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Wikipedia

Ruch Chorzów

Ruch Chorzów (Polish: [ˈrux ˈxɔʐuf] ) is a Polish association football club based in Chorzów, Upper Silesia. It is one of the most successful football teams in Poland, having won fourteen league titles, and the Polish Cup thrice. They currently compete in the Polish Ekstraklasa. Ruch's home venue is the Ruch Stadium, with a capacity of 9,300 seats.[1] As it is currently under renovation, Ruch temporarily hosts their games at the Stadion Śląski with a capacity of 55,211 seats. The club is known for its Silesian identity.[2] Ruch Chorzów has also had a very successful female handball team (9 times national champions).

Ruch Chorzów
Full nameKlub Sportowy Ruch Chorzów
Nickname(s)Niebiescy (The Blues),
Niebieska eRka (The Blue R),
HKS (from Hajducki Klub Sportowy)
Founded20 April 1920; 103 years ago (1920-04-20)
GroundRuch Stadium
Stadion Śląski
Capacity9,300[1]
55,211
ChairmanSeweryn Siemianowski
ManagerJanusz Niedźwiedź
LeagueEkstraklasa
2022–23I liga, 2nd of 18 (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Names edit

Years Name
1920–1923 KS Ruch Bismarkhuta
1923 KS Ruch Wielkie Hajduki
1923–c. 1924 KS Ruch BBC Wielkie Hajduki
c. 1924–1939 KS Ruch Wielkie Hajduki
1939–1948 KS Ruch Chorzów
1948–1949 ZKS Ruch Chorzów
1949 KS Chemik Chorzów
1949–1955 ZS Unia Chorzów
1955–c. 1956 ZKS Unia-Ruch Chorzów
c. 1956–2002 KS Ruch Chorzów
2002–2004 KS Ruch w Chorzowie
2004–2008 Ruch Chorzów SSA
2008–2017 Ruch Chorzów SA
2017–2018 Ruch Chorzów SA w restrukturyzacji
2018–current Ruch Chorzów SA

History edit

The club was founded on 20 April 1920 in Bismarkhuta (German Bismarckhütte, historically Hajduki), one of the many heavily industrialised municipalities in the eastern part of Upper Silesia, a disputed province between Poland and Germany. The main incentive was an appeal of the Polish Plebiscite Committee a few months earlier that led to creation of around one hundred sport associations. It took place in between the first and second Silesian Uprisings, to which the name Ruch is a supposed cover reference.[3] The Polish word ruch is however also a common noun for movement, not as strongly associated with Polishness as names of many other clubs established after the appeal (like Polonia, Powstaniec etc.). On the other hand, the club's first match, a 3:1 win against Orzeł Józefowiec, was played on 3 May 1920, the day of the first Polish Constitution. After the Upper Silesia plebiscite and the third Silesian Uprising in 1921 Bismarkhuta became part of Poland and the Silesian Voivodeship. The municipality was renamed to Wielkie Hajduki on 1 January 1923,[4] hence the club was known as Ruch Wielkie Hajduki until another merger into the town Chorzów (created in 1934 from amalgamation of Królewska Huta, Chorzów and Hajduki Nowe) in the early 1939, with a short period in 1923 after the fusion with the older local German club Bismarckhütter Ballspiel Club, when it was known as Ruch BBC Wielkie Hajduki. After the merger the team played its games on the former BBC's pitch known as na Kalinie.[5] The popular nickname of the club Niebiescy (The Blues) clung to the team already in the 1920s.[6]

 
Ruch Wielkie Hajduki, Silesian Vice-Champions in 1924

In autumn of 1920 Ruch won the promotion to the nascent Silesian Klasa A (see also: Lower Level Football Leagues in Interwar Poland). The Blues were third out of fourteen teams in its first season, unfinished due to the third Silesian Uprising. The next year Ruch won the championship of the Silesian Klasa A and represented the region in the 1922 Polish Football Championship. In 1924 the club finished second in the regional top league, behind AKS Królewska Huta, before 1924 considered German and known as Verein für Rasenspiele Königshütte, the first team Ruch had developed a local rivalry with. In 1925 the Silesian Klasa A did not play, instead Stanisław Flieger's Cup took place, ultimately won by Ruch, which gave the side a start in the only interwar Polish Cup competition in 1926. On 4 July 1926 Józef Sobota, before 1920 a BBC's player, became the first Ruch's player (and the fourth from Upper Silesia) of the Poland national team, who also scored a goal (against Estonia). In the same year, two weeks after the national Cup Ruch won for the second time the regional Klasa A, firmly establishing itself as one of the strongest football clubs in this densely populated region and as such it was among the founding clubs of the Polish national league in 1927. In 1933 Ruch won its first Championship as the first side from Silesia, with all the players who were born not further as a few kilometers from the na Kalinie pitch.[7] Thus the first truly golden era began. The local steel mill (since 1934 known as Huta Batory) began to financially support the side. In the winter of 1933 the most noteworthy players such as Edmund Giemsa, Teodor Peterek and Gerard Wodarz were joined by legendary Ernst Wilimowski, bought from 1. FC Kattowitz, who with Peterek and Wodarz were collectively nicknamed the three kings and helped to win another 4 championships (1934, 1935, 1936, 1938). On 1 November 1934 the club, as the last in the league, employed its first coach, Gustav Wieser.[8] The side was also a leader in the unfinished season 1939. The successes rendered the club the most popular in the voivodeship and accelerated building of the new stadium in the years 1934-1935, the current Ruch Stadium.

 
Ruch in 1938

After the German occupation of Poland in 1939, the club was officially discontinued but unofficially was simply renamed Bismarckhütter SV 99 and joined the Gauliga Oberschlesien in 1941.[9] The club was officially re-established after the war. In 1947 Ruch won the regional championships. In 1948, under communist pressure (Stalinisation), the club was renamed Unia Chorzów, in 1955 it became Unia-Ruch, and finally in 1956 returned to the name Ruch. As Unia the club finished third in the first season of the reactivated national league in 1948 and in 1950 as the second team. In 1951 the club won the reactivated Polish Cup edition and were rewarded with the title of the National Champions (even though they were only sixth in the league). The next two years the club also won the title, first in 1952 after final against Polonia Bytom, another local bitter rival, and in 1953 after finishing the league on the top position. The most renowned player of that era was Gerard Cieślik, who dedicated his whole life to the club and became its icon.

 
Ruch in 1968

The years 1957-1966 are considered a lost decade, completely overshadowed by the successes of the new biggest regional rival, Górnik Zabrze, even though the club won the championships in 1960. A record of its kind in the national football history as the team consisted of only 14 players, 11 of whom originated in the town of Chorzów. The turn of the tide came in the season 1967–68 when Ruch won the 10th championship title breaking Górnik Zabrze's streak of five consecutive titles. Another golden era for the Blues arrived in the early 1970s with Michal Vičan as a coach. In 1972–73 the club finished second, in 1973–74 they won the only double in the history (the championship and the cup) and advanced up to the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup. In 1974–75 they again won the league and qualified to the quarter-finals of the European Cup. The most praised players of that times were Bronisław Bula, Zygmunt Maszczyk and Joachim Marx.

These successes were followed by a bad financial plight and mediocre results until 1978–79, when the club won its 13th Championship title. In the 1980s the club was one of the poorest in the national league. The worst came in the season 1986–87, when the club, the only one in the country which so far played all the seasons of the official national top league, was relegated to the second tier. Especially shifty were the circumstances of the relegation decider, against Lechia Gdańsk, when Ruch's goalkeeper Janusz Jojko scored an infamous and bizarre own goal and the club lost the game 1:2.[10] After one year Ruch returned to the top flight as winners of the seconed league and won the 14th Championship title, as the second freshly-promoted club in the national history (the first was Cracovia in 1937), a feat, especially as it was still one of the poorest clubs in the top tier and over half of the players were home-grown,[11] including e.g. Dariusz Gęsior and the most renowned Krzysztof Warzycha, who was also, with 24 goals, the top scorer of the season.

After the political turnover in Poland in 1989, Ruch did not fare well for the first two seasons. The funds from the transfer of Krzysztof Warzycha to Panathinaikos ran out quickly. The team began to compete with the top teams first in 1991–92 finishing in the fifth spot, fourth the next year, furthermore the second team (Ruch II) reached the Polish cup final. Ruch was demoted for the second time in the history in the 1994–95 season. As before the stay in the second tier lasted one season. While playing in the second league Ruch won its third Polish Cup trophy. In 1998 Ruch reached the final of the UEFA Intertoto Cup and in the 1999–2000 season finished third in the league. The crisis came during the 2002–03 campaign, when the club was relegated from the top tier for the third time. In the following season, Ruch was in danger of being demoted to the third tier for the first time in history, however the club won the relegation play-offs against Stal Rzeszów (1–1, 2–0). In 2005, the club was restructured as a joint-stock company. The Blues won the promotion to the top flight in the 2006–07 season. In 2009, the side reached the Polish Cup final, the next year The Blues finished third in the league. The best season in the recent history was 2011–12, when Ruch was vice-champion (only 1 point behind the champions, Śląsk Wrocław) and reached the final of the national cup, which they lost 0–3 to Legia Warsaw.

