Jamie Iain Young (born 25 August 1985) is a professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Melbourne City. Born in Australia, he was a youth international for England.

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Jamie Young
Thumb
Young playing for Aldershot Town in 2010
Personal information
Full name Jamie Iain Young
Date of birth (1985-08-25) 25 August 1985 (age 39)
Place of birth Brisbane, Australia
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[1]
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Team information
Current team
Melbourne City
Number 1
Youth career
2002–2003 Reading
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2003–2006 Reading 1 (0)
2005–2006Rushden & Diamonds (loan) 20 (0)
2006–2010 Wycombe Wanderers 39 (0)
2010–2013 Aldershot Town 124 (0)
2013 Basingstoke Town 1 (0)
2013 Whitehawk 1 (0)
2013–2014 Hayes & Yeading United 10 (0)
2014–2021 Brisbane Roar 144 (0)
2021–2023 Western United 56 (0)
2023– Melbourne City 28 (0)
International career
2002–2003 England U18 3 (0)
2003 England U19 1 (0)
2005 England U20 4 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 9 May 2024
Close

Early life and education

Young was born in Brisbane, Australia, and is of Sri Lankan and Scottish descent.[2]

Young possesses a Bachelor in Exercise and Sport Science, with Young writing his dissertation on human genomic research in professional football.[3] He had previously spent a number of years combining university studies with football commitments, and had temporarily placed his university studies on hold in July 2016 in order to focus on his football.[4] Young is currently studying a PhD at the University of Queensland on the psychology of sports coaching, with a specific focus on the coach-athlete relationship in Australian football.[5][6]

Young is an ambassador for the Multicultural Development Association, which helps refugees and migrants settle in Queensland.[7]

Career

Club career

Having grown up in Australia, he attended Padua College, where he played in the First 11 as Goalkeeper and also played at Pine Hills, Albany Creek, Easts and QAS at club level. Young moved to England in 2002 to play professional football for Reading. After failing to break into the first team, he was released by Reading on 8 May 2006, and subsequently signed a one-year deal with Wycombe Wanderers on 2 August 2006.

He missed much of the 2007–08 season with a knee injury, but regained fitness by the end of the season.[8] His contract was cancelled by mutual consent in January 2010 after he was informed that he would not be offered a new contract in the summer. He was signed on a non-contract basis by Aldershot Town of League Two on 11 March 2010 as cover for goalkeeper Mikhael Jaimez-Ruiz.[9]

After impressing and establishing himself as the first choice goalkeeper, in the last quarter of the 2009–10 season, where Aldershot Town qualified for the League Two play-offs, Young signed a one-year contract with the club in June 2010. With the arrival of new goalkeeper Ross Worner in the 2011–12 season, Young was demoted to second choice goalkeeper but still managed to make a number of appearances in the later stage of the season when Worner was ruled out with a back injury. On 24 June 2012, Young signed a one-year contract to keep him with Aldershot until 2013.[10]

Thumb
Jamie Young makes a save from a Melbourne City Free Kick 01.03.20

Young left Aldershot in June 2013 after the club were relegated from the Football League and placed in administration.[11] He played one game for Basingstoke Town in September as cover for their regular goalkeeper before joining fellow Conference South side Whitehawk the following month.[12][13] After making only one appearance he moved, this time joining Hayes & Yeading United.[14] After making 10 appearances for Hayes & Yeading during its 2013–14 Conference South campaign, Young was released by manager Phil Babb following an on-field altercation with a teammate in a 2–0 defeat to Bath City.[15][16]

On 10 May 2014, it was reported that Young would return to his hometown to join A-League defending champion Brisbane Roar for the 2014–15 season. Young struggled to adjust to the A-League with fans and even teammate Shane Stefanutto laying the blame on Young for the Roar's less than impressive start to the season. Young kept his first clean sheet in a 4–0 thrashing of the Newcastle Jets, courtesy of an Henrique hat-trick. Due to Michael Theo's wrist injury, sustained in pre-season training, Young played as the first choice goalkeeper for the majority of the season, even in the Elimination Final clash against Adelaide United in which Brisbane lost 2–1. Young played 24 matches for the Roar in the 2014–15 season, keeping five clean-sheets, as well as one clean-sheet in the ACL in Roar's 1–0 win against Urawa Reds.[17][18]

After 7 seasons at Brisbane Roar, Young moved to Western United ahead of the 2021-22 season.[19] Young spent two seasons at Western United, before departing at the conclusion of his initial two year contract at the conclusion of the 2022-23 season.[20]

Young joined cross-town rivals Melbourne City after leaving Western United.[21]

International career

Although born in Australia, Young played for the England national under-20 football team internationally.[22]

Career statistics

As of match played 20 December 2020.[23][24][25]
More information Club, Season ...
Club Season League National Cup League Cup Continental Total
DivisionAppsCSAppsCSAppsCSAppsCSAppsCS
Reading 2003–04 First Division 100000 10
2004–05 Championship 000000 00
2005–06 000000 00
Total 100000 10
Rushden & Diamonds (loan) 2005–06 League Two 200301000 240
Wycombe Wanderers 2006–07 190203000 240
2007–08 40000000 40
2008–09 15000101[a]0 170
2009–10 League One 1000101[a]0 30
Total 590506020 720
Aldershot Town 2009–10 League Two 9000001[b]0 100
2010–11 46030102[a]0 520
2011–12 25030101[a]0 300
2012–13 440301000 480
Total 1240903040 1400
Basingstoke Town 2013–14 Conference South 100000 10
Whitehawk 2013–14 100000 10
Hayes & Yeading United 2013–14 1000000 100
Brisbane Roar 2014–15 A-League 24541 286
2015–16 207 207
2016–17 6373 136
2017–18 24510 255
2018–19 24210 255
2019–20 21611 227
Career total 31516918 358
Close
  1. Appearance(s) in the Football League Trophy
  2. Appearance in the League Two play-offs

Honours

Individual

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.