Robert Korzeniowski
.jpg) Robert Korzeniowski in 2020 |
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| Full name | Robert Marek Korzeniowski[1] |
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| Born | (1968-07-30) 30 July 1968[1] Lubaczów, Poland[1] |
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| Height | 168 cm (5 ft 6 in)[1] |
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| Weight | 60 kg (132 lb)[1] |
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Robert Marek Korzeniowski (born 30 July 1968) is a Polish former racewalker who won four gold medals at the Olympic Games and three gold medals at World Championships.
Biography
Korzeniowski was born in Lubaczów, and is the brother of fellow Olympic athlete Sylwia Korzeniowska.[1]
Career
Korzeniowski won three consecutive Olympic gold medals in the 50 km walk at Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, and Athens 2004.
In addition, he became the first athlete to win the gold medal in both the 50 km walk and 20 km walk at a single Olympic Games in Sydney.
He won World Championship titles in the 50 km walk at the 1997 World Championships, 2001 World Championships, and 2003 World Championships.
He also won European Championship twice in the 50 km walk in 1998 in Budapest and 2002 in Munich.
He is also the former world record holder in the 50 km walk from 2002 to 2006.
Post-career
Korzeniowski retired after the 2004 Olympic Games and became actively involved in various roles at the International Olympic Committee.
He was the coach and mentor of former world record-holder Paquillo Fernández.
Since 2005 he worked for the public Polish Television (TVP) as a chief of sport department and in 2007 he became a General Manager of TVP Sport, a new specialized channel in Poland. On 6 November 2009, he announced his resignation.
In 2014 Korzeniowski was inducted into the International Association of Athletics Federations' Hall of Fame.
In 2022, the Korzeniowski Warsaw Race Walking Cup, an annual racewalking competition in Warsaw, was founded and named in his honor. Since 2022 it has been a World Athletics Race Walking Tour Gold level competition.[2]
State awards
For his sport achievements, Korzeniowski received the Order of Polonia Restituta:
- 1996
Knight's Cross (5th Class)
- 2000
Officer's Cross (4th Class)
- 2004
Commander's Cross (3rd Class)
Competition record
| Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
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Representing Poland
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| 1987
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European Junior Championships
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Birmingham, United Kingdom
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–
|
10,000 m walk
|
DQ
|
| 1989
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Universiade
|
Duisburg, West Germany
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6th
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20 km walk
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1:26:10
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| 1990
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European Championships
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Split, Yugoslavia
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4th
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20 km walk
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1:23.47
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| 1991
|
World Championships
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
10th
|
20 km walk
|
1:21:32
|
| –
|
50 km walk
|
DNF
|
| 1992
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Olympic Games
|
Barcelona, Spain
|
–
|
20 km walk
|
DNF
|
| –
|
50 km walk
|
DQ
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| 1993
|
World Indoor Championships
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Toronto, Canada
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2nd
|
5000 m walk
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18:35.91
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| Universiade
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Buffalo, United States
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1st
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20 km walk
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1:22:01
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| World Championships
|
Stuttgart, Germany
|
–
|
50 km walk
|
DQ
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| 1994
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European Indoor Championships
|
Paris, France
|
–
|
5000 m walk
|
DQ
|
| European Championships
|
Helsinki, Finland
|
–
|
20 km walk
|
DQ
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| 5th
|
50 km walk
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3:45:57
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| 1995
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World Championships
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Gothenburg, Sweden
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3rd
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50 km walk
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3:45.57
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| 1996
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Olympic Games
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Atlanta, United States
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8th
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20 km walk
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1:21:13
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| 1st
|
50 km walk
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3:43:30
