Sport in Warsaw


is home to 2 major professional football clubs and a number of smaller clubs. The only one currently playing in the first division is Legia Warszawa.

Overview

On 9 April 2008 the President of Warsaw, Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz, obtained from the mayor of Stuttgart Wolfgang Schuster a challenge award – a commemorative plaque awarded to Warsaw as the European Capital of Sport in 2008.
The National Stadium, holds a capacity of 58,500 seat football stadium, Warsaw's recently demolished 10th-Anniversary Stadium. The national stadium hosted the opening match, 2 group matches, a quarterfinal, and a semifinal of the UEFA Euro 2012 hosted jointly by Poland and Ukraine.
at the Pepsi Arena
There are many sports centres in the city as well. Most of these facilities are swimming pools and sports halls, many of them built by the municipality in the past several years. The main indoor venue is Hala Torwar, used for all kinds of indoor sports and the horse racetrack.
The best of the city's swimming centres is at Wodny Park Warszawianka, 4 km south of the centre at Merliniego Street, where there's an Olympic-sized pool as well as water slides and children's areas.
From the Warsovian football teams, the most famous is Legia Warszawa – the army club with a nationwide following play at Polish Army Stadium, just southeast of the centre at Łazienkowska Street. Established in 1916, they have won the country’s championship 13 times and won the Polish Cup record 19 times. They have never been relegated divisions. In the Champions League season 1995/96 they reached the quarter-finals, where they lost to Panathinaikos Athens.
Their local rivals, Polonia Warsaw, have significantly fewer supporters, yet they managed to win Ekstraklasa Championship in 2000. They also won the country’s championship in 1946, and won the cup twice as well. Polonia's home venue is located at Konwiktorska Street, a ten-minute walk north from the Old Town.
Warsaw was chosen as one of four Polish cities to host the UEFA Euro 2012 tournament alongside Ukraine. Its National Stadium will be hosting just under a sixth of the games in the competition. It hosted 3 group A matches, 1 quarter-final and 1 semi-final at the European tournament. Its city emblem was chosen as the badge to symbolise the area. The city has also 4 teams who have their team base there or thereabouts: Russia, Croatia, Greece and of course, Poland. The stadium is fully equipped including a folding roof and a 56,000 seater capacity. The host stadium was only completed in November 2011, under a year before the start of UEFA Euro 2012 and it has hosted 2/3 of Poland's group matches.
ClubSportFoundedLeagueVenueHead Coach
Legia WarszawaFootball1916EkstraklasaPepsi ArenaHenning Berg
Polonia WarszawaFootball1911III LigaStadion PoloniiIgor Gołaszewski
Legia WarszawaBasketball1947Polska Liga KoszykówkiOSiR BemowoWojciech Kiełbasiewicz
Polonia Gaz Ziemny WarszawaBasketball1911II LigaHala Sportowa "Koło"Wojciech Kamiński
AZS Politechnika WarszawaVolleyball1918Polska Liga SiatkówkiHala UCSiRRadosław Panas
Cumann Warszawa Gaelic Football and Hurling2009European Gaelic Football ChampionshipStadion Skra, Pole MokotowskieEoin Sheedy
Królewscy WarszawaAmerican Football2012Polska Liga Futbolu AmerykańskiegoHutnik StadiumJames Deacon

Like most of Polish sport clubs, those based in Warsaw have also branches that specialize in other disciplines. The following lists the major sport clubs and the discipline the club is famous for:

Football clubs