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Central Junior League (Poland)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centralna Liga Juniorów
Organising bodyPZPN
Founded2013; 12 years ago (2013)
CountryPoland
ConfederationUEFA
Number of clubs16 (U19)
32 (U17)
56 (U15)
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toMacroregional league (U19)
Voivodeiship league (U15 and U17)
Current championsU19: Legia Warsaw (4th title)
U17: Śląsk Wrocław (1st title)
U15: Śląsk Wrocław (2nd title)
(2023–24)
Most championshipsU19: Legia Warsaw (4 titles)
U17: 6 clubs (1 title)
U15: Śląsk Wrocław and Zagłębie Lubin (2 titles)

The Central Junior League (Polish language: Centralna Liga Juniorów, CLJ) is a Polish youth football competition. Created in mid-2013, it replaced Mloda Ekstraklasa as the highest level of youth football in Poland. Initially serving as the top tier for under-19 teams (replaced by under-18 teams from 2017 to 2022), it has since introduced under-17 and under-15 divisions. The winners of each level are crowned junior champions of Poland in their age group, with the under-19 champions advancing to the UEFA Youth League.

History

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First tournament of Polish U-19 championship took place in the summer of 1936, see Football Junior Championships of Poland. The formula of the U-19 games changed several times. In some years, there was a final match, taking place before an international game featuring the national team of Poland, while on other occasions, there was a final tournament, featuring four top U-19 teams, winners of local competitions. At regional level, the championships were organized by local branches of Polish Football Association (PZPN).

In the summer of 2007, the so-called Młoda Ekstraklasa (Young Ekstraklasa) was formed. It was contested by players 21 years of age and under, also each team was allowed three players over this age limit. Despite the creation of Młoda Ekstraklasa, games of the U-19 national championships continued on regional levels: winners of local competitions played each other in the play-off series.

2013–14

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In the summer of 2013, the Central Junior League was officially formed by the PZPN. It consisted of four groups (48 teams), with 12 teams in each group (every Polish province was granted three spots). The championship took place in the autumn - spring system.

Group A

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This group was won by GKS Bełchatów, second was Legia Warsaw. Both teams qualified to the playoffs.

Group B

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This group was won by Lech Poznań, second was Pogoń Szczecin. Both teams qualified to the playoffs.

Group C

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This group was won by Ruch Chorzów, second was Zagłębie Lubin. Both teams qualified to the playoffs.

Group D

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This group was won by Wisła Kraków, second was Cracovia. Both teams qualified to the playoffs.

Play-offs

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  • 5 June 2014: Zagłębie Lubin 0–2 Wisła Kraków, Cracovia 2–1 Ruch Chorzów, Legia Warsaw 2–2 Lech Poznań, Pogon Szczecin 2–1 GKS Bełchatów,
  • 8 June 2014: Wisła Kraków 3–1 Zagłębie Lubin, Ruch Chorzów 0–2 Cracovia, Lech Poznań 3–0 Legia Warsaw, GKS Bełchatów 2–2 Pogoń Szczecin.

Semifinals

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  • 15 June 2014: Wisła Kraków 5–1 Lech Poznań, Cracovia 3–5 Pogoń Szczecin
  • 19 June 2014: Lech Poznań 1–1 Wisła Kraków, Pogoń Szczecin 3–5 Cracovia (pen. 3–5).

Final

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  • 22 June 2014: Wisła Kraków 2–1 Cracovia
  • 25 June 2014: Cracovia 0–10 Wisła Kraków.

Wisła Kraków became the 2014 U-19 Champion of Poland, and the first winner of the Central Junior League.

2014–15

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In the second season of the CLJ, the league was limited to 32 teams, divided into two groups: West and East.

Group West

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Sixteen teams from eight western provinces of Poland (Lower Silesia, Lubusz, Opole, Silesia, Kuyavia-Pomerania, Pomerania, Western Pomerania, Greater Poland):

This group was won by Lech Poznań (70 points), second was Górnik Zabrze (63 points), third Lechia Gdańsk (61 points), and fourth Pogoń Szczecin (55 points). First two teams qualified to the playoffs. Relegated were the last four teams: Odra Opole (39 points), Olimpia Grudziądz (14 points), MKS Kluczbork (14 points), and Stilon Gorzów Wielkopolski (8 points).

Group East

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Sixteen teams from eight eastern provinces of Poland (Łódź, Masovia, Podlasie, Warmia-Mazury, Lublin, Podkarpacie, Lesser Poland, Świętokrzyskie):

  • GKS Bełchatów, Legia Warsaw, MKS Polonia Warsaw, Stomil Olsztyn, Jagiellonia Białystok, Olimpia Elbląg, ŁKS 1926 Łomża, ŁKS Łódź, Wisła Kraków, Cracovia, Korona Kielce, Stal Mielec, Wisła Puławy, Stal Rzeszów, KSZO Ostrowiec Swiętokrzyski, Motor Lublin.

This group was won by Legia Warsaw (79 points), second was Polonia Warsaw (60 points), third Cracovia (53 points), and fourth Jagiellonia Białystok (52 points). First two teams qualified to the playoffs. Relegated were the last four teams: Olimpia Elbląg (27 points), Stomil Olsztyn (25 points), ŁKS Łomża (24 points), and Wisła Pulawy (23 points).

Semifinals

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  • 6 June 2015: Górnik Zabrze 1–1 Legia Warsaw, Polonia Warsaw 1–0 Lech Poznań,
  • 10 June 2015: Legia Warsaw 2–0 Górnik Zabrze, Lech Poznań 1–0 Polonia Warsaw (pen. 4–2)

Final

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  • 17 June 2015: Legia Warsaw 3–0 Lech Poznań
  • 20 June 2015: Lech Poznań 2–3 Legia Warsaw

Legia Warsaw became the 2015 U-19 Champion of Poland.

2015–16

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In the third season of the CLJ, the league had 32 teams, divided into two groups: West and East.

In Group West the teams that were relegated after the previous season (Odra Opole, Olimpia Grudziądz, MKS Kluczbork, Stilon Gorzów) were replaced by the four teams which won the playoffs:

In Group East the teams that were relegated after the previous season (Olimpia Elbląg, Stomil Olsztyn, ŁKS Łomża and Wisła Puławy) were replaced by the four teams which won the playoffs:

Champions

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Season Under-18/19 Under-17 Under-15
2013–14 Wisła Kraków
2014–15 Legia Warsaw
2015–16 Legia Warsaw
2016–17 Legia Warsaw
2017–18 Lech Poznań Jagiellonia Białystok Zagłębie Lubin
2018–19 Korona Kielce Legia Warsaw Legia Warsaw
2019–20 Górnik Zabrze Season abandoned Season abandoned
2020–21 Pogoń Szczecin UKS SMS Łódź Zagłębie Lubin
2021–22 Zagłębie Lubin Zagłębie Lubin Lech Poznań
2022–23 Lech Poznań Górnik Zabrze Śląsk Wrocław
2023–24 Legia Warsaw Śląsk Wrocław Śląsk Wrocław

Sources

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See also

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