Lukas Jutkiewicz

Footballer

Birthday March 28, 1989

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Southampton, England

Age 34 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 6ft 1in

Weight 162 lbs

#55480 Most Popular

1989

Lukas Isaac Paul Jutkiewicz (born 28 March 1989) is an English professional footballer who plays as a striker for club Birmingham City.

He previously played for Swindon Town, Everton, Plymouth Argyle, Huddersfield Town, Motherwell, Coventry City, Middlesbrough, Bolton Wanderers and Burnley.

Jutkiewicz was born in Southampton, and joined the Saints Academy as a ten-year-old after playing Tyro League football with Eastleigh Earls and Winsor.

He attended Highfield Primary School and also attended The Mountbatten School in Romsey.

After three years at the academy, he left but continued to play Tyro League football with Brendon Youth, before signing for Swindon Town.

2006

Jutkiewicz made his Swindon Town debut at the age of 17, as a substitute in a 2–1 defeat at Swansea City's Liberty Stadium in April 2006.

A week later, he had his first start, in a 2–1 win away to Scunthorpe United.

Jutkiewicz received the club's Young Player of the Year award at the end of the season, and signed his first professional contract, of three years, in July 2006.

He had to wait until December for his first league start of the 2006–07 season, which came in a 2–0 defeat to Mansfield Town.

In the next game, playing as a lone striker against top-of-the-table Walsall, he scored his first senior goal, had another attempt cleared off the line, and was fouled for a penalty converted by Christian Roberts to give Swindon a 2–0 victory.

He went on to score five goals during the 2006–07 season to help Swindon gain promotion back to League One.

2007

On 17 March 2007, Jutkiewicz agreed to join Premier League club Everton.

The contract, to come into force when the transfer window opened at the end of the season, was for four years, and the fee was undisclosed, but reported as £400,000 potentially rising to £1 million.

Jutkiewicz joined up with Everton for pre-season training in July 2007, and was given squad number 27, previously allocated to Andy van der Meyde.

2008

He was loaned to Plymouth Argyle until the end of the 2007–08 Championship season, in time to make his debut on 1 January 2008, replacing Jimmy Abdou after 76 minutes of their 1–0 defeat at Cardiff City.

Working under Paul Sturrock, his former manager at Swindon, Jutkiewicz made four more appearances over the next few weeks, but struggled both physically and for confidence and was unable to retain a place even in the matchday squad.

Jutkiewicz made his Everton debut – and what proved his only first-team appearance – in December 2008, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 league victory over Sunderland.

The following month he was again sent out on loan, this time to League One club Huddersfield Town until the end of the season.

2009

He made his first start for Huddersfield in a 1–0 win over Leeds United in February 2009, and played well in the next match, but his form declined.

He was substituted just half an hour into his seventh appearance, after Cheltenham Town had taken a two-goal lead, and reacted by throwing a training top on the ground.

Although he apologised afterwards, he did not appear again.

In August 2009, Jutkiewicz joined Scottish Premier League (SPL) club Motherwell on loan until January 2010.

He scored his first goal for the Fir Park outfit against Falkirk, and continued to play and score regularly, with seven goals in the first half of the season.

The loan period was extended to the end of the season, and he scored three more goals before a drought set in.

2010

In the penultimate match of the season, on 5 May 2010 at home to Hibernian, he won the man-of-the-match award in the highest-scoring match in SPL history; he scored an outstanding injury-time goal from a tight angle to complete Motherwell's comeback from 6–2 down to draw 6–6 and keep alive his team's hopes of a Europa League spot.

He had been playing through a knee injury incurred three months earlier and was praised for his determination by manager Craig Brown, who described the goal as "van Basten-like".

However, it could not be considered for goal of the season because the award had already been presented to Anthony Stokes.

Four days later, Jutkiewicz converted a penalty in stoppage time to secure a 3–3 draw against Rangers at Ibrox.

He netted a total of 12 goals during his time with Motherwell.

Jutkiewicz was transferred to Championship club Coventry City on 26 July 2010 for an undisclosed fee; he signed a three-year contract.

Manager Aidy Boothroyd stressed that he was "at the right age ... to grow and develop with Coventry City."

He made his competitive debut on the opening day of the season in a 2–0 home win against Portsmouth, and scored his first goal for the club a week later with a stoppage-time equaliser in a 2–2 draw at Watford.

He played regularly during the 2010–11 season, mainly as a member of the starting eleven, and scored nine goals, all in league competition.

2011

At the end of the August 2011 transfer window, Mddlesbrough's offer for Jutkiewicz, who had scored against them a few days earlier, was rejected, as were suggestions of a loan move; manager Andy Thorn said the player was very much part of their plans for the season.

2012

Jutkiewicz scored another nine goals by the beginning of January 2012, and

Middlesbrough renewed their interest.

Because a permanent transfer could not be completed in time for Jutkiewicz to play in Middlesbrough's fixture against Burnley on 14 January 2012, he joined the club initially on an emergency loan deal.

The permanent transfer, on a four-and-a-half-year contract for a fee reported by BBC Sport to be in the region of £1.3m, was completed a few days later.

Jutkiewicz scored his first goal for Middlesbrough in an FA Cup fourth-round replay against Sunderland, and followed this on 14 February with his first league goal, in a 2–1 win against Nottingham Forest.

He scored just once more that season, and manager Tony Mowbray suggested that he "was probably trying too hard to adapt his game rather than playing exclusively to his strengths."