Marco Djuricin Explained

Marco Djuricin
Full Name:Marco Djuricin
Birth Date:1992 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Vienna, Austria
Height:1.83m
Position:Forward
Currentclub:Rijeka
Clubnumber:92
Youthyears1:1999–2003
Youthclubs1:SV Donau
Youthyears2:2004–2005
Youthclubs2:Rapid Wien
Youthyears3:2005–2006
Youthclubs3:Austria Wien
Youthyears4:2006–2008
Youthclubs4:Rapid Wien
Youthyears5:2008
Youthclubs5:FC Stadlau
Youthyears6:2008–2010
Youthclubs6:Hertha BSC
Years1:2010–2012
Clubs1:Hertha BSC II
Caps1:23
Goals1:12
Years2:2010–2013
Clubs2:Hertha BSC
Caps2:11
Goals2:2
Years3:2012–2013
Clubs3:Jahn Regensburg (loan)
Caps3:16
Goals3:3
Years4:2012
Clubs4:Jahn Regensburg II (loan)
Caps4:1
Goals4:3
Years5:2013–2014
Clubs5:Sturm Graz
Caps5:36
Goals5:17
Years6:2015–2018
Clubs6:Red Bull Salzburg
Caps6:16
Goals6:2
Years7:2015–2016
Clubs7:Brentford (loan)
Caps7:22
Goals7:4
Years8:2016–2017
Clubs8:Ferencváros (loan)
Caps8:25
Goals8:8
Years9:2017–2018
Clubs9:Grasshoppers (loan)
Caps9:23
Goals9:5
Years10:2018–2019
Clubs10:Grasshoppers
Caps10:23
Goals10:6
Years11:2019–2021
Clubs11:Karlsruher SC
Caps11:23
Goals11:0
Years12:2021–2022
Clubs12:Austria Wien
Caps12:48
Goals12:17
Years13:2021–2022
Clubs13:Austria Wien II
Caps13:1
Goals13:1
Years14:2022–
Clubs14:Rijeka
Caps14:5
Goals14:0
Years15:2023–2024
Clubs15:Spartak Trnava (loan)
Caps15:4
Goals15:3
Nationalyears1:2008
Nationalteam1:Austria U17
Nationalcaps1:5
Nationalgoals1:3
Nationalyears2:2009
Nationalteam2:Austria U18
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:2009–2010
Nationalteam3:Austria U19
Nationalcaps3:12
Nationalgoals3:4
Nationalyears4:2012–2014
Nationalteam4:Austria U21
Nationalcaps4:8
Nationalgoals4:2
Nationalyears5:2015–
Nationalteam5:Austria
Nationalcaps5:2
Nationalgoals5:0
Club-Update:11:40, 25 May 2024 (UTC)
Nationalteam-Update:19:46, 3 December 2023 (UTC)

Marco Djuricin (Marko Đuričin, Serbian: Марко Ђуричин; born 12 December 1992) is an Austrian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Croatian First League club Rijeka.

Djuricin came to prominence in his native Austria with Sturm Graz, scoring 24 goals in 44 appearances, before joining Red Bull Salzburg in 2015. He has since played professionally in Germany, England, Hungary, Switzerland, Croatia and Slovakia. Djuricin has been capped by Austria at international level.

Club career

Hertha BSC

A forward, Djuricin began his career with SV Donau in 1999, before have alternate spells with Rapid Wien and Austria Wien.[1] After a short spell with FC Stadlau in 2008, he moved to Germany to enter the youth academy at Bundesliga club Hertha BSC. During the 2009–10 season, Hertha's U19 team reached the final of the DFB Youth Cup, but despite Djuricin's equaliser, Hertha lost the match 2–1 to 1899 Hoffenheim.[2] During the 2010–11 pre-season, Djuricin was called up to the first team's training camp in his native Austria.[3] Coach Markus Babbel was impressed by his performance during the camp and called in him up for Hertha's remaining pre-season friendlies.

Breakthrough and Jahn Regensburg loan

Djuricin made his debut for Hertha's reserve team in a 2–2 Regionalliga Nord draw with Hallescher FC on 6 August 2010.[4] Following injuries to Patrick Ebert, Raffael and Daniel Beichler, Djuricin received his maiden first team call up on the opening day of the 2010–11 2. Bundesliga season against Rot-Weiß Oberhausen.[5] He made his debut after just 18 minutes as a substitute for Rob Friend. Djuricin had a dream debut, scoring two second-half goals to help Hertha to a 3–2 win. He signed a new four-year contract shortly after the match.[6] Djuricin went on to make 9 appearances during a successful 2010–11 season for Hertha, which saw the club promoted back to the Bundesliga at the first time of asking.

