17.06.2023, 34. kolejka III ligi: Stal Brzeg - Gwarek Tarnowskie Góry 2:3 bramki: Bronisławski 43', Sypek 49' - Wiszniowski 41', ...
09.06.2023, 33. kolejka III ligi: Rekord Bielsko-Biała - Stal Brzeg 0:3 bramki: Sypek 18', Bronisławski 45' k, Morys 75'
Nieudane pożegnanie naszej drużyny z bielską publicznością. Goście wywożą trzy punkty z terenu wicelidera.
Biało-zielonych brakuje jednego punktu, by zapewnić sobie drugie miejsce na koniec sezonu 2022/2023, natomiast goście nadal ...
27.05.2023, 31. kolejka III ligi: LKS Goczałkowice-Zdrój - Stal Brzeg 3:1 bramki: Borek 41′, Szymała 71′, Nadolski 79′ ...
Zapraszamy do wysłuchania opinii trenera Polonii Bytom Adama Burka oraz Patryka Stefańskiego po zremisowanym meczu 31.
Bezbramkowy remis w meczu z Polonią Nysa wystarczył Polonii Bytom, aby zapewnić sobie mistrzostwo III grupy 3. ligi i awans ...
Siarka Tarnobrzeg is a Polish professional football club, based in Tarnobrzeg, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, which plays in the III liga, the fourth tier of the national football league system. In early 1990s, Siarka played in the Ekstraklasa, with such players as Cezary Kucharski, Andrzej Kobylański, Tomasz Kiełbowicz and Mariusz Kukiełka.
Stal Nysa SA is a Polish professional volleyball team based in Nysa, founded in 1948. From 1991 to 2005 Stal Nysa played in the highest level of Polish Volleyball League.
Kotwica Kołobrzeg is a football club based in Kołobrzeg, Poland. It was founded in 1946.
Kotwica Kołobrzeg, for sponsorships reasons Energa Kotwica Kołobrzeg, is a Polish basketball team, based in Kołobrzeg. In the 2004–05 season, Kotwica promoted to the domestic first tier Polish Basketball League .
Nysa may refer to:
Nysa [ˈnɨsa] (German: Neisse or Neiße) is a town in southwestern Poland on the Eastern Neisse (Nysa Kłodzka) river, situated in the Opole Voivodeship. With 43,849 inhabitants (2019), it is the capital of Nysa County.
In Greek mythology, the mountainous district of Nysa , variously associated with Ethiopia, Libya, Tribalia, India or Arabia by Greek mythographers, was the traditional place where the rain nymphs, the Hyades, raised the infant god Dionysus, the "Zeus of Nysa".
Nysa on the Maeander was an ancient city and bishopric of Asia Minor (now Anatolia, Asian Turkey), whose remains are in the Sultanhisar district of Aydın Province of Turkey, 50 kilometres (31 mi) east of the Ionian city of Ephesus, and which remains a Latin Catholic titular see. At one time it was reckoned as belonging Caria or Lydia, but under the Roman Empire it was within the province of Asia, which had Ephesus for capital, and the bishop of Nysa was thus a suffragan of the metropolitan see of Ephesus.Nysa was situated on the southern slope of mount Messogis, on the north of the Maeander, and about midway between Tralles and Antioch on the Maeander.
The Nysa family is part of the Nysa–Polana complex, the largest cluster of asteroid families in the asteroid belt.
Nysa or Nyssa α, flourished 150s BC-126 BC) was a princess from the Kingdom of Pontus and was a Queen of Cappadocia.
The Nysa Bridge is a late imperial Roman bridge over the Cakircak stream in Nysa in the ancient region of Caria, modern-day Turkey. The 100 m (328 ft) long substructure was the second largest of its kind in antiquity, after the Pergamon Bridge.
This is a list of monuments in the town of Nysa in Poland.
Nysa or Nyssa α, flourished second half of 2nd century BC and first half of 1st century BC) was a Greek Princess from the Kingdom of Bithynia.