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Edgaras Jankauskas

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1996
  
CSKA Moscow

Weight
  
86 kg

Playing position
  
Striker

Name
  
Edgaras Jankauskas

Salary
  
240,000 USD (2010)

Years
  
Team

Role
  
Footballer

Position
  
Forward

1991–1996
  
Zalgiris Vilnius

Height
  
1.93 m


Edgaras Jankauskas httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

Date of birth
  
(1975-03-12) 12 March 1975 (age 40)

Place of birth
  
Vilnius, Soviet Union

Kova1 edgaras jankauskas vs robertas iu ka www filmavimas net


Edgaras Jankauskas (born 12 March 1975) is a Lithuanian former footballer and the current manager of Lithuania.

Contents

Edgaras Jankauskas BBC Sport Hearts Edgaras Jankauskas amp board member

A powerful striker who excelled in the physical side of the game, he was also relatively skilled. Other than in his own he played professionally in nine countries, and represented the Lithuania national team for almost 20 years.

Edgaras Jankauskas Legendinis futbolininkas E Jankauskas skiriasi su mona

Whilst with Porto, Jankauskas made history as the first Lithuanian footballer to win the Champions League, in 2004. Ten years later, he began working as a full-time manager.

Edgaras Jankauskas Edgaras Jankauskas set to return to Hearts as assistant to

Edgaras jankauskas


Early years / Brugge

Edgaras Jankauskas EA Forums

Born in Vilnius, Lithuania, Soviet Union, Jankauskas moved to local FK Žalgiris' youth ranks at 16, from neighbouring FK Panerys. In 1996 he joined PFC CSKA Moscow, and later spent a further year in the Russian capital with FC Torpedo.

Edgaras Jankauskas Edgaras Jankauskas YM 15minlt

In 1997, Jankauskas moved to Club Brugge KV, and helped the club win the Belgian Pro League in his first season. However, in January 2000, he became the most expensive Lithuanian player of all time when Real Sociedad paid €2.4 million for his services.

Portugal

After another year and a half in San Sebastián, Jankauskas was loaned to S.L. Benfica for the 2001–02 season, and the following year was signed by FC Porto, under manager José Mourinho. Although not always a regular starter, he made an important contribution to a side which conquered all in Portugal, winning the Primeira Liga and Taça de Portugal double in 2002–03 and the national championship in the following campaign.

Jankauskas also helped Porto to an unprecedented run of European success and, while he missed selection for the 2003 UEFA Cup final-winning squad, he was a substitute when the Dragons won the UEFA Champions League against AS Monaco FC in the following year.

Hearts / Late career

After the departure of Mourinho, Jankauskas fell out of favor in Porto and joined OGC Nice on loan, but he failed to settle in France and eventually signed for Scottish Premier League club Heart of Midlothian – via FBK Kaunas – in 2005. In a complex deal, he was loaned to Hearts at the behest of Vladimir Romanov, who controlled both clubs, and spent the next two seasons in Edinburgh.

In 2005–06, Jankauskas' experience and goals helped Hearts to win the Scottish Cup and achieve Champions league qualification by finishing second in the league. The following campaign was less successful for him, as injuries and indifferent form limited his appearances; after his Kaunas and Hearts contracts expired in June 2007, he signed with Cyprus's AEK Larnaca FC.

On 30 January 2008, Jankauskas joined Portuguese League team C.F. Os Belenenses. However, after only a few months, he terminated his contract, moving to Latvia's Skonto FC in the summer after claiming he wanted to play closer to his homeland.

At the start of 2009, Jankauskas was working on obtaining his coaching badges, and pondering his retirement. However, in June, it was revealed that he would be heading to the United States for a trial with Major League Soccer club New England Revolution. On 28 June 2009, pending the arrival of his P1 Visa and ITC documents, a deal was arranged for the 34-year-old; his week 26 goal against the Kansas City Wizards was nominated for the MLS Goal of the Year Award.

On 30 September 2010, Jankauskas was released by the Revolution. He moved to FC Fakel Voronezh in the Russian second level shortly after, retiring after only a couple of months.

In July 2012, Jankauskas returned to Hearts as an assistant manager, leaving his post at the end of the season.

International career

Jankauskas was an important part of the Lithuanian national side since 1991 when, at the age of just 16, he helped the country to the 1991 Baltic Cup, playing the last 30 minutes of the 4–1 final win against Estonia. He scored his first international goal on 5 October 1996, in a 1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier against Iceland (2–0), and went on to net a further nine in 56 appearances, in eighteen years of play (he did not appear for the national team, however, from 1992 to 1995).

On 12 January 2016, after a brief spell at club level with FK Trakai, Jankauskas replaced Igoris Pankratjevas at the helm of Lithuania.

International goals

Scores and results list Lithuania's goal tally first.

Club

Žalgiris
  • A Lyga: 1991, 1992
  • Lithuanian Football Cup: 1991, 1993, 1994
  • Club Brugge
  • Belgian Pro League: 1997–98
  • Belgian Supercup: 1998
  • Porto
  • Primeira Liga: 2002–03, 2003–04
  • Taça de Portugal: 2002–03
  • Supertaça Cândido de Oliveira: 2002, 2003
  • UEFA Champions League: 2003–04
  • UEFA Cup: 2002–03
  • Hearts
  • Scottish Cup: 2005–06
  • Country

    Lithuania
  • Baltic Cup: 1991
  • Individual

  • Lithuanian Player of the Year: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2004
  • Managerial statistics

    As of 4 September 2017

    References

    Edgaras Jankauskas Wikipedia


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