Djuricin spent the majority of the 2011–12 Bundesliga season with the reserves, scoring 9 goals in 16 appearances. He made two first team substitute appearances in early 2012 and was on the bench for both of Hertha's relegation playoff matches, which were lost to Fortuna Düsseldorf and consigned the club to relegation straight back to the 2. Bundesliga. During the 2012 off-season, new Hertha manager Jos Luhukay announced that Djuricin was not in his first team plans.[7]

On 9 August 2012, Djuricin joined 2. Bundesliga club Jahn Regensburg on loan for the duration of the 2012–13 season.[8] He missed two months of the campaign with a broken sesamoid in his foot and made 17 appearances and scored three goals in a dire season for the Jahn,[9] [10] with a bottom-place finish consigning the club to relegation to the 3. Liga.

Djuricin departed Hertha in June 2013 and made just 11 appearances and scored two goals in three seasons as a first team player at the Olympiastadion.

Sturm Graz

Djuricin returned to Austria to sign a contract with Austrian Bundesliga club Sturm Graz in June 2013.[11] He made his debut in a 0–0 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round draw with Breiðablik on 18 July 2013, the first European appearance of his career. After just two further appearances, a cruciate ligament injury saw Djuricin fail to return to the team until December. He finished the 2013–14 season with 23 appearances and seven goals. Djuricin showed good goalscoring form in the first half of the 2014–15 season, scoring 17 goals in 21 games before departing the UPC-Arena on 8 January 2015.[12] He made 44 appearances and scored 24 goals during 18 months with Graz.

Red Bull Salzburg and loans

On 8 January 2015, Djuricin signed a -year contract with Austrian Bundesliga club Red Bull Salzburg. He scored just three goals in 16 appearances in the second half of the 2014–15 season, but received the first silverware of his career when Salzburg won the league title at the end of the campaign. He collected another medal by virtue of being an unused substitute in Salzburg's 2–0 victory over Austria Wien in the 2015 ÖFB Cup Final.[13]

After four appearances early in the 2015–16 season, Djuricin moved to England to sign for Championship club Brentford on loan until the end of the 2015–16 season.[14] He scored within 29 minutes of his debut in a 1–1 draw with against Leeds United on 12 September and made it two goals in three games with the winner versus Preston North End one week later. He came into form again in late October, scoring twice in three matches in wins versus Wolverhampton Wanderers and West London rivals Queens Park Rangers, the latter match being Brentford's first win over QPR for 50 years.[15] An ankle ligament injury suffered early in a 1–1 draw with Blackburn Rovers on 7 November kept Djuricin out of the team for two months.[16] He returned to the bench in mid-January 2016 and broke back into the starting lineup in late February, but was sidelined due to illness in March.[17] Djuricin made just two further appearances and finished the season with 4 goals from 23 appearances.[18]

On 23 June 2016, Djuricin joined Nemzeti Bajnokság I club Ferencváros on loan for the duration of the 2016–17 season.[19] He made 30 appearances and scored 10 goals during the season, but was left out of the matchday squad which emerged victorious in the 2017 Magyar Kupa Final.[20] Following a further season-long loan during the 2017–18 season, Djuricin left the club when his contract expired at the end of the 2017–18 season.[21]

Grasshoppers

In July 2017, Djuricin moved to Swiss Super League club Grasshopper Club Zürich on a season-long loan, with the option to transfer permanently.[22] He made 25 appearances and scored 9 goals during the 2017–18 season and permanently joined the club on a two-year contract. After 24 appearances and seven goals during the 2018–19 season, Djuricin departed the club.[23]

Karlsruher SC

On 14 June 2019, Djuricin returned to Germany to join 2. Bundesliga club Karlsruher SC on a two-year contract. He finished the 2019–20 season with 19 appearances. After making just seven appearances during the first half of the 2020–21 season, Djuricin's contract was terminated by mutual consent on 31 January 2021.[24]

Austria Wien

On 2 February 2021, Djuricin signed a contract with Austrian Bundesliga club Austria Wien on a free transfer. In what remained of the 2020–21 season, he scored seven goals in 17 appearances, helped the club qualify for the 2021–22 Europa Conference League and signed a new three-year contract.[25] [26] During the 2021–22 season, Djuricin scored 11 goals in 32 appearances and helped the club qualify for the 2022–23 Europa League play-off round. Following four appearances and one goal during the opening weeks of the 2022–23 season, Djuricin departed the club.[27] He made 53 appearances and scored 19 goals during 18 months at the Franz Horr Stadium.

