The club was founded on 9 July 1923 as fusion of three local clubs:
Kartagina,
Rewia' and
Sparta, under the name
KS Szczakowianka. With the exception of the years 1948–1951, and brief few-day spell in 2007 (where it was met with widespread fan protests) the club has kept its
Szczakowianka name throughout its existence, despite numerous minor name changes. They have spent the majority of their history in the 4th tier of Polish football, until the year 2000 they slowly started to make their way up the league pyramid. In the 2001–02 season, they gained promotion to the
second division after a double play-off match against
RKS Radomsko. However, the game was shrouded in controversy, with
Branko Rašić becoming the centre of attention with Radomsko claiming he was ineligible to play, as he was on loan from
Victoria Jaworzno before the transfer window at the time. The case took several years to resolve, with numerous court proceedings,
Polish FA involvement and even appeals to
UEFA,
Polish Olympic Committee, and debates in the
Polish parliament. The case had widespread consequences, with many officials punished and removed from office as a result, and changes in law to prevent similar incidents in the future. In the 2002–03 season, they played in the
Ekstraklasa and were relegated after one year in the top-flight. Whilst it looked like they were about to win promotion immediately, they were convicted of match-fixing, along with several other clubs in widespread enquiry that shook Polish football. After the two scandals, the club was heavily hit by sanctions with lack of confidence from supporters and sponsors alike in the management which led to the club being bankrupt by 2007. The team carried on relying on its reserve team in the fourth division, whilst the first team was dissolved and the disgraced management made redundant.
Match-fixing scandal After a play-off scandal where Szczakowianka were convicted of
match-fixing in the 2003–04 season, Szczakowianka played in
second league starting with a ten-point deduction at the start of the season: Several matches were annulled as result. Autumn 2003 round: • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Cracovia Kraków 2–1 (1–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Arka Gdynia 4–0 (2–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Błękitni Stargard 2–0 (1–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Ruch Chorzów 1–0 (0–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – ŁKS Łódź 2–1 (2–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Polar Wrocław 1–1 (0–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała 5–2 (3–0) • Piast Gliwice – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–2 (0–1) • Jagiellonia Białystok – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0–2 (0–1) • RKS Radomsko – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 2–1 (0–0) • KS Stasiak Opoczno – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–3 (1–2) • Zagłębie Lubin – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0–0 (0–0) • Tłoki Gorzyce – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 3–2 (0–1) • Aluminium Konin – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–3 (0–2) • GKS Bełchatów – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–2 (1–1) • KSZO Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–1 (1–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – MKS Pogoń Szczecin 0–0 (0–0) Spring 2004 round: • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Jagiellonia Białystok 4–0 (2–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Tłoki Gorzyce 4–2 (1–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Zagłębie Lubin 4–1 (1–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – GKS Bełchatów 1–2 (0–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Piast Gliwice 1–1 (1–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – RKS Radomsko 2–0 (1–0) • Polar Wrocław – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0–2 (0–1) • MKS Pogoń Szczecin – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 3–2 (2–0) • Arka Gdynia – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0–1 (0–0) • Cracovia Kraków – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 8–1 (5–0) • Podbeskidzie Bielsko-Biała – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 2–0 (2–0) • ŁKS Łódź – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 0–1 (0–0) • Ruch Chorzów – Szczakowianka Jaworzno 1–1 (0–1) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – KS Stasiak Opoczno 1–0 (1–0) • Szczakowianka Jaworzno – Aluminium Konin 1–0 (0–0) ==Current squad==