Riccardo Scimeca Explained

Riccardo Scimeca
Fullname:Riccardo Scimeca
Birth Date:13 June 1975
Birth Place:Leamington Spa, England
Youthyears1:1990–1995
Youthclubs1:Aston Villa
Years1:1995–1999
Years2:1999–2003
Years3:2003–2004
Years4:2004–2006
Years5:2006
Years6:2006–2009
Clubs1:Aston Villa
Clubs2:Nottingham Forest
Clubs3:Leicester City
Clubs4:West Bromwich Albion
Clubs5:Cardiff City (loan)
Clubs6:Cardiff City
Caps1:73
Caps2:151
Caps3:29
Caps4:35
Caps5:1
Caps6:69
Totalcaps:358
Goals1:2
Goals2:7
Goals3:1
Goals4:0
Goals5:0
Goals6:6
Totalgoals:16
Nationalyears1:1995–1997
Nationalteam1:England U21
Nationalcaps1:9
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalyears2:1998
Nationalteam2:England B
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0
Ntupdate:11:15, 28 March 2023 (UTC)

Riccardo Scimeca (born 13 June 1975) is an English football coach and professional footballer.

He who played as a defender notably in the Premier League for Aston Villa, Leicester City and West Bromwich Albion. He also played in the Football League for both Nottingham Forest and Cardiff City in a career spanning 16 years, making over 400 appearances. A product of the Aston Villa Academy, he captained the England U21s and made a single appearance for the England B side. Although working away from football since his retirement, he returned to the sport in 2015 as a youth team coach for Solihull Moors.

Career

Aston Villa and England U21

In Leamington Spa where he was born he is remembered playing for South Leam Gems as a striker, regularly scoring at ease and highlighted by local newspaper reports before Scimeca started his advanced career at Aston Villa, coming through the club's youth system, as a central defender and was largely a squad player until his move to Nottingham Forest in 1999 for £2.5 million.[1] During this time he was a regular in the England U21 side, captaining the side for the first time against Italy in October 1997.[2] [3]

Nottingham Forest

He spent four seasons at the City Ground, and took over as captain when Steve Chettle left in his first season. However Chris Bart-Williams was appointed captain the following season. Scimeca was consistent and reliable in his spell at Forest, playing in various positions. He featured regularly in central defence and midfield, but also had spells at right back and right-midfield. He scored 4 goals in his second season. In the 2001–02 season he formed a solid defensive partnership with Jon Olav Hjelde. In 2002–03, his last season, in which Forest made the play-offs, Paul Hart deployed him in a defensive midfield role within a diamond 4–4–2 formation. He scored 4 goals during this season, and played a prominent role throughout his four years at the club.

Leicester City and West Bromwich Albion

He moved on to Leicester City in 2003,[4] on a free transfer after failing to agree a new deal. At Leicester he scored once in a 4–3 defeat to Wolverhampton Wanderers on 25 October 2003.[5] Scimeca then moved to West Bromwich Albion a year later by activating a get-out clause in his contract which allowed him to leave Leicester,[6] before his transfer to Cardiff City in early 2006.[7]

Cardiff City

In his first year at Ninian Park, Scimeca became an important part of the Cardiff side under manager Dave Jones and also developed something of a goal scoring touch which he admitted surprised him.[8] At the beginning of the 2007–08 season he was sidelined with a groin injury and started the season on the treatment table. He attempted a comeback in August in a reserve match against Plymouth Argyle but only lasted twelve minutes after suffering a recurrence of the injury.[9] He again came close to a return in December 2007 after having an operation on his groin injury but suffered another setback after he contracted the MRSA bacteria after the incision failed to fully heal.[10] He made his long-awaited return for Cardiff on 19 February 2008, by playing for 45 minutes against Newport County in the FAW Premier Cup, his first appearance for the Bluebirds for nearly a year. He went on to make a total of 11 appearances in all competitions during the season, mostly as a substitute to return to match fitness.

The start of the 2008–09 season looked to be more promising for Scimeca as he began the season fully fit and an injury to Gavin Rae saw him back into the first team early in the year, but he went on to suffer another injury setback after seriously damaging ankle ligaments during a 2–1 victory over Milton Keynes Dons in the second round of the Football League Cup.[11] He returned to the squad for the first time on 22 November 2008 when he was named on the bench for a 2–1 defeat against Plymouth Argyle but did not make an appearance until the following week when he came on as a late substitute in the South Wales derby against Swansea City on 6 December. Despite his return, he made just two more appearances for the side during the rest of the season. In the 2009–10 season Scimeca made his 400th career appearance against his former club Aston Villa on 23 September 2009 in the League Cup. He returned to the starting line-up on 5 December in a 1–0 win over Preston North End and played in the following game against his former club West Bromwich Albion, where Cardiff won 2–0. After suffering a recurrence of a groin injury, Scimeca announced his retirement as a player on 17 December 2009.[12]

Personal life

Scimeca joined the veteran's team of his home town club, Leamington, in the Central Warwickshire Over 35's Premier League in 2013. In April 2015 he joined Solihull Moors in a role coaching youth players.[13]

Scimeca now works as a property investor.[14]

Career statistics

As of 17 December 2009

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Aston Villa1995–96Premier League1702010200
1996–97Premier League1703010210
1997–98Premier League210201040260
1998–99Premier League182201010222
Total732804050902
Nottingham Forest1999–2000First Division3803040450
2000–01First Division3640000364
2001–02First Division3701020400
2002–03First Division4231021454
Total153750811668
Leicester City2003–04Premier League2911010311
West Bromwich Albion2004–05Premier League3302010360
2005–06Premier League20002040
Total3502030400
Cardiff City2005–06Championship181000000181
2006–07Championship355200000375
2007–08Championship90100010110
2008–09Championship4010100060
2009–10Championship4000200060
Total706403010786
Career total3601620019120040517

Honours

Cardiff City

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Scimeca eyes Forest exit . . 21 June 2003 . 18 November 2008.
  2. Web site: 1997-02-12 . Football: Scimeca's incentive . 2023-03-28 . The Independent . en.
  3. Web site: England Matches – Under-21's 1990-2000 . 2023-03-28 . englandfootballonline.com.
  4. News: 24 June 2003. Foxes snap up Scimeca. BBC Sport. 1 May 2007.
  5. Web site: Wolves comeback stuns Leicester. BBC. 25 October 2003 . 22 February 2010.
  6. News: 18 May 2004. Scimeca joins West Brom. BBC Sport. 1 May 2007.
  7. News: 13 January 2006 . Scimeca heads to Wales . Sky Sports . 11 May 2007.
  8. News: Scimeca amazed by scoring touch . BBC Sport . 2 October 2006 . 2 October 2007.
  9. News: Cardiff suffer double injury blow . BBC Sport . 7 September 2007 . 1 October 2007.
  10. Web site: My brush with the MRSA bug – Scimeca . . 16 January 2008 . 16 January 2008.
  11. Web site: Jones to chase Prem replacement for Scimeca . South Wales Echo . 28 August 2008 . 28 August 2008.
  12. Web site: Riccy Scimeca retires . cardiffcityfc.co.uk . 17 December 2009 . 10 September 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120225000554/http://www.cardiffcityfc.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10335~1907728,00.html . 25 February 2012 .
  13. Web site: Former Villa star Scimeca joins youth coaching set-up. 28 March 2019.
  14. Web site: Riccardo Scimeca – Kenilworth – Property Investor.