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17 Facts About Pablo Mills

1.

Pablo Simeon Ishmael Mills was born on 27 May 1984 and is an English former footballer.

2.

Pablo Mills went on to appear in 64 first team games in league and cup for the Rams and during this time had loan spells at Milton Keynes Dons and Walsall.

3.

Pablo Mills joined Rotherham United during the summer of 2006, adding strength to the centre of defence.

4.

Pablo Mills returned to the Rotherham squad after his loan spell ended and signed a new two-year deal at Millmoor in May 2008.

5.

Pablo Mills says he was sick after the challenge and insisted there was no malice in the challenge.

6.

Pablo Mills was released by Rotherham after the League Two Play-off Final defeat at Wembley in May 2010.

7.

Pablo Mills was named Man of the Match in Crawley's FA Cup fifth round loss to Manchester United at Old Trafford, on 19 February 2011.

8.

Pablo Mills described his release as 'amicable' and wished the club well for the future.

9.

In July 2012, Pablo Mills was linked with French Ligue 2 side Boulogne after the club invited Pablo Mills for negotiations.

10.

However, Pablo Mills rejected a chance to move to France after deciding to stay in the UK for family reasons.

11.

Pablo Mills joined Rotherham United on 30 August 2013 after a successful trial with the club.

12.

On 3 January 2014, Pablo Mills signed for Bury after being released by Rotherham United.

13.

On 8 August 2016, Pablo Mills signed for Northern Premier League side Mickleover Sports.

14.

On 27 March 2012, Pablo Mills was involved in a post-match fight against Bradford City and was shown a red card along with four other players.

15.

Pablo Mills has represented his country at youth level, winning caps for the England under 16, under-18, and under-19 teams.

16.

On 7 September 2006, Pablo Mills was charged with burglary and causing criminal damage at a property in Derby on 1 July 2006.

17.

The burglary charge was later dropped, but Pablo Mills pleaded guilty to causing criminal damage, and was handed a community order for the offence.