2003/2004 Season
After a play-off scandal where Szczakowianka bought their place in the first league, Szczakowianka played in 2nd league starting with -10 points:
Autumn 2003 round:
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Cracovia Kraków 2-1 (1-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Arka Gdynia 4-0 (2-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Błękitni Stargard 2-0 (1-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Ruch Chorzów 1-0 (0-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - ŁKS Łódź 2-1 (2-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Polar Wrocław 1-1 (0-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała 5-2 (3-0)
- Piast Gliwice - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-2 (0-1)
- Jagiellonia Białystok - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0-2 (0-1)
- RKS Radomsko - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 2-1 (0-0)
- KS Stasiak Opoczno - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-3 (1-2)
- Zagłębie Lubin - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0-0 (0-0)
- Tłoki Gorzyce - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 3-2 (0-1)
- Aluminium Konin - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-3 (0-2)
- GKS Bełchatów - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-2 (1-1)
- KSZO Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-1 (1-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - MKS Pogoń Szczecin 0-0 (0-0)
Spring 2004 round:
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Jagiellonia Białystok 4-0 (2-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Tłoki Gorzyce 4-2 (1-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Zagłębie Lubin 4-1 (1-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - GKS Bełchatów 1-2 (0-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Piast Gliwice 1-1 (1-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - RKS Radomsko 2-0 (1-0)
- Polar Wrocław - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0-2 (0-1)
- MKS Pogoń Szczecin - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 3-2 (2-0)
- Arka Gdynia - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0-1 (0-0)
- Cracovia Kraków - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 8-1 (5-0)
- Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 2-0 (2-0)
- ŁKS Łódź - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0-1 (0-0)
- Ruch Chorzów - Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1-1 (0-1)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - KS Stasiak Opoczno 1-0 (1-0)
- Szczakowianka Jaworzno - Aluminium Konin 1-0 (0-0)
Read more about this topic: Szczakowianka Jaworzno
Famous quotes containing the word season:
“The instincts of merry England lingered on here with exceptional vitality, and the symbolic customs which tradition has attached to each season of the year were yet a reality on Egdon. Indeed, the impulses of all such outlandish hamlets are pagan still: in these spots homage to nature, self-adoration, frantic gaieties, fragments of Teutonic rites to divinities whose names are forgotten, seem in some way or other to have survived mediaeval doctrine.”
—Thomas Hardy (18401928)