The Scotsman

FOCUS ON LEGIA

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HISTORY Legia were formed in 1916 as the official football team of the Polish Army but it would be 11 years before the club would join the country’s top flight. Success was limited until the first of a record 19 Polish Cups was claimed in September 1955, followed four weeks later by a maiden league title. Since then Legia have gone on to be crowned national champions 13 times - a feat only bettered by Gornik Zabrze and Ruch Chorzow on 14 - with their most recent coming just last year.

MANAGER

Aleksandar Vukovic has twice served as Legia’s caretaker boss but was finally given the reins on a full-time basis late last season as he replaced former Sporting Lisbon coach Ricardo Sa Pinto to become the club’s 12th manager in the last nine years. The 39-year-old started his playing career at Partizan Belgrade and had two stints on the books at his present employers. He saw Legia over the line into second place last term but he has faced stick from fans following a patchy start to the new season.

PLAYING SQUAD

Legia cashed in on their best player Sebastian Szymanski in the summer as he joined Dinamo Moscow for €5.5million, while last season’s top scorer Carlitos has been in and out of Vukovic’s line-up so far this campaign. Teenage striker Sandro Kulenovic has been preferred recently but was booed off by his own fans as he chalked up his sixth game without a goal in the weekend win over Zaglebie. The Poles could turn to Ukrainian Valeriane Gvilia to set the tempo from midfield with his wide passing range.

EUROPEAN PEDIGREE

Rangers will be relieved to learn that the current Legia line-up are nowhere near as strong as the side which wiped the floor with Old Firm rivals Celtic five years ago, only to see their 6-1 aggregate Champions League win overturned after they were punished for playing an ineligible player. They still went on to make the last 32 of the Europa League that year and repeated the feat in 2016-17 as they finished third in a Champions League group featuring Real Madrid, Borussia Dortmund and Sporting Lisbon. But they have struggled in continenta­l action in the three seasons since and were last year dumped out of the Europa League by Luxembourg minnows F91 Dudelange.

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