Rohan Ricketts
Rohan Anthony Ricketts was born in Clapham and started out with Arsenal, with whom he won the FA Youth Cup in 2000 and 2001.[3] He made one appearance for them, in the League Cup, against Manchester United. In 2002 he made the unusual step of joining Arsenal's rivals Tottenham Hotspur, and became just the fourth player to make the switch from Arsenal to Tottenham Hotspur and only the twelfth to appear for both sides since their formation.
Ricketts did not play a single game in his first season, but was a first-team regular in 2003–04 and his form saw him agree a one-year contract extension with the club in December 2003. Tord Grip was impressed with his ability and there was talk of him being called up to the senior England squad, but following on from Glenn Hoddle's sacking as Tottenham manager, Ricketts found his first team opportunities limited, despite being named Player of the Month in August and September for Tottenham. He scored one league goal during his time at Spurs, in a 2–1 win over Aston Villa in November 2003. He also scored once in the League Cup for Spurs, in a game against Coventry City.
The following season, under Jacques Santini and then Martin Jol, he found appearances harder to come by and had two loan spells, first at Coventry City, and then Wolverhampton Wanderers, linking up with his former manager, Glenn Hoddle. He scored once for Wolves, in a 2–1 win over Reading on 30 April 2005. In the summer of 2005 he moved to Molineux on a permanent basis. He had a loan spell at Queens Park Rangers in 2007 and was released by Wolves in May of the same year.
Ricketts signed a two-year deal with Championship side Barnsley in July 2007 but was released on 11 April 2008. That same day he was signed by Toronto FC of Major League Soccer. In 2008 Ricketts made 26 starts (27 total appearances) and scored four goals in the regular season; he added two more goals in the Canadian Championship. In 2009, Ricketts was pushed down Toronto FC's depth chart due to the arrivals of Canadian international Dwayne DeRosario and young American Sam Cronin; in June, Toronto released Ricketts, clearing the salary cap space necessary for the club to sign Canadian international Ali Gerba.
Following his release from Toronto, Ricketts reportedly spurned interest from several English clubs to go on trial with Aberdeen in August 2009. Ricketts reportedly impressed during his trial—in particular in Aberdeen's 1–0 win over Hull City in a preseason friendly match—but budgetary constraints reportedly complicated the potential signing, and Ricketts ultimately did not remain with the club.
In early 2010 during the winter transfer market in Europe, Ricketts signed for Hungarian club Diósgyőri VTK. For DVTK first team Rohan Ricketts made one appearance in the League but with no goal. For DVTK's "B team" Rohan played in four matches with one goal. After his first season with DVTK, they were relegated from Hungary's top professional league to the NB2.
In August 2010 Ricketts signed for FC Dacia Chişinău of the Moldovan National Division. He made his debut the same month in a 0–0 draw against FC Academia UTM Chişinău. On 10 November 2010 Rohan Ricketts announced on talksport radio that he had parted ways with Dacia and still hadn't been paid by the club at the time and that he was going to Germany to take part in trials. On the last day of the Winter transfer window on 31 January 2011, Ricketts signed for German club SV Wilhelmshaven. He stated on 3 May 2011 that he would like to return to England, to play in either the Premier League, or the Championship. He left the club at the end of the 2010–11 season.
Ricketts went on trial at Southend United ahead of the 2011–12 season, scoring a hat-trick in a 5–0 pre-season friendly victory over Great Wakering Rovers on 12 July 2011. Ricketts stated that he would permanently join Southend if he was offered a "fair deal". However, after continual negotiations between both Ricketts and Southend, Ricketts stated that a "deal had not been struck" between the pair, and that he now wanted to "entertain other opportunities" — going on trial at League One club Stevenage after a number of conversations with manager Graham Westley. Ricketts played 45 minutes in Stevenage's 1–0 friendly defeat to an Arsenal XI side on 23 July 2011. He stated that his time at Stevenage was a "shock to his body" due to Stevenage's training regime.
