Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Korona Kielce

Korona Kielce

FieldValue
clubnameKorona Kielce
imageKorona Kielce crest.png
image_size180px
fullnameKorona Spółka Akcyjna
nicknameScyzory (The Buck-Knives)
Złocisto-Krwiści (The Golden-Blooded)
founded
groundKielce Municipal Stadium
capacity15,700
ownerKorona 4ever (99%)
Kielce (1%)
chairmanLeszek Czarny
managerJacek Zieliński
leagueEkstraklasa
season2024–25
positionEkstraklasa, 11th of 18
pattern_la1_korona2526h
pattern_b1_korona2526h
pattern_ra1_korona2526h
pattern_sh1_redsides
leftarm1FFEE00
body1FFEE00
rightarm1FFEE00
shorts1ffff00
socks1FF0000
pattern_la2_korona2526a
pattern_b2_korona2526a
pattern_ra2_korona2526a
leftarm2000000
body2000000
rightarm2000000
shorts2000000
socks2000000
current2025–26 Korona Kielce season
website

Złocisto-Krwiści (The Golden-Blooded) Kielce (1%)

Korona Kielce (, KoronaCrown – symbol of club and city, Kielce – name of city where club is based) is a Polish professional football club based in Kielce, competing in Ekstraklasa in the 2025–26 season. From 2002 to 2008, the club belonged to a Polish holding company Kolporter Holding and achieved its greatest success – winning promotion to the top tier in 2005. Since then, Korona has spent 17 seasons in the Polish football top level (as of 2024–25). In the 2006–07 season, Korona played in the final of the Polish Cup.

Honours

League

  • Ekstraklasa
  • I liga
    • Champions: 2004–05
  • II liga (group IV)
    • Champions: 1989–90, 1996–97, 2003–04

Cup

Youth teams

  • Polish U-19 Championship
    • Champions: 2009, 2019
    • Runners-up: 1997

History

II liga]] against [[KS Lublinianka]] in 1975

The club was founded in 1973 after the union of two clubs from Kielce – Iskra and SHL. The new club got its first promotion to the Polish 2nd league in 1975. Unfortunately, the team did not play very well and was soon relegated. The next promotion was in 1982. Korona played in the 2nd league until 1990 when it was once again relegated. 1996 brought several changes. Nida Gips from Gacki became the new sponsor and the club's name changed to Miejski Klub Sportowy Sekcja Futbolowa Korona. During the 1998–99 season, Korona again played in the 2nd league but dropped down at the end of the season. In 2000 Korona merged with another club from Kielce – Błękitni Kielce and was renamed to Kielecki Klub Piłkarski Korona.

In 2002, the golden era for Korona had begun. Kolporter became the new sponsor, Krzysztof Klicki the new chairman, and the club's name changed to Kielecki Klub Piłkarski Kolporter Korona. In 2003, the team was again renamed, this time to Sportowa Spólka Akcyjna Kolporter Korona. In 2005 Korona won the 2nd league and for the first time in the club's history was promoted to the Polish premier league.

Away game with [[Polonia Warsaw]] played in the [[2010–11 Ekstraklasa

Korona's first match in the Ekstraklasa was against Cracovia and the final score was 0–0. Korona ended the 2005–06 season fifth in the league table. Prior to the 2006–07 season, at a meeting with supporters, the chairman announced that club would revert to its historical coat of arms. Korona's second season in the Ekstraklasa started off strongly with an away win against Arka Gdynia (3–0). 20 September 2006 was a significant one in Korona's history. After an away victory against Odra Wodzisław Śląski, the club climbed to the top of the league table for the first time in its history although it ended the 2006–07 season in 7th place. Its third and final season in the top division was 2007–08, placing 6th but being relegated for its involvement in match-fixing in the 2003–04 season. In August 2008, Klicki sold the club to the city of Kielce for a nominal fee.

After one year, on 14 July 2009, Korona Kielce was promoted to the Ekstraklasa. In the 2019–20 season, Korona finished in 15th place and were relegated back to I liga. On 29 May 2022 Korona returned to the Ekstraklasa following a 3–2 win over Chrobry Głogów in the promotion play-off final after the winning goal scored in the final minutes of extra time.

