Jonathan Bornstein

American soccer player (born 1984)


title: "Jonathan Bornstein" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1984-births", "living-people", "american-men's-soccer-players", "jewish-american-soccer-players", "american-people-of-mexican-descent", "sportspeople-of-mexican-descent", "american-people-of-romanian-jewish-descent", "california-state-polytechnic-university,-pomona-alumni", "cal-poly-pomona-broncos-men's-soccer-players", "ucla-bruins-men's-soccer-players", "maccabiah-games-medalists-in-football", "maccabiah-games-silver-medalists-for-the-united-states", "competitors-at-the-2005-maccabiah-games", "chivas-usa-players", "tigres-uanl-footballers", "atlante-f.c.-footballers", "querétaro-f.c.-footballers", "maccabi-netanya-f.c.-players", "chicago-fire-fc-players", "c.d.s.-vida-players", "united-states-men's-international-soccer-players", "expatriate-men's-footballers-in-mexico", "expatriate-men's-footballers-in-honduras", "chivas-usa-draft-picks", "concacaf-gold-cup–winning-players", "2007-concacaf-gold-cup-players", "2007-copa-américa-players", "2009-fifa-confederations-cup-players", "2010-fifa-world-cup-players", "2011-concacaf-gold-cup-players", "major-league-soccer-players", "major-league-soccer-all-stars", "liga-mx-players", "liga-nacional-de-fútbol-profesional-de-honduras-players", "american-expatriate-sportspeople-in-mexico", "american-expatriate-sportspeople-in-israel", "american-expatriate-sportspeople-in-honduras", "men's-association-football-defenders", "israeli-premier-league-players", "israeli-people-of-romanian-jewish-descent", "sportspeople-from-los-alamitos,-california", "soccer-players-from-orange-county,-california", "soccer-players-from-torrance,-california", "21st-century-american-jews", "los-alamitos-high-school-alumni", "jews-from-california", "expatriate-men's-footballers-in-israel"] description: "American soccer player (born 1984)" topic_path: "science/astronomy" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Bornstein" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American soccer player (born 1984) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox football biography"]

FieldValue
nameJonathan Bornstein
imageWikiBornsteinJUL2010.jpg
captionBornstein with Chivas USA in 2010
fullnameJonathan Rey Bornstein
birth_date
birth_placeTorrance, California, U.S.
height
positionLeft-back
youthyears11998–2002
youthclubs1Irvine Strikers
collegeyears12002–2003
college1Cal Poly Pomona Broncos
collegecaps136
collegegoals117
collegeyears22004–2005
college2UCLA Bruins
collegecaps240
collegegoals26
years12006–2010
clubs1Chivas USA
caps1123
goals19
years22011–2015
clubs2Tigres UANL
caps29
goals20
years32014
clubs3Atlante (loan)
caps33
goals30
years42014–2015
clubs4Querétaro (loan)
caps413
goals41
years52015–2018
clubs5Querétaro
caps581
goals52
years62018–2019
clubs6Maccabi Netanya
caps625
goals61
years72019–2022
clubs7Chicago Fire
caps783
goals72
years82023–2024
clubs8Vida
caps831
goals80
years92024
clubs9Tallahassee SC
caps91
goals90
nationalyears12007–2011
nationalteam1United States
nationalcaps138
nationalgoals12
club-update18 January 2024
nationalteam-update16 September 2023
medaltemplates
::

