Results

Poland Cup 09/27 13:30 7 Gryf Wejherowo v Zaglebie Sosnowiec L 1-3
Poland IV Liga 08/12 09:00 - Jaguar Gdansk v Gryf Wejherowo L 3-2
Poland Regional Cup 06/21 15:00 - Gryf Wejherowo v Chojniczanka Chojnice II W 3-1
Poland IV Liga 04/26 15:30 - Gryf Wejherowo v Arka Gdynia II D 2-2
Europe Friendlies 01/14 09:00 - Cartusia Kartuzy v Gryf Wejherowo L 2-1
Poland IV Liga 11/04 17:30 - MKS Wladyslawowo v Gryf Wejherowo W 2-6
Poland Regional Cup 10/11 14:00 - Gryf Wejherowo v MKS Wladyslawowo W 5-0
Poland IV Liga 08/28 09:00 - Arka Gdynia II v Gryf Wejherowo W 1-3
Poland IV Liga 08/21 09:00 - KTS-K Luzino v Gryf Wejherowo L 4-2
Poland IV Liga 08/12 16:30 - Gryf Wejherowo v Jaguar Gdansk D 2-2
Poland IV Liga 04/30 12:00 - KTS-K Luzino v Gryf Wejherowo D 2-2
Poland IV Liga 04/24 12:00 - Gryf Wejherowo v Lechia Gdansk II L 0-1

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 3 2 1
Wins 0 0 0
Draws 1 1 0
Losses 2 1 1
Goals for 5 3 2
Goals against 8 5 3
Clean sheets 0 0 0
Failed to score 0 0 0

Wikipedia - Gryf Wejherowo

Gryf Wejherowo is a Polish football club in Wejherowo, Poland. The club plays in the Polish Fourth League (IV liga). It was founded as TS Kaszubia in 1921, but after World War II the club was renamed Gryf Wejherowo.

Gryf Wejherowo is the oldest football club in Pomeranian Voivodeship, and for several years was the only club in the region playing in the Polish Third League (III liga). It is well known in Poland for reaching the 2011–12 Polish Cup quarterfinals after beating clubs from the Polish Premier League (Ekstraklasa) and the Polish First League (I liga).

History

History

In April 1921, a Polish Sokół movement nest was the first gymnastics association organized in Wejherowo. Soon after that the predecessor of the current Wejherowo sports club, Kaszubia, was organized, along with Siła and some other smaller associations. Because of Sokół, the city became famous for top national boxers and long-distance runners, despite that they lacked modern training facilities, which were completed in 1927. Sokół nest had 700 members. Wejherowo's sports movement regularly organized various competitions and hosted nationally renowned tournaments including the "Błękitną Wstęgę Bałtyku", a tennis blue riband event in which players such as Ignacy Tłoczyński, Józef Hebda [pl], and Jadwiga Jędrzejowska competed. The development of this sports movement was stopped by World War II.

After in April 1945, all sport clubs in Wejherowo merged. In 1952 the club name was changed to "Miejski Międzyzakładowy Klub Sportowy (MMKS) 'Gryf'." Kaszubia was considered the most important of them all. There were also single sport clubs, like Czytelnik and Wejherowianka, but they quickly fell into obscurity and dissolved.

The heritage of Interwar period sports clubs was mainly dominated by boxing. MMKS Gryf was also a club for boxers; past members who competed for the club include Olympic medal winners Hubert Skrzypczak and Henryk Dampc. Despite these successes, the importance of the sports club decreased because it lacks the financial support of a large local employer for development so the sports club lost boxers to GKS Wybrzeże i Stoczniowca, footballers to various clubs, and handball players to Starty Gdańsk. On a side note, Gryf had also won the Polish women's team bowling cup during this period.

In the 1970s, the club's football team was promoted to the third tier of the Polish football league system but was demoted three years later. Football's popularity grew in Wejherowo and eventually dominated over the club's other sports. Football in Wejherowo even kept its popularity supreme over basketball, during the 1980s, when basketball was making some headway and accomplishing minor achievements.

The team again was promoted to the III liga in 1992, but was demoted five years later in a restructuring of the Polish football league system. By 1998, the team returned to the previous division as "WKS Gryf Wejherowo" and won a Regional Polish Cup. In 1995, some of the club's athletes left the team and founded a new club, KS Wejher Wejherowo.

During the years 1999–2004 were definitely the most difficult in the club's history. The club was in debt to the amount of 300,000 zł, which was equivalent to £43,336 as of 2004. For a time, until 2002, the club was not exclusively focused on football but also bowling and duplicate bridge. The team was the only club from the region which played in the pre-2008 III liga season. During that time, it included a few players, such as Dawid Pomorski and Wojciech Pięta, who are widely regarded today as legends. Both Pomorski and Pięta—despite the club's debt and difficulty paying it—are widely credited within the community of Wejherowo for competing at a level that raised the team to the III liga, and in turn won two regional cups in 2000 and 2003. But at the end of the 2003–2004 season, the team was relegated to the IV liga and the board resigned.

Rafał Szlas became the Gryf Wejherowo chairman in 2004. With Szlas's company he paid off all the club's debts and started to rebuild Gryf Wejherowo after suffering another relegation to the V liga. In 2006, the team reached the 4th tier, and gained a new club sponsor: The Orlex Company. From 2006–2009, the club reached higher divisions using local players, but when they reached the 4th tier, which was renamed the III liga, they decided to appoint a director of football; Wiesław Renusz. Renusz immediately started to trade for new young and talented players, like Grzegorz Gicewicz and Przemysław Kostuch, who are still playing for Gryf. In fact, Gicewicz and Kostuch are widely considered two of the best players in the club's history. In May 2011, former Ekstraklasa player Grzegorz Niciński [pl] was hired as the team manager. With Niciński's arrival, he has changed the club's winning average into one of the best in the Pomeranian Voivodeship, to boot, he led the club to win another Polish regional cup. In June 2011, the team reached the quarterfinals of the Central Polish Cup and got promoted to the II liga in June 2012. Unfortunately, Niciński was banned in 2012 for eight months by the Polish Football Association for participating in a 2004 match-fixing scandal, while he was a player. The team's temporary manager became Dariusz Mierzejewski who managed until July 2013. In July 2016 Mariusz Pawlak became new Gryf Wejherowo's manager.

In 2011, a book about the club's history was published: 9 Dekad Gryfa.


Gryf Wejherowo is a professional soccer team based in Wejherowo, Poland. The team was founded in 1922 and has a rich history of success in Polish soccer. Gryf Wejherowo plays in the third tier of Polish soccer, the II Liga.

The team's home stadium is the Municipal Stadium in Wejherowo, which has a capacity of 3,500 spectators. The team's colors are blue and white, and their logo features a griffin, which is a mythical creature that symbolizes strength and courage.

Gryf Wejherowo has a strong fan base and is known for their passionate supporters who create a lively atmosphere at home games. The team has a reputation for playing an attacking style of soccer, with a focus on quick passing and movement off the ball.

In recent years, Gryf Wejherowo has been building a young and talented squad, with a mix of experienced veterans and promising young players. The team's goal is to continue to develop their players and compete for promotion to the higher tiers of Polish soccer.

Overall, Gryf Wejherowo is a respected and competitive team in Polish soccer, with a proud history and a bright future ahead.