In 2017, it was decided that for the first time in the history of Polish football, in accordance with the Restructuring Law, SA will initiate an accelerated arrangement procedure aimed at agreeing the terms of debt repayment with creditors. These proceedings were opened before the Katowice District Court on 23 June 2017.[12] In these proceedings all 255 creditors were offered to reduce the debt, spread it into installments or convert the debt into club shares. On 30 November 2017 creditors gathered in court to decide whether or not to accept the offer. The majority agreed and the agreement was adopted, ultimately the agreement became final on 13 March 2018.[13] According to the provisions of the agreement, Ruch is to repay PLN 8 million złoty within 5 years. Installments are spread over 400 thousand złoty every quarter.

Ruch started the 2017–18 season in Nice I liga with a six-point deduction for unpaid debts. After a disastrous season in which the Blues suffered heavy defeats, including 0–6 in a home match against Pogoń Siedlce on the club's 98th anniversary, a 6–1 away defeat against Miedź Legnica and a 6–0 away loss to Wigry Suwałki, the club finished last in the league, being 11 points off the play-off place, which resulted in the first relegation to the third level in Ruch's history.

Ruch ended the 2018–19 season in the II liga in last place, eight points off of safety. It was the third season in a row in which the Blues were relegated from last place in the table.

In 2020–21, Ruch dominated group III of the III liga and were promoted to the II liga, 11 points ahead of second placed Polonia Bytom.

Ruch finished the 2021–22 season in third place, qualifying for the promotion play-offs. In the semi-finals, the team faced Radunia Stężyca, which they beat 1–0 after a goal from Daniel Szczepan in the 118th minute.[14] The final was played in Chorzów, where Ruch faced 5th placed Motor Lublin - on 29 May, Ruch won 4–0 and was promoted for the second season in a row, returning to the I liga for the first time since the 2017–18 season.[15]

Ruch finished the 2022–23 season as runners-up, after defeating GKS Tychy 1–0 on the last matchday, with the sole goal scored again by Daniel Szczepan. In result, Ruch returned to Ekstraklasa after 7 years of absence, with a streak of three straight promotions.

Achievements edit

  • ^ (In 1951, Wisła Kraków was the league champion, however, the championship title was awarded to the Cup winners, Ruch Chorzów.)
  • Current squad edit

    As of 23 February 2024[16]

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

    No. Pos. Nation Player
    1 GK   POL Michał Buchalik
    2 DF   POL Konrad Kasolik
    4 DF   POL Przemysław Szur
    5 MF   POL Tomasz Wójtowicz
    6 DF   ESP Josema
    7 MF   POL Juliusz Letniowski (on loan from Widzew Łódź)
    8 MF   POL Patryk Sikora
    10 MF   POL Tomasz Foszmańczyk (captain)
    13 MF   POL Łukasz Moneta
    16 MF   CZE Jan Sedlák
    17 MF   POL Dawid Barnowski
    19 FW   POL Michał Feliks (on loan from Radomiak Radom)
    20 MF   POL Szymon Szymański
    21 DF   POL Maciej Sadlok
    22 MF   POL Filip Starzyński
    23 FW   POL Artur Pląskowski
    No. Pos. Nation Player
    24 MF   POL Bartłomiej Barański
    26 MF   POL Kacper Michalski
    27 MF   POL Wiktor Długosz (on loan from Raków Częstochowa)
    32 GK   POL Marcel Potoczny
    33 FW   POL Mike Huras
    36 GK   CRO Dante Stipica (on loan from Pogoń Szczecin)
    54 MF   POL Filip Wilak (on loan from Lech Poznań)
    59 DF   POL Patryk Stępiński
    70 MF   POL Miłosz Kozak
    71 DF   POL Remigiusz Szywacz
    77 DF   POL Mateusz Bartolewski
    82 GK   POL Jakub Bielecki
    86 FW   HUN Soma Novothny
    88 MF   CZE Adam Vlkanova (on loan from Viktoria Plzeň)
    95 FW   POL Daniel Szczepan
    96 MF   POL Robert Dadok

    Out on loan edit

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

    No. Pos. Nation Player
    11 FW   POL Igor Stasiński (at Szombierki Bytom until 30 June 2024)
    MF   POL Kacper Skwierczyński (at Waterford until 31 December 2024)

    Managerial history edit

    [17]

     
    Name From To
      Gustav Wieser Oct 1934 July 1935
      Günther Ringer Aug 1936 Nov 1937
      Ferenc Fogl June 1938 Jan 1939
      Péter Szabó Jan 1939 July 1939
      František Dembický Jan 1948 Dec 1948
      Gerard Wodarz July 1949 Dec 1949
      Ryszard Koncewicz Jan 1950 June 1952
      Ewald Cebula July 1952 June 1954
      Adam Niemiec July 1954 Dec 1956
      Mikołaj Beljung Feb 1957 Oct 1957
      Czesław Suszczyk Oct 1957 Dec 1957
      Janos Steiner Jan 1958 Dec 1958
      Ewald Cebula Jan 1959 Dec 1959
      Janos Steiner Jan 1960 May 1960
      Ewald Cebula May 1960 June 1960
      Lajos Szolár June 1960 Dec 1960
      Gerard Wodarz Jan 1961 April 1961
      Gerard Cieślik April 1961 July 1961
      Sándor Tátrai July 1961 Oct 1963
      Franciszek Tim Oct 1963 Nov 1963
      Augustyn Dziwisz Dec 1963 Sept 1964
      Artur Woźniak Sept 1964 June 1966
      Teodor Wieczorek July 1966 April 1969
      Eugeniusz Pohl
      Hubert Pala
    May 1969 June 1969
      Jerzy Nikiel July 1969 Nov 1969
      Tadeusz Foryś Dec 1969 June 1971
      Hubert Pala June 1971 June 1971
      Michal Vičan July 1971 April 1976
      Rudolf Kapera April 1976 June 1976
      Frantisek Havranek July 1976 Oct 1977
      Teodor Wieczorek Oct 1977 June 1978
      Leszek Jezierski June 1978 Nov 1980
      Antoni Piechniczek Nov 1980 Jan 1981
      Józef Zwierzyna Jan 1981 Sept 1981
      Piotr Czaja Sept 1981 May 1982
      Orest Lenczyk 1 July 1982 1 Feb 1984
     
    Name From To
      Alojzy Łysko Feb 1984 Dec 1984
      Władysław Jan Żmuda 1 Jan 1985 1 May 1987
      Jacek Góralczyk April 1987 May 1987
      Jacek Machciński May 1987 July 1987
      Jerzy Wyrobek 1 July 1987 1 July 1990
      Zdzisław Podedworny July 1990 March 1991
      Edward Lorens 1 April 1991 1 May 1994
      Albin Wira 3 May 1994 4 May 1995
      Jerzy Wyrobek 5 May 1995 23 Sept 1996
      Orest Lenczyk 24 Sept 1996 23 March 1999
      Edward Lorens 23 March 1999 30 June 2000
      Jan Żurek 1 July 2000 21 Aug 2000
      Jan Rudnow Aug 2000 Dec 2000
      Bogusław Pietrzak 1 Dec 2000 11 April 2002
      Orest Lenczyk 11 April 2002 9 Oct 2002
      Piotr Mandrysz 10 Oct 2002 30 June 2003
      Jerzy Wyrobek 1 July 2003 5 May 2005
      Dariusz Fornalak 5 May 2005 22 Nov 2005
      Edward Lorens 22 Nov 2005 27 Nov 2005
      Marek Wleciałowski 28 Nov 2005 15 June 2007
      Dusan Radolsky 15 June 2007 10 Sept 2008
      Bogusław Pietrzak 10 Sept 2008 27 April 2009
      Waldemar Fornalik 27 April 2009 10 July 2012
      Tomasz Fornalik 12 July 2012 5 Sept 2012
      Jacek Zielinski 5 Sept 2012 16 Sept 2013
      Dariusz Fornalak (int.) 16 Sept 2013 18 Sept 2013
      Ján Kocian 18 Sept 2013 6 Oct 2014
      Waldemar Fornalik 7 Oct 2014 22 Apr 2017
      Krzysztof Warzycha 24 Apr 2017 10 Sep 2017
      Juan Ramón Rocha 10 Sep 2017 5 Apr 2018
      Dariusz Fornalak 5 Apr 2018 1 Nov 2018
      Marek Wleciałowski 1 Nov 2018 18 Apr 2019
      Karol Michalski 18 Apr 2019 18 Jun 2019
      Łukasz Bereta 18 Jun 2019 23 Jun 2021
      Jarosław Skrobacz 24 Jun 2021 6 Nov 2023
      Jan Woś 6 Nov 2023 29 Dec 2023
      Janusz Niedźwiedź 29 Dec 2023 current

