Neil Jablonski

Neil Jablonski (born 9 March 1983) is a Scottish footballer who plays as a midfielder for New South Wales Premier League side Hakoah Sydney City East FC.

Neil Jablonski
Personal information
Full name Neil Jablonski
Date of birth (1983-03-09) 9 March 1983
Place of birth Glenrothes, Scotland
Playing position(s) Striker
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2002–2005 Dundee 20 (0)
2003Brechin City (loan) 15 (1)
2005–2006 Raith Rovers 40 (7)
2006–2007 East Fife 35 (10)
2008 Sutherland Sharks 18 (2)
2008–2009 Glenrothes
2009–2010 Sutherland Sharks 29 (7)
2011–2017 Hakoah Sydney City East 125 (72)
2018 Stanmore Hawks 7 (5)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 24 September 2018

Career

Jablonski began his career with Dundee, making his debut in August 2002 as a substitute, aged 19. Featuring once more in the 2002–03 season, he played in the opening day win the following season but then moved on loan to Brechin City for four months. At Brechin he scored his first career goal in a game against Clyde.[1] He returned to Dundee in January 2004 and played around a dozen games throughout the rest of that season. A fractured wrist in September 2004 ruled him out for six weeks,[2] although he returned in mid October as a late substitute. Two further games followed in the remainder of 2004 before a January 2005 move to Gretna seemed likely;[3] in fact, he joined Raith Rovers instead on a free transfer. Featuring in twelve games in the remainder of the season, Jablonski stayed with Raith as they were relegated to the Second Division, featuring regularly in the 2005-06 season as they failed to gain promotion at the first attempt. In May 2006, Jablonski dropped down to the Third Division with East Fife, featuring prominently in the first few months. After seeming set to leave the club in January 2007 to go travelling in Australia, Jablonski committed himself for the remainder of the season,[4] going on to score ten goals and being nominated for Third Division Player of the Year.[5]

As expected, Jablonksi left East Fife at the end of the season and spent the summer months doing coaching work in the United States before heading to Australia, joining New South Wales side Sutherland Sharks. A year later, in late October 2008, Jablonski returned temporarily to Scotland, signing for hometown junior club Glenrothes,[6] spending three months with the Fife side before returning to Australia in January 2009. Jablonksi combines playing duties with working for Mark Robertson's Soccer Skills Coaching Academy.[7] He is currently the captain of newly promoted NSW PL1 side Hakoah Sydney City East FC.

Statistics

Correct to 1 July 2007:

ClubSeasonLeagueCupLg CupOtherTotal

Honours

Sutherland Sharks

  • NSW Premier Championship: 1
2008
gollark: It's still stupid though. Really.
gollark: In conclusion, even the installer makes me want to erase the part of my brain which read the code, please do not do this.
gollark: 38. Why the fake loading AGAIN?42. You made a function to download things from pastebin then just used shell instead?! Why is half the stuff downloaded differently?43. Why do you rerun install after every download?
gollark: 33. Also, I can't help but notice the inconsistent placement of brackets.
gollark: 15. FAKE LOADING! WHY!13. Hardcoded cursor positions? Bad idea!29. You know you don't have to use `shell.run "some other program"` for everything, right?

References

  1. "Clyde 2 v 1 Brechin City". Clydefc.co.uk. 23 August 2003. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  2. "Bad break for Jablonski". BBC Sport. 8 September 2004.
  3. "Gretna sign Nicholls from Falkirk". BBC Sport. 15 January 2009.
  4. "Jablonski boost for Methil men". The Courier (Dundee). 30 November 2006. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011.
  5. "Chaplain wins Division 3 honour". BBC Sport. 22 April 2007.
  6. "Football: Soccer Shorts - Archibald In Comeback Bid". Daily Record. 30 October 2008.
  7. Ormond, Aidan (4 September 2009). "Burnley's Man In Oz". FourFourTwo.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.