After being the top scorer in the third and second tiers of Polish football with
Znicz Pruszków, Lewandowski moved to top-flight
Lech Poznań, helping the team win the
2009–10 Ekstraklasa. In 2010, he transferred to
Borussia Dortmund, where he won honors including two consecutive
Bundesliga titles and the
league's top goalscorer award. In 2013, he also featured with Dortmund in the
2013 UEFA Champions League final. Prior to the start of the
2014–15 season, Lewandowski agreed to join Dortmund's domestic rivals,
Bayern Munich, on a
free transfer. In Munich, he won the Bundesliga title in every one of his eight seasons. Lewandowski was integral in Bayern's
UEFA Champions League win in
2019–20 as part of a
treble. He is one of only two players, alongside
Johan Cruyff, to achieve the European treble while being the highest goalscorer in all three competitions, and the first to do it as the sole top scorer.[4][5] Lewandowski is also one of only two players to be top goalscorer for club and country in Europe for three consecutive years (2019–21), alongside
Cristiano Ronaldo.[6][7] He was widely considered the best player of 2020 and deserving of the
Ballon d'Or, until it was canceled.[8][9][10][11] In 2022, he was signed by
Barcelona, where he won the
Supercopa de España, the
La Liga title and the
Pichichi Trophy in his debut season. He holds the joint-record for most top scorer awards in
Europe's top five leagues with eight, alongside
Lionel Messi, and the joint-record for the most consecutive with six, alongside
Kylian Mbappé.[12]
"When I was six, I remember
Roberto Baggio at the 1994 World Cup. When I was between 10 and 14,
Alessandro Del Piero was the best player for me. Then my idol was
Thierry Henry. He was amazing – it wasn't just how he scored the goals but what he did for the team."
Lewandowski was born in
Warsaw[18] and grew up in
Leszno,
Warsaw West County.[19] He took his first steps in football as an unregistered player for the local club, Partyzant Leszno.[20] In 1997, he joined MKS Varsovia Warsaw, where as a teen he played for seven years.[21] The following year he moved to
4th tier side Delta Warsaw, where he finally managed to play in the first team, scoring four goals at the end of the season.[22]
English coach,
Sam Allardyce, said that Lewandowski was about to join
Premier League club
Blackburn Rovers in 2010, but the volcanic ash clouds caused by the
2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull which suspended all flights in and out of the UK, in addition to other financial worries, prevented the potential transfer.[27] Moreover, Lewandowski was also about to join Italian club
Genoa, before president
Enrico Preziosi decided to cancel the transfer.[28]
Borussia Dortmund
2010–2012: League and cup double
Following press speculation that Lewandowski might move to one of a number of clubs,[29][30] he joined
Bundesliga club
Borussia Dortmund in June 2010, signing a four-year contract with the German club[31] for a fee reported to be worth around
€4.5 million.[32] On 19 September, he scored his first goal in the Bundesliga to make it 3–0 in the
Revierderby against
Schalke 04; the game ended 3–1.[33]
In the
2011–12 Bundesliga campaign, Lewandowski profited from an injury to
Lucas Barrios and he was elevated to an ever-present position in the starting XI until the winter break. The striker responded by finding the net two times in Dortmund's 3–0
DFB-Pokal first round victory over
Sandhausen.[34] Lewandowski opened his league account in a 2–0 win over
Nürnberg on 20 August 2011 by providing the finishing touch from a
Mario Götze cross.[35] On 1 October, Lewandowski netted a
hat-trick and provided an
assist in the club's 4–0 victory over
Augsburg, following a disappointing 0–3 loss to
Marseille in the
UEFA Champions League group stage.[36] He later scored his first Champions League goal in a 1–3
away defeat to
Olympiacos on 19 October.[37] Dortmund climbed into second place in the Bundesliga with a comfortable 5–0 victory over
Köln on 22 October, with Lewandowski finding the net either side of half-time.[38] Dortmund travelled to
Freiburg on 17 December and Lewandowski struck twice and provided an assist for
Kevin Großkreutz, as Dortmund eased to a 4–1 triumph, scoring his first hat-trick in Bundesliga.[39] Due to his strong performances, he was named
Footballer of the Year in Poland.[40]
Following the winter break, on 22 January 2012, Dortmund thrashed
Hamburg 5–1 to move level on points with leaders
Bayern Munich; Lewandowski netted twice and added an assist for
Jakub Błaszczykowski in the rout.[41] He scored in a 1–0 home win over Bayern Munich on 11 April.[42] The result gave Dortmund a six-point cushion over their title rivals with only four games left to play.[43] On 21 April, Lewandowski provided the assist for
Shinji Kagawa's 59th-minute goal as Dortmund won 2–0 over
Borussia Mönchengladbach to seal their second straight title.[44] In the final Bundesliga game of the campaign, Lewandowski scored two first-half goals as Dortmund beat Freiburg 4–0 and celebrated lifting the title.[45]
Lewandowski finished the year as the third top goal scorer with 22 goals, none from the penalty spot, and six assists.[46]
He netted his first goal in a 3–0 victory over