    Ruch in Europe edit

    Season Competition Round Club Score
    1972–73 UEFA Cup 1R   Fenerbahçe 3–0, 0–1
    2R   Dynamo Dresden 0–1, 0–3
    1973–74 UEFA Cup 1R   Wuppertaler SV 4–1, 4–5
    2R   Carl Zeiss Jena 3–0, 0–1
    3R   Budapest Honvéd 0–2, 5–0
    QF   Feyenoord 1–1, 1–3
    1974–75 European Cup 1R   Hvidovre IF 0–0, 2–1
    2R   Fenerbahçe 2–1, 2–0
    QF   Saint-Étienne 3–2, 0–2
    1975–76 European Cup 1R   KuPS 5–0, 2–2
    2R   PSV Eindhoven 1–3, 0–4
    1979–80 European Cup 1R   Dynamo Berlin 1–4, 0–0
    1989–90 European Cup 1R   CSKA Sofia 1–1, 1–5
    1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Q   Llansantffraid 1–1, 5–0
    1R   Benfica 1–5, 0–0
    1998 Intertoto Cup 1R   Austria Wien 1–0, 2–2
    2R   Örgryte 1–2, 1–0
    3R   Estrela da Amadora 1–1, 1–1
    4R   Debrecen 1–0, 3–0
    5R   Bologna 0–1, 0–2
    2000–01 UEFA Cup Q   Žalgiris Vilnius 1–2, 6–0
    1R   Inter Milan 0–3, 1–4
    2010–11 UEFA Europa League 1Q   Shakhter Karagandy 2–1, 1–0
    2Q   Valletta 1–1, 0–0
    3Q   Austria Wien 1–3, 0–3
    2012–13 UEFA Europa League 2Q   Metalurg Skopje 3–1, 3–0
    3Q   Viktoria Plzeň 0–2, 0–5
    2014–15 UEFA Europa League 2Q   FC Vaduz 3–2, 0–0
    3Q   Esbjerg 0–0, 2–2
    PO   Metalist Kharkiv 0–0, 0–1 (a.e.t)

    Crest edit

    Ruch Chorzów has a very specific crest and is one of the most recognizable football crests in Poland. There isn't information who was the author of the prototype and in which year the crest was used for the first time. The oldest confirmed source is letterhead from 1929. The club colours are blue and white. They accompany the team from the very beginning of the club's existence and already in the twenties it was written about Ruch - "Niebiescy" (en. The Blues). This color has become the symbol of the club. Except for the emblem of Unia Chorzów (around 1949-1955), the shield of the crest has always been, more or less precisely, the blue Reuleaux triangle with the club's full name on the rim. The white center of the sign is filled with an acronym. In the late 1980s, the monogram was decorated with thin lines, emphasizing the activity, militancy and mobility of the signet itself, and thereby reflecting the name of the club in a slightly expressive way (Ruch means Movement in English). In September 2007, it was decided to make a facelift of the logo, which was to be a sign of the continuous evolution of the brand of Ruch Chorzów. Shading was introduced to the sign in order to plasticize the drawing, give depth and spaciousness to the whole crest. In this way, they tried to show the spirit of nowadays and to gain the identity of a modern and attractive brand. However, trends for gradients quickly passed, while the crest in this version stayed for a long time and received many opponents. In 2021, after the jubilee year, starting its second century, the club decided to return to the most acceptable version of the crest among fans.


    Due to the lack of a consistent chronology of individual marks, the above listing of all crests with dates is approximate and conventional. The set above does not include jubilee signs.[18][19]

    Upper Silesian symbolism edit

     
    Masts with flags at the Ruch Chorzów stadium
     
    Łukasz Surma (19.11.2016 Górnik Łęczna - Ruch Chorzów)
     
    Tomasz Foszmańczyk (01.05.2022 Ruch Chorzów - Znicz Pruszków)

    Ruch Chorzów proudly emphasizes its Silesian origin. It has been assumed that the club is called "synonymous of Silesianess" or "the most Silesian of Silesian clubs".[20][21] On the stadium mast hangs the Upper Silesian flag,[22] the speaker often shouts "Tooor!" (en. Goal!) into the microphone after the goals scored,[23] and the club mascot is Adler, who speaks only in Silesian language, an anthropomorphic eagle, stylized as a golden eagle from the Upper Silesian coat of arms. In the fan stores there are many products with Upper Silesian symbols,[24] in the social media the club tags all posts with the hashtag #MySomRuch (en. We are Ruch), and in the club television people often uses the Silesian language. An example may be the video promoting the match against Zagłębie Sosnowiec.[25]

    The symbolism of Upper Silesia is also often displayed from the sports side. On July 15, 2015, on the Silesian Flag Day, the club presented new away kits for the 2015/2016 season. The yellow jersey, blue shorts and yellow socks alluded to the flag of Upper Silesia, intended to emphasize the Silesian character of the Ruch, in whose traditions the club is so deeply rooted.[26] The debut of the kits took place on the 80th anniversary of the stadium, and the team played in such a set for the first time in history. On that day, the coat of arms of the Silesian Voivodeship was additionally on the sleeve, and the speaker during the match was speaking entirely in Silesian language.[27]

    In the 2016–17 season, the jerseys had a large coat of arms of Upper Silesia with the inscription "Upper Silesia". Initially, only the first match was played in such kits, and all of them went to the charity auction, but after many requests from fans and the approval of the winners of these auctions, the emblem was printed on kits once again and from the 13th round they were in use until the end of the season.[28]

    On April 23, 2022, in a match against Radunia Stężyca, the captain of Ruch Chorzów, Tomasz Foszmańczyk, for the first time in the history of the club, put on a captain's armband with the Upper Silesian flag.[29]

    Supporters and rivalries edit

     
    Derby against Górnik Zabrze (2008)

    Ruch's popularity exploded in the 1930s and remained strong up to this date, especially in Upper Silesia. A specific subculture of szalikowcy (the name derived from szalik - scarf) developed in the 1970s, as elsewhere in the country, but in the region only after it first appeared among the fans of Polonia Bytom.[30] There are also hooligans (Psycho Fans, formed in the mid 1990s) and ultras („Nucleo Ultra '03" from 2003, replaced by „Ultras Niebiescy", formed in 2008).

    Expressions of Upper Silesian identity are often displayed with golden-blue flagues, on banners (like controversial "Oberschlesien",[31][32] now banned, or „To my Naród Śląski"[33] - It's us - Silesian Nation) or in chants.

    Ruch's supporters maintain friendships with fans of Widzew Łódź (since 2005), Elana Toruń, Atlético Madrid.[34] The biggest animosity is held against followers Górnik Zabrze (The Great Silesian Derby), GKS Katowice, Polonia Bytom (the oldest Silesian derby[35][36]), Zagłębie Sosnowiec, Legia Warszawa, Lech Poznań.[30]

    Notable individual supporters of Ruch are, among others:

    Notable former players edit

    Notes edit

    1. ^ a b Stadion Miejski (Chorzów) at ruchchorzow.com.pl
    2. ^ Willis, Craig; Hughes, Will; Bober, Sergiusz. "ECMI Minorities Blog. National and Linguistic Minorities in the Context of Professional Football across Europe: Five Examples from Non-kin State Situations". ECMI. ECMI. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
    3. ^ Andrzej Gowarzewski, 1995, p. 15
    4. ^ Jacek Kurek, Historia Wielkich Hajduk, Chorzów Batory-Wielkie Hajduki 2001, p. 11.
    5. ^ O powstaniu KS Ruch i boisku na Kalinie, Chorzowianin nr 22 (398) z 28.05.2008, p. 19-20. See also Jacek Kurek, Historia Wielkich Hajduk, Chorzów Batory-Wielkie Hajduki 2001, p. 105, 119; Encyklopedia piłkarska FUJI, kolekcja klubów, tom I: Ruch Chorzów, Andrzej Gowarzewski, Katowice 1995; p. 19.
    6. ^ Encyklopedia piłkarska FUJI, kolekcja klubów, tom I: Ruch Chorzów, Andrzej Gowarzewski, Katowice 1995; p. 12.
    7. ^ Analiza miejsc urodzenia piłkarzy na podstawie biogramów zamieszczonych w Encyklopedii piłkarskiej FUJI, kolekcja klubów, tom I: Ruch Chorzów, Andrzej Gowarzewski, Katowice 1995.
    8. ^ Encyklopedia piłkarska FUJI, kolekcja klubów, tom I: Ruch Chorzów, Andrzej Gowarzewski, Katowice 1995; p. 43.
    9. ^ Ruch Chorzów profile Albion Road, accessed: 15 April 2009
    10. ^ Murray, Scott (23 October 2007). "The Joy of Six: own goals". Guardian.co.uk.
    11. ^ O tytuł mistrza, p. 146
    12. ^ "RUCH CHORZÓW S.A.: otwarcie przyśpieszonego postępowania układowego". Bankier.pl. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
    13. ^ "RUCH CHORZÓW S.A.: Uprawomocnienie Postanowienia Sądu Rejonowego Katowice-Wschód w Katowicach w przedmiocie zatwierdzenia układu restrukturyzacyjnego". Retrieved 12 September 2021.
    14. ^ "2. liga. Ruch Chorzów – Radunia Stężyca 1:0 (po dogr.)". tvp sport. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
    15. ^ "Ruch Chorzów wraca na zaplecze Ekstraklasy! Hat-trick Daniela Szczepana". onet.pl. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
    16. ^ "Pierwsza drużyna" (in Polish). Ruch Chorzów. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
    17. ^ Encyklopedia piłkarska FUJI, kolekcja klubów, tom I: Ruch Chorzów, Andrzej Gowarzewski, Katowice 1995; s. 66
    18. ^ "Jak zmieniał się herb Ruchu". Ruch Chorzów (in Polish). Retrieved 26 November 2022.
    19. ^ "ROZPOCZYNAMY NOWĄ ERĘ!". Ruch Chorzów (in Polish). Retrieved 26 November 2022.
    20. ^ "Debiut oficjalnej maskotki" (in Polish). 30 April 2010.
    21. ^ "Premiera książki "Historia Ruchu Chorzów. Tom I. Część 1"" (in Polish). 6 October 2020.
    22. ^ "Ślōnsko fana dla Ruchu Chorzów. To prezent od Ruchu Autonomii Śląska" (in Polish). 21 July 2021.
    23. ^ "Spiker godo po śląsku na meczu Władców Śląska" (in Polish). 16 September 2015.
    24. ^ "Górny Śląsk - nowe szaliki i t-shirt" (in Polish). 8 August 2022.
    25. ^ "Piekło zamarzło! Gorole po stronie Hanysów po kiepskiej prowokacji Artura Boruca" (in Polish). 10 September 2022.
    26. ^ "Ruch zagra w śląskich barwach!". www.ksruch.com (in Polish). 15 July 2015.
    27. ^ "Ruch z Legią gra w śląskich barwach, by uczcić 80-lecie stadionu. Trener Fornalik chwali ten pomysł" (in Polish). 17 September 2015.
    28. ^ "Górny Śląsk wraca na koszulki! Na stałe!" (in Polish). 24 October 2016.
    29. ^ "Co łączy takie kluby jak Ruch Chorzów i FC Barcelona?" (in Polish). 28 April 2022.
    30. ^ a b "Historia kibiców" (in Polish).
    31. ^ "Oberschlesien. Ta flaga powinna wisieć czy nie?" (in Polish). 14 September 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
    32. ^ "Kontrowersje wokół flagi z napisem "Oberschlesien"" (in Polish). 11 September 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2016.
    33. ^ "Flaga To My Naród Śląski na meczu w Warszawie. PZPN odpowiada" (in Polish). Retrieved 26 November 2016.
    34. ^ "Przyjaciele [Friends]" (in Polish).
    35. ^ "Informacje z woj. śląskiego". tvs.pl. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
    36. ^ "Polonia Bytom - Ruch Chorzów: Najstarsze derby Śląska zdecydują kto będzie wiceliderem Ekstraklasy - Zapowiedzi meczów". PrzegladSportowy.pl. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
    37. ^ Dlaczego pseudokibice wyzywają się od „Żydów”?
    38. ^ "Wywiad z Jerzym Buzkiem: Kopanie piłki na podwórku w Chorzowie było moją specjalnością sportową | śląskie Nasze Miasto".
    39. ^ Ruch Chorzów.
    40. ^ Mistrz Holoubek trzymał z Ruchem Chorzów – e-teatr.pl.
    41. ^ Świr Roku to zapalony kibic Ruchu Chorzów.
    42. ^ a b Kibice Ruchu Wojciech Kilar i Jan Miodek o spadku?niebieskich?
    43. ^ Ta trudna sztuka piłki nożnej > ESEJE 2.0.
    44. ^ Fenomen Wielkich Derbów Śląska.
    45. ^ Powstaje film o kibicach Ruchu, bo to dobra rodzina.
    46. ^ Wprost 24 – Wencel gordyjski – Schizofrenia kibica
    47. ^ Szałankiewicz, Paweł (30 January 2015). "Karol Gwóźdź: poeta, kibic, muzyk, jednak przede wszystkim Ślązak". Dziennik Zachodni. p. 4.
    48. ^ Twardoch, Szczepan (2021). Wielkie Księstwo Groteski (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 53. ISBN 978-83-08-07441-1.
    49. ^ "Bogdan Kalus i Michał Żurawski przed kamerą Ruch TV". KS Ruch Chorzów (in Polish). Retrieved 4 September 2023.

    References edit

    • Gowarzewski Andrzej; Głyk Wioletta (2000). O tytuł mistrza Polski 1920–2000 (in Polish). GiA, Katowice. ISBN 83-88232-02-9.
    • Gowarzewski Andrzej; Waloszek Joachim (1995). Ruch Chorzów: 75 lat "Niebieskich" (in Polish). GiA, Katowice. ISBN 83-902751-3-9.
    • Bagier Tadeusz; Dutkowski Zbigniew; Kraszkiewicz Mirosław (1970). Pięćdziesiąt lat Klubu Sportowego "Ruch" Chorzów (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Artystyczno-Graficzne Chorzów.
    • Gorzelany Franciszek; Miklica Bogusław; et al. (1960). 40-lecie Klubu Sportowego "Ruch" Chorzów (in Polish). Wydawnictwo "Prasa" Katowice.
    • Collective work under Henryk Rechowicz editorial (1994). Z najnowszych dziejów kultury fizycznej i turystyki (in Polish). Wydawnictwo AWF Katowice.
    • Collective work (2000). 80 lat OZPN [Okręgowego Związku Piłki Nożnej] Katowice: 1920–2000 (in Polish). GiA, Katowice. ISBN 83-88232-03-7.
    • Kurek Jacek (2001). Historia Wielkich Hajduk (in Polish). Związek Górnośląski. Koło "Wielkie Hajduki", Rococo Chorzów-Batory. ISBN 83-86293-29-2.
    • Gowarzewski Andrzej (2001). Biało-czerwoni : piłkarska reprezentacja Polski 1921–2001 : ludzie mecze fakty daty (in Polish). GiA, Katowice. ISBN 83-88232-08-8.
    • Gowarzewski Andrzej; Waloszek Joachim (1996). 75 lat OZPN [Okręgowego Związku Piłki Nożnej] Katowice: 1920–1995, ludzie, historia, fakty (in Polish). GiA, Katowice. ISBN 83-902751-7-1.
    • Czapliński Marek (red.) (2002). Historia Śląska (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, Wrocław. ISBN 83-229-2213-2.

