2011–12 Ekstraklasa

Ekstraklasa
Season 2011–12
Champions Śląsk Wrocław
2nd title
Relegated ŁKS Łódź
Cracovia
Champions League Śląsk Wrocław
Europa League Ruch Chorzów
Legia Warsaw
Lech Poznań
Matches played 240
Goals scored 527 (2.2 per match)
Top goalscorer Artjoms Rudņevs
(22 goals)
Biggest home win GKS 6–0 Podbeskidzie
Biggest away win ŁKS 0–5 Lech
Highest scoring GKS 6–0 Podbeskidzie
Widzew 4–2 Jagiellonia
Zagłębie 1–5 Śląsk
Longest winning run 5 games
Zagłębie Lubin[1]
Longest unbeaten run 9 games
Korona Kielce, Lech Poznań, Ruch Chorzów[1]
Longest winless run 11 games
ŁKS Łódź[1]
Longest losing run 4 games
Zagłębie Lubin[1]
Highest attendance 42,770[2][3]
Śląsk 1–0 Lechia
(28 October 2011)
Lowest attendance 800[2][4]
ŁKS 0–5 Lech
(29 July 2011)
Average attendance 8,740[5]

The 2011–12 Ekstraklasa was the 78th season of the highest level of football leagues in Poland since its establishment in 1927. It started on 29 July 2011 and concluded on 6 May 2012. A total of 16 teams participated, 14 of which competed in the league during the 2010–11 season, while the remaining two were promoted from the 2010-11 season of the I Liga. Each team played a total of 30 matches, half at home and half away.

Śląsk Wrocław won the title, which marked their 2nd title in Ekstraklasa history.

The defending champions were Wisła Kraków, who won their 13th Polish championship in the previous season.

Teams

Arka Gdynia and Polonia Bytom were relegated to the I Liga after finishing last season in the 2 bottom places and were replaced by ŁKS Łódź, winners of the 2010-11 I Liga season and runners-up Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała.

Therefore ŁKS Łódź returned to the Ekstraklasa after a 2-season break, while Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała made their first Ekstraklasa appearance in the club's history.

Stadiums and locations

Team Location Venue Capacity[6] Notes
Cracovia Kraków Stadion Cracovii 15,016
GKS Bełchatów Bełchatów Stadion PGE GKS 5,238
Górnik Zabrze Zabrze Stadion im. Ernesta Pohla 3,500 Upgrading to 31,643
Jagiellonia Białystok Białystok Stadion Miejski (Białystok) 6,000 Upgrading to 22,400
Korona Kielce Kielce Arena Kielc 15,550
Lech Poznań Poznań Stadion Miejski (Poznań) 43,098
Lechia Gdańsk Gdańsk PGE Arena 44,636
Legia Warsaw Warsaw Pepsi Arena 31,800
Łódzki KS Łódź Stadion ŁKS 12,160 Upgrading to 30,000
Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała Bielsko-Biała Stadion Miejski (Bielsko-Biała) 4,286 Upgrading to 15,292
Polonia Warsaw Warsaw Stadion Polonii 7,150
Ruch Chorzów Chorzów Stadion Ruchu 10,000
Śląsk Wrocław Wrocław Stadion Miejski (Wrocław) 44,416
Widzew Łódź Łódź Stadion Widzewa 10,500
Wisła Kraków Kraków Stadion im. Henryka Reymana 33,680
Zagłębie Lubin Lubin Dialog Arena 16,300

Sponsoring and personnel

Club Manager 2010-11 Season Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
Cracovia Poland Tomasz Kafarski 14th Nike Comarch
GKS Bełchatów Poland Kamil Kiereś 10th adidas Polska Grupa Energetyczna
Górnik Zabrze Poland Adam Nawałka 6th Erima Allianz
Jagiellonia Białystok Poland Tomasz Hajto 4th Joma Eurocash
Korona Kielce Poland Leszek Ojrzyński 13th Hummel Lewiatan
Lech Poznań Poland Mariusz Rumak 5th Puma s.Oliver
Lechia Gdańsk Poland Paweł Janas 8th adidas LOTOS
Legia Warsaw Poland Maciej Skorża 3rd adidas ActiveJet
ŁKS Łódź Poland Andrzej Pyrdoł Promoted Zina Colorit
Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała Poland Robert Kasperczyk Promoted adidas Murapol
Polonia Warsaw Poland Czesław Michniewicz 7th Hummel pl:J.W. Construction
Ruch Chorzów Poland Waldemar Fornalik 12th Lotto WOŚP
Śląsk Wrocław Poland Orest Lenczyk 2nd Puma TAURON
Widzew Łódź Poland Radosław Mroczkowski 9th Vigo Harnaś
Wisła Kraków Poland Michał Probierz Champions adidas Tele-Fonika Kable
Zagłębie Lubin Czech Republic Pavel Hapal 11th Nike KGHM Polska Miedź

