[6] Jůza put up similar results in 2006 and 2007, playing two Pro Tours both years, making his country's national team in 2006, and qualifying for Worlds as the alternate in 2007.
[7] Jůza rounded out the season with a 50th-place finish at the World Championship to earn level 7 standing in the Pro Players Club.
[8] After his breakout season, Jůza very much adopted the Pro Tour lifestyle, playing fourteen of nineteen Grand Prix in 2009.
Over the course of the year, he reached top eight of Grand Prix in Denver, Kobe, Santiago, and Hiroshima.
His win in Hiroshima made Jůza the first European to win a Grand Prix in Japan, and he joined Raphaël Lévy, Shuhei Nakamura, and Alex Shvartsman as the fourth player to have won Grand Prix in Europe, North America, and Asia.
[13] He succeeded in doing so by finishing 11th,[14] and reached the top level in the Pro Players Club for the sixth season in a row.
In the 2014–15 season, despite finishing in the top eight of four Grand Prix events (Strasbourg, Manila, Mexico City, Seville), Jůza failed to attain Platinum status.