Neil Martin Kilkenny (born 19 December 1985) is a professional footballer who plays for Football West State League Division 1 side Sorrento FC. A midfielder, he began his career in the youth system at Arsenal, and went on to play league football for Oldham Athletic, Birmingham City, Leeds United, Bristol City, Preston North End, Melbourne City, Perth Glory and Western United.
Kilkenny was born in England, has Irish grandparents, and was raised in Australia. He played youth international football for both England and Ireland before committing to Australia. He has 15 caps for Australia, and competed for the country at the 2008 Olympics.
By the 2003–04 season, he had graduated to Arsenal's under-19 team and once been an unused substitute for the reserves, and had played international football for Republic of Ireland under-19s, qualifying via grandparents from Sligo, and for England under-18s. However, he became unhappy at Arsenal, chose to leave the club, and after trials with clubs including Aston Villa, Manchester City and Leicester City, he joined Birmingham City on a free transfer in January 2004.
At the start of the 2005–06 season he became part of the Birmingham first-team squad, though manager Steve Bruce warned him that he would not easily find his way into the team. On 20 September 2005, he made his Birmingham first-team debut in the EFL Cup away at Scunthorpe United, as a 26th-minute substitute to replace the injured Muzzy Izzet. Four days later, with six other midfielders unavailable through injury or suspension, he made his full home debut against Liverpool in the Premier League, in which he was sent off late in the game for handling the ball on the goal-line, thus giving Liverpool a penalty and a 2–2 draw. Despite his dismissal, he received words of encouragement from teammates Mikael Forssell and Mario Melchiot for his performance, and went on to make 25 appearances in all competitions, mainly as substitute, as Birmingham were relegated to the EFL Championship. The following season Kilkenny's appearances were infrequent; he started only two games, both in the League Cup. The player became frustrated; while part of the first-team squad, he was rarely part of the first team, yet Bruce was reluctant to allow him out on loan.
It was announced on 30 July 2007 that Kilkenny would again join Oldham on loan until January 2008. The move was blocked following the collapse of Birmingham's purchase of Hossam Ghaly, but was confirmed a few days later. His last match before he returned to Birmingham was an influential performance as Oldham beat Leeds United 3–1 to become the first team that season to win a League game at Elland Road.
His 43rd-minute goal against Yeovil Town on 10 March 2009 was a leading contender for the goal of the season. He followed this up with goals in the 3–2 win against Crewe Alexandra and the 3–1 win against Tranmere Rovers. Kilkenny was part of the Leeds team who were knocked out of the play-off semi-final by Millwall; he injured an ankle and was substituted in the first half of the second leg at Elland Road.
Kilkenny started his first league game of the season in the top-of-the-table goalless draw with Charlton Athletic and also started the next game in the Football League Trophy win against Darlington. He scored his first goal of the season for Leeds in the 3–1 win against Grimsby Town in the Trophy, "playing a give-and-go with Jermaine Beckford before tucking the ball into the far corner". Kilkenny also received the man of the match award in the same game. He scored in his next match, against Brighton & Hove Albion, as well as providing an assist for Beckford, and made it three in five when he scored against his former club Oldham. Kilkenny's fourth goal of the season came in December, with a rare header against Accrington Stanley. A few days later he provided yet another assist when he set up Beckford's first goal against Hartlepool United.
Kilkenny played against Manchester United when Leeds won 1–0 away at Old Trafford on 3 January in the FA Cup. He was at the heart of Leeds' midfield in the 2–2 draw with Tottenham Hotspur in the next round of the FA Cup. He missed the cup replay through injury, and returned to the bench against Carlisle United in the Football League Trophy Northern Final second leg. He came on as a second-half substitute and helped Leeds win the match 3–2, making the score 4–4 on aggregate. The match went to penalties: Kilkenny converted his kick but Leeds lost 6–5.