Bayer Leverkusen on 15 September 2012, extending Dortmund's run to 31 games unbeaten and moved the club into third in the Bundesliga.[52] Three days later, in the club's first
Champions League game of the season, Lewandowski scored an 87th-minute winner to defeat
Ajax, 1–0.[53] He set club's new record of the longest scoring streak, having scored in 12 consecutive league games, surpassing
Friedhelm Konietzka's record from
1964–65 season.[54] On 9 February 2013, he opened the scoring in a home match against Hamburg, but was sent off in the 31st minute for a foul on
Per Ciljan Skjelbred and Dortmund lost 4–1.[citation needed]
According to Borussia Dortmund director
Michael Zorc, speaking in February 2013, Lewandowski would not be renewing his contract with the club, and would leave either in the summer of 2013 or after the 2013–14 season.[55] He finished season with 24 league goals, one goal short of the Bundesliga's top scorer, Bayer Leverkusen's
Stefan Kießling.[citation needed]
On 27 July 2013, Lewandowski won the
2013 DFL-Supercup with Dortmund, 4–2, against Bayern Munich.[60] He scored his first goal of the season in Dortmund's 4–0 win over Augsburg in the club's opening Bundesliga match on 10 August.[61] On 1 November, he scored his only hat-trick of the season in a 6–1 Bundesliga win against
Stuttgart.[62]
He scored his 100th goal for the club on his 182nd appearance, as Dortmund defeated
VfL Wolfsburg 2–0 in the
semi-finals of the
2013–14 DFB-Pokal on 16 April, and revealed a shirt with the number 100 during celebration.[64]
Lewandowski ended the
2013–14 season as the top goalscorer in the
Bundesliga with 20 goals, which earned him the
Torjägerkanone [
de].[65] He also scored six goals in the Champions League, as Dortmund reached the quarter-finals.[66] During the second leg of the round of 16 match between Borussia Dortmund and Zenit, Lewandowski received a second yellow card, which resulted in his suspension for the
first leg of the quarter-final against Real Madrid.[citation needed]
Lewandowski played his final match for Dortmund in the
2014 DFB-Pokal Final against Bayern Munich on 17 May. Head coach
Jürgen Klopp had excused him from some training ahead of the final due to injury concerns; although Lewandowski played all 120 minutes of the final, Dortmund lost, 0–2.[67] He finished the season with 28 goals in 48 matches.[60][68]
Bayern Munich
In November 2013, Lewandowski confirmed he would sign a pre-contractual agreement for Borussia Dortmund's rivals Bayern Munich,[69] which officially happened on 3 January 2014, when he signed a five-year contract beginning at the start of the
2014–15 season.[70] Lewandowski was officially presented as a Bayern Munich player on 9 July 2014.[71]
He made his competitive debut for his new club in a 0–2 loss to Borussia Dortmund in the
2014 DFL-Supercup on 13 August 2014,[75] and scored his first goal in a 1–1 draw against Schalke 04 in his second league match on 30 August.[76] On 21 October, Lewandowski scored his first Champions League goal for Bayern Munich in a
7–1 away win against
Roma.[77] On 1 November, in his first league match against Dortmund, Lewandowski scored in a 2–1 win which put Bayern four points clear at the top of the table while leaving his former club in a relegation play-off place.[78] In his third match of the season against Dortmund on 4 April 2015, Lewandowski scored in the 36th minute in a 1–0 win, after Dortmund's goalkeeper
Roman Weidenfeller "parried"
Thomas Müller's shot.[79][80]
On 21 February 2015, Lewandowski scored twice in Bayern's 6–0 win away at
Paderborn, his second goal of the game was his 10th of the league season.[81] He scored twice in the first half on 21 April as Bayern
overturned a
deficit from the first leg to defeat
Porto 7–4 on aggregate and advance to the
semi-finals of the Champions League.[82] Five days later, after VfL Wolfsburg lost to Borussia Mönchengladbach, Bayern won the Bundesliga title.[83] He scored again on 28 April, opening a 1–1 draw in the
DFB-Pokal semi-final against Dortmund, but was later involved in a mid-air collision with
Mitchell Langerak in the 116th minute of
extra time.[84] The game ended in Bayern's elimination via a penalty shoot-out (0–2), and, unusually, none of the four attempts were converted by the Munich side, at their own stadium.[85][86] Although Lewandowski stayed until the end of the match, he didn't participate in the shootout; and tests later confirmed that he had fractured
jaw and
nose bone, and had a
concussion, ruling him out for approximately one week.[87][88][89] On 12 May, playing in a protective mask, he
curled in at the 59th minute in his team's 3–2 home victory against eventual winners
Barcelona in the
Champions League semifinal second leg, albeit they were eliminated by an aggregate score of 3–5.[90] With 17 goals in 31 games, Lewandowski was joint-second highest scorer of the Bundesliga season alongside teammate
Arjen Robben, behind
Eintracht Frankfurt's
Alexander Meier.[91] He finished the season with 25 goals in 49 appearances.[75][92]
2015–2017: Domestic success, Torjägerkanone, and 100 Bayern goals
On 22 September 2015, Lewandowski set a
