Poland

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Teams, tales and tips – a guide to the local game

Poland’s second city and busiest tourist destination has welcomed home the league title more times than anywhere else. Venue for the European Under-21 Championships final in June 2017, Kraków was surprisingly overlooked as a host for Euro 2012, which Poland co-shared with Ukraine. Some thought that Kraków simply didn’t try hard enough to win the tender – visitors have always flocked in droves to this pretty, historic town.

With reference to the city’s religious heritage as Poland’s ecclesiastical centre and former capital, Kraków stages the Swieta Wojna, the ‘Holy War’, between Wisła and Cracovia, the most venerable derby in the Polish game.

Each was formed in 1906 and first played matches on Błonia, the park west of town that separates the clubs’ two stadiums today. Decades later, Pope John Paul II held Mass before huge crowds here, close the Cracovia ground of his boyhood affection.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

As Karol Wojtyła, the later Pope played in goal for both Catholic and Jewish teams. In fact, the term ‘Holy War’ might have echoes from those times. Certainly, Kraków’s main two Jewish clubs, the left-leaning Jutrzenka and the Zionist-allied Makkabi shared a rivalry as bitter as that between Wisła and Cracovia.

At the time of their formation, Kraków, and the surrounding region of Galicia, was under Habsburg rule from Vienna. An early promoter of sport was Anglophile Professor Henryk Jordan – the park that sits alongside Błonia and the Wisła stadium is named after him. Each main Kraków club played friendlies against other teams in the Habsburg Empire. In similar spirit to Slavia in Prague, to signify Polish independence Wisła sported a white star, gaining the club the nickname Biała Gwiazda.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

This pioneering fortitude earned Kraków a special place in Polish sporting mythology. With Poland one nation again after World War I, it was fitting that Cracovia should win the first football title, in a play-off between the northern and southern champions, in 1921. Kraków’s clubs won five of six as soon as a national league was formed in 1927.

Wisła attracted support from the middle classes. Cracovia drew their fans from small businessmen and shopkeepers, earning themselves a Jewish tag.

A third element was added in 1921, Garbarnia, funded by Poland’s largest tannery, over the Vistula in today’s district of Ludwinów. Two years later, a football ground was built, the best in town, with a wooden stand and clubhouse. In 1931, ‘Tannery’ won the league to keep the title in Kraków.

This side of the river then became the site of the Jewish Ghetto, the Schindler Factory and the Płaszów work camp, settings for Steven Spielberg to film the Oscar-winning Schindler’s List there in 1993. In the early 1940s, Garbarnia had taken part in Kraków’s underground championships, about which relatively little is known.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

Kraków was the only major Polish city whose buildings survived World War II almost intact. While the rest of the country was rebuilding, Wisła and Cracovia shared four straight titles from 1947.

Considered bourgeois and merchant class, Cracovia and Garbarnia were shunned by the post-war Communist authorities and spent decades in the doldrums. Garbarnia’s stadium was knocked down in 1973 to make way for a hotel. Currently the club plays at a modest ground at Rydlówka 23, close to its old home on Barska. A mini-revival has seen Garbarnia head Group 4 of the fourth-tier III Liga in 2017.

With the forced industrialisation of the 1950s, a new club arose: Hutnik from the vast steel plant of Nowa Huta east of town. The city’s third club ironically achieved more immediately after the fall of Communism, with a third-place top-flight finish in 1996 and European football. The millionaires of Monaco, including later World Cup winners Fabien Barthez and Manu Petit, duly paid a visit to the basic Stadion Suche Stawy in this former Socialist utopia.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

A decade later, debt-ridden Hutnik collapsed, to be revived by loyal fans as Hutnik Nowa Huta in 2010. The stadium was improved enough to accommodate England as a training pitch at Euro 2012 and the club now plays against the reserve sides of Cracovia and Wisła in the lower leagues.

With a new, urban generation of Wisła fans from the north and west of the city, including a significant hooligan element, the centenary city derby of 2006 was played out against a backdrop of water cannons and riot vans. The year before, followers of both clubs had piously come together to mark the passing of Pope John Paul II.

On the pitch, Wisła were quickest to adjust to the free-market changes after 1989, rebuilding their team and venerable stadium, winning eight titles in 12 years, up to 2011.

Cracovia, European debutants in 2016, also reconstructed their stadium, the main venue for the Euro under-21 finals in June 2017.