| name = Jonathan Bornstein | image = WikiBornsteinJUL2010.jpg | caption = Bornstein with Chivas USA in 2010 | fullname = Jonathan Rey Bornstein | birth_date = | birth_place = Torrance, California, U.S. | height = | position = Left-back | currentclub = | clubnumber = | youthyears1 = 1998–2002 | youthclubs1 = Irvine Strikers | collegeyears1 = 2002–2003 | college1 = Cal Poly Pomona Broncos | collegecaps1 = 36 | collegegoals1 = 17 | collegeyears2 = 2004–2005 | college2 = UCLA Bruins | collegecaps2 = 40 | collegegoals2 = 6 | years1 = 2006–2010 | clubs1 = Chivas USA | caps1 = 123 | goals1 = 9 | years2 = 2011–2015 | clubs2 = Tigres UANL | caps2 = 9 | goals2 = 0 | years3 = 2014 | clubs3 = → Atlante (loan) | caps3 = 3 | goals3 = 0 | years4 = 2014–2015 | clubs4 = → Querétaro (loan) | caps4 = 13 | goals4 = 1 | years5 = 2015–2018 | clubs5 = Querétaro | caps5 = 81 | goals5 = 2 | years6 = 2018–2019 | clubs6 = Maccabi Netanya | caps6 = 25 | goals6 = 1 | years7 = 2019–2022 | clubs7 = Chicago Fire | caps7 = 83 | goals7 = 2 | years8 = 2023–2024 | clubs8 = Vida | caps8 = 31 | goals8 = 0 | years9 = 2024 | clubs9 = Tallahassee SC | caps9 = 1 | goals9 = 0 | nationalyears1 = 2007–2011 | nationalteam1 = United States | nationalcaps1 = 38 | nationalgoals1 = 2 | club-update = 18 January 2024 | nationalteam-update = 16 September 2023 | medaltemplates =

Jonathan Rey Bornstein (born November 7, 1984) is an American former professional soccer player who played as a left-back. He has captained and made 38 appearances for the United States national team. In addition to also playing for Chivas USA in Major League Soccer (with whom he was the 2006 MLS Rookie of the Year, an MLS Best XI, and a two-time MLS All-Star), he has played in Liga MX and in the Israeli Premier League. He won a silver medal with Team USA at the 2005 Maccabiah Games, in Israel.

Youth and college

Bornstein attended Los Alamitos High School, where he played soccer for all four years. He was MVP of the Sunset League, first-team all-county, and All-California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), and led the soccer team to a CIF Championship. He also played club soccer for Long Beach United, Beach Soccer Club, and the Irvine Strikers club team coached by Don Ebert. He won the Golden Boot Award as he led the Strikers to the US Youth Soccer 2002 Under-17 National Championship.

He started his college soccer career at Cal Poly Pomona and played there for the Cal Poly Pomona Broncos for two years. In 2002, Bornstein was California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) Freshman of the Year, first-team All-CCAA, and second-team All-Far West Region, as he led the team in scoring. In 2003, he was again first-team All-CCAA and second-team All-Far West Region, and was selected to the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) Academic All-America College Division District VIII team with a 3.30 GPA in Business Administration, as he led Cal Poly in all scoring categories. He finished his career at Cal Poly Pomona ranked second in career assists (19), third in career points (53), and fifth in career goals (19).

He then transferred to UCLA for the 2004 season as a sociology major. In 2004, Bornstein played in all of the UCLA's 20 games, with nine starts. In 2005, he started all 20 games and was named second-team All-Pac-10.

Bornstein was a teammate of Benny Feilhaber at the youth (with the Irvine Strikers), college (at UCLA, where they were roommates), and national-team level, and at the Maccabiah Games in Israel. Feilhaber said he and Bornstein "definitely had a special connection" because of their religion from the beginning of their friendship.

Club career

Chivas USA

Bornstein was selected by Chivas USA in the fourth round (37th overall) of the 2006 MLS SuperDraft. A forward in college, he was converted to a left back by Chivas coach Bob Bradley, and was his team's surprising starter at the position when the season opened. Injuries and suspensions forced Bornstein back into an attacking role for Chivas USA's June 3 match against FC Dallas, where the rookie scored his first MLS goal. He continued his fine play in the back and also contributed to the attack during the rest of the season, finishing the year with four assists and six goals, leading all rookies. He started every game in the season, and his total of 2,878 minutes played was third-highest in the league. He was rewarded for his fine form by winning the 2006 MLS Rookie of the Year Award.

