Boaz Solossa

Boaz Solossa
Personal information
Full name Boaz Theofilius Erwin Solossa
Date of birth (1986-03-16) 16 March 1986
Place of birth Sorong, Indonesia
Height 1.71 m (5 ft 7 12 in)
Playing position Forward, Winger
Club information
Current team
Persipura Jayapura
Number 86
Youth career
2002–2004 PON Papua
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2004–2015 Persipura Jayapura 200 (140)
2015–2016 Pusamania Borneo 4 (2)
2016 Carsae 4 (1)
2016– Persipura Jayapura 25 (11)
National team
2003 Indonesia U-17 7 (4)
2004 Indonesia U-19 8 (2)
2007–2009 Indonesia U-23 4 (1)
2004– Indonesia 42 (14)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 29 April 2016 (UTC).

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 3 December 2016

Boaz Solossa[1] (born 16 March 1986) is an Indonesian professional footballer that currently plays for Persipura Jayapura in the Liga Super Indonesia. He is known by his high leveled dribbling technique and his crossing accuracy or short-passing with his left-foot.

In 2011, Boaz got an offer to play at Dutch club VVV-Venlo, but because of family reasons he chose to keep playing in Persipura Jayapura.[2]

Personal life

Boaz was born in the Solossa family, a well-known family in the province of West Papua. His uncle, Jaap Solossa, was the governor of Papua before he died in 2005. Boaz was born in a footballing family as well, being the youngest of five children. Almost all of them were professionals, including his brother Ortizan and Nehemia. Boaz obtained a Bachelor of Economics at Cenderawasih University in 2013. He also works as Civil servant.

Club career

East Timor

In 2016 Boaz left Persipura for the first time in his career to play for Carsae FC in East Timor, joining fellow Indonesians Imanuel Wanggai and Oktovianus Maniani.[3] However, in April 2016 having only made four appearances Boaz along with Wanggai left the club by mutal consent to rejoin Persipura.[4]

International career

Boaz' international debut was against Turkmenistan in 2004 for the 2006 World Cup qualification where Indonesia won 3–1 and Boaz made two assists for his team mate Ilham Jaya Kesuma. Boaz was considered to be a bright prospect in Indonesian football after performing brilliantly in the 2004 Tiger Cup, where Indonesia was defeated by Singapore in a home and away match, which resulted in an aggregate score of 5–2 to Singapore. In the group phase, Boaz managed to score 4 goals and along with Ilham Jayakesuma, who scored 7 goals, both led the top scorers chart.

He got injured after a tough tackle in a friendly match against Hong Kong,[5] this made him absent from Asian Cup 2007 and disappear from football for many months.

Career statistics

Club

As of 29 April 2016
Club performance League National Cup League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
2005 Persipura Jayapura Liga Indonesia 16 7 2 - - 16 9
2006 12 10 2 3 - - 14 13
2007–08 19 13 4 5 - - 23 18
2008–09 Indonesia Super League 31 28 7 7 - - 38 35
2009–10 29 16 9 8 - 5 0 43 24
2010–11 27 21 - - 8 5 35 26
2011–12 13 7 - - - 13 7
2013 32 25 - - - 32 25
2014 20 10 - - 10 6 30 16
2015 1 1 - - - 1 1
Total 200 138 22 25 - 23 11 245 174
2016 Carsae Liga Futebol Amadora 4 1 - - - 4 1
Total 4 1 - - - 4 1
2016 Persipura Jayapura Indonesia Soccer Championship 1 0 - - - 1 0
Total 1 0 - - - 1 0
Career total 205 139 22 25 - 23 11 250 175

International

Indonesia national team
YearAppsGoals
200453
200521
200630
200710
200800
200930
201032
201140
201200
201372
201440
201520
201686
Total4214

International goals

Boaz Solossa: International under-23 goals

Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 16 May 2007 Lebak Bulus Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Oman 1–0 2–1 2008 AFC Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament
Boaz Solossa: International goals[6]
Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition

Note:Bold indicates Solossa's goals

1 9 December 2004 Thong Nhat Stadium, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam  Laos 0–1 0–6 2004 Tiger Cup
2 9 December 2004 Thong Nhat Stadium, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam  Laos 0–4 0–6 2004 Tiger Cup
3 11 December 2004 My Dinh National Stadium, Hanoi, Vietnam  Vietnam 0–2 0–3 2004 Tiger Cup
4 3 January 2005 Bukit Jalil Stadium, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia  Malaysia 1–4 1–4 2004 Tiger Cup
5 6 January 2010 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Oman 1–1 1–2 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
6 8 October 2010 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Uruguay 1–0 1–7 Friendly
7 23 March 2013 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  Saudi Arabia 1–0 1–2 2015 AFC Asian Cup qualification
8 15 October 2013 Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, Indonesia  China PR 1–1 1–1 2015 AFC Asian Cup qualification
9 6 September 2016 Manahan Stadium, Surakarta, Indonesia  Malaysia 1–0 3–0 Friendly
10 6 September 2016 Manahan Stadium, Surakarta, Indonesia  Malaysia 3–0 3–0 Friendly
11 8 November 2016 My Dinh National Stadium, Hanoi, Vietnam  Vietnam 0–1 3–2 Friendly
12 19 November 2016 Philippine Sports Stadium, Bocaue, Philippines  Thailand 2–1 4–2 2016 AFF Championship
13 21 November 2016 Philippine Sports Stadium, Bocaue, Philippines  Philippines 2–1 2–2 2016 AFF Championship
14 3 December 2016 Pakansari Stadium, Bogor, Indonesia  Vietnam 2–1 2–1 2016 AFF Championship

Honours

Club

Persipura Jayapura

Individual

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.