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Piast won their first national championship in the 2018–19 Ekstraklasa season and have regularly qualified for European competitions since. Prior to their rise in the 2010s, the club had spent most of its history in the lower divisions.
Piast Gliwice play their home matches at the Piotr Wieczorek Stadium, a 10,000-seat venue opened in 2011, and traditionally wear blue and red.
In 1949, five local teams were merged with Piast, and the team was renamed to Metal Piast Gliwice, and then to Stal Gliwice, before its original name Piast Gliwice was restored in 1955. Piast continued to play their matches on ul. Robotniczej. In 1964, Piast merged with GKS Gliwice, a team formed in 1956 from a fusion of the three other local clubs, and the name was changed to GKS Piast Gliwice. Since the 1950s, Piast mostly played in the Second Division. During that period, Piast have twice (1978, 1983) managed to reach the final of the Polish Cup, losing on both occasions.
In the 1990s, due to financial difficulties, the team was rebuilt from the Klasa B (7th tier), achieving four consecutive promotions from the seventh to the third tier in 1997–2001, and afterwards it won promotion to the II liga (second tier) in 2003. Piast played as many as 33 seasons in the Polish Second Division, before finally being promoted to the Ekstraklasa in 2008. Having played two seasons in the top division, the club was relegated in 2010 to come back in 2012. It is the first football team in Poland to gain promotion from the 7th tier to the Ekstraklasa (Polish top tier of football) and later to the European club competition.[1]
In the 2010s, Piast enjoyed its greatest success, being runners-up in the 2015–16 Ekstraklasa and winning its first Polish championship in the 2018–19 season.
There is also a futsal department of Piast Gliwice, which competes in the Futsal Ekstraklasa (top division). Its home venue is the Gliwice Arena. It won its first Polish Championship in the 2021–22 season.[2]
Naming history
18 June 1945 – KS Piast Gliwice
23 May 1946 – KSM Piast Gliwice
September/November 1947 – ZKSM Piast Gliwice
5 March 1949 – ZS Metal Piast Gliwice (merged with ZKSM Huta Łabędy, ZKS Walcownia Łabędy, RKS Jedność Rudziniec, RKS PZS Gliwice and ZKS Silesia Gliwice)
1 November 1949 – ZKS Stal Gliwice
11 March 1951 – ZKS Stal GZUT Gliwice
15 March 1955 – ZKS Piast Gliwice
20 January 1957 – KS Piast Gliwice
1 January 1961 – SKS Piast Gliwice
15 March 1964 – GKS Piast Gliwice (merged with GKS Gliwice and KS Metal Gliwice)
17 October 1983 – MC-W GKS Piast Gliwice
12 September 1989 – CWKS Piast-Bumar Gliwice
1989 – merged with ZTS Łabędy (Gliwice)
1990 – CWKS Bumar-Piast Gliwice
4 April 1990 – KS Bumar Gliwice
11 May 1990 – KS Bumar Łabędy (Gliwice)
1 July 1990 – KS Bumar Gliwice
1991 – KS Piast-Bumar Gliwice
1 July 1992 – MC-W GKS Piast Gliwice
1 August 1995 – KS Bojków Gliwice (merged with KS Bojków Gliwice)
15 September 1995 – KS Piast Bojków Gliwice
2 September 1996 – GKS Piast Gliwice
Crest
Gliwice city coat of arms from which the club crest is derived
The club's crest is derived from the coat of arms of the city of Gliwice, and thus contains the Piast Eagle of the Upper Silesian line of the medieval Polish Piast dynasty, which ruled the city until 1532.
Piast have a friendship with fans of Belarusian club BATE Borisov since 2011. The friendship started when BATE fans on their way to a Champions League match in Copenhagen stopped for a Piast game against local rivals GKS Katowice. The Piast fans then went to Alkmaar to support BATE versus AZ. After another visit for a Champions League game against Sturm Graz, the friendship became official and both sets of fans regularly visit each other.[3]
Piast's major rivals are Górnik Zabrze, with whom they contest the local derby.[4][5] The stadiums are located just a few kilometres from each other. Other rivals are local teams GKS Katowice and the two Bytom clubs, Szombierki and Polonia.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Had international caps for their respective countries at any time. Players with names listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Piast.