In 2007, he was an MLS All-Star, and named to the MLS Best XI as one of the best 11 players in Major League Soccer. In 2008, Bornstein suffered a knee injury that affected him throughout the spring. When he came back, Chivas coach Preki began to employ him in an attacking capacity, which Bornstein trained for in his youth. He repeated as an MLS All-Star in 2008.

In summer 2008, Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv was reportedly interested in Bornstein. News stories claimed that the offer involved a transfer fee of $750,000 and would increase the player's salary five-fold to around $500,000 a season. Bornstein was apparently unenthusiastic, fearing that such a move could cost him his place in the U.S. national team.

In 2009, he was the Chivas USA Defender of the Year (2009) and captain. In five seasons with Chivas USA (2006–10), Bornstein made 123 regular season appearances (117 starts).

Liga MX

Bornstein spent the next eight seasons in Mexico's first division, Liga MX. He first played for Tigres de la UANL (2010–14). In July 2010, it was announced by Chivas USA that Bornstein would join Tigres de la UANL in January 2011, following the conclusion of the 2010 Major League Soccer season.

Bornstein was selected by Portland Timbers in the 2010 MLS Expansion Draft. In doing so, Portland retained his MLS rights should he ever return to the league. On February 13, 2013, Portland traded Bornstein's MLS rights back to Chivas USA with allocation money for midfielder Ben Zemanski.

Bornstein was transfer listed by Tigres on November 19, 2012.

He played for Atlante F.C. (2013–14) and Querétaro F.C. (2014–18). On May 24, 2015, Bornstein scored the goal that sent Querétaro F.C. to their first-ever Liga MX final. Then, on June 10, 2015, it was announced that Bornstain had signed for Querétaro on a permanent basis.

While playing in Mexico, he made 128 appearances and won the 2011–12 Liga MX championship, as well as the 2016–17 Copa MX and 2017 Supercopa MX titles.

Maccabi Netanya

In 2018, Bornstein signed with Maccabi Netanya of the Israeli Premier League ahead of the 2018–19 League campaign. Playing for Maccabi Netanya in Netanya, Israel in 2018–19, he became an Israeli citizen due to his Jewish lineage. Charles Boehm (June 28, 2020). During his time with the club, Bornstein made 36 appearances with 35 starts, totaling 3,163 minutes across all competitions.

Chicago Fire

The Chicago Fire of MLS acquired him from Maccabi Netanya on July 22, 2019. The team signed Bornstein to a contract through 2020, with a 2021 club option that the team exercised in July 2020. In 2019, he played in 11 starts in his first season with the Fire. Bornstein left Chicago at the end of the 2022 season.

International career

Bornstein has made 38 appearances for the United States national soccer team. He got his first cap, and scored his first goal on an assist from Justin Mapp, for the U.S. national team on January 20, 2007, against Denmark. As 2007 continued, Bornstein became the first choice left back for Bob Bradley. He played for the U.S. in Copa América 2007. He received his first World Cup Qualifying appearance in a start against Guatemala in the semifinal round of World Cup Qualifying. In 2007, he helped the USMNT win the CONCACAF Gold Cup, making five starts during the tournament. He featured in the Concacaf Gold Cup (2007, 2011).

In 2008, Bornstein lost his starting place to Heath Pearce and also struggled with injuries. He started the group stage matches at the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup, but was relegated back to the bench when Carlos Bocanegra returned from injury.

After the Confederations Cup, Bornstein eventually replaced Pearce as first-choice again and remained so for the rest of the qualifiers. He scored the equalizing goal in the United States' final World Cup qualifier against Costa Rica in the fifth minute of injury time. The goal meant that Honduras, when combined with their win over El Salvador, a game in which Bornstein captained the US side, qualified automatically for the 2010 World Cup. That goal resulted in Bornstein having a level of celebrity in Honduras; he was invited to Honduras by the President of the country and he received letters of thanks for years afterwards.

