Stefano Di Fiordo Explained

Stefano Di Fiordo
Birth Date:5 February 1980
Birth Place:Civitavecchia, Italy
Height:1.82 m
Position:Central Defender
Youthyears1:1998–1999
Youthclubs1:Lazio
Years1:1999–2000
Caps1:0
Goals1:0
Years2:2000
Clubs2:Padova (loan)
Caps2:4
Goals2:0
Years3:2000–2002
Caps3:60
Goals3:3
Years4:2002–2003
Caps4:0
Goals4:0
Years5:2002–2003
Clubs5:Rimini (loan)
Caps5:21
Goals5:0
Years6:2003–2006
Caps6:46
Goals6:0
Years7:2006–2008
Caps7:40
Goals7:0
Years8:2008–2010
Caps8:58
Goals8:0
Years9:2010–2011
Caps9:23
Goals9:0
Years10:2011–2016
Caps10:47
Goals10:0

Stefano Di Fiordo (born 5 February 1980) is an Italian former footballer who played as a defender.

Club career

Early career

Born in Civitavecchia, the Province of Rome, Di Fiordo started his career at S.S. Lazio. In the summer of 1999, he joined Piacenza along with Stefano Morrone and Flavio Roma as part of Simone Inzaghi's deal. He then left for Padova on loan, then for Sora in a co-ownership deal. (i.e. 50% rights) He won promotion playoffs to Serie C1 in 2001.

Roma & false accounting scandal

On 26 June 2002, he was bought back by Piacenza but on 29 June (one day before the end of 2001–02 fiscal year) left for Roma along with "team-mate" Davide Bagnacani, for Roma's Primavera youth team keeper Simone Paoletti and forward Alfredo Vitolo,[1] in another co-ownership deal for a total cost €4.5M.[2] He was immediately loaned to Serie C2 side Rimini.[3] Roma also swapped youth players with other teams before the closure of the fiscal year and created a profit of €55 million by selling youth players, but almost all the "money" were in terms of youth players' registration rights from other teams.[4] In June 2003, Di Fiordo and Bagnacani were bought back by Piacenza in undisclosed fees, and co-currently Roma bought back Paoletti and Vitolo for just €1,000.[5] On 30 October 2007, Roma was fined €60,000 by Criminal Court of Rome for irregularity on youth player transfers.[6]

Rimini

At Rimini Di Fiordo played 4 seasons. In the first season, he played 21 times in Serie C2 Group B runner-up and won promotion playoffs. After Di Fiordo was bought back by Piacenza in June 2003, he was signed by Rimini in co-ownership deal in July.[7] Di Fiordo was between regular starter and substitute player in 2003–04 Serie C1 season but played more regularly for Rimini 2004–05 season, which Rimini won the champion in Group B. He just played 9 times in his first Serie B season.

Serie C2

Di Fiordo then left for Benevento,[8] played 40 times in 2 seasons both as starter and substitutes. After Benevento won Serie C2 champion, he left for Lega Pro Seconda Divisione (ex-Serie C2) side Cisco Roma[9] which he became the regular starter.

Honours

Rimini

2004–05

Benevento

2007–08

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Primavera Squad 2000/2001. 5 April 2010. Channel 2. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080509183304/http://www.channel2.co.uk/roma/01-02/primavera.html. 9 May 2008. dmy-all.
  2. News: La Roma ha un buco nel bilancio? Per coprirlo basta vendere 26 sconosciuti. 7 November 2002. 5 April 2010. Corriere della Sera. Vittorio Malagutti. Italian.
  3. News: Arriva in biancorosso Stefano DI FIORDO. 12 August 2002. 5 April 2010. Rimini Calcio FC. Italian.
  4. News: Calciopoli: pm, falsi i bilanci di Roma e Lazio. 22 May 2006. 5 April 2010. Corriere della Sera. Italian.
  5. News: Chiusura delle Compartecipazioni. 27 June 2003. 29 March 2011. AS Roma. Italian. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110810133700/http://109.75.174.100/~asroma/downloads/corporate_investor/1291135090.pdf. 10 August 2011. dmy-all.
  6. News: Doping amministrativo Roma colpevole, Lazio no. 30 October 2007. 5 April 2010. La Gazzetta dello Sport. Italian.
  7. News: DI FIORDO ancora al centro della difesa biancorossa. 8 July 2003. 5 April 2010. Rimini Calcio FC. Italian.
  8. News: UFFICIALE: Di Fiordo al Benevento. 5 September 2006. 5 April 2010. Tutto Mercato Web. Italian. Christian Seu.
  9. News: UFFICIALE: Di Fiordo è della Cisco Roma. 22 August 2008. 5 April 2010. Tutto Mercato Web. Italian. Stefano Sica.