[mapsmarker map="34"]

Getting Around

Arriving in town, local transport and timings
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
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Kraków’s John Paul II Airport is 11km (seven miles) west of the city centre, connected by train from the terminus behind the car park to the main train station, Dworzec Główny (every 30min, 17min journey time, 9zł) beside the city centre.

The official airport taxi service charges a flat 69zł into town unless you’re travelling under 10km, ie almost as far as the Wisła stadium, when it’s 49zł. Credit cards are accepted.

MPK runs an efficient network of trams and buses – the centre is transport-free and walkable. Cracovia is an easy stroll from town, Wisła slightly further. Transport tickets, sold from machines at main stops (notes and coins) and on board (coins only), are valid for trams and buses for specific timed lengths of journey, changes included: 2.80zł for 20min, 3.80zł for 40min, 15zł for 24hrs, 24zł for 48hrs. Stamp your ticket immediately, even for on-board purchases.

iTaxi Kraków (+48 737 737 737) is part of a nationwide network with a downloadable app.

Where to Drink

The best pubs and bars for football fans
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
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Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
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Kraków is a fine, fine drinking town, the historic centre and Plac Nowy in Kazimierz awash with late-opening boozeries. Those in the Old Town tend to be more mainstream and tourist-friendly, some located in cellars. The scene in Kazimierz is more contemporary.

Football-friendly pubs include stalwarts Pod Papugami and the English Football Club, though a number of Irish- and Brit-style pubs have closed. A more recent arrival is the Bull Pub, of similar ilk.

Just north of the Old Town, Football Heaven is much more promising than its modest exterior might indicate, with four long alcoves bookended by match action and decked out in scarves. Open from 7pm weekdays, 1pm weekends.

FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
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FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
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Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
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More Polish in feel, where sport is screened but beer and music give more focus, Enigma is one of the busier cellar bars while CK Browar has just celebrated its 20th anniversary serving microbrewed beers in beer-hall surroundings. Bierhalle is the Kraków branch of a Warsaw-based chain, with own-brewed German-style beers, TV football and a location close to the main square. 

Right on the main square, the Vis à Vis is one of those lovely old spots you hope will still be there in years to come, a little part of Poland deep in tourist central.

If you’re one of the squillions descending on Plac Nowy, Moment is as good a bar as any, and has a TV. Given the swarming crowds in Kazimierz, it was inevitable that locals would open a place of their own nearby. Drukarnia is that place, just over the river. It’s more jazz club these days but don’t let that put you off – it’s a great bar, with riverside seats outside.

Where to stay

The best hotels for the stadiums and city centre
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
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Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
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Visit Kraków has a comprehensive database of the many hotels, guesthouses and hostels in the city.

On the same street, Reymonta, as Wisła, the lower mid-range Polonez has 49 rooms at under 300zł/night and a restaurant, the Krakus. Even closer, right by the stadium, in fact, the Biała Gwiazda (‘White Star’) is basic but at 120zł/night, 90zł for a single, you can’t expect miracles.

With the former state-run, mass-tourist lodgings close to Cracovia now youth hostels, the only hotels in the vicinity are along Piłsudskiego, the main street that leads to the nearby city centre. The four-star Ostoya Palace may be a cut above for the average football weekend, though its Kuranty pub is worth a look-in. Slightly closer to town, the Fortuna is a tidy three-star in a late 19th-century building, though its lack of online booking is annoying.

FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
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Also close, on the ring road that holds in Kraków’s historic centre, the Radisson Blu appeals to business visitors and weekenders alike with its gym, sauna, beauty salon and meeting spaces.

Typified by the four-star Wentzl on the main square, stately hotels fill baronial buildings around the Old Town, such as the Grand on Sławkowska, the Pod Róža on Florianska and the gorgeous Stary on Szczepańska, where designers have integrated two swimming pools within medieval walls.

The three-star Floryan is more budget-friendly while still occupying a 16th-century building. It’s also a short walk from the train station, where you’ll find andel’s by Vienna House Cracow, contemporary and designer-friendly, with a spa, gym, bar and restaurant.

In similar vein, overlooking the Vistula, the panoramic Niebieski Art Hotel & Spa is comfort itself, a shortish walk from Cracovia.