    External links edit

    • Official website (in Polish)
    • Fansite (in Polish)
    • Ruch Chorzów at 90minut.pl (in Polish)


    ruch, chorzów, polish, ˈrux, ˈxɔʐuf, polish, association, football, club, based, chorzów, upper, silesia, most, successful, football, teams, poland, having, fourteen, league, titles, polish, thrice, they, currently, compete, polish, ekstraklasa, ruch, home, ve. Ruch Chorzow Polish ˈrux ˈxɔʐuf is a Polish association football club based in Chorzow Upper Silesia It is one of the most successful football teams in Poland having won fourteen league titles and the Polish Cup thrice They currently compete in the Polish Ekstraklasa Ruch s home venue is the Ruch Stadium with a capacity of 9 300 seats 1 As it is currently under renovation Ruch temporarily hosts their games at the Stadion Slaski with a capacity of 55 211 seats The club is known for its Silesian identity 2 Ruch Chorzow has also had a very successful female handball team 9 times national champions Ruch ChorzowFull nameKlub Sportowy Ruch ChorzowNickname s Niebiescy The Blues Niebieska eRka The Blue R HKS from Hajducki Klub Sportowy Founded20 April 1920 103 years ago 1920 04 20 GroundRuch StadiumStadion SlaskiCapacity9 300 1 55 211ChairmanSeweryn SiemianowskiManagerJanusz NiedzwiedzLeagueEkstraklasa2022 23I liga 2nd of 18 promoted WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent season Contents 1 Names 2 History 3 Achievements 4 Current squad 4 1 Out on loan 5 Managerial history 6 Ruch in Europe 7 Crest 8 Upper Silesian symbolism 9 Supporters and rivalries 10 Notable former players 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksNames editYears Name1920 1923 KS Ruch Bismarkhuta1923 KS Ruch Wielkie Hajduki1923 c 1924 KS Ruch BBC Wielkie Hajdukic 1924 1939 KS Ruch Wielkie Hajduki1939 1948 KS Ruch Chorzow1948 1949 ZKS Ruch Chorzow1949 KS Chemik Chorzow1949 1955 ZS Unia Chorzow1955 c 1956 ZKS Unia Ruch Chorzowc 1956 2002 KS Ruch Chorzow2002 2004 KS Ruch w Chorzowie2004 2008 Ruch Chorzow SSA2008 2017 Ruch Chorzow SA2017 2018 Ruch Chorzow SA w restrukturyzacji2018 current Ruch Chorzow SAHistory editThe club was founded on 20 April 1920 in Bismarkhuta German Bismarckhutte historically Hajduki one of the many heavily industrialised municipalities in the eastern part of Upper Silesia a disputed province between Poland and Germany The main incentive was an appeal of the Polish Plebiscite Committee a few months earlier that led to creation of around one hundred sport associations It took place in between the first and second Silesian Uprisings to which the name Ruch is a supposed cover reference 3 The Polish word ruch is however also a common noun for movement not as strongly associated with Polishness as names of many other clubs established after the appeal like Polonia Powstaniec etc On the other hand the club s first match a 3 1 win against Orzel Jozefowiec was played on 3 May 1920 the day of the first Polish Constitution After the Upper Silesia plebiscite and the third Silesian Uprising in 1921 Bismarkhuta became part of Poland and the Silesian Voivodeship The municipality was renamed to Wielkie Hajduki on 1 January 1923 4 hence the club was known as Ruch Wielkie Hajduki until another merger into the town Chorzow created in 1934 from amalgamation of Krolewska Huta Chorzow and Hajduki Nowe in the early 1939 with a short period in 1923 after the fusion with the older local German club Bismarckhutter Ballspiel Club when it was known as Ruch BBC Wielkie Hajduki After the merger the team played its games on the former BBC s pitch known as na Kalinie 5 The popular nickname of the club Niebiescy The Blues clung to the team already in the 1920s 6 nbsp Ruch Wielkie Hajduki Silesian Vice Champions in 1924In autumn of 1920 Ruch won the promotion to the nascent Silesian Klasa A see also Lower Level Football Leagues in Interwar Poland The Blues were third out of fourteen teams in its first season unfinished due to the third Silesian Uprising The next year Ruch won the championship of the Silesian Klasa A and represented the region in the 1922 Polish Football Championship In 1924 the club finished second in the regional top league behind AKS Krolewska Huta before 1924 considered German and known as Verein fur Rasenspiele Konigshutte the first team Ruch had developed a local rivalry with In 1925 the Silesian Klasa A did not play instead Stanislaw Flieger s Cup took place ultimately won by Ruch which gave the side a start in the only interwar Polish Cup competition in 1926 On 4 July 1926 Jozef Sobota before 1920 a BBC s player became the first Ruch s player and the fourth from Upper Silesia of the Poland national team who also scored a goal against Estonia In the same year two weeks after the national Cup Ruch won for the second time the regional Klasa A firmly establishing itself as one of the strongest football clubs in this densely populated region and as such it was among the founding clubs of the Polish national league in 1927 In 1933 Ruch won its first Championship as the first side from Silesia with all the players who were born not further as a few kilometers from the na Kalinie pitch 7 Thus the first truly golden era began The local steel mill since 1934 known as Huta Batory began to financially support the side In the winter of 1933 the most noteworthy players such as Edmund Giemsa Teodor Peterek and Gerard Wodarz were joined by legendary Ernst Wilimowski bought from 1 FC Kattowitz who with Peterek and Wodarz were collectively nicknamed the three kings and helped to win another 4 championships 1934 1935 1936 1938 On 1 November 1934 the club as the last in the league employed its first coach Gustav Wieser 8 The side was also a leader in the unfinished season 1939 The successes rendered the club the most popular in the voivodeship and accelerated building of the new stadium in the years 1934 1935 the current Ruch Stadium nbsp Ruch in 1938After the German occupation of Poland in 1939 the club was officially discontinued but unofficially was simply renamed Bismarckhutter SV 99 and joined the Gauliga Oberschlesien in 1941 9 The club was officially re established after the war In 1947 Ruch won the regional championships In 1948 under communist pressure Stalinisation the club was renamed Unia Chorzow in 1955 it became Unia Ruch and finally in 1956 returned to the name Ruch As Unia the club finished third in the first season of the reactivated national league in 1948 and in 1950 as the second team In 1951 the club won the reactivated Polish Cup edition and were rewarded with the title of the National Champions even though they were only sixth in the league The next two years the club also won the title first in 1952 after final against Polonia Bytom another local bitter rival and in 1953 after finishing the league on the top position The most renowned player of that era was Gerard Cieslik who dedicated his whole life to the club and became its icon nbsp Ruch in 1968The years 1957 1966 are considered a lost decade completely overshadowed by the successes of the new biggest regional rival Gornik Zabrze even though the club won the championships in 1960 A record of its kind in the national football history as the team consisted of only 14 players 11 of whom originated in the town of Chorzow The turn of the tide came in the season 1967 68 when Ruch won the 10th championship title breaking Gornik Zabrze s streak of five consecutive titles Another golden era for the Blues arrived in the early 1970s with Michal Vican as a coach In 1972 73 the club finished second in 1973 74 they won the only double in the history the championship and the cup and advanced up to the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup In 1974 75 they again won the league and qualified to the quarter finals of the European Cup The most praised players of that times were Bronislaw Bula Zygmunt Maszczyk and