Piotr Dziewicki

Piotr Dziewicki (born June 26, 1979 in Milanówek) was a Polish professional football player, who currently is the head coach of Polonia Warsaw, where he spent most of his football career.

Piotr Dziewicki
Personal information
Full name Piotr Paweł Dziewicki
Date of birth (1979-09-26) September 26, 1979
Place of birth Milanówek, Poland
Height 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in)
Playing position(s) Defender
Club information
Current team
Polonia Warsaw
Youth career
1993 Milan Milanówek
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994–2003 Polonia Warsaw 63 (4)
2003–2006 Amica Wronki 42 (0)
2006–2008 Antalyaspor 60 (0)
2009–2010 Polonia Warsaw 33 (0)
2011 Dolcan Ząbki 6 (0)
2013 Milan Milanówek - (-)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 26 July 2013

Career

Club

He has played for Milan Milanówek, Polonia Warsaw and Amica Wronki. At the start of 2006-07 season, he transferred to Turkish side Antalyaspor with fellow Pole Jarosław Bieniuk.[1]

In January 2009 he returned to Polonia Warsaw[2] and he remained there until January 2011 when he moved down one level to play for Dolcan Ząbki.[3] He was released from Dolcan Ząbki on 1 May 2011.[4]

Coaching

After the bankruptcy of KSP Polonia Warsaw Ltd. in June 2013, at the hands of Ireneusz Król. Piotr Dziewicki along with Paweł Olczak, where the main figures within the association of Polonia fans led by Grzegorz Popielarz who organized the resurrection of the club, starting from the 4th league (north)(5th tier in Poland). Piotr Dziewicki was nominated as the head coach and manager to create the new Polonia team, on the basis of MKS Polonia Warszawa Youth Academy. He won 6-0 in his debut, against Wkra Żuromin.

gollark: Oh noooo, how will I deal with 15W power draw?!
gollark: The Pi 4 has gigabit Ethernet and USB 3.
gollark: I do not want to deal with an underpowered device which can serve files at probably 30MB/s at most.
gollark: Yes, and I have gigabytes of files *at* home.
gollark: I am *not* serving my gigabytes of files off something with a single-core CPU and trash IO.

References


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