Jump to content

Pablo Pallarés

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Pablo Pallares Marzo)

Pablo Pallarés
Personal information
Full name Pablo Pallarés Marzo
Date of birth (1987-01-12) 12 January 1987 (age 37)
Place of birth Gandia, Spain
Height 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)
Position(s) Forward
Team information
Current team
Svay Rieng
Number 9
Youth career
1999–2006 Valencia
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2006–2007 Atlético Madrid C
2007–2008 Palencia 23 (1)
2008–2009 Dénia 27 (1)
2009–2010 Águilas 21 (3)
2010 Alcoyano 16 (2)
2010–2011 Roquetas 36 (9)
2011–2012 Almería B 24 (3)
2011–2012 Almería 11 (0)
2012–2013 San Fernando 35 (2)
2013–2014 La Hoya Lorca 34 (17)
2014–2015 Cartagena 13 (1)
2015 Huesca 14 (1)
2015–2017 UCAM Murcia 38 (10)
2017 Ponferradina 37 (4)
2018 Kedah 8 (3)
2018–2019 Guijuelo 15 (5)
2019–2020 Badalona 8 (1)
2020 Gorica 0 (0)
2020–2021 Socuéllamos 17 (1)
2021 Olímpic Xàtiva 27 (2)
2022 Svay Rieng 11 (9)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 2 May 2022

Pablo Pallarés Marzo (born 12 January 1987) is a Spanish footballer who plays for Svay Rieng mainly as a forward.

Club career

[edit]

Pallarés was born in Gandia, Valencian Community. After unsuccessfully emerging through Atlético Madrid's youth ranks, he started playing as a professional in Segunda División B, starting with CF Palencia in 2007–08 (only one goal in 946 minutes of action, team relegation).[1] In the following three seasons he played with four teams in that level, his best individual year being with CD Roquetas.[2][3]

On 4 June 2011, Pallarés signed with UD Almería, playing initially for their reserves.[4] On 13 December he made his debut with the Andalusians' first team, coming off the bench for Aarón Ñíguez in a 1–3 Copa del Rey home loss against CA Osasuna (2–4 on aggregate).[5]

In August 2012, after appearing in roughly only one quarter of the Segunda División games in his only season, Pallarés returned to division three after joining San Fernando CD.[6] He continued to compete in that tier in the following years, representing La Hoya Lorca CF,[7] FC Cartagena,[8] SD Huesca,[9] UCAM Murcia CF[10] and SD Ponferradina.[11]

In January 2018, 31-year-old Pallarés moved abroad for the first time in his career, signing with Malaysia Super League club Kedah FA.[12]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pablo Pallarés abandona el Palencia y espera poder jugar en un equipo de Segunda B (Pablo Pallarés leaves Palencia and hopes to play in a Segunda B team); Ideal, 9 June 2008 (in Spanish)
  2. ^ El Club Deportivo Roquetas cierra su plantilla con Pallarés (Club Deportivo Roquetas complete their squad with Pallarés); Ideal, 20 August 2010 (in Spanish)
  3. ^ "Me hace ilusión ir con el primer equipo o jugar ante el Roquetas" ("I am as hungry going with the first team or playing against Roquetas"); Diario de Almería, 11 February 2012 (in Spanish)
  4. ^ El 'roquetero' Pallarés abre la agenda de altas del Almería B (Roquetero Pallarés opens the agenda of signings of Almería B); Ideal, 4 June 2011 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Osasuna saborea el momento (Osasuna savour moment); Marca, 13 December 2011 (in Spanish)
  6. ^ El SFCD trabaja hasta los días de fiesta (SFCD work even on holidays) Archived 2014-08-19 at the Wayback Machine; San Fernando CD, 15 August 2012 (in Spanish)
  7. ^ Pablo Pallarés, el deseado delantero para La Hoya Lorca (Pablo Pallarés, the desired forward for La Hoya Lorca); Vavel, 26 August 2013 (in Spanish)
  8. ^ El 9 esperado es Pablo Pallarés (The awaited 9 is Pablo Pallarés); Vavel, 17 August 2014 (in Spanish)
  9. ^ Pallarés, nuevo delantero de la SD Huesca (Pallarés, new forward of SD Huesca); Sport Huesca, 30 January 2015 (in Spanish)
  10. ^ Pallarés refuerza el ataque del UCAM (Pallarés bolsters the attack of UNAM); La Verdad, 9 July 2015 (in Spanish)
  11. ^ Pablo Pallarés se une a la SD Ponferradina (Pablo Pallarés added to SD Ponferradina); SD Ponferradina, 13 January 2017 (in Spanish)
  12. ^ Empieza la Superliga de Malasia con cuatro futbolistas españoles (Malaysia Superleague gets going with four Spanish footballers); Diario AS, 2 February 2018 (in Spanish)
[edit]