Stadium

Stadium of Korona Kielce

In response to Korona's successes and the club owner, Krzysztof Klicki's, affirmation that the club would play in the premier league and battle for European cups, Kielce municipal authorities approved the construction of a new stadium. Unfortunately, the stadium turned out to be much too small. Because of this the club played its first round in the highest division at its old stadium (currently used by reserves and youth teams) to permit further work on the new facility.

Only eighteen months after the start of the building project, the keys of the new stadium were officially handed to the club. The first premier league match was played on 1 April 2006 against Zagłębie Lubin.

The Korona stadium, although it stands on the same site as an earlier stadium, is an entirely new facility, built according to UEFA recommendations and modern design ideas. In this way it differs from most other football stadiums in Poland which were built during the communist era or earlier and only slightly modernized to meet basic UEFA standards.

Kielce stadium can seat 15,550 fans, however, due to Polish regulations, which require a buffer zone between local fans and the visitors section, league matches can only accommodate 13,823 Korona fans and 777 visiting fans. However, on one occasion the stadium was full to capacity during a league match. This occurred during the 2006–07 season when fans of visiting club Legia Warsaw were prohibited from entering due to the vast number of their 'red brigade' supporters who made the trip down to watch their club in Kielce.

Pitch dimensions are 105 x 68 m, and the entire surface is heated. Automatic sprinklers water the pitch in between match days. Kielce stadium has a complete system of monitoring, which could serve as a model for other Polish stadiums. Korona's stadium is also considered by the Polish Football Association for international games.

Since 2006, when the club moved to the most modern stadium in Poland, it often had one of the highest attendance statistics in the Polish league, although these numbers have declined since the club's relegation at the end of the 2007–08 season.

Club crest

A new club crest was introduced in 2002, featuring a redesigned coat of arms. However, many fans were disappointed by the removal of the beloved black crown from the emblem.

Before the 2006–07 season, the chairman announced in a meeting with supporters that the club would return to the historical coat of arms. Thanks to the fans and good will of the chairman, Korona again has the crown in her coat of arms.

Ownership

In April 2017, former German international footballer Dieter Burdenski became the majority owner of the club after purchasing 72% of the club shares, and subsequently signed his son Fabian in June that year. In 2020, the city of Kielce acquired Burdenski's shares and became the sole owner of the club.

In March 2025, Kielce sold 99% of its shares to a private limited company Korona 4ever, run by local businessman Łukasz Maciejczyk, and pledged to provide the club with 2.3 million PLN annually until 2030.

Supporters

"''We are the Buck-Knives''"

Supporters of Korona are some of the most enthusiastic in the Ekstraklasa and have received many awards for their artistic match 'frames'. In the spring round of 2006–07, Korona Kielce fans were awarded 5 times in 8 matches for their superb 'frames'.

Korona supporters' tireless cheering for their team often helps their team to victories. The most faithful fans are seated in the Młyn () which contains 500 – 2,000 people.

On 14 June 2006, the Stowarzyszenie Kibiców Korony Kielce "Złocisto-Krwiści" () was officially registered at a Kielce court. Official appointing of Korona Kielce fans had become a fact. This association brings together representatives of various Korona supporters groups.

County Hall Island Block]] in [[London]], 2006

The association is a partner for the club and many institutions, which it wants to cooperate with. The fans are invaluable in the creation of memorable football events, and the association has an important role in increasing fan input on football life in Korona. The most important role of the association however is to improve the quality of support.

The association also organizes special trains and coaches for fans for away matches. It also organizes events promoting the Club such as "Golden-bloody stadium in Kielce", "Small toy – children's benefit" (fans donated toys to an orphanage), "Action Banner" (a lot of flags and banners were sewed). In short, the association has introduced a new supporting style at Korona matches which will attract even more fans to the stadium on Ściegiennego street.

Korona Kielce fans have a friendship with fans of Stal Mielec and Sandecja Nowy Sącz.

Their biggest rivals are KSZO Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski with whom they contest the Holy Cross Province derby. Other fierce rivals are Radomiak Radom and Wisła Kraków.

After a match...

Korona Kielce II

Main article: Korona Kielce II

The club operates a reserve team.