HNK Rijeka and loan to Spartak Trnava

On 31 August 2022, Djuricin transferred to Croatian First League club Rijeka and signed a three-year contract. He made five appearances prior to the 2022–23 winter break, after which he was frozen out of the squad by incoming head coach Sergej Jakirović.[28] On 6 July 2023, Djuricin joined Slovak First League club Spartak Trnava on loan for the duration of the 2023–24 season.[29] Heart problems restricted him to just 11 appearances during the season,[30] [31] [32] in which he scored four goals.

International career

Djuricin won 26 caps and scored 9 goals for Austria between under-17 and under-21 level. He scored a penalty at the 2010 UEFA European Under-19 Championship and the resulting win over the Netherlands qualified the team for the 2011 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Colombia, though he would miss the tournament through injury.[33]

Djuricin made his senior Austria debut on 27 March 2015 in a UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying match away to Liechtenstein at the Rheinpark Stadion in Vaduz and replaced Marc Janko for the final 13 minutes of a 5–0 victory.[34]

Personal life

Djuricin is of Serbian-Croatian descent. His father, Goran,[35] is a former footballer and a manager.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueCupEuropeTotal
LeagueAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Hertha BSC II2010–11Regionalliga Nord7373[36]
2011–12Regionalliga Nord169169[37]
Total23122312
Hertha BSC2010–112. Bundesliga920092
2011–12Bundesliga200020
Total11200112
Jahn Regensburg (loan)2012–132. Bundesliga16310173[38]
Jahn Regensburg II (loan)2012–13Bayernliga Süd1313[39]
Sturm Graz2013–14Austrian Bundesliga1863120237
2014–15Austrian Bundesliga1811362117
Total361767204424
Red Bull Salzburg2014–15Austrian Bundesliga1321021163
2015–16Austrian Bundesliga30131053
Total1622331216
Brentford (loan)2015–16Championship22410234
Ferencváros (loan)2016–17Nemzeti Bajnokság I25832203010
Grasshoppers (loan)2017–18Swiss Super League23524259
Grasshoppers2018–19Swiss Super League23611247
Karlsruher SC2019–202. Bundesliga17020190
2020–212. Bundesliga601070
Total23030260
Austria Wien2020–21Austrian Bundesliga17700177
2021–22Austrian Bundesliga28921213211
2022–23Austrian Bundesliga311041
Total481721315319
Austria Wien II2020–21Austrian 2. Liga1111
Rijeka2022–23Croatian First League500050
Spartak Trnava (loan)2023–24Slovak First League431061114
Career total277832218163315104