Kilkenny came back into the starting line-up for the next game against Leyton Orient after fully recovering from his injury. By the time Leeds equalised, via a 95th-minute own goal, Kilkenny had been substituted. He played an instrumental part as Leeds were promoted to the Football League Championship after finishing second in League One and thus earning automatic promotion.
Kilkenny said in December that he was keen to sign a new contract with Leeds. Kilkenny was named in Australia's final 23-man squad for the 2011 Asian Cup in January 2011, so would miss a month of Leeds' season; he said he was "gutted" to be missing the FA Cup tie against his old club Arsenal.
In January he repeated his desire to stay with Leeds, He returned from international duty to be named on the bench against Hull City. He scored his first league goal of the season with a "spectacular 20-yard shot" against Preston North End. At the end of the season, it became clear that club and player were unlikely to agree terms on a new contract, and on 26 May, manager Simon Grayson said that neither Kilkenny nor his agent had responded to the club's offer and he was "keen to move on" in terms of planning for next season. Kilkenny said that despite speculation linking him with a move to the Australian A-League, he wanted "to play at the highest level and that's in Europe".
On 29 March 2013, Kilkenny reached his 250th career league appearance with Bristol City against Derby County.
He was released at the end of the 2015–16 season.
Kilkenny's performances over the season earned him Melbourne City's Player of the Year award for 2016–17.
In January 2018, Melbourne City released Kilkenny.
Kilkenny spent seasons at Perth Glory, before being released at the end of the 2020–21 season.
In 2007, he was a part of the Australian Olyroos for the 2008 Beijing Olympics qualifying campaign. In June 2008 he was one of 33 players called up for a pre-Olympic training camp prior to selection of the final 18-man squad. He was included in the final 18-man squad and played one game in the Olympics for Australia, who were knocked out in the group stages. After Leeds' FA Cup win over Manchester United put Kilkenny back on the international radar, Australia sent scouts to watch him as a possibility for the 2010 World Cup squad, but manager Pim Verbeek did not select him.
In December 2010, Kilkenny was selected in Australia's 23-man squad for the 2011 Asian Cup. Kilkenny came on as a second-half substitute against United Arab Emirates in a warm-up game for the Asian Cup. He played his first game in the Asian Cup when he came on as a second-half substitute against Bahrain. In the quarter-final match, against reigning champions Iraq, Kilkenny made an appearance in the 109th minute, during a 1–0 win. He was a late substitute in the final, which Australia lost 1–0 to Japan after extra time.
Kilkenny played for Australia in the 3–0 win over New Zealand and goalless draw with Serbia in June 2011.
In October 2024, Kilkenny joined Football West as their Football Development Officer, overseeing a new academy in partnership with Football Australia.
Preston North End
Perth Glory
Western United
Australia
Club career
Birmingham City and loans
Leeds United
2007–08 season
2008–09 season
2009–10 season
2010–11 season
Bristol City
Preston North End
Melbourne City
Perth Glory
Western United
International career
Personal life
Career statistics
+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition Birmingham City 2004–05 0 0 2005–06 0 0 2006–07 0 0 Oldham Athletic (loan) 2004–05 — 5 Oldham Athletic 2007–08 1 3 Leeds United 2007–08 — 1 2008–09 0 4 2009–10 0 4 2010–11 1 2 Bristol City 2011–12 0 1 2012–13 0 0 2013–14 0 0 Preston North End 2013–14 — 2 2014–15 1 1 2015–16 0 1 A-League — 1 2 2017–18 A-League 3 0 3 0 — — — 6 0 Perth Glory 2017–18 A-League 10 1 0 0 — — — 10 1 2018–19 A-League 28 6 1 0 — — — 29 6 2019–20 A-League 28 3 1 0 — 5 1 — 34 4 2020–21 A-League 18 1 — — — — 18 1 Western United 2021–22 A-League Men 0 2022–23 A-League Men 1
Honours
Player
Individual
External links
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