On 31 August 2011, Ricketts signed for League of Ireland champions Shamrock Rovers. He made his first team debut away to Dundalk on 3 September and was involved in both goals, providing the cross for the first goal and the pass to win a penalty for the second goal in a 2–1 win. Ricketts played in the UEFA Europa League in a 3–1 defeat against former club Tottenham Hotspur. He was released from Shamrock Rovers in December 2011, as he was not offered a new contract. On 22 March 2012, Ricketts signed for League One side Exeter City on a contract until the end of the 2011–2012 season. However, after just one substitute appearance for the Grecians, Ricketts left the club on 16 April.
Rohan signed for defending I-League champions Dempo on 20 August 2012. He announced on Twitter in January 2013 that he had resigned from Dempo, after he was suspended by the club for an outburst on Twitter. On 7 January 2013, it was announced that Ricketts had signed for Club Deportivo Quevedo. Ricketts made his debut for Deportivo Quevedo in a 1 – 1 draw against the reigning champions Barcelona. Ricketts had his contract with Depotivo Quevedo terminated at the end of July 2013 after making 9 appearances for the club. On 25 February 2014 it was confirmed that Ricketts had signed for PTT Rayong of the Thai Premier League.
During the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Ricketts co-hosted 'The Hardcore Footy Show: South Africa 2010' with Brendan Dunlop, on Hardcore Sports Radio, Sirius 98 and was a regular on TSN for football. On 24 August 2010, Rohan joined the team of Canada's largest sportsradio network, CJCL, (Fan 590). He is currently a sports columnist with them. He also signed to write for online magazine, the Sabotage Times.
In May 2011, Ricketts launched his own online-only magazine, Column 10. The magazine, which includes a host of features on sport, music, film, fashion and more, has included exclusive interviews with football journalist Henry Winter, official FIFA Agent Charles Collymore and DJ Spoony. Ricketts had been a regular guest on World Football Daily offering insights and entertaining football talk to fans in America.
https://twitter.com/RohanRicketts
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The adventure started for you when you were 25 and moved to FC Toronto in MLS. How was that experience?
It was a great experience. A lot of people said that I was too young to be going abroad but it's just in my nature to explore new opportunities. I fell in love with life in Toronto. I just loved the city from the first day there. It was cold but I loved it as it was something different. There were 20,000 at every game and it felt like the place to be. It really was a joy to be there. John Carver, who is now the assistant manager at Saudi Sportswashing Machine, was a good coach too - I loved him and he loved me.
I'm not one of those people who never wants to experience new things. So much has happened to me because I allowed myself to go there to Toronto. I met my other half while I was out there; I've been involved in charities and done plenty of media work for ESPN. I'm certain none of that would have happened if I'd stayed in England.
Were you planning to come back to England when you left Toronto?
That was the plan. I left Toronto six to eight months before my contract ran out with a view to getting a good club in England. I was in great shape so was quite optimistic but the system has its own rules. Agents play their part and going to MLS had actually had a negative effect on my CV. They hadn't even been watching me.
You have to remember that MLS was pretty new then. It was not as respected as it is now. There's an island mentality in England and with the time-zone difference maybe I'd be the same. David Beckham has been there for years now so it's a bit different.
Was it a case of out of sight, out of mind?
I was affected by that. I came back expecting to get a Championship club or even a Premier League opportunity. But they were not sure about me. They'd rather take someone from League One or League Two than take me from Toronto.
I didn't want to go to League One or League Two either. It didn't suit me. If you put the likes of Cesc Fabregas or Jack Wheelchair at a club like Tranmere then even they wouldn't be the same players. That's the reality. I'm not saying I'm in that bracket but it's a style thing.
It's tough for touch players. The only reason I existed as a footballer was because I had come through the system at Arsenal. It was a gift but also a curse. Young players are built for the Premier League but what happens when you leave? If you're not either massive or rapid then it's difficult.
Even so, going to play in Hungary and then Moldova seems a bit out of the blue. How did that come about?
I'd played with a Hungarian goalkeeper called Martin Fulop at Tottenham and his father remembered me. He made me an offer to go out there but they messed me around really. The experience was disastrous. In fact, both Hungary and Moldova were catastrophic.