Honours

Red Bull Salzburg

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Marco Djuricin . 28 August 2015 . kicker.de . de.
  2. Web site: 15 May 2010 . U19 gewinnt den DFB-Junioren-Pokal . 28 August 2015 . www.achtzehn99.de.
  3. Web site: Bardow . Dominik . 22 August 2010 . Marco Djuricin: Instinkt für die große Bühne . 28 August 2015 . Tagesspiegel.
  4. Web site: 6 August 2010 . Hertha BSC II vs. Hallescher FC 2 – 2 . 28 August 2015 . Soccerway.
  5. Web site: Hertha BSC vs. Rot-Weiß Oberhausen 3 – 2 . 28 August 2015 . Soccerway.
  6. Web site: Bremer . Uwe . 22 August 2010 . Hertha-Talent Marco Djuricin verzaubert Berlin . 28 August 2015 . Berliner Morgenpost . de.
  7. Web site: Bremer . Uwe . 31 July 2012 . Welche Profis bei Hertha BSC nicht mehr mitspielen dürfe . 29 August 2015 . Berliner Morgenpost . de.
  8. Web site: 9 August 2012 . Djuricin verstärkt den Jahn . 29 August 2015 . kicker.de . German.
  9. Web site: 15 June 2013 . "Man kann alles erreichen, wenn man daran glaubt" . https://web.archive.org/web/20130619043126/http://www.laola1.at/de/fussball/bundesliga/interview/djuricin-zu-sturm-interview/page/57744-32-48-48-.html . 19 June 2013 . 29 August 2013 . laola1.at . de.
  10. Web site: 23 November 2013 . Djuricin: "Zwischendurch hatte ich keine Lust mehr" . 28 August 2015 . Kleine Zeitung . de.
  11. Web site: 15 June 2012 . Berlin ist Geschichte: Djuricin geht nach Graz . 19 June 2012 . kicker.de . German.
  12. Web site: 8 January 2015 . Marco Djuricin verstärkt die Bullenherde! . Marco Djuricin strengthens the bulls herd! . 22 February 2015 . FC Red Bull Salzburg . German.
  13. Web site: 2 June 2015 . Austria Wien vs. Salzburg 0 – 2 . 28 August 2015 . Soccerway.
  14. Web site: Wickham . Chris . 31 August 2015 . Brentford sign Marco Djuricin from Red Bull Salzburg . 31 August 2015 . Brentford Football Club.
  15. News: Brentford 1–0 Queens Park Rangers . BBC . 31 October 2015.
  16. Web site: Brentford FC injury update from Head of Medical Neil Greig . 12 November 2015 . www.brentfordfc.co.uk.
  17. Web site: Street . Tim . Which Brentford striker could be ready to return against Bolton tonight? . 5 April 2016 . getwestlondon.
  18. Web site: Wickham . Chris . Josh Clarke has been offered a new contract at Brentford FC . 9 May 2016 . www.brentfordfc.co.uk.
  19. Web site: Marco Djuricin joins Ferencvaros Budapest . 9 January 2018 . FC Red Bull Salzburg.
  20. Web site: Vasas FC – Ferencvárosi TC 1 : 1 büntetőkkel 4–5, 2017.05.31. (képek, adatok) • Magyar Kupa 2016–2017, döntő . 9 January 2018 . Magyarfutball.hu . hu.
  21. Web site: Marco Djuricin leaves for Grasshoppers . 3 August 2018 . FC Red Bull Salzburg . de.
  22. Web site: Marco Djuricin leaves for Grasshoppers . 9 January 2018 . FC Red Bull Salzburg.
  23. Web site: Thijs . Simon . 14 June 2019 . KSC verpflichtet Marco Djuricin . 12 July 2019 . Liga-Zwei.de . de-DE.
  24. Web site: Ablösefreier Wechsel: Marco Djuricin verstärkt Austria Wien . 6 February 2021 . FK Austria Wien.
  25. Web site: Summary – Bundesliga – Austria – Results, fixtures, tables and news . 4 June 2021 . Soccerway.
  26. Web site: Marco Djuricin verlängert bis 2024 . 4 June 2021 . FK Austria Wien.
  27. Web site: Marco Djuričin wechselt zu HNK Rijeka . 31 August 2022 . FK Austria Wien . de.
  28. Web site: Velika čistka u Rijeci. Jakirović otpisao 11 igrača, među njima i Halilović . 21 February 2023 . www.index.hr . hr.
  29. Web site: 6 July 2023 . Spartak získal útočníka z Rakúska . 6 July 2023 . FC Spartak Trnava . sk-SK.
  30. Web site: 30 August 2023 . Šok pre Trnavu! Hviezdna posila s podozrením na vážnu diagnózu, je v nemocnici . 24 September 2023 . Šport.sk.
  31. Web site: 2 December 2023 . Marco Djuričin je späť . 3 December 2023 . FC Spartak Trnava . sk-SK.
  32. Web site: 17 February 2024 . Djuričin v tejto sezóne dohral . 25 May 2024 . FC Spartak Trnava . sk-SK.
  33. Web site: Harrison . Wayne . 25 July 2010 . Djuricin delighted with Austria achievement . 29 August 2015 . UEFA.com.
  34. News: 27 March 2015 . Austria maintain advantage in Liechtenstein . UEFA.com . 29 August 2015.
  35. Web site: 25 July 2010 . Teamchef Heraf zieht den Hut . 29 August 2015 . de.
  36. Web site: Marco Djuricin . 29 August 2015 . kicker.de . German.
  37. Web site: Marco Djuricin . 10 November 2014 . kicker.de . kicker . German.
  38. Web site: Marco Djuricin . 10 November 2014 . kicker.de . kicker . German.
  39. Web site: Jahn Regensburg II – TSV Aindling am 16. September um 15:00 Uhr in der Bayernliga Süd . 29 August 2015 . beinschuss.de.