Bundesliga record by coming on as a substitute with Bayern trailing 0–1 to Wolfsburg and scoring five goals in 8 minutes and 59 seconds, the fastest by any player in Bundesliga history, to take a 5–1 lead. He also set Bundesliga records for the fastest hat-trick (three goals in four minutes), and most goals scored by a substitute (five).[96] Lewandowski's five goals in nine minutes was also the fastest in any
major European football league since
Opta began keeping records, and it ended Wolfsburg's 14-match unbeaten run.[97] He was awarded four certificates by
Guinness World Records for this feat.[98]
Four days later, he scored twice in a 3–0 win at
Mainz, the first goal being his 100th Bundesliga goal on his 168th appearance, a league record for a foreign player. He also reached 10 goals in the opening 7 matches with this brace, a feat only achieved before by
Gerd Müller.[99] On 29 September, he scored a
Champions League hat-trick in a 5–0 win over
Dinamo Zagreb, putting him on ten goals in three games in a week.[100] He added two in a 5–1 rout of Dortmund five days later, to total 12 goals in his last four appearances.[101] On 24 October, Lewandowski scored in a 4–0 home win over Köln, a result which made Bayern the first Bundesliga team ever to win all 10 of their opening games of a season.[102] The victory in Cologne was also Bayern's 1,000th win in the Bundesliga.[103] On 11 January 2016, he achieved fourth place at the
2015 FIFA Ballon d'Or awards.[104]
On 19 March 2016, Lewandowski scored the only goal in a 1–0 win against Köln to bring his league total up to 25 goals; a new personal best.[105] He had scored 24 goals for Borussia Dortmund during the 2012–13 season.[106] He also started Bayern's
comeback with a 73rd-minute header in the
second leg of the round of 16 on 16 March, after trailing 0–2 home to
Juventus, which Munich eventually won 4–2 after extra time, and 6–4 on aggregate.[107] His goal against
Atlético Madrid on 3 May in the second leg of Bayern's
Champions League semifinal exit saw him end the season's competition with nine goals.[108]
On 7 May 2016, Lewandowski scored both goals for Bayern in a 2–1 win at
Ingolstadt to confirm the Bavarian club as
champions of Germany for the fourth consecutive season.[109] A week later, he scored his 30th goal of the season in Bayern's final league match of the season at home to
Hannover 96. This made him the first foreign player to score 30 goals in the Bundesliga, the first player since
Dieter Müller in
1976–77, and secured him the Torjägerkanone for the second time in three seasons.[110] He finished the season with 42 goals in 51 matches.[93][111]
The
2016–17 season started with Bayern winning the
2016 DFL-Supercup on 14 August.[112] Five days later, Bayern defeated
Carl Zeiss Jena 5–0 in the
DFB-Pokal first round, with the help of Lewandowski's hat-trick during the first half and assist to
Arturo Vidal in the 72nd minute.[113][114] He opened the
2016–17 Bundesliga season with another hat-trick in a 6–0 victory against Werder Bremen.[115] On 13 December, Lewandowski signed a new contract with Bayern, keeping him at the club until 2021.[116]
On 11 March 2017, Lewandowski reached 100 goals for Bayern in his 137th appearance for the club, scoring twice in a 3–0 victory against Eintracht Frankfurt in the Bundesliga.[117] He finished the season with 42 goals in 47 matches.[112][118]
2017–2019: Consecutive Golden Boots and all-time foreign Bundesliga goalscorer
The
season began with Bayern Munich winning the
2017 DFL-Supercup against Borussia Dortmund, in which Lewandowski scored the opening goal for the Bavarians by controlling a low cross from
Joshua Kimmich to cancel out
Christian Pulisic's opener. The match ended 2–2 after extra time. Lewandowski, again, scored the first penalty of the shootout as Bayern eventually won 5–4.[119]
Lewandowski started from where he left in the last season and once again was the top scorer in the early stages of the
2017–18 Bundesliga. On 13 December, in the league fixture against Köln, he scored the only goal of the game, to reach Bundesliga's top ten goalscorers of all time.[120] A couple of months later, on Matchday 22, Lewandowski again found the back of the net against Schalke 04 at the
Allianz Arena to equal the record of scoring in 11 successive home games in a single season, a record also held by then Bayern manager
Jupp Heynckes.[121] He continued his goal scoring form by netting a hat-trick against Hamburg as the runaway leaders won 6–0, while he also missed a kick from the spot which would have been his fourth goal of the day. This was his first penalty missed for Bayern in the Bundesliga, nevertheless he scored the second spot kick to complete his hat-trick.[122]
On 11 February 2018, he was voted Poland's Footballer of the Year for the seventh time in a row.[123] On 22 February, he fired his long-time agent, Cezary Kucharski. Lewandowski hired renowned dealmaker
Pini Zahavi as his new agent; the hiring of Zahavi was rumoured to be the start of Lewandowski trying to seal a summer move to Real Madrid.[124] On 24 February, he played his 250th Bundesliga game against
Hertha Berlin.[125] On 19 May, Lewandowski scored Bayern's only goal in a 3–1 defeat in the
DFB-Pokal Final against Eintracht Frankfurt.[126]
Lewandowski finished the league as the Bundesliga's top goalscorer with 29 goals. This was the third time he won the Torjägerkanone award.[127] He finished the season with 41 goals in 48 matches in all competitions.[128]
