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Pogoń Szczecin (women)

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Pogoń Szczecin
Founded2002; 22 years ago (2002)
GroundStadion Nehringa, Szczecin
Capacity1,500
ChairmanMaciej Buryta
ManagerPiotr Łęczyński
LeagueEkstraliga
2023–24Ekstraliga, 1st of 12 (champions)

Pogoń Szczecin is a women's football club from Szczecin, Poland, the women's section of Pogoń Szczecin. It competes in the Ekstraliga, the country's top division (as of 2024–25).

Honours

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  • Polish Cup
    • Runners-up: 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11

History

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The team was founded as TKKF Gryf Szczecin.[1]

The team reached the Ekstraliga for the first time in 2010. In its debut season in the top division Gryf finished 4th,[2] and it subsequently became Pogoń's women team. It has been successful in the national cup, reaching the final for three seasons in a row between 2009 and 2011. In them Gryf lost once to AZS Wrocław and twice to Unia Racibórz.[3]

The team was dissolved after the 2012–13 season.[4] In 2022, the women's football section of Pogoń Szczecin was reactivated by merging the former women's club Olimpia Szczecin with Pogoń Szczecin.[5] It won its first Polish Championship title in the 2023–24 season.

Historical squads

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2012–13 squad

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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
GK Poland POL Anita Piotrowska
GK Poland POL Anna Szymańska
DF Poland POL Patrycja Balcerzak
DF Poland POL Monika Kaźmierczak
DF Poland POL Marlena Kowalik
DF Poland POL Aneta Legęć
DF Poland POL Joanna Pałaszewska
DF Latvia LVA Anna Propošina
DF Poland POL Mariola Żyła
MF Poland POL Nataly Barlage
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Poland POL Kasia Barlewicz
MF Poland POL Natalia Gumuła
MF Poland POL Daria Kasperska
MF Poland POL Małgorzata Ładniak
MF Poland POL Jola Siwińska
MF Poland POL Emilia Zdunek
MF Latvia LVA Jūlija Levčenko
FW Romania ROU Monika Sinka
FW Romania ROU Zsuzsanna Sinka

Club statistics

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Season League Place W D L GF GA Pts Cup
2002–03 II liga, grupa: wielkopolska (II)[6] 6 3 0 17 29 138 9
2003–04 II liga, grupa: wielkopolska (II) 6 5 2 9 23 52 17
2004–05 II liga, grupa: wielkopolska (II) 4 4 2 4 20 24 14
2005–06 II liga, grupa: wielkopolska (III) 2 7 1 2 22 8 22 round of 32
2006–07 II liga, grupa: zachodniopomorska (III) 1 10 0 0 46 8 30 round of 16
2007–08 I liga, grupa: północna (II) 6 5 3 6 17 23 18
2008–09 I liga, grupa: zachodnia (II) 2 9 2 3 43 17 29 runner-up
2009–10 I liga, grupa: północna (II) 1 13 1 1 64 8 40 runner-up
2010–11 Ekstraliga (I) 4 10 3 5 29 21 33 runner-up
2011–12 Ekstraliga (I)[7] 4 10 2 6 43 16 32 round of 16[8]
2012–13 Ekstraliga (I)[4] 10[note 1] 5 1 12 12 37 16 round of 16[9]
2022–23 Ekstraliga (I)[10] 5 12 1 9 42 30 37 semi-final[11]
2023–24 Ekstraliga (I) 1 16 3 3 63 16 51 round of 32[12]
2024–25 Ekstraliga (I)
Green marks a season followed by promotion, red a season followed by relegation.

Notes

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  1. ^ Pogoń Szczecin Women withdrew from the competition after the 10th round.

References

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  1. ^ "Skarb - Pogoń Szczecin Women (k)". 90minut (in Polish).
  2. ^ 2010–11 table in Soccerway.com
  3. ^ List of finals in RSSSF.com
  4. ^ a b "Ekstraliga kobiet 2012/2013". 90minut (in Polish).
  5. ^ "Od nowego sezonu Olimpia stanie się Pogonią". Kobiecy Futbol (in Polish). 17 May 2022. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  6. ^ "Skarb - TKKF Gryf Szczecin (K)".
  7. ^ "Ekstraliga kobiet 2011/2012". 90minut (in Polish).
  8. ^ "Puchar Polski kobiet 2011/2012". 90minut (in Polish).
  9. ^ "Puchar Polski kobiet 2012/2013". 90minut (in Polish).
  10. ^ "Orlen Ekstraliga kobiet 2022/2023". 90minut (in Polish). Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  11. ^ "Orlen Puchar Polski kobiet 2022/2023". 90minut (in Polish). Retrieved 10 June 2024.
  12. ^ "Orlen Puchar Polski kobiet 2023/2024". 90minut (in Polish). Retrieved 10 June 2024.
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