WCKS Rewera Stanisà Âawów was a Polish football team, located in Stanisà Âawów (now Ivano-Frankivsk), in the historic territory of Galicia.
The club's hues were red and blue, same as the hues of one of the most popular Polish teams, Pogoà  Lwów. Apart from football, Rewera, a member of the WCKS society, had other departments as well â volleyball, boxing, ice hockey, cycling, and track and field. All home games were held at a municipal stadium in Potocki Park, funded by the local savings bank. Among the activists of Rewera, was the father of Maryla Rodowicz, one of the most popular Polish singers.
The club was founded in 1908, when the city of Stanisà Âawów (Stanyslaviv) belonged to the Austrian province of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria. The name of the city comes from the nickname of Polish magnate Stanisà Âaw Potocki, whose son, Andrzej Potocki, founded the city of Stanisà Âawów. "Rewera" is a variation of a Latin proverb "re vera", which means "in fact".
The football team of Rewera never managed to qualify to the elite Polish Football League, however, it was a regular champion of the Stanisà Âawów regional A-Class (see: Lower Level Football Leagues in Interwar Poland). In 1934 Rewera reached the second level semifinals of the qualifying games to the League, losing 0âÂÂ5, 1âÂÂ0 to à Âlàsk à ÂwiÃÂtochà Âowice. In 1938, Stanisà Âawów's side lost qualifiers to Dàb Katowice (2âÂÂ2, 1âÂÂ6), Garbarnia Kraków (1âÂÂ7, 1âÂÂ4), and Czarni Lwów (1âÂÂ0, 0âÂÂ2).
On June 5, 1938, the club organized a tournament to commemorate its 30th anniversary, with four teams participating â Rewera, a Romanian side Dragos Voda from CernÃÂuÃÂi (champion of Bucovina), Cracovia, and a collective team of the Stanisà Âawów Voivodeship. The event was organized by the 48th Infantry Regiment stationed in the city and led by Voivode of Stanisà Âawów, Stefan Pasà Âawski. The Cup was taken by the CernÃÂuÃÂi team with Rewera finishing second. The results of the tournament were as follows:
Following the German and Soviet aggression on Poland, Rewera ceased to exist in September 1939.