On 1 August, after a summer of transfer speculation, Bayern CEO
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, confirmed in an interview that Lewandowski would not be allowed to leave Bayern at any price, saying "the top quality we have at Bayern Munich will stay here. With Robert, we clearly want to send a signal to people within and outside the club: Bayern Munich are completely different to other clubs who get weak when certain sums are mentioned"[129] On 12 August, Lewandowski recorded the first ever hat-trick in the
DFL-Supercup in a 0–5 away victory against Eintracht Frankfurt in the
2018 edition as Bayern Munich went on to win the title for the record seventh time.[130] He also became the
all-time top scorer in the German Supercup history.[131][132]
On 27 November, Lewandowski became the third-fastest player to score 50 goals (after
Lionel Messi and
Ruud van Nistelrooy) in the Champions League, when he scored two goals in a 5–1
group stage home win over
Benfica. It took Lewandowski just 77 Champions League matches to reach the milestone.[133] He finished as the top scorer in the Champions League group stage with eight goals in six matches.[134] On 9 February 2019, Lewandowski scored in a 3–1 win over Schalke 04 and became the first player to score 100 competitive goals at the Allianz Arena. His goal was also his 119th league goal for Bayern Munich, which saw him draw level with
Roland Wohlfarth as the club's third-highest goalscorer of all-time.[135]
He surpassed Wohlfarth the following month after scoring a brace in a 5–1 win over Borussia Mönchengladbach, with his second goal also seeing him equal
Claudio Pizarro's record of 195 league goals for the most Bundesliga goals by a foreign player.[136][137] In his very next fixture, he broke Pizarro's record by scoring twice in a 6–0 win over Wolfsburg.[138] On 6 April, in the 100th Bundesliga meeting between Bayern Munich and Dortmund, Lewandowski scored twice in a 5–0 win, with his first goal taking him to 200 goals in the league.[139][140]
Lewandowski ended the
league campaign as the Bundesliga's top goalscorer with 22 goals for the fourth time.[141] On 25 May, he scored a brace as Bayern won against
Leipzig 3–0 in the
2019 DFB-Pokal Final. With his goals, he became the all-time top scorer in the
DFB-Pokal finals with six, surpassing Gerd Müller on five.[142] Lewandowski finished the
season with 40 goals in 47 matches in all competitions, reaching the 40-goal landmark for the fourth consecutive season, also winning his second domestic double with Bayern.[143]
2019–2020: Treble, Best FIFA Men's Player, and UEFA Men's Player of the Year
On 12 August, Lewandowski scored his first goal of the
season when Bayern defeated
Energie Cottbus 3–1 in the
first round of the DFB-Pokal.[144] Four days later, he scored two goals in the
2019–20 Bundesliga opener against Hertha BSC. With his goals, Lewandowski set a Bundesliga record for scoring a goal in the season opener for the fifth year in a row.[145] He then scored a hat-trick against Schalke at the
Veltins Arena on 24 August, as the Reds won 3–0.[146] On 29 August, Lewandowski extended his contract at Bayern until 2023.[147] Lewandowski scored his 200th goal for Bayern in a 3–0 win against Serbian club
Red Star Belgrade in the
Champions League on 18 September.[148] Later that month, after scoring his tenth goal of the campaign during a 3–2 win over Paderborn, he became the first player in Bundesliga history to achieve double figures for goals scored after the first six match rounds.[149] Lewandowski then became the first player in Bundesliga history to score in each of the opening nine, ten and eleven matches of a season, surpassing the record of eight set by former Borussia Dortmund striker
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.[150][151][152] On 26 November, Lewandowski scored 4 goals in under 15 minutes as Bayern defeated Red Star Belgrade 6–0 in their reverse fixture and clinched first place in their
Champions League group, setting a new record for fastest time to score four goals in a Champions League match. He also became only the second player ever to score four goals in multiple Champions League matches.[153][154]
On 25 February 2020, Lewandowski equalled
Cristiano Ronaldo's record of nine away goals in a season in Europe's top club competition. He did so by scoring a goal in a 3–0 win against
Chelsea at
Stamford Bridge (he also assisted
Serge Gnabry twice in that match).[155] On 10 August, Lewandowski scored a brace and provided two assists in a 4–1 win over Chelsea in the
return leg.[156] On 14 August, he assisted and scored in
Bayern's 8–2 decimation of Barcelona in the
quarter-finals.[157] Lewandowski scored another goal, to be 15 goals in total, in his ninth consecutive Champions League match in Bavarian's
semifinal 3–0 win against
Lyon.[158] His European scoring streak ended when he failed to score a goal in the
Champions League final match against
Paris Saint-Germain on 23 August; nevertheless, Bayern defeated PSG 1–0, giving Lewandowski his first Champions League title.[159] He also became the second player ever to win the European
treble while being the top scorer in all three competitions, repeating
Johan Cruyff's achievement with
Ajax from the
