Rafael Scheidt Explained

Rafael Scheidt
Fullname:Rafael Scheidt
Birth Date:10 February 1976
Birth Place:Porto Alegre, Brazil
Height:1.83 m
Position:Defender
Youthclubs1:Grêmio
Years1:1995–1996
Years2:1997
Years3:1998–1999
Years4:1999–2002
Years5:2000–2002
Years6:2003–2004
Years7:2004–2006
Years8:2007–2008
Clubs1:Grêmio
Clubs2:Kawasaki Frontale
Clubs3:Grêmio
Clubs4:Celtic
Clubs5:Corinthians (loan)
Clubs6:Atlético Mineiro
Clubs7:Botafogo
Clubs8:Shaanxi Baorong
Caps1:7
Caps2:26
Caps3:39
Caps4:3
Caps5:35
Caps6:35
Caps7:73
Caps8:38
Goals1:0
Goals2:5
Goals3:2
Goals4:0
Goals5:1
Goals6:2
Goals7:1
Goals8:2
Totalcaps:256
Totalgoals:13
Nationalyears1:1999
Nationalteam1:Brazil
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:0
Pcupdate:January 3, 2008
Ntupdate:January 3, 2008

Rafael Felipe Scheidt (born February 10, 1976, in Porto Alegre, Brazil) is a retired Brazilian footballer. He was signed by Kenny Dalglish, manager of Celtic from Grêmio for £5 million and failed to make an impact. Plagued by injury and finding it hard to settle he started one game in the 1999–00 season against St Johnstone[1] and was let out on loan to Corinthians by new manager Martin O'Neill after just five appearances. Indeed, Scheidt later admitted that following an unimpressive showing in a pre-season friendly O'Neill had told him "I like footballers who are not like you", further adding "I like footballers who play well."[2] The Guardian newspaper called Scheidt the second worst transfer in the history of football, behind Steve Daley, in an article published in 2001.[3]

Scheidt's loan spell at Corinthians came to an end in 2002, and he maintained his hope of making it at Celtic, informing the Sunday Herald that "I want this year to be known as the Scheidt year". However, he no longer met UK work permit requirements and Celtic paid off the remainder of his contract.[4] He then returned to Brazil, joining Atlético Mineiro. A year later he signed for Botafogo, before being released by them in 2006.

Scheidt won three caps for Brazil in 1999 shortly prior to his transfer to Celtic. These games were friendlies and rumours later surfaced that Brazilian based players at that time were being handed caps in return for sweeteners from their clubs wanting to sell them to European clubs for large transfer fees.

Notes and References

  1. News: Viduka and Burchill banish Saints. BBC. 11 March 2000 . 25 May 2012.
  2. Web site: When Saturday Comes - Rafael Scheidt. Dan. Brennan. www.wsc.co.uk.
  3. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,6903,543912,00.html The 10 biggest wastes of money in football history
  4. News: Permit hitch for Scheidt return. BBC. 26 December 2002 . 10 June 2020.