Joachim Marx These successes were followed by a bad financial plight and mediocre results until 1978 79 when the club won its 13th Championship title In the 1980s the club was one of the poorest in the national league The worst came in the season 1986 87 when the club the only one in the country which so far played all the seasons of the official national top league was relegated to the second tier Especially shifty were the circumstances of the relegation decider against Lechia Gdansk when Ruch s goalkeeper Janusz Jojko scored an infamous and bizarre own goal and the club lost the game 1 2 10 After one year Ruch returned to the top flight as winners of the seconed league and won the 14th Championship title as the second freshly promoted club in the national history the first was Cracovia in 1937 a feat especially as it was still one of the poorest clubs in the top tier and over half of the players were home grown 11 including e g Dariusz Gesior and the most renowned Krzysztof Warzycha who was also with 24 goals the top scorer of the season After the political turnover in Poland in 1989 Ruch did not fare well for the first two seasons The funds from the transfer of Krzysztof Warzycha to Panathinaikos ran out quickly The team began to compete with the top teams first in 1991 92 finishing in the fifth spot fourth the next year furthermore the second team Ruch II reached the Polish cup final Ruch was demoted for the second time in the history in the 1994 95 season As before the stay in the second tier lasted one season While playing in the second league Ruch won its third Polish Cup trophy In 1998 Ruch reached the final of the UEFA Intertoto Cup and in the 1999 2000 season finished third in the league The crisis came during the 2002 03 campaign when the club was relegated from the top tier for the third time In the following season Ruch was in danger of being demoted to the third tier for the first time in history however the club won the relegation play offs against Stal Rzeszow 1 1 2 0 In 2005 the club was restructured as a joint stock company The Blues won the promotion to the top flight in the 2006 07 season In 2009 the side reached the Polish Cup final the next year The Blues finished third in the league The best season in the recent history was 2011 12 when Ruch was vice champion only 1 point behind the champions Slask Wroclaw and reached the final of the national cup which they lost 0 3 to Legia Warsaw In 2017 it was decided that for the first time in the history of Polish football in accordance with the Restructuring Law SA will initiate an accelerated arrangement procedure aimed at agreeing the terms of debt repayment with creditors These proceedings were opened before the Katowice District Court on 23 June 2017 12 In these proceedings all 255 creditors were offered to reduce the debt spread it into installments or convert the debt into club shares On 30 November 2017 creditors gathered in court to decide whether or not to accept the offer The majority agreed and the agreement was adopted ultimately the agreement became final on 13 March 2018 13 According to the provisions of the agreement Ruch is to repay PLN 8 million zloty within 5 years Installments are spread over 400 thousand zloty every quarter Ruch started the 2017 18 season in Nice I liga with a six point deduction for unpaid debts After a disastrous season in which the Blues suffered heavy defeats including 0 6 in a home match against Pogon Siedlce on the club s 98th anniversary a 6 1 away defeat against Miedz Legnica and a 6 0 away loss to Wigry Suwalki the club finished last in the league being 11 points off the play off place which resulted in the first relegation to the third level in Ruch s history Ruch ended the 2018 19 season in the II liga in last place eight points off of safety It was the third season in a row in which the Blues were relegated from last place in the table In 2020 21 Ruch dominated group III of the III liga and were promoted to the II liga 11 points ahead of second placed Polonia Bytom Ruch finished the 2021 22 season in third place qualifying for the promotion play offs In the semi finals the team faced Radunia Stezyca which they beat 1 0 after a goal from Daniel Szczepan in the 118th minute 14 The final was played in Chorzow where Ruch faced 5th placed Motor Lublin on 29 May Ruch won 4 0 and was promoted for the second season in a row returning to the I liga for the first time since the 2017 18 season 15 Ruch finished the 2022 23 season as runners up after defeating GKS Tychy 1 0 on the last matchday with the sole goal scored again by Daniel Szczepan In result Ruch returned to Ekstraklasa after 7 years of absence with a streak of three straight promotions Achievements editEkstraklasa Winners 14 1933 1934 1935 1936 1938 1951 n 1 1952 1953 1960 1967 68 1973 74 1974 75 1978 79 1988 89 In 1951 Wisla Krakow was the league champion however the championship title was awarded to the Cup winners Ruch Chorzow Runners up 6 1950 1956 1962 63 1969 70 1972 73 2011 12 Third place 9 1937 1948 1954 1955 1966 67 1982 83 1999 2000 2009 10 2013 14 I liga Winners 2 1987 88 2006 07 Runner up 1 2022 23 II liga Promotion play off winner 2021 22 III liga Winner 1 2020 21 group III Polish Cup Winners 3 1950 51 1973 74 1995 96 Runners up 6 1962 63 1967 68 1969 70 1992 93 2008 09 2011 12 Polish Super Cup Runners up 2 1989 1996 European Cup Quarter finals 1 1974 75 UEFA Cup Quarter finals 1 1973 74 UEFA Intertoto Cup Finalist 1 1998 Youth teams Polish U 19 champions 1965 1984Current squad editAs of 23 February 2024 16 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK nbsp POL Michal Buchalik2 DF nbsp POL Konrad Kasolik4 DF nbsp POL Przemyslaw Szur5 MF nbsp POL Tomasz Wojtowicz6 DF nbsp ESP Josema7 MF nbsp POL Juliusz Letniowski on loan from Widzew Lodz 8 MF nbsp POL Patryk Sikora10 MF nbsp POL Tomasz Foszmanczyk captain 13 MF nbsp POL Lukasz Moneta16 MF nbsp CZE Jan Sedlak17 MF nbsp POL Dawid Barnowski19 FW nbsp POL Michal Feliks on loan from Radomiak Radom 20 MF nbsp POL Szymon Szymanski21 DF nbsp POL Maciej Sadlok22 MF nbsp POL Filip Starzynski23 FW nbsp POL Artur Plaskowski No Pos Nation Player24 MF nbsp POL Bartlomiej Baranski26 MF nbsp POL Kacper Michalski27 MF nbsp POL Wiktor Dlugosz on loan from Rakow Czestochowa 32 GK nbsp POL Marcel Potoczny33 FW nbsp POL Mike Huras36 GK nbsp CRO Dante Stipica on loan from Pogon Szczecin 54 MF nbsp POL Filip Wilak on loan from Lech Poznan 59 DF nbsp POL Patryk Stepinski70 MF nbsp POL Milosz Kozak71 DF nbsp POL Remigiusz Szywacz77 DF nbsp POL Mateusz Bartolewski82 GK nbsp POL Jakub Bielecki86 FW nbsp HUN Soma Novothny88 MF nbsp CZE Adam Vlkanova on loan from Viktoria Plzen 95 FW nbsp POL Daniel Szczepan96 MF nbsp POL Robert DadokOut on loan edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player11 FW nbsp POL Igor Stasinski at Szombierki Bytom until 30 June 2024 MF nbsp POL Kacper Skwierczynski at Waterford until 31 December 2024 Managerial history edit 17 Name From To nbsp Gustav Wieser Oct 1934 July 1935 nbsp Gunther Ringer Aug 1936 Nov 1937 nbsp Ferenc Fogl June 1938 Jan 1939 nbsp Peter Szabo Jan 1939 July 1939 nbsp Frantisek Dembicky Jan 1948 Dec 1948 nbsp Gerard Wodarz July 1949 Dec 1949 nbsp Ryszard Koncewicz Jan 1950 June 1952 nbsp Ewald Cebula July 1952 June 1954 nbsp Adam Niemiec July 1954 Dec 1956 nbsp Mikolaj Beljung Feb 1957 Oct 1957 nbsp Czeslaw Suszczyk Oct 1957 Dec 1957 nbsp Janos Steiner Jan 1958 Dec 1958 nbsp Ewald Cebula Jan 1959 Dec 1959 nbsp Janos Steiner Jan 1960 May 1960 nbsp Ewald Cebula May 1960 June 1960 nbsp Lajos Szolar June 1960 Dec 1960 nbsp Gerard Wodarz Jan 1961 April 1961 nbsp Gerard Cieslik April 1961 July 1961 nbsp Sandor Tatrai July 1961 Oct 1963 nbsp Franciszek Tim Oct 1963 Nov 1963 nbsp Augustyn Dziwisz Dec 1963 Sept 1964 nbsp Artur Wozniak Sept 1964 June 1966 nbsp Teodor Wieczorek July 1966 April 1969 nbsp