1971–72 season.[160] However, Lewandowski was the first to do so as the sole top scorer in all three competitions.[161]
2020–2021: Ballon d'Or Striker of the Year and European Golden Shoe
On 18 September, in an 8–0 win over
Schalke 04, in which Lewandowski scored a penalty, he provided a rabona assist to
Thomas Müller, which was praised as the best of the season.[162][163] On 24 September, Lewandowski assisted
Leon Goretzka's opener in 2–1 victory over
2019–20 UEFA Europa League winners
Sevilla in the
2020 UEFA Super Cup in
Budapest.[164] 6 days later, he played in Bayern's 3–2 win over Borussia Dortmund in the
2020 DFL-Supercup, to win their fifth trophy of the year.[165] On 4 October, he scored all four goals in a 4–3 win against Hertha BSC.[166] On 24 October, he scored a hat-trick in a 5–0 win against Eintracht Frankfurt, to become the first player in Bundesliga to score ten goals in only five matches.[167] On 16 December, he scored a brace against Wolfsburg to be the third player to pass the 250-goal mark in Bundesliga, after Gerd Müller and
Klaus Fischer.[168] After winning the treble with Bayern Munich and his performances in the tournaments,[169] he was named
The Best FIFA Men's Player2020 on 17 December, becoming the first Polish player to win the award.[170][171] The cancellation of the 2020
Ballon d'Or was met with extensive criticism, as most news and sports organisations believed Lewandowski was the front-runner and should have won the award.[172]
On 17 January 2021, Lewandowski became the first player in Bundesliga history to score 21 goals after just 16 games – a new Hinrunde record, beating Gerd Müller's 20 goals during the
1968–69 season.[173] On 8 February, he scored a brace in a 2–0 win over
Al Ahly in the
2020 FIFA Club World Cupsemi-finals.[174] On 11 February, he won the FIFA Club World Cup 2020 with the club after 1–0 win against
Mexican top-flight clubTigres in the
final, as Bayern became the second club ever (after Barcelona in
2009) to win the
sextuple. He was also involved in
Benjamin Pavard's winning goal, and was named player of the tournament.[175] On 23 February, Lewandowski opened the score in a 4–1 win against
Lazio in the first leg of the
Champions League round of 16, reaching his 72nd Champions League goal and surpassing
Raúl as the
third highest goalscorer in the competition's history.[176] On 6 March, he scored his 12th Bundesliga hat-trick in a 4–2 win over his former club Borussia Dortmund, to reach 31 goals in 23 matches.[177] On 13 March, he scored a goal in a 3–1 away win over Werder Bremen, hence he became the joint-second on the all-time Bundesliga scoring list with 268 goals along with Klaus Fischer.[178] On 20 March, he surpassed Fischer, as he scored a
perfect hat-trick in the first half of a 4–0 win over VfB Stuttgart.[179]
On 28 March, Lewandoski scored two goals in a 3–0 home win against
Andorra in a
World Cup qualification match, and also damaged
ligaments in his right knee (he was taken off after 63 minutes); he missed both
Champions League quarter-final matches against Paris Saint-Germain, in which Bayern Munich lost on
away goals rule after a 3–3 draw on aggregate.[180] On 24 April, he returned after almost a month on the sidelines in a 1–2 defeat to Mainz, where he scored in added time.[181] On 8 May, he scored his 14th Bundesliga hat-trick in a 6–0 win over Borussia Mönchengladbach.[182] On 22 May, he broke Gerd Müller's record of 40 goals in the
1971–72 season with a 90th-minute goal in Bayern's 5–2 win over Augsburg to reach his 41st goal on the
final day of the season.[183] He also managed to win his first
European Golden Shoe award.[184] Lewandowski finished the
season with 48 goals in 40 matches in all competitions, reaching at least the 40-goal landmark for the sixth time.[185]
2021–2022: Final season with Bayern and second European Golden Shoe
Lewandowski kicked off his
2021–22 Bundesliga season with a
volley-shotequaliser in a 1–1 opening fixture draw against Borussia Mönchengladbach on 13 August, making him the first player to score in seven consecutive Bundesliga opening games.[186] He also scored a brace and
backheeled to Thomas Müller in a 3–1 away win against Dortmund in the
2021 DFL-Supercup on 17 August. The match was preceded by a
moment of silence for Gerd Müller, who died two days earlier.[187] On 28 August, he scored his 15th Bundesliga hat-trick in a 5–0 win over Hertha Berlin,[188] setting a new club and German record for the most consecutive appearances in all competitions with a goal at 16,[189] surpassing the previous record of 15 held by Gerd Müller from
1969 to 1970.[190] In addition, he managed to reach more than 300 goals with Bayern Munich in all competitions.[191] On 18 September, Lewandowski scored in his 13th consecutive Bundesliga home match against
VfL Bochum, surpassing the previous league record of 12 held by Gerd Müller (October 1969 to April 1970) and
Jupp Heynckes (June 1972 to February 1973).[192] He ended the streak for most consecutive appearances in all competitions with a goal at 19, the new all-time German record.[193]
"You deserve your Ballon d'Or. Last year everyone agreed that you were the winner. Hopefully France Football can give it to you to have in your home, because you were the true winner if it weren't for the pandemic. You should have one in your house too."