After sitting out the first two group-stage games for the United States in the 2010 World Cup, Bornstein started at left back against Algeria in the final group game and against Ghana in the round of 16.

Bornstein was never recalled to the squad by Bradley's successor, Jürgen Klinsmann, by Klinsmann's successor, Bruce Arena, or by Arena's successor, interim manager Dave Sarachan.

Maccabiah Games

Bornstein played in the 2005 Maccabiah Games, in Israel, representing the U.S. along with Benny Feilhaber, Kevin Friedland, Matt Reiswerg, and Leo Krupnik, winning a silver medal. He scored two goals in the team's quarterfinal win over South Africa. Because of his Jewish lineage, he had an opportunity to play in Israel and not count as a foreign player.

Personal life

Bornstein was born in Torrance, California, and later lived in Los Alamitos, California. His father is Jeff Bornstein, who is Jewish and was born in Torrance into an Orthodox family, and worked for Hostess until his death in 2014. His mother is from Mexico, and is not Jewish. Bornstein's parents divorced when he was three years old, and he lived with his father. His father's family were Romanian Jews. Bornstein grew up observing Rosh Hashanah and Passover with relatives, and said of his experience representing the U.S. in the 2005 Maccabiah Games reinforcing his Jewish identity: "I was able to explore my Jewish identity in the Old City, at Masada, at the Dead Sea." In 2006 he said: "in the past couple years, I've felt more Jewish than ever." He found faith in Christianity when he met his wife, and was baptized, while in Mexico. He told ESPN, "Just experiencing both cultures, sometimes I felt like I didn't know where I belonged. It's still a soul-searching kind of thing, trying to figure out exactly where you come from or which heritage you relate to. I still kind of feel lost even to this day, but it's something that I just deal with, and it makes me a stronger person having both of those heritages."

His brother Andrew played soccer at Cal Poly Pomona, and is now a marketing director. He has a third brother, Taylor. His wife, Juliana, is from Brazil, and he has two daughters.

Career statistics

Club

|Israeli Premier League |25||1||6||0|| colspan="2" |—||5||0||36||1 |- |rowspan="5"|Chicago Fire |2019 | rowspan="4" |Major League Soccer |11||0|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—||11||0 |- |2020 |20||1|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—||20||1 |- |2021 |30||0|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—||30||0 |- |2022 |22||1|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—|| colspan="2" |—||22||1 |- !colspan="2"|Total !83!!2!!0!!0!!0!!0!!0!!0!!83!!2 |- !colspan="3"|Career total !324!!14!!37!!0!!13!!0!!13!!0!!387!!14 |}

International

::data[format=table] | National team | Year | Apps | Goals | Total||38||2 | |---|---|---|---|---| | United States | | | | | | 2007 | 12 | 1 | | | | 2008 | 1 | 0 | | | | 2009 | 13 | 1 | | | | 2010 | 10 | 0 | | | | 2011 | 2 | 0 | | | ::

International goals

::data[format=table]

#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
01.January 20, 2007Home Depot Center, Carson, United States2 – 13–1Friendly
02.October 14, 2009RFK Stadium, Washington, United States2 – 22–22010 World Cup qualifier
::