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Teams, tales and tips – a guide to the local game

The impressive National Stadium, built for Euro 2012 and designed in the form of the Polish flag waving in the wind, represents Warsaw’s move onto football’s world stage, demonstrated by its hosting of the Europa League Final in 2015. For many years, Poland’s national team and league title were rooted in the south, either Kraków or the industrial hubs of Chorzów and Zabrze. But with the new national arena and flagship club Legia winning three titles in a row from 2016 to 2018, the focus has fallen firmly back on the Polish capital. Each stadium sits either side the Vistula river, east of downtown Warsaw. The Polish game developed in Kraków and Lvov, when Warsaw still belonged to Russia. The two main Warsaw clubs were formed around the time of World War I. Legia and Polonia were founded as expressions of national pride, shortly before full Polish independence.
Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis
They played the first Warsaw derby in 1917 and remained the two biggest clubs in the capital. Legia dominated the Polish game in the 1970s, players such as Kazimierz Deyna and Robert Gadocha taking club and country to the semi-finals of the European and World Cups. Their stadium was rebuilt and reopened as in 2011. Though originally the railway workers’ club and title-winners in 1946, Polonia suffered from lack of state backing and spent four decades in the lower leagues. Their promotion in 1993 revived the Warsaw derby, not least when a 3-0 win at Legia earned Polonia the title in 2000. A decade later, a home win over Legia, the first for 60 years, saved the Black Shirts from relegation.
Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis
After a procession of irresponsible owners, Polonia restarted from the lower rungs in 2013. Polonia faithful have been turning up in reasonable numbers at the General Kazimierz Sosnkowski Stadium just north of the city centre to see their team play their way back to the top. In 2017, Polonia were relegated from the nationwide II Liga, Poland’s third flight. Other Warsaw clubs, too, have failed to adapt to modern times. The football team of multisports club Warsawianka made waves in the local Warsaw Championship and top-flight in Poland before the war. Key player Stanislaw Baran even starred in the 1938 World Cup. The soccer section lost direction under the incoming Communist régime. In their place, Gwardia Warsaw, founded in 1948, became the city’s de facto third club. Representing the police department, Gwardia won the Polish Cup in 1954 and participated in the inaugural European Cup a year later, on the invitation of organisers L’Équipe. Star player was goalscorer Stanislaw Hachorek, who later moved to Warsawianka.
Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis
Gwardia enjoyed another decent run in the 1970s, beating Ferencváros and Bologna in Europe, but faded after state backing disappeared. Still based at the dilapidated Gwardia Stadium at Racławicka 132, near Żołnierzy Radzieckich cemetery, down Zwirki i Wigury accessed by buses 114, 136, 175 and 188. The club are currently in the seventh level of the Polish league pyramid, a local Warsaw league. As Gwardia were enjoying their heyday, thousands of volunteers helped clear the ground and bring tons of wartime rubble for builders to create an open bowl of a stadium not unlike the Stadion Śląski in Chorzów. Opened in July 1955 to marked the formation of Poland’s Communist government, the 10th Anniversary Stadium across the Vistula held prestigious sporting events, including Polish cup finals and internationals, until falling into disrepair. For most of the 1980s and 1990s, it was the setting for Europe’s biggest market, Jarmark, where thousands of traders purveyed junk and pirated goods. All was cleared away for the National Stadium to be erected here, ushering in a new era in Polish football. [mapsmarker map="34"]

Getting Around

Arriving in town, local transport and timings
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Previous Next Warsaw Chopin Airport is 10km (six miles) south-west of town, connected by rail to town about 25min away. Urban lines S2 and S3 run into town, S2 direct to the national stadium (Warszawa Stadion, 30min journey time) via focal Śródmieście, line S3 only as far as the main station of Centralna. These are part of the city’s public transport system – buy a standard 4.40zł ticket from the machine by the platform, then stamp on board. Trains run every 20-30mins and there’s usually an employee by the ticket machine to help you. The airport is close enough to town to be in Zone 1, so the 24hr day ticket (15zł) and weekend pass (24zł) are also valid from there. The regional KM train (5.50zł) also runs every hour to Centralna. ZTM Warsaw public transport also consists of a two-line metro system, buses, trams and trolleybuses. As well as the tickets indicated above, a shorter journey of 20mins is 3.40zł. Tickets are sold at newsstands, kiosks and from machines by most stops. Credit cards are usually accepted. You can also pay on board, but have the right change. Eletaxi (+48 22 811 1111) from Chopin Airport to town costs around 40zł-45zł – a journey through the city centre should be about 15zł.
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Previous Next Budget airlines, including Ryanair, also use renovated Warsaw Modlin Airport 35km (21.5 miles) north-west of town. From the airport, a Modlin bus (from 9zł online, 33zł on board, every 1-2hrs, 10.20am-9.15pm, 60-100min journey time) goes to central Warsaw, by Centrum metro. Another option is the shuttle bus to the regional train station 10min away. Roughly two buses/trains an hour (15zł combined, 1hr total journey time) run to Centralna or central Wschodnia. A Modlin Taxi (+48 600 105 105) should take around 40mins with a set price of 159zł to town.