On 21 November, Lewandowski scored a hat-trick against
Benfica in a
Champions League group stage match, becoming the fastest player to 80 UCL goals, in 100 appearances, edging past the previous record of
Lionel Messi.[195][196] On 23 November, he opened the score with a
bicycle kick in a 2–1 away win against
Dynamo Kiev in a
Champions League group stage match, thereby becoming the first player to score in nine consecutive games in two separate seasons of the competition.[197][198] Midway through the season, Lewandowski finished second in the
2021 Ballon d'Or award, behind Lionel Messi of Paris Saint-Germain and received the
Striker of the Year award by the France Football magazine.[199] On 17 December, Lewandowski set the Bundesliga record for most goals in a calendar year with his 43rd goal.[200] He became the second player, after
Cristiano Ronaldo, to be the top goalscorer for club and country as a player playing in Europe for three consecutive years.[6][7]
On 15 January 2022, Lewandowski scored his 16th hat-trick and 300th Bundesliga goal in a 4–0 away win over Köln.[201] On 8 March, Lewandowski scored a hat-trick in a 7–1 win over
Red Bull Salzburg in the second leg of
Champions League round of 16. Coming inside the first 23 minutes of the match, Lewandowski's hat-trick becomes the earliest ever scored by a player from the start of a Champions League match.[202] Taking just 11 minutes from first goal to last, Lewandowski's three-goal extravaganza against Salzburg also ranks as the quickest hat-trick ever scored in the knockout phases of the Champions League.[202] With these goals he took himself beyond the 40-goal mark in all competitions for the seventh consecutive season.[203] With the hat-trick, he also became the fastest player to 85 UCL goals, again edging past Lionel Messi's previous record.[204] He also joined
Cristiano Ronaldo and Messi as the only three players to have ten or more goals in three or more UCL campaigns, and joined Messi as the only two players who have scored a first half hat trick in a UCL knockout game.[205] However, Lewandowski finished the league with 35 goals as top scorer for the fifth consecutive season and seventh outright, equaling the record of Gerd Müller. He also broke the Bundesliga record for most away goals in a single season with 19 goals.[206] In addition, he won his second European Golden Shoe award for the second consecutive season.[207]
On 30 May 2022, Lewandowski stated his desire to leave Bayern Munich, saying "My story with Bayern has come to an end, I cannot imagine further good cooperation... I hope they will not stop me (from leaving) just because they can. A transfer is the best solution for everyone."[208]
Barcelona
Transfer
At Bayern Munich, Lewandowski established himself as one of the best players of his generation. On 16 July 2022,
Barcelona confirmed they had reached an agreement with Bayern Munich for Lewandowski's transfer.[209] Three days later, Lewandowski signed a four-year contract for a fee of €45 million, potentially rising to €50 million with add-ons.[210] The contract included a
release clause set at €500 million.[211] Lewandowski became the most expensive Polish player in history and Bayern Munich's most expensive sale of all time.[212] Lewandowski was formally unveiled in front of 50,000 fans on 5 August at the
Camp Nou, and was handed the number 9 shirt, previously worn by
Memphis Depay, and was officially registered on 12 August, amid speculation that the club could not register him as they were over the league's salary cap limit, due to their financial difficulties.[213][214][215][216]
2022–23: La Liga title and Pichichi Trophy
On 7 August 2022, he scored his first ever goal for Barcelona in a 6–0 victory over Mexican club
UNAM in the
Joan Gamper Trophy pre-season match held at the
Camp Nou.[217] On 13 August, he made his competitive debut for the club in 0–0 draw against
Rayo Vallecano in the league.[218] On 21 August, he scored his first competitive goals for Blaugrana, netting a brace in a 4–1 victory over
Real Sociedad on 21 August,[219] followed by another brace against
Real Valladolid in a 4–0 victory on 28 August.[220] On 7 September, in his first game as a Barcelona player in
Champions League, he scored a hat-trick in a 5–1 victory over
Viktoria Plzeň, becoming the first player in history to score a Champions League hat-trick for three different clubs.[221][222] On 11 September, he scored his sixth league goal of the season in his fifth league match for Barcelona, in their 4–0 win over
Cádiz, setting the record for most goals in the first five La Liga games of the season in the 21st century,[223] and eventually registered eleven goal contributions including nine goals and two assists in seven matches, after scoring the only goal of an away win over
Mallorca on 1 October.[224]
On 12 October, Lewandowski scored a brace in Barcelona's Champions League fixture against
Inter Milan, with his last minute equalizer securing a 3–3 home draw for the Blaugrana at Camp Nou.[225] Despite scoring five goals in the competition, his goals were not able to help Barcelona, as they finished third in the
group stage which put them in the
Europa Leagueknockout round play-offs for the second consecutive season.[226] On 8 November, Lewandowski was sent off for the second time in his club career for a foul on
David García, later receiving a three-game ban, as Barcelona won 2–1 against
Osasuna.[227][228] However, Lewandowski participated in the 1–1 tie against
rivalsEspanyol on 31 December after his ban was suspended by a court in
Madrid, but still ended up serving the disqualification, as Spain's sports court upheld the punishment, missing the league matches against
Atlético Madrid,
Girona and
Getafe.[229]
On 16 January 2023, he scored the second goal in the
2023 Supercopa de España final, as Barcelona defeated Real Madrid 3–1 in El Clásico, winning his first title with the club.[230] On 14 May, he scored two goals as Barcelona defeated Espanyol 4–2, confirming them as La Liga champions.[231][232] He was the first Barcelona player to score more than 30 goals across all competitions in his debut season since
Ronaldo Nazário in
1996–97.[233] By the end of the
2022–23 La Liga season, Lewandowski won his first
Pichichi Trophy with 23 goals in 34 matches,[234] becoming the first player in top 5 European leagues to get top scorer award in six consecutive seasons.[235] Lewandowski also tied
Lionel Messi for most top scorer awards in top 5 European leagues with eight.[12]
2023–24: La Liga runner-up
On 19 September 2023, Lewandowski scored once in Barcelona's 5–0 home win over
Antwerp in the first matchday of the
2023–24 UEFA Champions League to bring his
UEFA competitions tally to 100 goals, becoming only the
third player to reach such a milestone after
Cristiano Ronaldo and
Lionel Messi.[236][237] He also became the oldest player, at 35 years and 29 days, to score for Barcelona in the UEFA Champions League, surpassing
Gerard Piqué's previous record.[238] On 23 September, he scored a brace to help Barcelona overturn a two-goal deficit in a 3–2 home victory against
