinów, a historical district of the city of Kraków. The club's name comes from the nearby tannery (Polish: Garbarnia) of the Dłużyński brothers, which was the original club sponsor. After withdrawing from the III liga before the start of the 2024–25 season,[2] Garbarnia currently competes in the western group of the V liga Lesser Poland.

History

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Founded in 1921, Garbarnia's best years were the late 1920s and early 1930s. In 1928, after winning both regional and national qualifiers, the team was promoted to the Polish Football League. Then, in 1929, after an excellent campaign, they finished second to champions Warta Poznań, thus cementing their position as one of the top teams in Poland.

In 1931, Garbarnia went one better, becoming Polish Champions. Containing little home-grown talent, the Kraków starting lineup consisted of players brought in from other clubs. Among the top players were Otto Riesner and Karol Pazurek, both natives of Katowice, and both of whom played for the Poland national team.

In 1937, after 9 years in the top division, Garbarnia were relegated. They returned in 1939, in a season cut short by the outbreak of World War II.

After the Second World War Garbarnia never regained its status, playing mainly in the Polish Second Division, occasionally managing to win promotion to the first division, only to be relegated after a year or two. The worst was yet to come, as in 1971 the team was relegated to the third division, the Regional Kraków district league.

In 2018, Garbarnia returned to the second-tier after a 44-year absence. Garbarnia secured promotion after a promotion/relegation play-off win over Pogoń Siedlce.[3] In 2019, the club was again relegated to the II liga.[4]

Honours

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Players

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Current squad

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As of 21 January 2022

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 Dorian Frątczak
4 DF Poland POL Bartłomiej Niedzielski
5 DF Poland POL Mateusz Bartków
6 MF Poland POL Mateusz Duda
7 MF Poland POL Wojciech Słomka
8 MF Slovakia SVK Michal Klec
9 FW Poland POL Jakub Kuczera
10 MF Poland POL Kamil Kuczak
11 MF Poland POL Daniel Morys
15 MF Poland POL Grzegorz Marszalik
17 DF Poland POL Patryk Warczak (on loan from Wisła Kraków)
19 MF Poland POL Bartłomiej Korbecki
20 DF Poland POL Mateusz Kardas
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 DF Poland POL Jakub Banach
23 MF Poland POL Dawid Malik
24 MF Poland POL Kacper Ciuruś
28 GK Poland POL Bartosz Kieliszek
29 MF Poland POL Kacper Duda (on loan from Wisła Kraków)
31 DF Lithuania LTU Donatas Nakrošius
32 DF Poland POL Kamil Bentkowski
33 GK Poland POL Aleksander Kozioł
53 MF Poland POL Wiktor Szywacz (on loan from Wisła Kraków)
55 DF Poland POL Mateusz Surma
90 FW Poland POL Mateusz Grzybowski
98 MF Poland POL Bartłomiej Purcha
99 FW Poland POL Michał Feliks

Former players

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References

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  1. ^ "Stadion – RKS Garbarnia Kraków – oficjalny serwis klubu".
  2. ^ Pasternak, Dominik (29 July 2024). "Garbarnia Kraków wycofuje się z rozgrywek Betclic 3 Ligi". sport.tvp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 30 July 2024.
  3. ^ "Po 44 latach Garbarnia wraca do piłkarskiej pierwszej ligi". radiokrakow.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  4. ^ "Garbarnia spada do II ligi". podgorze.pl (in Polish). 29 April 2019. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
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