Where to Drink

The best pubs and bars for football fans
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Previous Next Downtown Warsaw is full of bars that show football – and dotted with sport-themed bars. All takes place within a shortish walk of the grid-patterned streets either side of main Aleja Jerozolimskie that cuts through the city by Centralna and the Stalinist skyscraper of Pałac Kultury I Nauki. Right on the avenue, facing Centralna, is the Marriott Hotel and the Champions sports bar at street level. Centrepieced by a boxing ring and literally filled with TVs, this expansive if pricy venue is an easy option for sports gawping. Note the signed pic of Jerzy Dudek. In the same vein, behind the Marriott, Legends is run by friendly Scouse Graham and his Warsaw partner, done out with refined sepia images of sports history. Further down, beerhall/restaurant Warka appeals to the local crowd, with its history of Polish football in black and white in a side space. Back on Jerozolimskie, the British Bulldog Pub offers TV football and fish & chips. Nearby, on Nowogrodzka behind the Novotel, scruffy Patrick’s also has plenty of TV sports, plus live music. On Miodowa, Irish Pub focuses more on live music and keeps late opening hours.

Where to stay

The best hotels for the stadiums and city centre
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Previous Next The Warsaw Tourist Office has little accommodation information. The nearest lodging to the National Stadium is the stylish, 24-room Dedek Park, with its own restaurant, surrounded by greenery. Near Legia, the three-star Hotel Lazienkowski offers cheaper rooms at weekends, 210zl a double as opposed to 300zl. The Ibis Stare Miasto is right by Polonia’s stadium, a standard budget business hotel with a handy pre-match bar. Of the many hotels in the city centre, the Novotel Warszawa Centrum forms part of the downtown skyline near Centralna, with a sauna and gym. The nearby landmark Warsaw Marriott is also where you’ll find the Champions Sports Bar, right opposite Centralna.
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona transport/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
FC Barcelona tickets/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Expo Hotel Barcelona/Peterjon Cresswell
Previous Next The bargain-basement Hostel W Centrum 4U is a converted house, colourfully done out, with a range of rooms with private or shared facilities. It’s a short walk from Centralna, as are the InterContinental Warsaw, with its spa and panoramic views, and the sleek Mercure Warszawa Centrum. Mid-range and central, the three-star Metropole is old-school on the outside but modernised within. Alongside, the Polonia Palace Hotel used be part of the same complex but is now a 200-plus room lodging in its own right, with a heritage dating back to 1913. Near a hub of decent bars, the Hotel Rialto offers Art Deco elegance, with a new wing opening in 2019. At the other end of the scale, nearby, hostel-like SCSK Žurawia does singles and doubles too." ["post_title"]=> string(6) "Warsaw" ["post_excerpt"]=> string(0) "" ["post_status"]=> string(7) "publish" ["comment_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["ping_status"]=> string(6) "closed" ["post_password"]=> string(0) "" ["post_name"]=> string(6) "warsaw" ["to_ping"]=> string(0) "" ["pinged"]=> string(0) "" ["post_modified"]=> string(19) "2022-11-06 14:01:49" ["post_modified_gmt"]=> string(19) "2022-11-06 14:01:49" ["post_content_filtered"]=> string(0) "" ["post_parent"]=> int(0) ["guid"]=> string(35) "https://old.liberoguide.com/?p=5174" ["menu_order"]=> int(0) ["post_type"]=> string(4) "post" ["post_mime_type"]=> string(0) "" ["comment_count"]=> string(1) "0" ["filter"]=> string(3) "raw" } } ["post_count"]=> int(2) ["current_post"]=> int(-1) ["before_loop"]=> bool(true) ["in_the_loop"]=> bool(false) ["post"]=> object(WP_Post)#4286 (24) { ["ID"]=> int(23897) ["post_author"]=> string(1) "3" ["post_date"]=> string(19) "2017-06-11 18:08:44" ["post_date_gmt"]=> string(19) "2017-06-11 18:08:44" ["post_content"]=> string(20482) "

Teams, tales and tips – a guide to the local game

Poland’s second city and busiest tourist destination has welcomed home the league title more times than anywhere else. Venue for the European Under-21 Championships final in June 2017, Kraków was surprisingly overlooked as a host for Euro 2012, which Poland co-shared with Ukraine. Some thought that Kraków simply didn’t try hard enough to win the tender – visitors have always flocked in droves to this pretty, historic town.

