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Mark Williams (South African soccer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South African footballer
For other people named Mark Williams, seeMark Williams (disambiguation).

Mark Williams
Personal information
Full nameMark Frank Williams[1]
Date of birth (1966-08-11)11 August 1966 (age 59)
Place of birthCape Town,South Africa
PositionForward
Youth career
1978–1988Clarewood AFC
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1988–1990Jomo Cosmos28(22)
1991Mamelodi Sundowns20(5)
1992Hellenic FC19(6)
1993Cape Town Spurs5(2)
1993–1995RWD Molenbeek61(17)
1995–1996Wolverhampton Wanderers12(0)
1996Corinthians3(0)
1996–1997Kaizer Chiefs F.C.17(8)
1997Guangdong Hongyuan F.C.20(3)
1998–2000Qiánwéi Huándǎo50(36)
2001Shanghai Zhongyuan Huili20(19)
2002Qingdao Hademen14(1)
2002–2003Moroka Swallows8(2)
2003Brunei6(5)
Total283(107)
International career
1992–1997South Africa23(8)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Mark Williams (born 11 August 1966) is a South African former internationalfootballer who played as aforward for many clubs throughout his career, includingCorinthians (Brazil),[2]Wolverhampton Wanderers (England),Chongqing Lifan (China),Qingdao Zhongneng (China) andRWDM (Belgium). At Wolves he scored once; his goal coming in aLeague Cup tie againstFulham in October 1995.[3] Internationally he is predominantly remembered for being in the squad that played in the1996 African Cup of Nations where he was the joint second scorer with 4 goals, and scored both goals in the final after coming on as a substitute, in which South Africa beat Tunisia 2–0 to win the cup for the first time.[4] When he retired he would have played for theSouth Africa national football team 23 times, scoring 8 goals. As of December 2006 he is playing for South African Beach Soccer team.

Career statistics

[edit]

International

[edit]
South Africa national team
YearAppsGoals
199220
199310
199420
199532
199685
199771
Total238

International goals

[edit]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.22 November 1995Loftus Versfeld Stadium,Pretoria,South Africa Zambia1–?2–2Friendly
2.2–?
3.13 January 1996FNB Stadium,Johannesburg, South Africa Cameroon2–03–01996 African Cup of Nations
4.20 January 1996 Angola1–01–0
5.3 February 1996 Tunisia1–02–0
6.2–0
7.18 September 1996Johannesburg Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa Australia2–02–0Friendly
8.8 June 1997FNB Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa Zambia3–03–01998 FIFA World Cup qualification

Honours

[edit]

Qiánwéi Huándǎo

Shanghai Zhongyuan Huili

  • Chinese Jia B League: 2001 

Qingdao Hademen

South Africa

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Sul-africano que passou pelo Timão cobra caro para conceder entrevista".
  2. ^"Ex-corintiano Mark Williams é destaque na África do Sul" (in Portuguese). UOL. Retrieved4 December 2007.
  3. ^"From the archive - rare League Cup success".expressandstar.com. 11 August 2015. Archived fromthe original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved4 December 2015.
  4. ^"'Mandela brought extra pressure': the story of South Africa's Afcon triumph".The Guardian. 24 June 2019.

External links

[edit]
Goalkeepers
Defenders
Midfielders
Forwards
China League One top scorers
Chinese FA Cup top scorers
South Africa
South Africa
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