Celta Vigo, becoming the best scorer in first 50 matches for the club in 21st century, with 35 goals, surpassing the record previously held by
Samuel Eto'o.[239][240][241]
On 17 February 2024, Lewandowski secured a win for Barcelona in a 2–1 victory over Celta Vigo by converting a retaken 97th-minute penalty.[242] He became the most successful footballer in terms of the number of goals scored (407) over the past decade in the top five
major European football leagues.[243]
On 22 February, he scored his 93rd
Champions League goal in a 1–1 draw against
Napoli.[244][245] Then on 12 March, Lewandowski scored the final goal in a 3–1 win in the home leg, knocking out Napoli with a 4–2 aggregate score.[246] On 17 March, he was a key player in Barcelona's 3–0 win over
Atlético Madrid having been involved in all three goals. He scored one goal and produced two assists helping his side move to the second spot in the La Liga table.[247] On 29 April, he scored his first La Liga hat-trick to help his team get a 4–2 win against
Valencia.[248]
International career
2007–2013: Youth level and early international career
His debut for the senior national team came on 10 September 2008, three weeks after his 20th birthday, against
San Marino where he came on as a substitute and scored a goal in a 2–0 away win in
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification.[250] Only
Włodzimierz Lubański scored a goal on his debut for the national team at a younger age than Lewandowski, having been 16 at the time. Lewandowski scored another qualifying goal against the same team on 1 April 2009, in a 10–0 victory.[251]
Playing in Warsaw in the opening match of the
UEFA Euro 2012 tournament against
Greece, Lewandowski scored the first goal of the competition after an assist from then Dortmund teammate
Jakub Błaszczykowski and was named
Man of the Match.[252] He played in all three games for Poland in the tournament, as the co-hosts crashed out of the group stage with two points earned.[253][254]
2013–2017: Assuming the captaincy
Lewandowski scored two penalties in the 5–0 win against San Marino on 26 March 2013 during the
2014 World Cup qualifying campaign, his first match as
captain.[255] Later on in the campaign, on 6 September, he scored the equaliser against
Montenegro in a 1–1 home draw.[256] Poland did not qualify for the
2014 World Cup in Brazil.[257]
On 7 September 2014, in Poland's first
UEFA Euro 2016 qualifier, away against
Gibraltar, Lewandowski scored his first international hat-trick, netting four goals in a 7–0 win.[258] On 13 June 2015, he scored another hat-trick in Poland's 4–0 defeat of
Georgia, with the three goals scored within the space of four minutes.[259] On 8 October, he scored twice in a 2–2 draw away to
Scotland, opening and equalising with the last kick of the game to eliminate the hosts.[260] Three days later he headed the winner in a 2–1 victory against the
Republic of Ireland, qualifying Poland for the tournament finals in France.[261] Lewandowski ended the campaign with 13 goals, a joint
European Championships qualifying record with
David Healy's tally for
Northern Ireland in
UEFA Euro 2008 qualifying.[262]
At
UEFA Euro 2016 in France, Lewandowski did not have a shot on target until the last-16 match against
Switzerland in
Saint-Étienne.[263] Following the 1–1 draw, he scored his team's first attempt in the penalty shootout victory that sent them to the quarter-finals for the first time.[264] In the 100th second of the quarter-final against
Portugal at the
Stade Vélodrome, he finished
Kamil Grosicki's cross to open another 1–1 draw, and again scored in the shootout although the Poles lost.[265] At the time of Poland's exit, Lewandowski had suffered more fouls than any other player in the tournament.[265]
2017–present: All-time Poland top scorer
On 5 October 2017, Lewandowski scored a hat-trick in a 6–1 win over
Armenia to take his tally to 50 goals for Poland, surpassing the previous record of 48 goals set by
Włodzimierz Lubański to become the all-time top scorer for Poland.[266][267] On 8 October 2017, Lewandowski scored a goal in a 4–2 win over to Montenegro taking his tally to 51 goals for Poland.[268] He finished the
2018 FIFA World Cup qualification campaign with 16 total goals, a record for a European World Cup qualifier.[268]
Lewandowski was called up to the
23-man Polish squad for the
2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia.[269] Lewandowski played every minute in all three matches, against
Senegal,
Colombia and
Japan. Lewandowski did not score a goal and Poland failed to qualify for the knockout phase.[270]
On 19 June 2021, in Poland's second group match of
UEFA Euro 2020 against
Spain, Lewandowski scored the equalising goal in a 1–1 draw; hence, he became the first Polish player to score in three consecutive
European Championships.[271][272] On 23 June, he scored a brace in a 2–3 defeat against
Sweden; however, Poland finished last in their group and were knocked out from the group stages.[273]
Lewandowski was selected for
national squad ahead of the
2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. During the first game against
Mexico, he missed a penalty;[274] however, in the second match against
Saudi Arabia, he scored his maiden goal at a
FIFA World Cup as his Poland downed the first match giant killer Saudi Arabia 2–0, ultimately played a key role in condemning Saudi Arabia and Mexico to elimination.[275] He scored his second World Cup goal on a penalty in a 3–1 loss to France in the round of 16.[276]
Lewandowski is widely regarded as one of the best strikers in the world,[278][279][280][281] and is considered by many to be one of the greatest centre-forwards of all time.[282] An accurate and efficient finisher with his head and both feet, Lewandowski is a prolific goalscorer, which has led him to be dubbed Lewangoalski.[283] A well-rounded
forward, he is said to possess almost all the necessary qualities of a traditional
number nine: height, strength, balance, pace, intelligent movement and proficiency with both feet.[284] Although he primarily operates as a goal-poacher in the penalty area, due to his positional sense, ability to shoot first time, strength in the air, and powerful shot with either foot, his excellent technical skills, quick feet, proficient
dribbling, vision, and physique also enable him to hold up the ball with his back to goal and either bring his teammates into play, or win fouls for his team in useful positions. Despite often functioning as a lone-
centre forward or as an out-and-out
striker, he has also stood out for his work-rate and defensive contribution off the ball, and is capable of dropping into deeper roles on the pitch, in order to create space for teammates with his movement, or surprise defenders by making late and sudden attacking runs into the area. He became more of a team player as his career progressed, having been criticised by pundits earlier in his career for his perceived selfishness.
