Jean-Paul de Jong explained

Jean-Paul de Jong
Fullname:Jean-Paul de Jong
Birth Date:17 October 1970
Birth Place:Utrecht, Netherlands
Height:1.75 m
Position:Midfielder
Youthclubs1:DWSV
Youthclubs2:Elinkwijk
Youthyears3:1984–1986
Youthclubs3:Feyenoord
Youthyears4:1986–1989
Youthclubs4:Ajax
Youthyears5:1989–1991
Youthclubs5:Arminia Bielefeld
Years1:1991–1993
Clubs1:VfL Osnabrück
Caps1:14
Goals1:0
Years2:1993–2007
Clubs2:Utrecht
Caps2:370
Goals2:11
Totalcaps:384
Totalgoals:11
Manageryears1:2007–2013
Managerclubs1:Utrecht (youth)
Manageryears2:2013–2015
Managerclubs2:FC Eindhoven
Manageryears3:2015–2017
Managerclubs3:Utrecht (assistant)
Manageryears4:2017–2018
Managerclubs4:Utrecht
Manageryears5:2019–2020
Managerclubs5:Roda JC Kerkrade

Jean-Paul de Jong (born 17 October 1970) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played mostly as a right midfielder. He was most recently the manager of Roda JC Kerkrade. He was the manager of FC Utrecht until 4 September 2018.

He is best known for his lengthy spell as a player with FC Utrecht, appearing in nearly 450 official games in 14 years and winning two major titles.

Career

Born in Utrecht, de Jong had several trainee spells, including with country giants Feyenoord and AFC Ajax. He made his professional debuts in Germany at the age of 20 with 2. Bundesliga club VfL Osnabrück, appearing sparingly over the course of two seasons.

In 1993 de Jong returned to his country and city, going on serve a 14-year spell with FC Utrecht. In total he played 370 Eredivisie matches, in which he scored 11 goals; as the side appeared in three consecutive domestic cup finals, winning twice, "Mr. FC Utrecht" (as he was nicknamed) was on target in the final of the 2002–03 edition, opening the scoresheet in a 4–1 win against Feyenoord.[1] On 22 April 2007, de Jong received his 83rd yellow card in the league, surpassing the record number of cards received by a player which had been previously held by Barry van Galen. During his final season as a player, in which he contributed with 21 matches to a comfortable ninth place, he completed his coaching training badges and began to work as a youth trainer with the club.[2]

Honours

2002–03, 2003–04[3] [4]

2004

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Gluscevic, ex del Extremadura, ´héroe´ del fútbol holandés. Gluscevic, formerly of Extremadura, ´heroe´ of Dutch football. El Periódico de Extremadura. es. 2 June 2003. 11 November 2015.
  2. Web site: Jean-Paul stopt, maar blijft bij FC Utrecht. Jean-Paul retires, but stays with FC Utrecht. FC Utrecht. nl. 14 June 2007. 5 August 2009. 22 July 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120722121441/http://fcutrecht.nl/site/actueel/nieuws/2007/06/jeanPaulStoptMaarBlijftBijFCUtr.html. dead.
  3. Web site: 2003: FC UTRECHT NEEMT REVANCHE . totoknvbbekker.nl . 12 March 2018 . 17 October 2020.
  4. Web site: 2004: FC UTRECHT PROLONGEERT DE BEKER . totoknvbbekker.nl . 12 March 2018 . 17 October 2020.