With reference to the city’s religious heritage as Poland’s ecclesiastical centre and former capital, Kraków stages the Swieta Wojna, the ‘Holy War’, between Wisła and Cracovia, the most venerable derby in the Polish game.

Each was formed in 1906 and first played matches on Błonia, the park west of town that separates the clubs’ two stadiums today. Decades later, Pope John Paul II held Mass before huge crowds here, close the Cracovia ground of his boyhood affection.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

As Karol Wojtyła, the later Pope played in goal for both Catholic and Jewish teams. In fact, the term ‘Holy War’ might have echoes from those times. Certainly, Kraków’s main two Jewish clubs, the left-leaning Jutrzenka and the Zionist-allied Makkabi shared a rivalry as bitter as that between Wisła and Cracovia.

At the time of their formation, Kraków, and the surrounding region of Galicia, was under Habsburg rule from Vienna. An early promoter of sport was Anglophile Professor Henryk Jordan – the park that sits alongside Błonia and the Wisła stadium is named after him. Each main Kraków club played friendlies against other teams in the Habsburg Empire. In similar spirit to Slavia in Prague, to signify Polish independence Wisła sported a white star, gaining the club the nickname Biała Gwiazda.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

This pioneering fortitude earned Kraków a special place in Polish sporting mythology. With Poland one nation again after World War I, it was fitting that Cracovia should win the first football title, in a play-off between the northern and southern champions, in 1921. Kraków’s clubs won five of six as soon as a national league was formed in 1927.

Wisła attracted support from the middle classes. Cracovia drew their fans from small businessmen and shopkeepers, earning themselves a Jewish tag.

A third element was added in 1921, Garbarnia, funded by Poland’s largest tannery, over the Vistula in today’s district of Ludwinów. Two years later, a football ground was built, the best in town, with a wooden stand and clubhouse. In 1931, ‘Tannery’ won the league to keep the title in Kraków.

This side of the river then became the site of the Jewish Ghetto, the Schindler Factory and the Płaszów work camp, settings for Steven Spielberg to film the Oscar-winning Schindler’s List there in 1993. In the early 1940s, Garbarnia had taken part in Kraków’s underground championships, about which relatively little is known.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

Kraków was the only major Polish city whose buildings survived World War II almost intact. While the rest of the country was rebuilding, Wisła and Cracovia shared four straight titles from 1947.

Considered bourgeois and merchant class, Cracovia and Garbarnia were shunned by the post-war Communist authorities and spent decades in the doldrums. Garbarnia’s stadium was knocked down in 1973 to make way for a hotel. Currently the club plays at a modest ground at Rydlówka 23, close to its old home on Barska. A mini-revival has seen Garbarnia head Group 4 of the fourth-tier III Liga in 2017.

With the forced industrialisation of the 1950s, a new club arose: Hutnik from the vast steel plant of Nowa Huta east of town. The city’s third club ironically achieved more immediately after the fall of Communism, with a third-place top-flight finish in 1996 and European football. The millionaires of Monaco, including later World Cup winners Fabien Barthez and Manu Petit, duly paid a visit to the basic Stadion Suche Stawy in this former Socialist utopia.

Atlético Madrid tour/Ruth Jarvis

A decade later, debt-ridden Hutnik collapsed, to be revived by loyal fans as Hutnik Nowa Huta in 2010. The stadium was improved enough to accommodate England as a training pitch at Euro 2012 and the club now plays against the reserve sides of Cracovia and Wisła in the lower leagues.

With a new, urban generation of Wisła fans from the north and west of the city, including a significant hooligan element, the centenary city derby of 2006 was played out against a backdrop of water cannons and riot vans. The year before, followers of both clubs had piously come together to mark the passing of Pope John Paul II.