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| 1997
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World Championships
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Athens, Greece
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1st
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50 km walk
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3:44:46
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| 1998
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European Championships
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Budapest, Hungary
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1st
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50 km walk
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3:43:51
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| 1999
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World Race Walking Cup
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Mézidon-Canon, France
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4th
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20 km walk
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1:20:52
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| World Championships
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Seville, Spain
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–
|
50 km walk
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DQ
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| 2000
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European Race Walking Cup
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Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany
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1st
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20 km walk
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1:18:29
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| Olympic Games
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Sydney, Australia
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1st
|
20 km walk
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1:18:59 (OR)
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| 1st
|
50 km walk
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3:42:22
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| 2001
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World Championships
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Edmonton, Canada
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1st
|
50 km walk
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3:42.08
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| Goodwill Games
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Brisbane, Australia
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2nd
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20,000 m walk
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1:19:52.0
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| 2002
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European Championships
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Munich, Germany
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1st
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50 km walk
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3:36:39 (WR)
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| 2003
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World Championships
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Paris, France
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1st
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50 km walk
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3:36:03 (WR)
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| 2004
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Olympic Games
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Athens, Greece
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1st
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50 km walk
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3:38:46
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See also
- Polish records in athletics
- 2002 Race Walking Year Ranking
References
External links
Olympic champions in men's 20 km race walk |
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Olympic champions in men's 50 km race walk |
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| 50 km |
- 1976:
Veniamin Soldatenko (URS)
- 1983:
Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1987:
Hartwig Gauder (GDR)
- 1991:
Aleksandr Potashov (URS)
- 1993:
Jesús Ángel García (ESP)
- 1995:
Valentin Kononen (FIN)
- 1997:
(POL)
- 1999:
Ivano Brugnetti (ITA)
- 2001:
(POL)
- 2003:
(POL)
- 2005:
Sergey Kirdyapkin (RUS)
- 2007:
Nathan Deakes (AUS)
- 2009:
Trond Nymark (NOR)
- 2011:
Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS)
- 2013:
Robert Heffernan (IRL)
- 2015:
Matej Tóth (SVK)
- 2017:
Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2019:
Yusuke Suzuki (JPN)
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| 35 km | |
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|
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1934–2018 50 kilometres |
- 1934:
Jānis Daliņš (LAT)
- 1938:
Harold Whitlock (GBR)
- 1946:
John Ljunggren (SWE)
- 1950:
Pino Dordoni (ITA)
- 1954:
Vladimir Ukhov (URS)
- 1958:
Yevgeny Maskinskov (URS)
- 1962:
Abdon Pamich (ITA)
- 1966:
Abdon Pamich (ITA)
- 1969:
Christoph Höhne (GDR)
- 1971:
Veniamin Soldatenko (URS)
- 1974:
Christoph Höhne (GDR)
- 1978:
Jorge Llopart (ESP)
- 1982:
Reima Salonen (FIN)
- 1986:
Hartwig Gauder (GDR)
- 1990:
Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1994:
Valeriy Spitsyn (RUS)
- 1998:
(POL)
- 2002:
(POL)
- 2006:
Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2010:
Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2014:
Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2018:
Maryan Zakalnytskyy (UKR)
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2022–present 35 kilometres |
- 2022:
Miguel Ángel López (ESP)
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- 1981:
Maurizio Damilano (ITA)
- 1983:
Guillaume LeBlanc (CAN)
- 1985:
Viktor Mostovik (URS)
- 1987:
Raffaello Ducceschi (ITA)
- 1989:
Walter Arena (ITA)
- 1991:
(POL)
- 1993:
(POL)
- 1995:
Daniel García (MEX)
- 1997:
Ilya Markov (RUS)
- 1999:
Alejandro López (MEX)
- 2001:
Lorenzo Civallero (ITA)
- 2003:
Stepan Yudin (RUS)
- 2005:
Juan Manuel Molina (ESP)
- 2007:
Chu Yafei (CHN)
- 2009:
Sergey Bakulin (RUS)
- 2011:
Andrey Krivov (RUS)
- 2013:
Andrey Krivov (RUS)
- 2015:
Dane Bird-Smith (AUS)
- 2017:
Toshikazu Yamanishi (JPN)
- 2019:
Koki Ikeda (JPN)
- 2021:
Salih Korkmaz (TUR)
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| 20 km walk |
- 1980: Domingo Colín (MEX)
- 1981: Dave Smith (AUS)
- 1982: Willi Sawall (AUS)
- 1983: Jozef Pribilinec (TCH)
- 1984: Ernesto Canto (MEX)
- 1985: Dave Smith (AUS)
- 1986: Reima Salonen (FIN)
- 1987: Axel Noack (GDR)
- 1988: Mikhail Shchennikov (URS)
- 1989: Yevgeniy Misyulya (URS)
- 1990: Pavol Blažek (TCH)
- 1991: Aleksandr Pershin (URS)
- 1992: Stefan Johansson (SWE)
- 1993: Bernardo Segura (MEX)
- 1994: Bernardo Segura (MEX)
- 1995: Vladimir Andreyev (RUS)
- 1996: Yevgeniy Misyulya (BLR)
- 1997: Jefferson Pérez (ECU)
- 1998: Vladimir Andreyev (RUS)
- 1999: Julio René Martínez (GUA)
- 2000: Roman Rasskazov (RUS)
- 2001: Dmitriy Yesipchuk (RUS)
- 2002: Paquillo Fernández (ESP)
- 2003: Jefferson Pérez (ECU)
- 2004: Vladimir Stankin (RUS)
- 2005: Nathan Deakes (AUS)
- 2006: Li Gaobo (CHN)
- 2007: Vladimir Kanaykin (RUS)
- 2008: Sergey Morozov (RUS)
- 2009: Valeriy Borchin (RUS)
- 2010: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2011: Wang Zhen (CHN)
- 2012: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2013: Petr Trofimov (RUS)
- 2014: Yusuke Suzuki (JPN)
- 2015: Yusuke Suzuki (JPN)
- 2016: Eiki Takahashi (JPN)
- 2017: Wang Kaihua (CHN)
- 2018: Sergey Shirobokov (RUS)
- 2019: Toshikazu Yamanishi (JPN)
- 2020: Toshikazu Yamanishi (JPN)
- 2021: Wang Kaihua (CHN)
- 2022: Vasiliy Mizinov (ANA)
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| 50 km walk |
- 1980: José Marín (ESP)
- 1981: Uwe Dünkel (GDR)
- 1982: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1983: José Marín (ESP)
- 1984: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1985: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1986: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1987: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1988: Vyacheslav Ivanenko (URS)
- 1989: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1990: Aleksandr Potashov (URS)
- 1991: Carlos Mercenario (MEX)
- 1992: (POL)
- 1993: Jesús Ángel García (ESP)
- 1994: Valentí Massana (ESP)
- 1995: Zhao Yongsheng (CHN)
- 1996: Thierry Toutain (FRA)
- 1997: Jesús Ángel García (ESP)
- 1998: Andrey Plotnikov (RUS)
- 1999: Sergey Korepanov (KAZ)
- 2000: Valeriy Spitsyn (RUS)
- 2001: (POL)
- 2002: (POL)
- 2003: (POL)
- 2004: Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS)
- 2005: Yu Chaohong (CHN)
- 2006: Nathan Deakes (AUS)
- 2007: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2008: Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS)
- 2009: Sergey Kirdyapkin (RUS)
- 2010: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2011: Sergey Bakulin (RUS)
- 2012: Sergey Kirdyapkin (RUS)
- 2013: Robert Heffernan (IRL)
- 2014: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2015: Matej Tóth (SVK)
- 2016: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2017: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2018: Tomohiro Noda (JPN)
- 2019: Masatora Kawano (JPN)
- 2020: Matej Tóth (SVK)
- 2021: Satoshi Maruo (JPN)
- 2022: Resham Midhun (IND)
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 Polish Sports Personality of the Year |
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| Sportspersonality of The Year | |
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| Team of The Year | |
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| Coach of The Year |
- 1976: Hubert Wagner
- 1977: Krystyna Babirecka, Bolesław Bogdan, Zbigniew Katner & Zbigniew Kuciewicz
- 1978: Edward Budny
- 1979: Zbigniew Rusin & Andrzej Trochanowski
- 1980: Ludwik Miętta-Mikołajewicz
- 1981: Antoni Piechniczek
- 1982: Antoni Piechniczek
- 1983: Zdzisław Dudzik
- 1985: Ryszard Szurkowski
- 1986: Stanisław Rybakowski
- 1987: Stanisław Krzesiński
- 1988: Ryszard Zieniawa
- 1989: Stanisław Pytel & Wacław Skarul
- 1990: Arkadiusz Koniecki
- 1991: Janusz Wójcik
- 1992: Zbigniew Pacelt
- 1993: Tomasz Herkt
- 1994: Olgierd Światowiak
- 1995: Michał Brzuchalski
- 1996: Ryszard Świerad
- 1997: Wojciech Borowiak
- 1998: Józef Lisowski
- 1999: Tomasz Herkt
- 2000: Jerzy Broniec
- 2001: Jerzy Engel & Apoloniusz Tajner
- 2002: Paweł Słomiński
- 2003: Andrzej Niemczyk
- 2004: Paweł Słomiński
- 2005: Andrzej Niemczyk & Paweł Słomiński
- 2006: Raúl Lozano
- 2007: Leo Beenhakker
- 2008: Aleksander Wojciechowski
- 2009: Bogdan Wenta
- 2010: Aleksander Wierietielny
- 2011: Marek Cieślak
- 2012: Henryk Olszewski
- 2013: Łukasz Kruczek
- 2014: Stéphane Antiga & Łukasz Kruczek
- 2015: Adam Nawałka
- 2016: Krzysztof Kaliszewski
- 2017: Stefan Horngacher
- 2018: Vital Heynen
- 2019: Jolanta Kumor
- 2020: Piotr Sierzputowski
- 2021: Aleksander Matusiński
- 2022: Tomasz Wiktorowski
- 2023: Nikola Grbić
- 2024: Mateusz Mirosław
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- New entry
- 1May 17, 2012
- 2June 6, 2012
- 3June 11, 2012
- 4July 2, 2012
- 5August 4, 2012
- 6September 15, 2012
- 7October 13, 2012
- 8November 16, 2013
- 9November 21, 2014
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