Amber Cup Tournament


The Amber Cup is a Polish indoor football tournament which takes place in January, when the Polish football league takes a winter break. The tournament which was first held at Hala Gryfia, Słupsk, in 2006, and held annually from 2008 until 2018. In 2016 the competition was held in the Ergo Arena, Gdańsk due to the capacity being much higher than that of Hala Gryfia, with the hall being the venue for the next three editions. After the tournament was cancelled for 2019 it returned again in January 2020, this time being hosted in Gliwice.

Format

The tournament is played over 2 days. The first day sees a children's tournament of 16 teams. The teams are split into 4 groups of 4, with the top two teams playing in the knock-out stages.
The second day sees the men's teams play. This is a similar format but with only 2 groups. From 2006–2016 the 8 teams were split into groups of 4, and 2017–2018 the 6 teams were split into groups of 3. Each team plays each other once, with the top teams playing in a knockout stage before the 3rd place play-off and finals are played. The format was changed again with only 4 teams taking part in tournament for the 2020 edition.

History

In the early years of its formation, the tournament was for amateur clubs or teams from the lower divisions of Polish football. The organisers wanted to mix sport with football and create an event of "great fun". As the Amber Cup was getting more popular bigger teams accepted invitations to compete in the tournament. Wisła Kraków was one of the first "big" teams to take part in the tournament, and won it in 2010. As Gdańsk and Gdynia were not too far from Słupsk it was a plan to invite one of the teams to take part in the near future to gain popularity with a bigger following in future events. Lechia Gdańsk first took part in 2011, and have featured in every tournament since.
The Amber Cup is not just for the big teams, while the tournament grew, it saw a mix of amateur teams facing professional players. In 2012, 2014 and 2015 it was an amateur team which came out on top and won the tournament. In 2016 the venue for the tournament was moved from Słupsk to the Ergo Arena in Gdańsk. The new arena had a capacity of 15,000 and was the perfect place to see the tournament grow further in popularity. Since the move to Gdańsk, fewer amateur teams have been invited, with more teams from Northern Poland taking part which play in the second or third tiers. As the tournament got more competitive the bigger teams started taking more established senior players from their squad, instead of the younger or second-team players which used to take part in the tournament.
In January 2019 the Amber Cup was left out of the Ergo Arenas calendar. Tournament organisers announced that the tournament had been cancelled for 2019 & 2020, with the organisers using those two years to prepare for a better organised and greater advertised tournament. At the time it was unknown whether the Amber Cup would continue, albeit with a different format, or whether a new tournament will take its place.
Despite the future of the Amber Cup being uncertain, the tournament returned in 2020 with a new location in Gliwice. It was the first tournament since its early creation not to include any professional teams. The tournament was also the first of its kind to include a women’s match, involving a game between Team Kiedrzynek and Team Pajor.

Amber Cup Winners

Men's tournament

Team by performance

ClubWinnerRunners-upThird placeWinning years
Lechia Gdańsk4112011, 2013, 2016, 2017
Gryf Słupsk1122009
Blue Moon Szczecin11-2012
Unia Szczecin1-12008
Wisła Kraków1--2010
Mściwoj Kartuzy1--2014
Team Graham Sierakowice1--2015
Wisła Płock1--2018
KTS Weszło1--2020
Śląsk Wrocław-2--
Football Factory-13-
Forcars Słupsk-1--
Puma All Star Team-1--
Team Adrian Mierzejewski-1--
Team Mariusz Piekarski-1--
Miedź Legnica-1--
Poland Stars-1--
Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała--1-
Motor Lublin--1-
GKS Katowice--1-
Lambada Team--1-
Team Kamil Wilczek--1-

Key
TypeInfoColour
Professional teamsTeams made up of players from professional teams
Invitational teamsTeams made up of retired or current famous Polish players
Amateur teamsTeams made up entirely of amateur or lower league players

Performance of teams class
ClubWinnerRunners-upThird placeWinning years
Professional teams7562009, 2010, 2011, 2013,
2016, 2017, 2018
Amateur teams4112008, 2014, 2015, 2020
Invitational teams1652012

Women's Tournament

There were no women's games before the thirteenth edition of the tournament
EditionYearWinnerRunners-upVenue
XIII2020Team Ewa PajorTeam Katarzyna KiedrzynekGliwice Arena, Gliwice-