Eugeniusz Pohl nbsp Hubert Pala May 1969 June 1969 nbsp Jerzy Nikiel July 1969 Nov 1969 nbsp Tadeusz Forys Dec 1969 June 1971 nbsp Hubert Pala June 1971 June 1971 nbsp Michal Vican July 1971 April 1976 nbsp Rudolf Kapera April 1976 June 1976 nbsp Frantisek Havranek July 1976 Oct 1977 nbsp Teodor Wieczorek Oct 1977 June 1978 nbsp Leszek Jezierski June 1978 Nov 1980 nbsp Antoni Piechniczek Nov 1980 Jan 1981 nbsp Jozef Zwierzyna Jan 1981 Sept 1981 nbsp Piotr Czaja Sept 1981 May 1982 nbsp Orest Lenczyk 1 July 1982 1 Feb 1984 Name From To nbsp Alojzy Lysko Feb 1984 Dec 1984 nbsp Wladyslaw Jan Zmuda 1 Jan 1985 1 May 1987 nbsp Jacek Goralczyk April 1987 May 1987 nbsp Jacek Machcinski May 1987 July 1987 nbsp Jerzy Wyrobek 1 July 1987 1 July 1990 nbsp Zdzislaw Podedworny July 1990 March 1991 nbsp Edward Lorens 1 April 1991 1 May 1994 nbsp Albin Wira 3 May 1994 4 May 1995 nbsp Jerzy Wyrobek 5 May 1995 23 Sept 1996 nbsp Orest Lenczyk 24 Sept 1996 23 March 1999 nbsp Edward Lorens 23 March 1999 30 June 2000 nbsp Jan Zurek 1 July 2000 21 Aug 2000 nbsp Jan Rudnow Aug 2000 Dec 2000 nbsp Boguslaw Pietrzak 1 Dec 2000 11 April 2002 nbsp Orest Lenczyk 11 April 2002 9 Oct 2002 nbsp Piotr Mandrysz 10 Oct 2002 30 June 2003 nbsp Jerzy Wyrobek 1 July 2003 5 May 2005 nbsp Dariusz Fornalak 5 May 2005 22 Nov 2005 nbsp Edward Lorens 22 Nov 2005 27 Nov 2005 nbsp Marek Wlecialowski 28 Nov 2005 15 June 2007 nbsp Dusan Radolsky 15 June 2007 10 Sept 2008 nbsp Boguslaw Pietrzak 10 Sept 2008 27 April 2009 nbsp Waldemar Fornalik 27 April 2009 10 July 2012 nbsp Tomasz Fornalik 12 July 2012 5 Sept 2012 nbsp Jacek Zielinski 5 Sept 2012 16 Sept 2013 nbsp Dariusz Fornalak int 16 Sept 2013 18 Sept 2013 nbsp Jan Kocian 18 Sept 2013 6 Oct 2014 nbsp Waldemar Fornalik 7 Oct 2014 22 Apr 2017 nbsp Krzysztof Warzycha 24 Apr 2017 10 Sep 2017 nbsp Juan Ramon Rocha 10 Sep 2017 5 Apr 2018 nbsp Dariusz Fornalak 5 Apr 2018 1 Nov 2018 nbsp Marek Wlecialowski 1 Nov 2018 18 Apr 2019 nbsp Karol Michalski 18 Apr 2019 18 Jun 2019 nbsp Lukasz Bereta 18 Jun 2019 23 Jun 2021 nbsp Jaroslaw Skrobacz 24 Jun 2021 6 Nov 2023 nbsp Jan Wos 6 Nov 2023 29 Dec 2023 nbsp Janusz Niedzwiedz 29 Dec 2023 currentRuch in Europe editSeason Competition Round Club Score1972 73 UEFA Cup 1R nbsp Fenerbahce 3 0 0 12R nbsp Dynamo Dresden 0 1 0 31973 74 UEFA Cup 1R nbsp Wuppertaler SV 4 1 4 52R nbsp Carl Zeiss Jena 3 0 0 13R nbsp Budapest Honved 0 2 5 0QF nbsp Feyenoord 1 1 1 31974 75 European Cup 1R nbsp Hvidovre IF 0 0 2 12R nbsp Fenerbahce 2 1 2 0QF nbsp Saint Etienne 3 2 0 21975 76 European Cup 1R nbsp KuPS 5 0 2 22R nbsp PSV Eindhoven 1 3 0 41979 80 European Cup 1R nbsp Dynamo Berlin 1 4 0 01989 90 European Cup 1R nbsp CSKA Sofia 1 1 1 51996 97 UEFA Cup Winners Cup Q nbsp Llansantffraid 1 1 5 01R nbsp Benfica 1 5 0 01998 Intertoto Cup 1R nbsp Austria Wien 1 0 2 22R nbsp Orgryte 1 2 1 03R nbsp Estrela da Amadora 1 1 1 14R nbsp Debrecen 1 0 3 05R nbsp Bologna 0 1 0 22000 01 UEFA Cup Q nbsp Zalgiris Vilnius 1 2 6 01R nbsp Inter Milan 0 3 1 42010 11 UEFA Europa League 1Q nbsp Shakhter Karagandy 2 1 1 02Q nbsp Valletta 1 1 0 03Q nbsp Austria Wien 1 3 0 32012 13 UEFA Europa League 2Q nbsp Metalurg Skopje 3 1 3 03Q nbsp Viktoria Plzen 0 2 0 52014 15 UEFA Europa League 2Q nbsp FC Vaduz 3 2 0 03Q nbsp Esbjerg 0 0 2 2PO nbsp Metalist Kharkiv 0 0 0 1 a e t Crest editRuch Chorzow has a very specific crest and is one of the most recognizable football crests in Poland There isn t information who was the author of the prototype and in which year the crest was used for the first time The oldest confirmed source is letterhead from 1929 The club colours are blue and white They accompany the team from the very beginning of the club s existence and already in the twenties it was written about Ruch Niebiescy en The Blues This color has become the symbol of the club Except for the emblem of Unia Chorzow around 1949 1955 the shield of the crest has always been more or less precisely the blue Reuleaux triangle with the club s full name on the rim The white center of the sign is filled with an acronym In the late 1980s the monogram was decorated with thin lines emphasizing the activity militancy and mobility of the signet itself and thereby reflecting the name of the club in a slightly expressive way Ruch means Movement in English In September 2007 it was decided to make a facelift of the logo which was to be a sign of the continuous evolution of the brand of Ruch Chorzow Shading was introduced to the sign in order to plasticize the drawing give depth and spaciousness to the whole crest In this way they tried to show the spirit of nowadays and to gain the identity of a modern and attractive brand However trends for gradients quickly passed while the crest in this version stayed for a long time and received many opponents In 2021 after the jubilee year starting its second century the club decided to return to the most acceptable version of the crest among fans THE CRESTS OF RUCH CHORZoW nbsp 1939 nbsp 1945 1947 nbsp 1948 1949 nbsp 1949 1955 nbsp 1955 nbsp 1956 1959 nbsp 1960 nbsp 1960 1969 nbsp 1970 1979 nbsp 1980 1989 nbsp 1989 1999 nbsp 2000 2007 nbsp 2007 2020 nbsp 2021 Due to the lack of a consistent chronology of individual marks the above listing of all crests with dates is approximate and conventional The set above does not include jubilee signs 18 19 Upper Silesian symbolism edit nbsp Masts with flags at the Ruch Chorzow stadium nbsp Lukasz Surma 19 11 2016 Gornik Leczna Ruch Chorzow nbsp Tomasz Foszmanczyk 01 05 2022 Ruch Chorzow Znicz Pruszkow Ruch Chorzow proudly emphasizes its Silesian origin It has been assumed that the club is called synonymous of Silesianess or the most Silesian of Silesian clubs 20 21 On the stadium mast hangs the Upper Silesian flag 22 the speaker often shouts Tooor en Goal into the microphone after the goals scored 23 and the club mascot is Adler who speaks only in Silesian language an anthropomorphic eagle stylized as a golden eagle from the Upper Silesian coat of arms In the fan stores there are many products with Upper Silesian symbols 24 in the social media the club tags all posts with the hashtag MySomRuch en We are Ruch and in the club television people often uses the Silesian language An example may be the video promoting the match against Zaglebie Sosnowiec 25 The symbolism of Upper Silesia is also often displayed from the sports side On July 15 2015 on the Silesian Flag Day the club presented new away kits for the 2015 2016 season The yellow jersey blue shorts and yellow socks alluded to the flag of Upper Silesia intended to emphasize the Silesian character of the Ruch in whose traditions the club is so deeply rooted 26 The debut of the kits took place on the 80th anniversary of the stadium and the team played in such a set for the first time in history On that day the coat of arms of the Silesian Voivodeship was additionally on the sleeve and the speaker during the match was speaking entirely in Silesian language 27 In the 2016 17 season the jerseys had a large coat of arms of Upper Silesia with the inscription Upper Silesia Initially only the first match was played in such kits and all of them went to the charity auction but after many requests from fans and the approval of the winners of these auctions the emblem was printed on kits once again and from the 13th round they were in use until the end of the season 28 On April 23 2022 in a match against Radunia Stezyca the captain of Ruch Chorzow Tomasz Foszmanczyk for the first time in the history of the club put on a captain s armband with the Upper Silesian flag 29 Supporters and rivalries edit nbsp Derby against Gornik Zabrze 2008 Ruch s popularity exploded in the 1930s and remained strong up to this date especially in Upper Silesia A specific subculture of szalikowcy the name derived from szalik scarf developed in the 1970s as elsewhere in the country but in the region only after