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Revision as of 03:38, 2 January 2019

Ronnie O'Brien
Personal information
Full name Ronnie O'Brien
Date of birth (1979-01-05) 5 January 1979 (age 45)
Place of birth Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1997–1999 Middlesbrough 0 (0)
1999–2002 Juventus 0 (0)
1999AC Lugano (loan) 8 (0)
2000–2001Crotone (loan) 4 (0)
2001–2002Lecco (loan) 8 (0)
2002Dundee United (loan) 6 (0)
2002–2006 FC Dallas 108 (12)
2007 Toronto FC 13 (0)
2008 San Jose Earthquakes 28 (4)
Total 175 (16)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 17 August 2010
‡ National team caps and goals, correct as of 7 April 2006

Ronnie O'Brien (born 5 January 1979 in Bray, Ireland) is a retired Irish footballer. Although he was released by his first club, Middlesbrough, early in his career, he was subsequently signed by Juventus in 1999. During three years with the Italian club, he played only occasionally for the first team and was loaned out to Lugano in Switzerland, lower division Italian clubs Crotone and Lecco, and Dundee United in Scotland. After leaving Juventus in 2002, O'Brien spent the rest of his career playing in Major League Soccer (MLS) for FC Dallas, Toronto FC and San Jose Earthquakes before retiring in 2008. He was named in the MLS Best XI in both 2004 and 2005, and was selected for the MLS All-Star Game for four years running. O'Brien represented the Republic of Ireland under-16 team and was part of the squad that won the 1998 European Championship.

Playing career

O'Brien's footballing career began very promisingly, when at the age of 18 he signed a contract with Middlesbrough of the FA Premier League. Although he played little at Middlesbrough, he had great success with Irish national team youth sides, winning the European U-16 championship alongside players like Damien Duff and Robbie Keane. After two years with Middlesbrough, O'Brien was released on a free transfer. Incredibly, Italian giants Juventus offered 20-year-old O'Brien a five-year contract; however, he had trouble getting playing time on such a talented side and was loaned out to Lugano of Switzerland, Dundee United of Scotland, and lower league Italian side Lecco. After several years of disappointment and three Inter-Toto Cup appearances, O'Brien was released from his contract with Juventus in 2002.

MLS

In search of consistent playing time, O'Brien, made the unconventional decision to move to America to join the Dallas Burn. O'Brien made an immediate impact, scoring on his debut for the club in a US Open Cup match. He finished the 2002 season with two goals and two assists in 11 games but had proven himself one of the more dynamic players on the team. O'Brien entered the 2003 season with great expectations, but these were cut short early in the season. In the Burn's third game of the season, a tackle from D.C. United's Dema Kovalenko broke O'Brien's tibia, effectively ending his season. O'Brien returned to the team in 2004 and was one of the team's offensive leaders – he started 29 games, registering two goals and 10 assists, was named to the MLS Best XI, and helped revitalise a Burn team that had recorded one of the league's worst records ever in the previous season.

In 2005, O'Brien repeated his Best XI form, finishing the year with six goals and 12 assists. During the 2006 season, O'Brien clashed with FC Dallas' head coach Colin Clarke all season. His form was poor and he finished with only one goal in 27 games. At the conclusion of the season, O'Brien was traded to the expansion club Toronto FC with a gentlemen's agreement that Toronto FC would not draft any other FC Dallas players.

Due to a knee injury during a training session, which was later aggravated during a friendly match, O'Brien was limited to 13 games in the 2007 season.

In 2008, O'Brien was traded to the San Jose Earthquakes. In return, Toronto FC received San Jose's first round pick in the 2009 draft plus an undisclosed amount of money.[1] He made 28 appearances, scoring 4 goals (his 16th in the MLS). His 6 assists brought his MLS career assist total to 45 (from 142 total appearances).

Following O'Brien's strong performance and evident leadership in 2008, the San Jose Earthquakes stunned their fans by failing to pick up his contract option for the 2009 season. Instead, Earthquakes' GM John Doyle was hoping that he would accept a substantial pay cut. In January 2009, O'Brien made it known that he would not be returning to the San Jose Earthquakes.[2] Without O'Brien's leadership and strong play, the Earthquakes struggled early in 2009. Despite a favourable schedule in which San Jose played five of their seven games at home, the Quakes managed just one win, leading many San Jose fans to call for O'Brien's return.

O'Brien keeps an off-season residence in Dallas and is an avid Dallas Mavericks fan. His profile page on the MLS site stated that he had retired.[3]

He is now a coach of FC Dallas' youth teams.[4]

International career

Despite having played multiple times for the Irish underage sides, O'Brien only received one callup to the senior side. Steve Staunton contacted Toronto FC about his availability for a short tour of the US in June 2007. However, O'Brien turned down the chance to play for his country again, as he had just returned from injury, while adding he was happy playing club football.[5]

Career statistics

Club Season League Other1 Total
League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
FC Lugano 1999–2000 Super League 5 0 5 0
Dundee United 2001–02 Premier League 8 0 8 0
Dallas Burn/FC Dallas 2002 MLS 11 2 3 0 14 2
2003 6 1 6 1
2004 29 2 29 2
2005 28 6 2 0 30 6
2006 27 1 2 0 29 1
Totals 101 12 7 0 108 12
Toronto FC 2007 MLS 13 0 13 0
San Jose Earthquakes 2008 28 4 28
Career totals 158 16 7 0 165 16
Sources:[6][7]
  • 1.^ Includes MLS Cup playoffs.

Time magazine stunt

In August 1999, e-mails circulated urging Irish people to vote for Ronnie O'Brien in Time's Person of the Century Internet poll, causing O'Brien to lead the poll, above those such as Albert Einstein and Martin Luther King. After the poll crashed due to attracting too much traffic, Time removed O'Brien from the running, restating the rule that "whimsical candidates will not be counted."[8]

Honors

Individual

References

  1. ^ Campbell, Morgan (28 February 2008). "TFC trades O'Brien to Earthquakes: Report".
  2. ^ Carlisle, Jeff (22 January 2009). "O'Brien: "I'm definitely not coming back"". Archived from the original on 28 June 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Ronnie O'Brien". Archived from the original on 27 April 2011.
  4. ^ FC Dallas (2010). Spring Break Youth Soccer Camp (Video).
  5. ^ McIntyre, Doug (24 May 2007). "O'Brien has no regrets about declining Irish invite".
  6. ^ "Ronnie O'Brien » Club matches". World Football. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  7. ^ "Ronnie O'Brien". Major League Soccer. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  8. ^ Wrafter, Mark (6 April 2003). "Polling power of viral e-mails". Archived from the original on 1 March 2009.