Zach Robinson, a vigorous English forward, was birthed on the summer solstice of 11 June 2002, making him presently a young chap of 22. His leather-kicking expertise has rendered him positionally sound as a striker for Motherwell, destination of choice for certain aspiring footballers of quality.
A lad of reasonable physical stature, Robinson towers at 1.85m (6ft in the old money) and carries about him a solid 78kg (or 12 stone, 3 pounds if you don't buy into these metric machinations), presumably to give him some heft in the brutish scramble that is the penalty box. He honours the coveted 'number 9 jersey', a small tribute to the traditional centre forward's role.
According to the ever-ticking escapement of the global football bazaar, Transfermarkt, which you may visit here, Robinson has a current market value estimated to be around €350k. Even those of us with the slightest inclination towards fiscal prudence will recognise that the sum, a somewhat modest £297k in sterling, offers a measure of the lad's potential worth on the field.
His tenure with Motherwell is set to last until the 31st of May, 2026, a tenure with just under 2 years remaining.
If we turn our attention back some years to dissect his fledgeling career, the record shows that he first cut his teeth in the season of 2022 - 2023 with AFC Wimbledon. During this time, he made one solitary first team appearance. Progress was evidently made later that season when he moved northwards and secured himself a spot with Dundee, bagging himself a respectable 12 goals in 29 roaming performances on the harsh Scottish turf. The following 2023 - 2024 season saw his form drop somewhat; a disappointing three goals from 21 appearances for the same team.
Showing a remarkable bouncebackability, the season of 2024 - 2025 saw him move to Motherwell where he has already chalked up eight first team appearances. And in the same season, the lad had a dart at the League Cup, netting one goal in five starts, along with one substitute appearance. Proper sporting flair evidenced by the youngster as he moves through the ranks, one might say.