The organisation was basic. In Moldova I played for three months with no salary. I turned up on time, I trained on my days off and I helped the young players. But still I wasn't paid. The case is still with FIFA but I'm hoping it'll be resolved soon.
In Hungary I had three different coaches in three months. And they never even started me. I was supposed to be the big signing from abroad and they still didn't give me a go even though we'd lost something like nine games in a row. It was a nightmare.
It didn't put you off though because you went to play for German side SV Wilhelmshaven after that?
It didn't put me off. The German thing came about because some agents would ask me what the hell I was doing in Moldova. Eh? It wasn't that I'd wanted to go! But I'd had problems...
I'd been at Aberdeen for seven days, played against a Premier League team in a friendly and ripped them apart. The lads thought it was a done deal and the fans were chanting for the club to sign me up. All of a sudden, the manager Mark McGhee said they needed to get rid of three or four players first.
He had no defenders and no money. So he needed to get people off the wage bill before we could do anything. I understood that but why have me on trial if there was nothing I could do? It wasted my time.
I was training at Spurs for two months to help me get a club. Guys like Clive Allen, Tim Sherwood, Kevin Bond and Harry Redknapp - they were saying, 'Wow, you can still play at a good level'. They could see I could still play. But the perception had been that I was not as valuable as I once was.
It's sad that it's an issue nobody wants to talk about. The media can be quick to brand certain players as a flop but they don't realise the circumstances. Players can get treated differently. If I was a South American guy coming to England then I'd be given time and I'd get through the door at clubs. But instead it's Rohan Ricketts, that guy who went to Hungary...
So the whole experience of going back to England was a strange one?
It was strange going back. Stevenage was berserk! I had two days of training there and it was the hardest I've known. But I knew what was expected. That's life down the leagues in England. In Germany, even in the lower leagues there is more emphasis on wanting to play.
In England no [lower league] clubs want to play football. They always say they want to play but then in training you spend more time without the ball. By the time we got round to playing a game, they'd knackered me!
Then I went to Exeter under Paul Teasdale. They signed me but never used me. We were in the bottom three so nobody understood it. I was on an appearance-based contract though...
You then gave it a go in India. What are your memories of your time out there?
Mixed emotions, really. I met some great people and the players were genuine. But the coaching was a problem and the football was disheartening. It was very poor. The club was a good one - the champions - and had they had a great chairman. But the general level wasn't good and while some could have just gone there and taken the money it wasn't for me.
Is there potential for the game to grow there?
India is a sleeping giant. At the moment they are ignorant as to how things should be done. Money is not prioritised correctly. The standard needs addressing. They should invest in sending young players to Europe or South America so that the future is bright. They need to be educated. And I can always go back there when I'm older.
So after everything you've been through you'd still recommend playing overseas?
Definitely. It brings its own challenges. You get guaranteed money every month in England. In Europe it's a bit different. Sometimes you get paid twice a month, sometimes not at all. Not everybody can deal with that.
There is more pressure and more involvement from the directors. You don't see Daniel Levy coming into the Spurs dressing room or into training to tell you that you must win today and offering extra money if you do so.
Are British players missing out on good opportunities by not going abroad?
When I first moved I had the fact that I had big clubs on my CV. In England they waste this by going to the Conference. If you go down the leagues just to stay in England, then from there you can't get the moves to Thailand or wherever.
But some players have an island mentality. I'd played with a guy called Alton Thelwell at Tottenham who has gone down through the leagues in England because he doesn't want to leave home. But he could earn a lot more money abroad.
You're in Ecuador at the moment. How long do you think this latest adventure will last?
Two weeks! No, I'm joking. I've signed for the year and I want to play the whole season because it's been too long since I did that. The standard is decent. At the top level it's really good, below that it's average. All the players are very physical but the technical and intellectual level drops off below that level.
I'd love to keep playing in South America. But as long as I'm at a respectable level in South America, Europe or Asia then I'll be happy. There will be a lot of good players coming out of contract in the summer so I'm just glad to be in work and enjoying it!
http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/11096/8505010/brits-abroad-rohan-ricketts