Managerial changes

Club Outgoing Manager Date of vacancy Manner of departure Incoming Manager Date of appointment
GKS Bełchatów Poland Maciej Bartoszek 1 June 2011 Sacked Poland Paweł Janas 17 June 2011
Korona Kielce Poland Włodzimierz Gąsior 9 June 2011 Temporary Manager Poland Leszek Ojrzyński 9 June 2011
Widzew Łódź Poland Czesław Michniewicz 22 June 2011 Resigned Poland Radosław Mroczkowski 24 June 2011
Jagiellonia Białystok Poland Michał Probierz 22 July 2011 Resigned Poland Czesław Michniewicz 22 July 2011
ŁKS Łódź Poland Andrzej Pyrdoł 1 August 2011 Resigned Poland Dariusz Bratkowski 1 August 2011
GKS Bełchatów Poland Paweł Janas 31 August 2011 Resigned Poland Kamil Kiereś 1 September 2011
ŁKS Łódź Poland Dariusz Bratkowski 4 September 2011 Sacked Poland Michał Probierz 5 September 2011
Cracovia Ukraine Yuriy Shatalov 22 September 2011 Resigned Poland Dariusz Pasieka 23 September 2011
Zagłębie Lubin Poland Jan Urban 31 October 2011 Sacked Czech Republic Pavel Hapal 31 October 2011
ŁKS Łódź Poland Michał Probierz 3 November 2011 Resigned Poland Tomasz Wieszczycki (temporary) 4 November 2011
ŁKS Łódź Poland Tomasz Wieszczycki 7 November 2011 Temporary Manager Poland Ryszard Tarasiewicz 7 November 2011
Wisła Kraków Netherlands Robert Maaskant 7 November 2011 Sacked Poland Kazimierz Moskal 8 November 2011
Lechia Gdańsk Poland Tomasz Kafarski 8 November 2011 Sacked Poland Rafał Ulatowski 9 November 2011
Lechia Gdańsk Poland Rafał Ulatowski 14 December 2011 Sacked Poland Paweł Janas 19 December 2011
Jagiellonia Białystok Poland Czesław Michniewicz 22 December 2011 Sacked Poland Tomasz Hajto 10 February 2012
ŁKS Łódź Poland Ryszard Tarasiewicz 1 February 2012 Resigned Poland Andrzej Pyrdoł 8 February 2012
Lech Poznań Spain José Mari Bakero 25 February 2012 Sacked Poland Mariusz Rumak 27 February 2012
Wisła Kraków Poland Kazimierz Moskal 1 March 2012 Sacked Poland Michał Probierz 1 March 2012
Cracovia Poland Dariusz Pasieka 6 March 2012 Sacked Poland Tomasz Kafarski 7 March 2012
Polonia Warsaw Poland Jacek Zieliński 27 March 2012 Sacked Poland Czesław Michniewicz 28 March 2012

League table

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
Head-to-head
1 Śląsk Wrocław (C) 30 17 5 8 47 31+16 56 2012–13 UEFA Champions League Second qualifying round
2 Ruch Chorzów 30 16 7 7 44 28+16 55 2012–13 UEFA Europa League Second qualifying round
3 Legia Warsaw 30 15 8 7 42 17+25 53 2012–13 UEFA Europa League Second qualifying round 1
4 Lech Poznań 30 15 7 8 42 22+20 52 2012–13 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round 1
5 Korona Kielce 30 13 9 8 34 29+5 48
6 Polonia Warsaw 30 13 6 11 33 32+1 45
7 Wisła Kraków 30 12 7 11 29 26+3 43
8 Górnik Zabrze 30 11 9 10 36 30+6 42
9 Zagłębie Lubin 30 11 7 12 36 426 40
10 Jagiellonia Białystok 30 11 6 13 35 4510 39 WID 3–1 JAG
JAG 4–1 WID
11 Widzew Łódź 30 9 12 9 25 261 39
12 Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała 30 9 8 13 26 3913 35
13 Lechia Gdańsk 30 7 10 13 21 309 31 LGD 0–0 GKS
GKS 1–3 LGD
14 GKS Bełchatów 30 7 10 13 34 362 31
15 ŁKS Łódź (R) 30 5 9 16 23 5330 24 Relegation to 2012–13 I Liga
16 Cracovia (R) 30 4 10 16 20 4121 22

Source: 90minut.pl (Polish)
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head goals scored; 5) goal difference; 6) number of goals scored; 7) Fair Play table. Head-to-head record is used only after all the matches between the teams in question have been played[7]
1As the winners of the 2011–12 Polish Cup, Legia qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. Since they finished third in the league, the fourth-placed team of the league also qualified for the Europa League.
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.
Head-to-Head: used when head-to-head record is used to rank tied teams.

