Lechia Gdańsk or Arka Gdynia? Football’s battle for the Tri-City and supremacy on the Baltic
On 24 August at 5:30 p.m. the Polsat Plus Arena in Gdańsk will once again host a match that has defined football on Poland’s northern coast for six decades. The Tri-City derby between Lechia Gdańsk and Arka Gdynia is far more than a league fixture – it is a contest for prestige, pride, and symbolic control of the Baltic shoreline.
pomerania football tricity news23 august 2025 | 19:19 | Source: Gazeta Morska | Prepared by: Kamil Kusier | Print

fot. Lechia Gdańsk
A rivalry anchored in history
The first Tri-City derby was played on 2 September 1964, with Lechia winning 2–1. Since then, the rivalry has become a permanent fixture on the footballing map of northern Poland. To date, 46 official derbies have been played: Lechia has won 18, Arka 12, with 16 ending in draws.
Derbies are rarely predictable. Past encounters have been marked by dramatic twists, surprise victories, and unforgettable atmospheres. Matches in Gdynia and Gdańsk have drawn tens of thousands, with the stands often shaking under the weight of passion and song.
Record attendance and high stakes
Recent years have seen the derby set new attendance records. In May 2024 nearly 36,000 fans filled the Gdańsk stadium. This Sunday, a record crowd of 37,500 is expected, with dignitaries including the Pesident of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, and the Polish FA chairman, Cezary Kulesza among those in attendance.
Beyond football, the event requires meticulous planning – from special SKM train services to road closures – underscoring the scale of the derby as both a sporting and logistical operation.
Current season: two sides in need of momentum
Lechia enters the fixture under pressure, sitting bottom of the table with negative points due to licensing penalties. The match offers the Gdańsk side a chance to reset its campaign and find a turning point in front of its home supporters.
Arka, although higher in the standings, has also struggled for form, taking just five points from its opening five games (one win, two draws, two defeats). For the Gdynia side, victory in Gdańsk would be a statement of intent and a boost for a team searching for consistency.
More than a game for the coast
For the Tri-City, this match is about more than sport. It is about civic pride, local identity, and the symbolic question: who rules the Baltic coast – the white and green of Gdańsk, or the yellow and blue of Gdynia?
On Sunday evening, the Polsat Plus Arena will resemble less a football ground than a harbour filled with anticipation. Whether Lechia can fight its way back from troubled waters, or Arka can steer a steady course toward victory, one thing is certain: the Baltic will once again bear witness to the north’s most passionate football battle.
Buy us a coffee, and we’ll invest in great maritime journalism! Support Gazeta Morska and help us sail forward – click here!
Kamil Kusier
redaktor naczelny
comments
Add the first comment
see also
Aurora borealis over the Baltic Sea: a space weather signal for the maritime industry
The Polish flag: twenty years of drift and a belated change of course. More than just the white-and-red
High-pressure dominance brings frost and snow during winter holidays
Poland launches second DELFIN SIGINT ship ORP Henryk Zygalski in Gdańsk
Poland as a stable gas supplier for the region and strengthening supply security
Port Haller: Poland’s new strategic gateway on the Baltic Sea
Jantar Unity: modernization of POLSCA fleet and Baltic ro-pax shipping
Polish icebreakers in action on the Odra and Vistula rivers
ORP Drużno returns to service following intermediate dock repair
Gdynia honors top athletes of 2025 and century-old sports legends
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT