He joined Bahraini club Al-Ahli Manama in 2020 before returning to French football with Bourg-en-Bresse, and spent the 2021–22 season with Al-Kawkab of the Saudi First Division League.
A few days prior, Julienne and two other 13-year-olds left Sarcelles to join the centre de formation at ESTAC Troyes, some 180 kilometres (110 miles) distant.
[2] Julienne made a few appearances for Rennes' reserve team in the Championnat de France Amateur (CFA) in 2008–09 and was a regular in the following two seasons.
[4] Head coach Frédéric Antonetti included him among the substitutes for the first time in October 2010, for the Ligue 1 visit to Lens,[6] and he signed his first professional contract, of two-and-a-half years, in December.
[9][10] Advised by former team-mate Abdoul Camara that it was a good place to come, Julienne signed on loan to Rennes' new partner club, Vannes of the third-tier Championnat National, where he expected to bounce back.
[13] Coach Stéphane Le Mignan pointed out that the club had several similar players already, but was delighted at his arrival and saw no reason why he shouldn't play.
[14] Julienne made only nineteen league appearances, of which just seven were in the starting eleven;[10] he said later that when he arrived, the team was already settled and he was competing for one position with the in-form Mohamed Youssouf.
After playing in Ligue 1 as a 19-year-old, he was disappointed with the lack of regular football in his first loan spell and with the low level of his next, where he had arrived after the start of the season with the team already settled.
[9] Julienne was contacted in 2017 by Grégory Poirier, manager of Marseille-based fifth-tier club Endoume, who helped him accept what happened in his past career and start preparing both mentally and physically for a future in the game.
[22] After a season in which he scored ten goals and made eight assists in all competitions,[23] Lyon-Duchère were keen to retain Julienne's services, but the lure of playing at a higher level was too strong.
[25] He went straight into the starting eleven for Le Mans' opening fixture, a 2–1 defeat at home to Lens,[10] but never established himself as a regular in the side: he played in ten league matches, mainly as a substitute and without scoring, and twice in the Coupe de France.