On the pitch, Wisła were quickest to adjust to the free-market changes after 1989, rebuilding their team and venerable stadium, winning eight titles in 12 years, up to 2011.

Cracovia, European debutants in 2016, also reconstructed their stadium, the main venue for the Euro under-21 finals in June 2017.

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Getting Around

Arriving in town, local transport and timings
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Kraków’s John Paul II Airport is 11km (seven miles) west of the city centre, connected by train from the terminus behind the car park to the main train station, Dworzec Główny (every 30min, 17min journey time, 9zł) beside the city centre.

The official airport taxi service charges a flat 69zł into town unless you’re travelling under 10km, ie almost as far as the Wisła stadium, when it’s 49zł. Credit cards are accepted.

MPK runs an efficient network of trams and buses – the centre is transport-free and walkable. Cracovia is an easy stroll from town, Wisła slightly further. Transport tickets, sold from machines at main stops (notes and coins) and on board (coins only), are valid for trams and buses for specific timed lengths of journey, changes included: 2.80zł for 20min, 3.80zł for 40min, 15zł for 24hrs, 24zł for 48hrs. Stamp your ticket immediately, even for on-board purchases.

iTaxi Kraków (+48 737 737 737) is part of a nationwide network with a downloadable app.

Where to Drink

The best pubs and bars for football fans
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Kraków is a fine, fine drinking town, the historic centre and Plac Nowy in Kazimierz awash with late-opening boozeries. Those in the Old Town tend to be more mainstream and tourist-friendly, some located in cellars. The scene in Kazimierz is more contemporary.

Football-friendly pubs include stalwarts Pod Papugami and the English Football Club, though a number of Irish- and Brit-style pubs have closed. A more recent arrival is the Bull Pub, of similar ilk.

Just north of the Old Town, Football Heaven is much more promising than its modest exterior might indicate, with four long alcoves bookended by match action and decked out in scarves. Open from 7pm weekdays, 1pm weekends.

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More Polish in feel, where sport is screened but beer and music give more focus, Enigma is one of the busier cellar bars while CK Browar has just celebrated its 20th anniversary serving microbrewed beers in beer-hall surroundings. Bierhalle is the Kraków branch of a Warsaw-based chain, with own-brewed German-style beers, TV football and a location close to the main square. 

Right on the main square, the Vis à Vis is one of those lovely old spots you hope will still be there in years to come, a little part of Poland deep in tourist central.

If you’re one of the squillions descending on Plac Nowy, Moment is as good a bar as any, and has a TV. Given the swarming crowds in Kazimierz, it was inevitable that locals would open a place of their own nearby. Drukarnia is that place, just over the river. It’s more jazz club these days but don’t let that put you off – it’s a great bar, with riverside seats outside.

Where to stay

The best hotels for the stadiums and city centre
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Visit Kraków has a comprehensive database of the many hotels, guesthouses and hostels in the city.

On the same street, Reymonta, as Wisła, the lower mid-range Polonez has 49 rooms at under 300zł/night and a restaurant, the Krakus. Even closer, right by the stadium, in fact, the Biała Gwiazda (‘White Star’) is basic but at 120zł/night, 90zł for a single, you can’t expect miracles.

With the former state-run, mass-tourist lodgings close to Cracovia now youth hostels, the only hotels in the vicinity are along Piłsudskiego, the main street that leads to the nearby city centre. The four-star Ostoya Palace may be a cut above for the average football weekend, though its Kuranty pub is worth a look-in. Slightly closer to town, the Fortuna is a tidy three-star in a late 19th-century building, though its lack of online booking is annoying.

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Also close, on the ring road that holds in Kraków’s historic centre, the Radisson Blu appeals to business visitors and weekenders alike with its gym, sauna, beauty salon and meeting spaces.

Typified by the four-star Wentzl on the main square, stately hotels fill baronial buildings around the Old Town, such as the Grand on Sławkowska, the Pod Róža on Florianska and the gorgeous Stary on Szczepańska, where designers have integrated two swimming pools within medieval walls.

The three-star Floryan is more budget-friendly while still occupying a 16th-century building. It’s also a short walk from the train station, where you’ll find andel’s by Vienna House Cracow, contemporary and designer-friendly, with a spa, gym, bar and restaurant.

In similar vein, overlooking the Vistula, the panoramic Niebieski Art Hotel & Spa is comfort itself, a shortish walk from Cracovia.

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