Athletics There was an athletics department. During
World War II, three athletes of AZS Warsaw, Stanisław Fiedorowicz, Jerzy Koźlicki and Julian Gruner, were among Poles murdered by the Russians in the large
Katyn massacre in April–May 1940. Olympic athletes
Stanisław Sośnicki and
Wojciech Trojanowski were prisoners of the
German prisoner-of-war camp Oflag II-C.
Boxing History The ancestor of the boxing section was the Academic Boxing Association, which was established before 1924. It became a section of AZS Warsaw before 1930. The section was not very successful in Poland.
Gymnastics Andrzej Konopka,
Wiesława Noskiewicz, and
Łukasz Uhma represented the club at various Summer Olympic Games.
Ice Hockey History This section was established in 1922. it was one of the first hockey teams in Poland, next to
Polonia Warsaw. Initially, training sessions took place at the ice rink in
Łazienki Park, then at Karowa Street and finally at Dynasy, where hockey players stayed for many years. The section was one of the best hockey teams of the 1920s and 1930s. In 1927, the team became the first Polish champions in history. The team defended their title in the next four editions of the championships, until 1931. In 1927, the team was recognised as the fifth best hockey team in Europe. In 1924, AZS Warsaw, together with Polonia Warsaw, the Warsaw Skating Society, and
KS Warszawianka, founded the
Polish Ice Hockey Federation. AZS Warsaw players became the core of Polish representation in ice hockey for many years. In 1926, AZS Warsaw hockey players, as the Polish national team, went to the European Ice Hockey Championships in
Davos, where they lost 1:2 to France and Austria. In the squad for the European Championships in
Vienna in 1927, the formation was once again primarily players from the Warsaw club. The Poles took fourth place in the tournament. AZS Warsaw won the academic world championships in 1928. AZS Warsaw was an important hockey team until the outbreak of
World War II, although other teams began to dominate the league after 1931. During the war, two players,
Edmund Czaplicki and
Aleksander Kowalski, were among Poles murdered by the Russians in the large
Katyn massacre in April–May 1940. Pre-war player
Tadeusz Adamowski was a prisoner of the German prisoner-of-war camp
Oflag II-C. This section was re-activated after the end of the war, but was not able to return to its pre-war successes. This was largely due to the presence of
Legia Warsaw, which had gathered old representatives around them, and used the fact that it was a military club to attract talented younger players. The section ceased to exist shortly after 1957. Famous players included Olympic athletes
Tadeusz Adamowski and
Aleksander Kowalski. == References ==