Jonjoe Kenny
Jonjoe Kenny was born in Kirkdale, England, United Kingdom on March 15th, 1997 and is the Soccer Player. At the age of 27, Jonjoe Kenny biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 27 years old, Jonjoe Kenny has this physical status:
Jonjoe Kenny (born 15 March 1997) is an English professional footballer who plays as a right-back for Bundesliga club Schalke 04, on loan from Premier League club Everton.
He has also represented England at under-21 level.
He came through the youth system of the Premier League side, where he has been a professional since July 2014.
Club career
On July 21, 2015, Kenny signed on a loan for Wigan Athletic in League One. Despite Wigan boss Gary Caldwell's desire to extend the contract, he returned to Everton at the end of the loan. Kenny joined Oxford United of League Two for the first time on a one-month loan and then extended to the end of the season.
He made his Premier League debut for Everton on May 15, 2016 against Norwich City as a replacement for Matthew Pennington. Mason Holgate came as a replacement for him against Swansea City on May 6th, 2017.
Kenny was the fourth pick under Ronald Koeman, but he was immediately impressed when given the opportunity. In a 5–2 loss at home to Arsenal on October 22nd, he got his first Premier League start. Following Koeman's dismissal, the ten-year veteran made 13 starts in the league, playing in 16 out of 19 games from October to January's return of Seamus Coleman. In all sports, he appeared in 25 games.
Kenny's season began with him as back-up to Coleman before he impressed as the Irishman suffered with a foot injury. He appeared in four Premier League games in a row. Following Leicester's victory on October 6th, he was dropped from the starting XI and didn't play again until New Year's Day, this time against Leicester in a 1–0 loss. He stayed on his spot in the FA Cup 3rd round over Lincoln City. After an injury to Leighton Baines and a red card for his replacement Lucas Digne, he returned the XI to his squad on January 28th for a 1–0 win over Huddersfield Town. He continued at left field against Wolves four days later, before turning to Leighton Baines in the 20th minute. He appeared in the following two matches against Man City and Watford, earning the Man of the Match award.
Kenny joined Schalke 04 in June 2019 on a season-long loan. On his third Bundesliga appearance, he earned the Rookie of the Month award for August 2019. He made 31 league appearances in 2019-20, scoring twice, before returning to Everton at the end of the season.
Kenny made eight appearances for Everton in 2020-21 before going out on loan. He joined Celtic in February 2021 until the end of the season. Kenny decided to leave Everton after his deal came to an end, despite being offered a new one until the 2021-22 season. BSC's Kenny left Everton following his deal's end.
International career
Kenny was part of the England Under-17 team that secured the 2014 European Under-17 Championship in May 2014. Kenny converted the match-winning penalty against the Netherlands in the final of the penalty shoot-out. He was chosen in the tournament's staff by UEFA.
Kenny was a member of the England squad for the 2016 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, beginning in the semi-final loss to Italy.
In the 2017 FIFA U-20 World Cup, Kenny was selected for the England under-20 team. He appeared in all seven games of the tournament. England defeated Venezuela 1–0 in the final, marking England's first victory in a global tournament since the 1966 World Cup triumph.
Kenny was named in the England Under-21 squad for the UEFA European U-21 Championship in Italy and San Marino in May 2019. Kenny was one of three Everton players named as Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Kieran Dowell, as well as Kieran Dowell. During a 3–3 draw with Croatia at San Marino Stadium on June 24, Kenny scored a spectacular strike and England's third.
Under FIFA's grandparent rule, Kenny qualifies for the Republic of Ireland.