Jaromír Blažek

Jaromír Blažek (Czech pronunciation: [ˈjaromiːr ˈblaʒɛk]; born 29 December 1972) is a Czech former professional football goalkeeper.

Jaromír Blažek
Personal information
Full nameJaromír Blažek[1]
Date of birth (1972-12-29) 29 December 1972 (age 51)
Place of birthBrno, Czechoslovakia
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Position(s)Goalkeeper
Youth career
1980–1982Metra Blansko
1982–1990Slavia Prague
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1990–1992Slavia Prague9(0)
1992–1993Dynamo České Budějovice29(0)
1993–1994Viktoria Žižkov24(0)
1994–2000Bohemians Prague117(0)
1995–1996Slavia Prague (loan)7(0)
2000–2007Sparta Prague167(0)
2001–2002Marila Příbram (loan)22(0)
2007–20081. FC Nürnberg25(0)
2008–2012Sparta Prague74(0)
2012–2015Vysočina Jihlava59(0)
Total533(0)
International career
1993Czech Republic U-213(0)
2000–2008Czech Republic14(0)
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  Czech Republic
UEFA European Championship
Bronze medal – third place2004 Portugal
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Club career

Born in Brno, Blažek started his career in Slavia Prague, where he got to play his first league games. After two years during which he was mainly used as a substitute, he moved to Dynamo České Budějovice to become the number one goalkeeper there. That 1992–93 season was to be the last of the Czechoslovak First League, and he decided to spend his first season in the new Gambrinus liga with Viktoria Žižkov, which turned out to be a good choice since he won his first title, the national cup. He left after only one year though, moving across Prague to FC Bohemians. They were relegated that year and Blažek, who did not want to spend a year in the Second League, was loaned for one year to his first club Slavia Prague, where again he was a substitute. Since Bohemians regained promotion the same year, he returned there and stayed for three and a half years.

However, while his club was not performing very well, Blažek drew the attention of giants Sparta Prague, transferring there in early 2000 and winning back-to-back titles in 2000 and 2001. He went on loan to rivals Marila Příbram in 2001 but returned after one year. After that, he played almost every single game for Sparta Prague, be it league, cup or Champions League games. It was a very successful period for Blažek as he won four more titles and three national cups.

In 2007, he decided to move abroad and was sold to German club 1. FC Nürnberg, who purchased him as a replacement for Raphael Schäfer who had left for VfB Stuttgart over the summer. Blažek was the number one there but fell sick in April and could not play the end of a season that saw Nürnberg being relegated. In June, it was announced that Blažek was returning to Sparta Prague for the following season.[2] However, on 16 December 2011, Sparta Prague announced their decision to terminate Blažek's contract early, releasing him as a free agent. This was confirmed by the player's agent Pavel Paska.[3]

On 22 February 2014, in a league match for Jihlava against Znojmo, Blažek kept his 139th clean sheet, setting a new goalkeeper record for the Czech league.[4]

International career

Blažek made his debut for the national team on 29 March 2000 in a friendly match against Australia that ended up in a 3–1 win. Due to the dominance of Petr Čech as the first-choice national team goalkeeper, Blažek was unable to make regular appearances for his nation. He was part of the Czech squad at both Euro 2000 and Euro 2004, but only played in one match during the two tournaments combined. He was also named in the Czech squad for the 2006 World Cup.

Personal life

He is married and has two children – Jakub and Aneta. Blažek is the cousin of tennis player Radek Štěpánek.[5]

Career statistics

Club

International

Source:[6]

Czech Republic national team
YearAppsGoals
200020
200310
200420
200520
200620
200710
200810
Total110

Honours

Club

Viktoria Žižkov

Slavia Prague

Bohemians 1905

Sparta Prague

Vysočina Jihlava

International

Czech Republic

Individual

Czech First League

Czech Footballer of the Year

Records

References