it first appeared among the fans of Polonia Bytom 30 There are also hooligans Psycho Fans formed in the mid 1990s and ultras Nucleo Ultra 03 from 2003 replaced by Ultras Niebiescy formed in 2008 Expressions of Upper Silesian identity are often displayed with golden blue flagues on banners like controversial Oberschlesien 31 32 now banned or To my Narod Slaski 33 It s us Silesian Nation or in chants Ruch s supporters maintain friendships with fans of Widzew Lodz since 2005 Elana Torun Atletico Madrid 34 The biggest animosity is held against followers Gornik Zabrze The Great Silesian Derby GKS Katowice Polonia Bytom the oldest Silesian derby 35 36 Zaglebie Sosnowiec Legia Warszawa Lech Poznan 30 Notable individual supporters of Ruch are among others Jerzy Bralczyk professor at Warsaw University 37 Jerzy Buzek 38 professor of technical science and politician who was the ninth post Cold War Prime Minister of Poland from 1997 to 2001 39 Gustaw Holoubek actor director member of the Polish Sejm and a senator 40 Bogdan Kalus actor 41 Wojciech Kilar classical and film music composer 42 Wojciech Kuczok novelist poet and screenwriter 43 Kazimierz Kutz film director author journalist and politician 44 Jan Miodek linguist professor of Wroclaw University 42 Jerzy Szymik poet professor of KUL 45 Ingmar Villqist Jaroslaw Swierszcz writer 46 Karol Gwozdz poet musician graphic designer 47 Szczepan Twardoch writer 48 Michal Zurawski film and theater actor 49 Notable former players edit nbsp Ernst Wilimowski nbsp Teodor Peterek nbsp Gerard Wodarz nbsp Gerard Cieslik nbsp Zygmunt Maszczyk nbsp Krzysztof Warzycha nbsp Waldemar Fornalik nbsp Dariusz Gesior nbsp Roman Dabrowski nbsp Krzysztof Bizacki nbsp Michal Probierz nbsp Mariusz Srutwa nbsp Piotr Lech nbsp Artur Sobiech nbsp Tomasz Brzyski nbsp Jaroslaw Pasnik nbsp Grazvydas Mikulenas nbsp Grzegorz Kuswik nbsp Michal Peskovic nbsp Eduards Visnakovs nbsp Martin Konczkowski nbsp Lukasz Surma nbsp Tomasz JaworekNotes edit a b Stadion Miejski Chorzow at ruchchorzow com pl Willis Craig Hughes Will Bober Sergiusz ECMI Minorities Blog National and Linguistic Minorities in the Context of Professional Football across Europe Five Examples from Non kin State Situations ECMI ECMI Retrieved 14 March 2023 Andrzej Gowarzewski 1995 p 15 Jacek Kurek Historia Wielkich Hajduk Chorzow Batory Wielkie Hajduki 2001 p 11 O powstaniu KS Ruch i boisku na Kalinie Chorzowianin nr 22 398 z 28 05 2008 p 19 20 See also Jacek Kurek Historia Wielkich Hajduk Chorzow Batory Wielkie Hajduki 2001 p 105 119 Encyklopedia pilkarska FUJI kolekcja klubow tom I Ruch Chorzow Andrzej Gowarzewski Katowice 1995 p 19 Encyklopedia pilkarska FUJI kolekcja klubow tom I Ruch Chorzow Andrzej Gowarzewski Katowice 1995 p 12 Analiza miejsc urodzenia pilkarzy na podstawie biogramow zamieszczonych w Encyklopedii pilkarskiej FUJI kolekcja klubow tom I Ruch Chorzow Andrzej Gowarzewski Katowice 1995 Encyklopedia pilkarska FUJI kolekcja klubow tom I Ruch Chorzow Andrzej Gowarzewski Katowice 1995 p 43 Ruch Chorzow profile Albion Road accessed 15 April 2009 Murray Scott 23 October 2007 The Joy of Six own goals Guardian co uk O tytul mistrza p 146 RUCH CHORZoW S A otwarcie przyspieszonego postepowania ukladowego Bankier pl Retrieved 12 September 2021 RUCH CHORZoW S A Uprawomocnienie Postanowienia Sadu Rejonowego Katowice Wschod w Katowicach w przedmiocie zatwierdzenia ukladu restrukturyzacyjnego Retrieved 12 September 2021 2 liga Ruch Chorzow Radunia Stezyca 1 0 po dogr tvp sport Retrieved 29 May 2022 Ruch Chorzow wraca na zaplecze Ekstraklasy Hat trick Daniela Szczepana onet pl Retrieved 29 May 2022 Pierwsza druzyna in Polish Ruch Chorzow Retrieved 18 September 2023 Encyklopedia pilkarska FUJI kolekcja klubow tom I Ruch Chorzow Andrzej Gowarzewski Katowice 1995 s 66 Jak zmienial sie herb Ruchu Ruch Chorzow in Polish Retrieved 26 November 2022 ROZPOCZYNAMY NOWA ERe Ruch Chorzow in Polish Retrieved 26 November 2022 Debiut oficjalnej maskotki in Polish 30 April 2010 Premiera ksiazki Historia Ruchu Chorzow Tom I Czesc 1 in Polish 6 October 2020 Slōnsko fana dla Ruchu Chorzow To prezent od Ruchu Autonomii Slaska in Polish 21 July 2021 Spiker godo po slasku na meczu Wladcow Slaska in Polish 16 September 2015 Gorny Slask nowe szaliki i t shirt in Polish 8 August 2022 Pieklo zamarzlo Gorole po stronie Hanysow po kiepskiej prowokacji Artura Boruca in Polish 10 September 2022 Ruch zagra w slaskich barwach www ksruch com in Polish 15 July 2015 Ruch z Legia gra w slaskich barwach by uczcic 80 lecie stadionu Trener Fornalik chwali ten pomysl in Polish 17 September 2015 Gorny Slask wraca na koszulki Na stale in Polish 24 October 2016 Co laczy takie kluby jak Ruch Chorzow i FC Barcelona in Polish 28 April 2022 a b Historia kibicow in Polish Oberschlesien Ta flaga powinna wisiec czy nie in Polish 14 September 2009 Retrieved 26 October 2016 Kontrowersje wokol flagi z napisem Oberschlesien in Polish 11 September 2009 Retrieved 26 October 2016 Flaga To My Narod Slaski na meczu w Warszawie PZPN odpowiada in Polish Retrieved 26 November 2016 Przyjaciele Friends in Polish Informacje z woj slaskiego tvs pl Retrieved 16 October 2015 Polonia Bytom Ruch Chorzow Najstarsze derby Slaska zdecyduja kto bedzie wiceliderem Ekstraklasy Zapowiedzi meczow PrzegladSportowy pl Retrieved 16 October 2015 Dlaczego pseudokibice wyzywaja sie od Zydow Wywiad z Jerzym Buzkiem Kopanie pilki na podworku w Chorzowie bylo moja specjalnoscia sportowa slaskie Nasze Miasto Ruch Chorzow Mistrz Holoubek trzymal z Ruchem Chorzow e teatr pl Swir Roku to zapalony kibic Ruchu Chorzow a b Kibice Ruchu Wojciech Kilar i Jan Miodek o spadku niebieskich Ta trudna sztuka pilki noznej gt ESEJE 2 0 Fenomen Wielkich Derbow Slaska Powstaje film o kibicach Ruchu bo to dobra rodzina Wprost 24 Wencel gordyjski Schizofrenia kibica Szalankiewicz Pawel 30 January 2015 Karol Gwozdz poeta kibic muzyk jednak przede wszystkim Slazak Dziennik Zachodni p 4 Twardoch Szczepan 2021 Wielkie Ksiestwo Groteski in Polish Wydawnictwo Literackie p 53 ISBN 978 83 08 07441 1 Bogdan Kalus i Michal Zurawski przed kamera Ruch TV KS Ruch Chorzow in Polish Retrieved 4 September 2023 References editGowarzewski Andrzej Glyk Wioletta 2000 O tytul mistrza Polski 1920 2000 in Polish GiA Katowice ISBN 83 88232 02 9 Gowarzewski Andrzej Waloszek Joachim 1995 Ruch Chorzow 75 lat Niebieskich in Polish GiA Katowice ISBN 83 902751 3 9 Bagier Tadeusz Dutkowski Zbigniew Kraszkiewicz Miroslaw 1970 Piecdziesiat lat Klubu Sportowego Ruch Chorzow in Polish Wydawnictwo Artystyczno Graficzne Chorzow Gorzelany Franciszek Miklica Boguslaw et al 1960 40 lecie Klubu Sportowego Ruch Chorzow in Polish Wydawnictwo Prasa Katowice Collective work under Henryk Rechowicz editorial 1994 Z najnowszych dziejow kultury fizycznej i turystyki in Polish Wydawnictwo AWF Katowice Collective work 2000 80 lat OZPN Okregowego Zwiazku Pilki Noznej Katowice 1920 2000 in Polish GiA Katowice ISBN 83 88232 03 7 Kurek Jacek 2001 Historia Wielkich Hajduk in Polish Zwiazek Gornoslaski Kolo Wielkie Hajduki Rococo Chorzow Batory ISBN 83 86293 29 2 Gowarzewski Andrzej 2001 Bialo czerwoni pilkarska reprezentacja Polski 1921 2001 ludzie mecze fakty daty in Polish GiA Katowice ISBN 83 88232 08 8 Gowarzewski Andrzej Waloszek Joachim 1996 75 lat OZPN Okregowego Zwiazku Pilki Noznej Katowice 1920 1995 ludzie historia fakty in Polish GiA Katowice ISBN 83 902751 7 1 Czaplinski Marek red 2002 Historia Slaska in Polish Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego Wroclaw ISBN 83 229 2213 2 External links editOfficial website in Polish Fansite in Polish Ruch Chorzow at 90minut pl in Polish nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ruch Chorzow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruch Chorzow amp oldid 1209761789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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