Robert Jarni
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Robert Jarni | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Robert Jarni | |
Date of birth | October 26, 1968 | |
Place of birth | Čakovec, SFR Yugoslavia | |
Height | 1.80 m | |
Playing position | Left-Back/Left-Winger | |
Youth clubs | ||
Čakovec | ||
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1986-1991 1991-1993 1993-1994 1994-1995 1995-1998 1998 1998-1999 1999-2001 2001-2002 |
Hajduk Split Bari Torino Juventus Real Betis Coventry City Real Madrid Las Palmas Panathinaikos |
128 (17) 52 (3) 23 (0) 15 (1) 98 (19) 0 (0) 27 (1) 43 (6) 5 (0) |
National team | ||
1990-1991 1990-2002 |
Yugoslavia Croatia |
81 (1) |
7 (1)
Teams managed | ||
2007-2008 | Hajduk Split | |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Robert Jarni (born October 26, 1968) is a former Croatian footballer who played left winger or wingback.
He was a regular in the Croatian national team throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. This allowed him to become the team's all-time most-capped player with 81 caps, although the record he held for four years following his retirement was by now surpassed by Dario Šimić, who won his 82nd cap in June 2006.
The crowning moment of his career was the 1998 World Cup in France, where he played a significant part in the Croatian team that surprisingly won the bronze medals, becoming the first debut team to reach the World Cup semifinals since Portugal in 1966. Jarni also scored the first goal in Croatia's 3-0 victory over highly favoured Germany in the quarterfinals of the tournament.
Contents |
[edit] Career in football
[edit] Club career
Jarni was born in Čakovec and started to play football in the mid-1980s at local club MTČ, which is now known as NK Čakovec. In June 1985, he was spotted by Hajduk Split while playing for MTČ in a cup match in Split and started his professional career by joining the club in February 1986.
He played for Hajduk until 1991, before moving to his first foreign club, AS Bari from Italy. After two seasons at Bari, he moved to Torino FC in 1993, subsequently playing one season with them before leaving for local rivals Juventus FC in 1994. After one season with Juve, he left Italy and signed with Spanish side Real Betis for the 1995-96 season. He played regularly for Betis in the Spanish Primera over the following three seasons and also scored 19 league goals for the club, more than at any other club in his career.
In 1998, Jarni initially moved to English side Coventry City, signing for £2.6m from Real Betis. However, when Real Madrid decided they wanted the player, they successfully bought him from Coventry for £3.35m with Jarni having made no appearances whatsoever. Some believe this was a joint Coventry City and Real Madrid tactic, as Betis refused to sell him to the Madrid club.
At Real Madrid, Jarni only spent one season, making 27 Primera appearances and scoring one goal. However, the season with Real Madrid was only partly successful for him personally as he often received little playing time as a second-half substitute. One of his highlights at Real Madrid was their third UEFA Champions League group-stage match against SK Sturm Graz, where he scored two goals in his team's 6-1 victory.
He left Real Madrid for Spanish second-division side UD Las Palmas in 1999, managing promotion to Primera with the club for the 2000-01 season, which saw him making another 26 Primera appearances and scoring two goals in the league. For the 2001-02 season, he moved to Greek side Panathinaikos, where never established himself in the team and only made five domestic-league appearances as well as his last three UEFA Champions League appearances in early 2002. In June 2002, he was released from his contract and retired from professional football at the age of 34.
[edit] International career
Jarni started his international career with the national team of former Yugoslavia in 1990, subsequently winning seven international caps and scoring one goal. He also made his World Cup debut with the team, playing the entire second half of their second group match against Colombia at the 1990 finals in Italy, which they won 1-0.
In December 1990, he went on to make his international debut for then newly founded Croatian national team in a friendly match against Romania. He subsequently became a regular in the team and made his major-tournament debut with them at the 1996 European Championship in England, where he appeared in all four matches prior to the team's elimination to eventual champions Germany in the quarterfinals.
Jarni continued to play regularly for the Croatian team in the following years and was named to their 22-man squad for their first World Cup appearance at the 1998 finals in France, where they surprisingly got all the way to the semifinals and finished third in the end. At the tournament, he played over 90 minutes in all of Croatia's seven matches and also managed to score his only international goal there, netting the opening goal in Croatia's surprising victory over Germany in the last quarterfinal on July 4, 1998 in Lyon. In the final minute of the first-half three-minute stoppage time, Jarni ran onto Mario Stanić's pass at about 20 yards from goal and sent a strong left-footed shot past Germany keeper Andreas Köpke, who could not stretch his arm enough to get to the ball. Although it was his only goal for Croatia, Jarni participated in numerous goals as one the best assist-makers in the Croatian team at his time, since he was a fast runner who could quickly transfer the ball through the left flank and send high crosses into the box.
After the 1998 World Cup, Jarni continued to play regularly for Croatia over the next four years and retired from both international and club football after their disappointing group-stage elimination at the 2002 World Cup in Korea and Japan. At the 2002 World Cup, Jarni appeared for Croatia in all of their three group matches and thus became the only player to appear in all of the team's 10 matches in their first two World Cup appearances.
In twelve years of playing for the Croatian national team, Jarni won a total of 81 international caps and was the team's all-time cap leader before Dario Šimić surpassed his record in 2006 World Cup match against Japan on June 18, 2006.
[edit] Career in futsal
After retiring from professional football, Jarni started a career in futsal at Croatian club MNK Split, where he was still playing as of October 2006. He also won two caps and scored two goals for the Croatian national futsal team in November 2003 during their qualifying campaign for the Futsal World Cup.
[edit] Other activities
In association with a sports-apparel manufacturer based near his native town of Čakovec, called Astrea, Jarni also founded his own sports-apparel brand simply called Jarni, which became quite popular among sports teams in Međimurje, his native region in northern Croatia.
He is also regularly appearing as an expert analyst on RTL Televizija, a Croatian commercially-funded national television station established in 2004, during their live broadcasts of various international football matches, mostly the away matches of the Croatian national team.
He is also famous for being one of only three players on ISS PRO 98 with 9 for speed.
[edit] Coaching career
Jarni started his coaching career in professional football as assistant manager to Sergije Krešić at Hajduk Split in late August 2007. However, after Krešić's resignation on 26 October 2007, Jarni was appointed head coach at the club and was initially presented as caretaker manager until the end of the first part of the Croatian league season in December. His first match as head coach at Hajduk Split was their 1-0 away victory at NK Inter Zaprešić on 27 October 2007. He went on to sign a one-year contract with the club after the match. [1] He was sacked one week after the end of 2007/2008 season.
[edit] External links and references
- Robert Jarni's sports-apparel brand (Croatian)
- ^ Jarni potvrđen kao prvi trener Hajduka. Jutarnji list (2007-10-29). Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
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