GKS Victoria Jaworzno is a Polish football and boxing club based in Jaworzno, Poland. It is the oldest Polish miner's football club.
The clubs origins date back to 1914, however it was an unofficial gathering more so than a functioning sports club. After Poland re-gained independence in 1918, among the people returning from the front-lines of World War I was a man named Emil Dawidowicz. Emil with the help of his two friends, Rudolf Hot, a plumber from Ostrava, and Rudolf Gloser, a baker from Bielsko-Biała founded TSV Jaworzno (Towarzystwo Sportowe Victoria Jaworzno). They chose the name Victoria after the then popular Czech klub Viktoria Žižkov. 1918 is the clubs official founding date as that is when the club charter, rules and regulations were established.
In 1974 the club changed its name to GKS Jaworzno, in reference to its mining community (GKS stands for Górniczy Klub Sportowy, which means "Mining Sport Club") after a merger with Górnik Jaworzno and Azotania Jaworzno. The merger was a flop and in 1981 the historical name "Victoria" was re-incorporated once again.
The club has spent the majority of its history between the third and fifth tiers of Polish football.
In 2011, the club has ceased to exist, due to ongoing financial troubles. The club's ground has been demolished and listed for redevelopment.
In June 2014, the club was re-founded and fielded a senior football team in the lowest division for the 2014/2015 season. The new Victoria has no legal ties to the previous association and was re-activated due to a handful of loyal supporters. On 23 August 2014 the club played its first league match since its rebirth away against Lew Olszyny.
The fan movement started in 1982/83, one of the first. The fans were unique in the fact that as well as following the football team, they also attended the team's boxing matches. In the 80's and 90's the fan group Desperados strongly identified with the skinhead movement and extreme right-wing ideology.