Jamie Coyne

James " Jamie " Coyne ( born January 2, 1981 in Sydney ) is an Australian football player. Coyne Perth Glory won with two championship titles in the National Soccer League and is existing since 2005 A-League record players of the club.

Career

Jamie Coyne's father John was a professional footballer in England and came to Australia in the late 1970s, where he even made it to some missions in the Australian national team. Coyne grew up in New South Wales, about 12 years old he moved with his family to Western Australia, where he played at Kingsway Olympic and came in youth teams of Western Australia for use. For the 1998/99 season he became the Apprentice (German trainee) for English club West Ham United, where his older brother Chris was at that time under contract. After one season, he returned to Australia and spent after a trial at Perth Glory in the second half at Kingsway Olympic. In 2000 he moved to Perth SC in the Premier League of Western Australia and was there the following three seasons achievers. In 2002 he won with the team the league championship, belonged to the State selection and was honored at the end of the season as the best player in the league.

His performances ensured even with Perth Glory, the only Western Australian Club in the National Soccer League, for interest. As of September 2002, he played for Perth Glory in the highest Australian league, initially on loan, he received his first professional contract in October. Glory paid a fee of approximately A $ 5.000, which could be doubled for use dependent. While Coyne mostly acted at Perth SC in central midfield, he was first called up in Glory as a central defender, and finally established himself as a right-back. With the team's top striker Damian Mori about the two and Bobby Despotovski Coyne won the Australian Championship in 2003 and 2004. While he was only a reserve player was in 2003 and the final was not used, he wore in 2004 as a regular player to defend their title at. In the final against Parramatta Power he was substituted after 95 minutes with the score at 0-0, three minutes later Perth won with a golden goal by Nik Mrdja the championship. The final match was also the last game in the history of the National Soccer League, which was subsequently adjusted.

Like his teammate Anthony Danze, Adrian Caceres (both England ), Mark Byrnes (Finland ), Wayne Srhoj (Romania ), Nik Mrdja (Sweden) and Jason Petkovic (Turkey) joined Coyne on the setting of the NSL to Europe and signed a two - year contract with the Dutch first division club ADO Den Haag. There, it was not possible Coyne to establish itself in the first team and he completed for ADO until his premature departure in the spring of 2005, only one competitive match in the Dutch Cup competition against FC Zwolle.

After an intended move to England as early as 2002 when he was at tryouts at Luton Town and Carlisle United, not materialized, he returned in March back to Australia and rejoined Perth Glory at which a new team for the inaugural season of the newly established professional league A-League presented together. Glory did not succeed in the A-League to build on the successes of the NSL. In the first four seasons Perth each missed qualifying for the Championship play-offs. In the 2008 / 09 season, Coyne served as team captain for the following season took over the armband Jacob Burns, who was one of three internationals alongside Jason Petkovic and Jamie's brother Chris Coyne, who were now required for season 2009/10. With these reinforcements the club in 2010 for the first time succeeded in making the play -off phase of the A-League, where the team failed but already in the first game on penalties to Wellington Phoenix.

In the 2010/11 season Coyne was at the first 24 matchdays 23 times in the starting lineup and missed only one game due to a sending off, but found from the beginning of 2011 no longer uses. Coyne and the Australian players' union suspected behind the sudden expulsion from the team a clause in Coyne's contract that would have guaranteed him after 24 league inserts an automatic extension of the contract by one year. Such a clause should have been out at his teammate Michael Baird to its non-consideration. Club coach Ian Ferguson called contrast Coyne form as the decisive reason for his existence reservists. Coyne came to the last six games due to injury, despite numerous failures no longer used, and his departure was confirmed at the end of season club page. With 118 league inserts is Jamie Coyne Perth's record player in the A-League and was next to Jamie Harnwell and Naum Sekulovski one of three players that belonged from 2005 to 2011 continuously in the squad.

Coyne was consequently in the Premier League rivals Sydney FC in the conversation, but the contractual dispute with Perth prevented inclusion in the squad for the group stage of the AFC Champions League 2011, which will take place in the Australian season break. In May 2011, he eventually signed a two -year contract with Sydney. In Sydney, he was at the beginning of the 2011/12 season to the permanent staff and posted on 22 October, against Adelaide United 's only goal of the season, just days before he was father for the first time. Early 2012 Coyne lost his place as a right-back to Rhyan Grant, who henceforth had the confidence of coach Vítězslav Lavička. At the end of the season Coyne and the club agreed to the early termination of his contract until 2013.

Coyne undertook subsequent to the Indonesian giants Sriwijaya FC with whom he won the championship in 2011/12. Then he got up from September to October 2012, short time during league rivals Persib Bandung under contract, but the club broke this after a short time because of disputes over the provided apartment again. In February 2013 Coyne signed the A- League club Melbourne Heart a contract until the end of the season and came in the following weeks to seven missions, received at the end of the season but no contract extension offered and played in the port for the Bayswater City SC in the highest Western Australian division.

An application for an Australian national team was Jamie Coyne, unlike his brother, not granted. For more than an invitation to a two-day training camp for the national team in early 2008, at the 22 A- League players took part, it was not enough.

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