Results

Home ╲ Away CRA BEŁ GÓRJAGKORLPOLGDLEGŁKSPBBPWARUCŚLĄWIDWISZLU
Cracovia 21 13 00 12 03 11 13 01 31 00 02 01 00 10 02
GKS Bełchatów 22 11 20 02 03 13 02 30 60 21 11 30 00 22 21
Górnik Zabrze 01 10 20 20 21 22 20 00 30 10 12 02 11 20 41
Jagiellonia Białystok 21 10 21 11 20 21 00 21 02 32 01 02 41 10 31
Korona Kielce 00 22 20 20 22 10 10 02 20 30 22 21 02 00 02
Lech Poznań 31 01 10 41 10 21 00 40 10 10 30 20 01 01 32
Lechia Gdańsk 11 00 21 01 00 00 10 00 23 13 10 11 00 02 01
Legia Warsaw 00 11 31 11 10 01 30 20 12 00 20 12 20 20 30
ŁKS Łódź 22 11 11 11 02 05 00 13 21 02 04 12 11 12 12
Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała 10 10 11 22 23 00 10 01 01 11 01 11 00 13 10
Polonia Warsaw 21 21 11 41 00 10 10 21 20 22 01 30 12 11 04
Ruch Chorzów 20 21 00 10 41 30 12 01 22 22 01 01 31 10 21
Śląsk Wrocław 30 10 11 31 12 31 10 04 40 10 40 11 12 01 21
Widzew Łódź 10 10 20 42 00 00 01 11 01 01 10 12 22 11 00
Wisła Kraków 10 20 01 31 01 00 01 00 32 01 01 32 01 10 10
Zagłębie Lubin 11 11 21 21 31 11 01 04 21 00 10 11 15 10 22

Source: (Polish)
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Player statistics

[8][9]

Player of the month

Month Player Club Matches Goals /
Goals Conceded
Assists /
Clean Sheets
August Serbia Danijel Ljuboja[10] Legia Warsaw
3
4
0
September Latvia Artjoms Rudņevs[11] Lech Poznań
3
4
0
October Poland Piotr Celeban[12] Śląsk Wrocław
4
2
0
November Burkina Faso Prejuce Nakoulma[13] Górnik Zabrze
3
2
1
March Poland Arkadiusz Piech[14] Ruch Chorzów
5
3
0
April Poland Adam Banaś[15] Zagłębie Lubin
5
1
0

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "2011–12 Ekstraklasa". WhoScored.com. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  2. 1 2 "Ekstraklasa attendance statistics" (in Polish). 90minut.pl. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
  3. "Pierwsza wygrana w nowym domu" (in Polish). slaskwroclaw.pl. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  4. Match played at Belchatow, lack of consent on the part of the town for the match with the participation of over 1000 spectators
  5. http://ekstraklasa.org/index.php#statystyki
  6. Stadiony.net
  7. "Zmiany w zasadach ustalania kolejności w tabeli Ekstraklasy od sezonu 2011/2012". 8 July 2011 (in Polish). Ekstraklasa S.A. – official site. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  8. "KLASYFIKACJA STRZELCÓW". ekstraklasa.org. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  9. "Ekstraklasa - Asysty". ekstraklasa.wp.pl. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  10. "Ljuboja i Mroczkowski najlepsi w sierpniu" (in Polish).
  11. "Lenczyk i Rudniew najlepsi we wrześniu" (in Polish).
  12. "Skorża i Celeban najlepsi we październiku" (in Polish).
  13. "Fornalik i Nakoulma najlepsi w listopadzie w T-Mobile Ekstraklasie" (in Polish).
  14. "Piłkarz marca: Arkadiusz Piech" (in Polish).
  15. "Adam Banaś najlepszym piłkarzem kwietnia w T-Mobile Ekstraklasie!" (in Polish).

External links

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