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Wronki Stadium (Polish: Stadion Wronki) formally KKS Lech Poznań Academy Stadium in Wronki (Polish: Stadion Akademii KKS Lech Poznań we Wronkach), and previously called Amica Wronki Stadium (Polish: Stadion Amiki Wronki) is a football stadium in Wronki, Greater Poland.
Stadion Wronki | |
![]() Interactive map of Wronki Stadium | |
Full name | KKS Lech Poznań Academy Stadium in Wronki (Polish: Stadion Akademii KKS Lech Poznań we Wronkach) |
|---|---|
Former names | Amica Wronki Stadium (Polish: Stadion Amiki Wronki) |
| Address | ul. Leśna 15a 64-510 Wronki Poland |
| Coordinates | 52°43′11″N 16°22′27″E / 52.719722°N 16.374167°E |
| Capacity | 4624 |
| Surface | Grass |
Field size | 105 m × 70 m (344 ft × 230 ft) |
| Construction | |
| Built | 1991 |
| Opened | 1992 |
| Renovated | 2004 2009 2022 |
| Tenants | |
| Amica Wronki (1992–2006) Błękitni Wronki (2007–) Lech Poznań (2009, 2011) Lech Poznań II (2013–) | |
It was initially built and used by the now defuct Amica Wronki, who played for many years in the Ekstraklasa, hosted the 2000 Polish Cup final and Amica's European matches (UEFA Cup and UEFA Cup Winners' Cup).
After Amica's dissolution in 2007, the stadium was taken over by Lech Poznań, who used the stadium during periods when its own stadium was being rebuilt. Since then, Lech uses the stadium as its academy and research base, and is the current stadium of its reserve and senior academy team.
Facilities
editIt is part of a sports and recreation complex where the Poland national football team often trains. In 2004, the stadium underwent renovation and meets all UEFA requirements.[1] The stadium features 1400 lux-strength lighting and under-soil heating, and is surrounded by a hotel, conference center, pub, and restaurant.[2]
Renovations
editMatches
editFrom 1995 to 2006, the stadium hosted Ekstraklasa matches featuring Amica Wronki. On 9 June 2000, the second leg of the Polish Cup final was played here, with Amica defeating Wisła Kraków 3–0 to win the trophy. At the start of the 2009–10 season, Lech Poznań also played Ekstraklasa matches here due to the renovation of the Poznań Stadium. The stadium also hosted qualifying and main rounds of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and UEFA Cup with Amica's participation, including group stage matches in the 2004–05 season,[5] as well as UEFA Cup qualifiers in the 2009–10 season featuring Lech.[3]
References
edit- ↑ "Stadion Amica", www.stadiumguide.com, 2009-09-22, archived from the original on 2010-01-02
- ↑ "Stadion Amiki Wronki", www.stadiony.net (in Polish), 2009-09-22
- 1 2 Szymon Mierzyński (4 August 2009), "Rozbudowa stadionu we Wronkach zakończona", sportowefakty.pl (in Polish), Sportowe Fakty WP, retrieved 2009-09-22
- ↑ Lech Poznań (8 November 2022), Wielka inwestycja Lecha Poznań zakończona. Nowy dom Akademii uroczystoście otwarty (in Polish), Lech Poznań
- ↑ "Historia klubu", www.amicasport.pl (in Polish), 2009-09-22, archived from the original on 2007-10-13
External links
edit- stadiony.net profile
- "Stadion map", amicasport.pl, archived from the original on 2007-10-13
