When Lukas Podolski joined Górnik Zabrze in 2021, many saw the transfer as a beautiful, but above all sentimental, story. A 2014 World Cup winner, a player with Bayern Munich, Arsenal, Inter Milan and Galatasaray in his CV, he was returning to the club of his heart — a club tied to his Silesian identity and childhood dreams. He already had a great international career behind him, but still had one more mission ahead: to give Górnik something more than just a famous name.
Five years later, that story reached a symbolic finale. Górnik Zabrze won the Polish Cup in the 2025/2026 season, defeating Raków Częstochowa 2–0 at the PGE National Stadium in Warsaw. Roberto Massimo and Maksym Chłań scored the goals for the Zabrze side. For Górnik, it was their seventh triumph in the competition, but the first since 1972 — the first in more than half a century.
Podolski did not lead Górnik to this success in the traditional coaching sense. He led them as a symbol, a dressing-room leader, a magnet for supporters, an ambassador of the club and a man who made people talk about Zabrze again far beyond the city itself. His presence mattered beyond the pitch. For younger players, he was a point of reference; for the fans, proof that a great footballer truly took Górnik seriously; and for the club, evidence that a great name could return and help rebuild its identity.
In the final, Podolski appeared on the pitch only in the closing stages of the match, but his role after the final whistle was enormous. The image of the world champion celebrating the triumph together with Górnik’s supporters became one of the strongest scenes of the final. After the medal ceremony, he ran with the trophy towards the stands occupied by the Zabrze fans, sharing with them the joy of a historic victory.
This triumph has sporting, historical and emotional significance for Górnik. Sporting, because the Polish Cup opens the door to European competition. Historical, because it ends a very long wait for a national trophy. Emotional, because it closes Podolski’s five-year story in Zabrze in an almost cinematic way: a great champion returns to the club of his heart and, after years of patient work, helps it lift a trophy.
Podolski showed that football is not always only a matter of goals, minutes played and contracts. Sometimes it is a story of loyalty, attachment to a place and the power of a promise. For Górnik Zabrze, his arrival was more than a transfer. It was the beginning of a process that, five years later, ended with one of the most important evenings in the club’s recent history.
Górnik won the Polish Cup, but a certain idea of football also triumphed: that even after a great global career, one can return to the place where the heart belongs and do something that will be remembered for generations.