Honors

UANL

Querétaro

United States

Individual

References

References

  1. "Jonathan Bornstein". Chicago Fire FC.
  2. (April 17, 2013). "Player Bio: Jonathan Bornstein".
  3. (July 28, 2002). "California dominates youth soccer finals".
  4. "Jonathan Bornstein". [[Chivas USA]].
  5. "Jonathan Bornstein". Chicago Fire FC.
  6. Carin Davis. (October 12, 2006). "Pro soccer rookie Bornstein gives small goals a big kick".
  7. (November 2, 2006). "Chivas USA claims two MLS awards".
  8. Connoly, Matt. (June 21, 2008). "Give & Go: Chivas USA's Jonathan Bornstein". Goal.com.
  9. לי בוץ. (August 8, 2019). "מבוי סתום למכבי בגזרת המגן השמאלי". Ynet.
  10. Zac Lee Rigg. (July 20, 2010). "Chivas USA Captain Jonathan Bornstein To Join Tigres After MLS Season".
  11. (July 19, 2010). "Bornstein to join Mexican club Tigres after 2010 season".
  12. (July 19, 2010). "Bornstein to join Tigres UANL after finishing the 2010 season with Chivas USA". CDChivasUSA.com.
  13. Jeremiah Oshan. (November 24, 2010). "MLS Expansion Draft, Analysis: Whitecaps Showed Greater Willingness To Spend". SBNation.com.
  14. (February 13, 2013). "Chivas USA trades midfielder Ben Zemanski". Chivas USA.
  15. Tom Marshall. (November 19, 2012). "American Exports: Tigres list Bornstein for transfer again". Major League Soccer.
  16. CLUB TIGRES OFICIAL. (June 10, 2015). "#OFICIAL @JonnyBornstein pasa en compra definitiva al @Club_Queretaro".
  17. (July 22, 2019). "Chicago Fire acquire 34-year-old defender Jonathan Bornstein".
  18. Tom Bogert. (July 28, 2020). "Chicago Fire FC exercise 2021 contract option of former USMNT defender Jonathan Bornstein". MLSsoccer.com.
  19. "Chicago Fire FC Announces 2022 Roster Decisions | Chicago Fire FC".
  20. Tom Bogert. (July 22, 2019). "Chicago Fire add former US international defender Jonathan Bornstein". MLSsoccer.com.
  21. (June 24, 2009). "U.S. National Team Upsets Top-Ranked Spain, 2–0; Trio of Bruins help U.S. advance to FIFA Confederations Cup final.". UCLA Bruins.
  22. [https://www.thejc.com/sport/sport-news/interview-usa-world-cup-star-jonathan-bornstein-1.16105 "Interview: USA World Cup star Jonathan Bornstein,"] ''The Jewish Chronicle'', June 10, 2010.
  23. (October 28, 2009). "Bornstein: Honduras' new hero". Yanks Abroad.
  24. Ryan Thies. (May 13, 2010). "Soccer: SoCal's Jonathan Bornstein Going International". Long Beach Post Sports.
  25. Clemente Lisi. (January 30, 2017). "Q&A with Jonathan Bornstein". US Soccer Players.
  26. (July 18, 2005). "Kirshner's U.S. Squad Wins Three Straight at 17th Maccabiah Games".
  27. Kaplan, Ron. (2015). "The Jewish Olympics: The History of the Maccabiah Games". Skyhorse Publishing.
  28. Brian Sciaretta. (June 12, 2018). "ASN: After seven years in Mexico Bornstein heads to Israel with ambitious goals".
  29. Nick Green. (October 18, 2010). "Chivas USA's Bornstein gets one final home game". Daily News.
  30. (June 18, 2010). "Tribal Members Jonathan Bornstein, Benny Feilhaber, and Jonathan Spector Play for Team USA in World Cup". Israel Jewish News.
  31. (February 8, 2007). "Cheering on the home team". Orange County Register.
  32. Alexandra Baird. (June 24, 2010). "Los Alamitos family looking forward to seeing son, brother in World Cup". Long Beach Press Telegram.
  33. (June 12, 2014). "Who knew? 10 Jews and the World Cup". The Jewish Chronicle.
  34. "World Cup / Meet America's Jewish players".
  35. Wechsler, Bob. (2008). "Day by Day in Jewish Sports History". KTAV Publishing House, Inc..
  36. Seth Rogovoy. (June 13, 2018). "The Secret Jewish History Of The World Cup".
  37. Carlisle, Jeff. "Bornstein fashions a new identity". ESPN Soccernet.
  38. Sandalow, Brian. (July 27, 2019). "Jonathan Bornstein ready for new challenge with Fire".
  39. {{Soccerway. jonathan-bornstein/6906
  40. "JONATHAN BORNSTEIN; Soccer – 2008".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

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