Lewandowski is an accurate
penalty taker and has repeatedly shown coolness and composure on the spot; he is also capable of scoring from long range, and has been known to take
free kicks. In addition to his playing ability, Lewandowski has also been praised for his outstanding work-ethic, fitness, mentality, and discipline, both on the pitch and in training, by pundits, players and managers.[285][286][287][288][289][290]
Outside football
Personal life
Lewandowski's father gave him the name Robert to make it easier for him when moving abroad as a professional footballer.[287] Lewandowski's father, Krzysztof (died in 2005),[291] was a Polish
judo champion, and also played football for
Hutnik Warsaw in the second division.[292] His mother, Iwona, is a former
volleyball player for
AZS Warsaw and later vice-president of Partyzant Leszno.[292] His sister, Milena, also plays volleyball and has represented the U21 national team.[292]
In October 2017, the day after scoring to help Poland qualify for the 2018 World Cup, Lewandowski finished his
Bachelor of Physical Education (BPhEd) with coaching and management at the Academy of Sport Education in Warsaw, concluding a decade of studies.[297][298][299]
In addition to his native
Polish, Lewandowski also speaks English and German.[300][301]
Lewandowski and his wife, Anna, have supported, donated and raised money for various charitable organisations and for children throughout their career, including
Children's Memorial Health Institute in Warsaw, for which they've raised more than
PLN 150,000 during Anna's birthday party on 25 August 2018.[313] Lewandowski also donated PLN 100,000 for the treatment of Cyprian Gaweł, a three-year-old boy from
Hel;[314] and helps raising funds for the
Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity each year, donating his personal items or private meetings that are sold at online auctions.[315][316][317]
In March 2014, he was named a
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador.[318] In June the same year, he visited a refugee camp in
Zaatari, Jordan, and took part in the "Voice of the Children" campaign in which he appealed for support of children affected by humanitarian crises.[319]
In 2018, he and his wife donated PLN 500,000 to Children's Memorial Health Institute in Warsaw.[320]
In March 2020, Lewandowski and his wife, Anna, donated €1 million during the
COVID-19 pandemic.[321]
In January 2022, he won a charity auction in which he paid PLN 280,000 for
Dawid Tomala's Olympic gold medal. The funds were used to finance the operation of a seriously ill boy.[322] Lewandowski subsequently returned the medal to Tomala.[323]
In February 2022, Lewandowski condemned the
Russian invasion of Ukraine and showed his solidarity with the Ukrainian people by wearing a blue and yellow armband during a Bundesliga match.[324] The armband was later auctioned for PLN 27,000 and the money was used to purchase humanitarian aid for Ukraine.[325]
Beside philanthropy, Lewandowski also invests primarily in
startups,
e-commerce, and websites, mainly through Protos Venture Capital, a company of which he is a shareholder.[326] He also owns Stor9_, an agency specialising in
marketing communications.[327] In 2022, Lewandowski and his wife Anna's
net worth was estimated at PLN 625 million (US$ 140 million), making them claim the 89th place on the "List of 100 Richest Poles" compiled by the Wprost magazine.[328]
In 2016, a mobile game Lewandowski: Euro Star 2016 was released on
Android and
iOS platforms.[337]
In March 2022, Lewandowski cancelled his sponsorship deal with Chinese telecom company
Huawei after the company's reported support to Russia following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Lewandowski had signed on as the global ambassador for Huawei, after agreeing to a partnership in November 2015.[338][339]
In 2022, Lewandowski was the most popular Pole on
social media. His accounts on
Instagram,
YouTube and
Tik Tok were followed by over 62 million people.[342] In 2023, he was the subject of a
documentary film entitled Lewandowski − Nieznany (Lewandowski − Unknown), which premiered on 28 March and is available on
Amazon Prime.[343][344]
^Rosner, Maik (4 April 2015).
"Lewandowski setzt die Pointe" [Lewandowski sets the punch line]. Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Dortmund.
Archived from the original on 19 December 2019. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
^"Stolzer Papa von Klara" [Proud Dad of Klara]. Der Spiegel (in German). 4 May 2017.
Archived from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2017.