Season to season

SeasonTierPlace
1973–7434th
1974–7531st
1975–76215th
1976–7736th
1977–78310th
1978–7938th
1979–8034th
1980–8134th
1981–8232nd
1982–8329th
1983–8429th
1984–8528th
1985–86210th
1986–87213th
1987–8832nd
1988–8934th
1989–9031st
1990–91217th
SeasonTierPlace
1991–92213th
1992–93218th
1993–9437th
1994–9533rd
1995–9634th
1996–9731st
1997–9828th
1998–9926th
1999–2000223rd
2000–01313th
2001–0237th
2002–0332nd
2003–0431st
2004–0521st
2005–0615th
2006–0717th
2007–0816th
2008–0923rd
SeasonTierPlace
2009–1016th
2010–11113th
2011–1215th
2012–13111th
2013–14113th
2014–15111th
2015–16112th
2016–1715th
2017–1818th
2018–19110th
2019–20115th
2020–21212th
2021–2224th
2022–23113th
2023–24114th
2024–25111th

|}

Players

Current squad

Out on loan

Notable players

The following players received international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Korona Kielce. ; Poland

  • Poland Grzegorz Bonin (2005–08)
  • Poland Piotr Celeban (2007–08)
  • Poland Radosław Cierzniak (2007–10)
  • Poland Paweł Golański (2005–07) (2010–15)
  • Poland Artur Jędrzejczyk (2010)
  • Poland Marcin Kaczmarek (2005–08)
  • Poland Arkadiusz Kaliszan (2004–06)
  • Poland Jacek Kiełb (2006–10, 2011–12, 2013–15, 2016–18, 2020–23)
  • Poland Wojciech Kowalewski (2007–08)
  • Poland Marcin Kuś (2007–08)
  • Poland Andrzej Niedzielan (2010–11)
  • Poland Grzegorz Piechna (2004–06)
  • Poland Mariusz Stępiński (2026–)
  • Poland Piotr Świerczewski (2007–08)
  • Poland Maciej Wilusz (2015)
  • Poland Łukasz Załuska (2004–07)
  • Poland Marcin Żewłakow (2012–13)
  • Poland Michał Żyro (2019–20) ; Belarus
  • BLR Yevgeny Shikavka (2022–25)
  • BLR Dzmitry Verkhawtsow (2016) ; Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • BIH Vlastimir Jovanović (2010–16)
  • BIH Adnan Kovačević (2017–20) ; Bulgaria
  • BUL Iliyan Mitsanski (2007, 2017)
  • BUL Vladimir Nikolov (2025–)
  • BUL Viktor Popov (2025–) ; Canada
  • Canada Milan Borjan (2017)
  • Canada Marcus Godinho (2023–25)
  • Canada Charlie Trafford (2015–17)
  • Canada Dominick Zator (2023–25) ; Costa Rica
  • CRC Felicio Brown Forbes (2018–19) ; Cyprus
  • CYP Constantinos Soteriou (2025–) ; Czech Republic
  • CZE Michal Papadopoulos (2019–20) ; Estonia
  • EST Ken Kallaste (2016–19)
  • EST Sander Puri (2011) ; Finland
  • FIN Petteri Forsell (2020, 2024) ; France
  • FRA Olivier Kapo (2014–15) ; Georgia
  • GEO Vato Arveladze (2018–20)
  • GEO Nika Kacharava (2017–18) ; Israel
  • ISR Yoav Hofmayster (2023–25) ; Kazakhstan
  • KAZ Sergei Khizhnichenko (2014) ; Latvia
  • LVA Aleksandrs Fertovs (2015–16)
  • LVA Vladislavs Gabovs (2015–17) ; Lithuania
  • Lithuania Vytautas Černiauskas (2014–15)
  • Lithuania Andrius Skerla (2007–08) ; Moldova
  • MDA Anatolie Doroș (2005–06) ; Montenegro
  • MNE Saša Balić (2022–23)
  • MNE Slobodan Rubežić (2025–) ; New Zealand
  • NZL Themistoklis Tzimopoulos (2019–21) ; Senegal
  • Senegal Elhadji Pape Diaw (2016–19) ; Serbia
  • SRB Nemanja Miletić (2019–20) ; Slovakia
  • Slovakia Erik Pačinda (2019–20) ; Slovenia
  • Slovenia Goran Cvijanović (2017–18)
  • Slovenia Tamar Svetlin (2025–) ; Sweden
  • Sweden Simon Gustafson (2026–)

Managers

  • Poland Zbigniew Pawlak (1973)
  • Poland Bogumił Gozdur (1973–77)
  • Poland Zbigniew Lepczyk (1978)
  • Poland Marian Szczechowicz (1979)
  • Poland Wojciech Niedźwiedzki (1979–80)
  • Poland Antoni Hermanowicz (1980–83)
  • Poland Józef Golla (1983–84)
  • Poland Czesław Palik (1 July 1984 – 30 June 1985)
  • Poland Czesław Fudalej (1985)
  • Poland Witold Sokołowski (1986)
  • Poland Antoni Hermanowicz (1986)
  • Poland Bogumił Gozdur (1986)
  • Poland Antoni Hermanowicz (1987–88)
  • Poland Czesław Palik (1 July 1988 – 31 December 1991)
  • Ukraine Volodymyr Bulhakov (1992)
  • Poland Marian Puchalski (1993)
  • Poland Antoni Hermanowicz (1993)
  • Poland Marek Parzyszek (1994)
  • Poland Czesław Palik (1 July 1994 – 30 June 1996)
  • Poland Włodzimierz Gąsior (1 July 1996 – 30 June 1999)
  • Poland Stanisław Gielarek (1999)
  • Poland Antoni Hermanowicz (2000)
  • Poland Jacek Zieliński I (1 July 2000 – 20 December 2000)
  • Poland Czesław Palik (1 January 2001 – 30 June 2001)
  • Poland Robert Orłowski (1 July 2001 – 2002)
  • Poland Tomasz Muchiński (2002 – 23 September 2002)
  • Poland Dariusz Wdowczyk (23 September 2002 – 12 December 2004)
  • Poland Ryszard Wieczorek (13 December 2004 – 7 May 2007)
  • Poland Jacek Zieliński II (1 July 2007 – 17 May 2008)
  • Poland Włodzimierz Gąsior (3 June 2008 – 4 May 2009)
  • Poland Marek Motyka (18 May 2009 – 23 November 2009)
  • Poland Marcin Gawron (caretaker) (24 November 2009 – 29 November 2009)
  • Poland Marcin Sasal (29 November 2009 – 12 May 2011)
  • Poland Włodzimierz Gąsior (interim) (12 May 2011 – 9 June 2011)
  • Poland Leszek Ojrzyński (1 July 2011 – 5 August 2013)
  • Poland Sławomir Grzesik (caretaker) (5 August 2013 – 13 August 2013)
  • Spain Pacheta (13 August 2013 – June 2014)
  • Poland Ryszard Tarasiewicz (17 June 2014 – 10 June 2015)
  • Poland Marcin Brosz (25 June 2015 – 30 June 2016)
  • Poland Tomasz Wilman (30 June 2016 – 10 November 2016)
  • Poland Maciej Bartoszek (10 November 2016 – 30 June 2017)
  • Italy Gino Lettieri (1 July 2017 – 31 August 2019)
  • Poland Mirosław Smyła (16 September 2019 – 6 March 2020)
  • Poland Maciej Bartoszek (6 March 2020 – 15 April 2021)
  • Poland Dominik Nowak (16 April 2021 – 29 November 2021)
  • Poland Leszek Ojrzyński (17 December 2021 – 29 October 2022)
  • Poland Kamil Kuzera (29 October 2022 – 31 July 2024)
  • Poland Mariusz Arczewski (caretaker) (31 July 2024 – 8 August 2024)
  • Poland Jacek Zieliński I (8 August 2024 – present)

References

References

  1. "Korona Kielce".
  2. (14 July 2009). "Korona w Ekstraklasie". www.90minut.pl.
  3. (17 July 2020). "Dlaczego Korona spadła z ekstraklasy? Ekspert: Zawiodły transfery, to przypadkowa zbieranina ludzi". kielce.wyborcza.pl.
  4. (30 May 2022). "Korona Kielce awansowała do Ekstraklasy. Kluczowy gol padł w dogrywce".
  5. (11 April 2017). "Ex-Keeper Burdenski kauft sich bei Korona Kielce ein". weser-kurier.de.
  6. (4 August 2020). "Ulga w Kielcach. Korona ponownie w rękach miasta".
  7. (6 March 2025). "Łukasz Maciejczyk: To decyzja podjęta zdecydowanie z...miłości do Korony. Ten klub jest w moim sercu, towarzyszy mi od wielu lat".
  8. "Korona Kielce".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Korona Kielce — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report