Jonjo Dickman

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Jonjo Dickman
Personnel
birthday October 11, 1981
place of birth HexhamEngland
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
Sunderland AFC
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1998-2005 Sunderland AFC 1 (0)
2004 →  York City  (loan) 2 (0)
2005-2006 Darlington FC 46 (3)
2006-2011 AFC Consett
1 Only league games are given.

Jonjo Dickman (born October 11, 1981 in Hexham ) is a former English football player .

Career

Jonjo Dickman comes from the Sunderland AFC youth academy and received his first professional contract in November 1998. In the following years, the midfield player was regularly used in the reserve team. After a cruciate ligament rupture Dickman threatened the end of his career, but he recovered from the injury. He made his Premier League debut on March 21, 2003 when he was substituted on by coach Mick McCarthy in the second half against Manchester City (final score 0: 3). This was Dickman's only competitive game for Sunderland, who were relegated clearly at the end of the season. In the spring of 2004 he was on loan to the fourth division club York City released, after two league appearances, however, he returned to Sunderland due to injury.

After he continued to play in the 2004/05 season in Sunderland's reserve team and partially led the team as captain, he moved in the spring of 2004 to the Football League Two for Darlington FC on a free transfer . There he quickly established himself in the central midfield and scored his first goal in professional football on the last day of the season. He extended his contract, which was running out at the end of the season, for another year and was part of the regular staff under coach David Hodgson for most of the season when the play-off places were narrowly missed. Despite a total of 40 competitive games in the 2005/06 season, there was no interest on the part of the club at the end of the season in a contract extension and Dickman drifted into non-league football . In September 2006 he joined the AFC Consett with game operations in the ninth-rate Northern Football League and completed over 150 games for the club.

His brother Elliott Dickman, himself a talented young player at Manchester United , Sunderland and in English junior national teams, had to end his career early after a serious hip injury and took a position in the youth division of Sunderlands.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c darlington-fc: Jonjo Dickman joins Quakers till the end of the season (March 1, 2005)  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as broken. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.darlington-fc.net  
  2. Barry J. Hugman (Ed.): The PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2004/2005 . Queen Anne Press, Harpenden 2004, ISBN 1-85291-660-5 , pp. 110 .
  3. Barry J. Hugman (Ed.): The PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2005/2006 . Queen Anne Press, Harpenden 2005, ISBN 1-85291-662-1 , pp. 111 .
  4. thefreelibrary.com: Money set to block Robert's exit route (1 June 2005)
  5. thefreelibrary.com: Captain Clarke released in Quakers clear-out (May 17, 2006)
  6. safc.com: Elliott Dickman - Assistant Academy Manager