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RTP Unia Racibórz

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RTP Unia Racibórz
Full nameRaciborskie Towarzystwo Pilkarskie Unia Racibórz
Founded1945; 79 years ago (1945) (sports club)
2001; 23 years ago (2001) (women's football)
GroundOSiR Stadium, Racibórz
Capacity10,000
PresidentRemigiusz Trawiński
Head coachRemigiusz Trawiński
2013–14Ekstraliga, 10th of 10 (withdrew mid-season)
Websitehttp://www.rtpunia.raciborz.com.pl

RTP Unia Racibórz was a women's football club from Racibórz, Poland. The club won five national championships, three Polish Cups and participated in the UEFA Women's Champions League.

History

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As part of a sports club

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Unia Racibórz was founded on 27 April 1946 as a men's team. Its initial name was Klub Sportowy Plania Racibórz. The club has undergone several name changes. From June 1949 to November 1949 it was named ZKS Chemik Racibórz, then it was called ZKS Unia Racibórz (until 18 March 1957), and KS Unia Racibórz up to the 1997–98 season before adopting the current name RTP Unia Racibórz.[1] Until 2001, the year the women started training, the club had only a men's football team. The women's team was registered for league play in the 2002–03 season.

In January 2008, after discrepancies over the use of finances, the men's section split from RTP Unia and took the name KP Unia Racibórz.[2] Thus RTP Unia Racibórz became exclusively a women's football club.

As an independent club

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In 2006-07 the club gained promotion into Ekstraliga, Poland's first league for women. In their first season in the Ekstraliga the took 3rd place, but only one year later the team won the championship and ended the dominance of KS AZS Wrocław, who had won the title the last eight times. Unia was able to defend the title in 2009–10.

In the 2009-10 Champions League, they started in the round of 32 but lost to SV Neulengbach. Later that season Unia won their first national cup after beating Pogoń Women Szczecin7-1 in the final. The following season, Unia again lost the round of 32 champions league legs, this time to Brøndby. In 2012–13, Unia lost to VfL Wolfsburg and was eliminated by Konak Belediyespor a year later, at the round of 32 stage yet again.

After the 2012/13 season the main sponsor left and many players left for new clubs. Several of those were Polish national team players.[3] Unia eventually withdrew from the Extraleague after the first half of the 2013/14 season because of financial problems.[4][5] They stood at second place that time of being withdrawn. The club was disbanded and thus did not join lower-tier competitions.

Honours

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  • Ekstraliga
  • I liga
    • Champions: 2004–05 (Opole group)
  • Polish Cup
    • Winners: 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12
  • Poland indoor championships
    • Champions: 2008, 2009, 2011

Seasons

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Season[6] League Place W D L GF GA Pts Cup
2002–03 II liga Silesia II[7] 5th 6 2 12 22 31 20
2003–04 II liga Opole 2nd 7 1 2 42 18 22
2004–05 II liga Opole 1st 17 1 2 96 16 52 Round of 16
2005–06 I liga South 2nd 12 3 5 69 34 39 Semi-finals
2006–07 I liga West 1st 20 0 0 116 6 60 Quarter-finalists
2007–08 Ekstraliga 3rd 10 4 6 33 28 34 Runners-up
2008–09 Ekstraliga 1st 17 2 1 78 11 53 Semi-finalists
2009–10 Ekstraliga 1st 17 1 2 84 12 52 Winners
2010–11 Ekstraliga 1st 15 2 1 82 7 47 Winners
2011–12 Ekstraliga 1st 17 0 1 85 8 51 Winners
2012–13 Ekstraliga 1st 14 2 2 58 13 44 Runners-up
2013–14 Ekstraliga 10th[a] 7 1 10 5 37 32 Quarter-finalists
Green marks a season followed by promotion, red a season followed by relegation.
  1. ^ Unia withdrew from competition after round 9.

UEFA competitions record

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Unia Racibórz – Wolfsburg (1–5)
Season Competition Stage Result Opponent
2009–10 Champions League Round of 32 1–3 1-0 Austria Neulengbach
2010–11 Champions League Round of 32 1–2 1-0 Denmark Brøndby
2011–12 Champions League Qualifying Stage 0–1 Slovakia Slovan Bratislava
8–0 Albania Ada Velipojë
1–1 Finland PK-35
2012–13 Champions League Qualifying Stage 5–0 Slovakia Slovan Bratislava
7–1 Montenegro ŽFK Ekonomist
5–0 Belarus Bobruichanka Bobruisk
Round of 32 1–5 1-6 Germany VfL Wolfsburg
2013–14 Champions League Qualifying Stage 3–1 Slovenia Pomurje
7–0 Albania Ada Velipojë
0–0 Belarus Bobruichanka Bobruisk
Round of 32 1–2 0–0 Turkey Konak Belediyespor

Current squad

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As of 11 August 2012, according to UEFA's website.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Poland POL Natasza Górnicka
4 MF Poland POL Hanna Konsek
7 FW Poland POL Dżesika Jaszek
8 MF Poland POL Natalia Chudzik
9 FW Poland POL Agata Tarczyńska
10 FW Poland POL Anna Żelazko
11 DF Poland POL Donata Leśnik
12 GK Poland POL Marlena Janeczek
13 MF Poland POL Karolina Wieczorek
17 GK Poland POL Dorota Wilk
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF Poland POL Marta Mika
19 MF Slovakia SVK Katarina Ištóková
20 DF Poland POL Aleksandra Sosnowska
21 DF Poland POL Alicja Pawlak
22 MF Poland POL Katarzyna Krupa
27 MF Poland POL Patrycja Pożerska
29 MF Slovakia SVK Dominika Sýkorová
66 FW Poland POL Patrycja Wiśniewska
57 MF Slovakia SVK Ivana Bojdová

Former internationals

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References

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  1. ^ "Skarb – Unia Racibórz". 90minut.pl.
  2. ^ "Interview mit dem polnischen Meistertrainer Remigiusz Trawinski". fansoccer.de.
  3. ^ Wschodni, Dziennik. "Dziennik Wschodni – Lublin, Lubelskie, Lubelszczyzna – wiadomości, informacje, aktualności, artykuły, wydarzenia". Dziennik Wschodni. Archived from the original on 14 March 2014.
  4. ^ "Unia withdraw from league" (in Polish). pzpn.pl. 10 March 2014. Archived from the original on 4 April 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  5. ^ "Mistrzowska Unia Racibórz znika z mapy Polski • Racibórz, Rybnik, Wodzisław Śląski". sport.nowiny.pl.
  6. ^ "Unia Raciborz seasons". 90minut.pl. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  7. ^ "Skarb – Unia Racibórz (k)". 90minut.pl.
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