Hámilton Ricard

Hámilton Ricard Cuesta (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈxamilton ˈrikaɾð ˈkwesta]; born 12 January 1974) is a Colombian former footballer who played as a striker. He played for clubs in 10 different countries over the course of his career, including Colombian sides Deportivo Cali, Cortuluá, Independiente Santa Fe and Deportes Quindío, English club Middlesbrough, CSKA Sofia in Bulgaria, Emelec in Ecuador, Japanese side Shonan Bellmare, APOEL in Cyprus, Spanish side Numancia, Uruguayan club Danubio and Concepción in Chile.

Hámilton Ricard
Personal information
Full nameHámilton Ricard Cuesta
Date of birth (1974-01-12) 12 January 1974 (age 50)
Place of birthQuibdó, Chocó, Colombia
Height1.84 m (6 ft 12 in)
Position(s)Forward
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1992–1997Deportivo Cali61(92)
1997–2001Middlesbrough115(33)
2001–2002CSKA Sofia9(1)
2002Independiente Santa Fe0(0)
2003Shonan Bellmare9(1)
2003Cortuluá3(0)
2004Emelec25(17)
2004APOEL15(6)
2005Deportivo Cali6(0)
2005Numancia16(2)
2006–2007Danubio25(11)
2007–2008Shanghai Shenhua42(14)
2009–2010Danubio10(3)
2010–2011Concepción16(5)
2011–2012Deportes Quindío30(10)
2012–2013Cortuluá11(0)
International career
1995–2000Colombia27(5)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Career

Ricard was signed for Middlesbrough by manager Bryan Robson for a fee of £2 million in 1998. He signed his signature on a napkin because Middlesbrough had no documents.[1] Over a four-year Middlesbrough career, he scored 33 goals in 115 appearances. He was twice Middlesbrough's top scorer. When Steve McClaren took over the reins, Ricard was deemed surplus to requirements and allowed to move to CSKA Sofia on a free transfer.[2] After one season in Bulgaria, Ricard moved to Japan, where he joined Second Division side Shonan Bellmare.[3]

Since leaving Middlesbrough, Ricard courted controversy both on and off the pitch. In 2002, he was involved in a car accident that killed a passenger,[4] and was banned from football for 12 months for attacking a referee and making obscene gestures to the crowd while playing for Guayaquil side Emelec. The ban was reduced on appeal, and since then, Ricard attempted to move back to Europe to rejuvenate his career. He briefly played in Cyprus for APOEL, before signing a year's deal with Numancia for the 2005–06 season. He played 16 times, scoring two goals.

After he moved to Danubio in Uruguay where he scored 12 goals and was voted as one of their best players of the decade.[5] In June 2007 he trialled with Chinese Super League team Shanghai Shenhua, subsequently signing a contract with the Chinese club.

Ricard has represented Colombia 27 times, scoring five goals.

Club statistics

Club performanceLeague
SeasonClubLeagueAppsGoals
ColombiaLeague
1993Deportivo CaliPrimera A155
19944617
1995
199636
1997
EnglandLeague
1997–98MiddlesbroughFirst Division92
1998–99Premier League3615
1999–20003412
2000–01274
2001–0290
BulgariaLeague
2001–02CSKA SofiaA PFG91
ColombiaLeague
2002Independiente Santa FéPrimera A00
JapanLeague
2003Shonan BellmareJ2 League122
ColombiaLeague
2003CortuluáPrimera A30
EcuadorLeague
2004EmelecSerie A2517
CyprusLeague
2004–05APOELFirst Division156
ColombiaLeague
2005Deportivo CaliPrimera A60
SpainLeague
2005–06NumanciaSegunda División162
UruguayLeague
2006–07DanubioPrimera División2511
China PRLeague
2007Shanghai ShenhuaSuper League155
2008279
UruguayLeague
2009–10DanubioPrimera División103
CountryColombia7058
England11533
Bulgaria91
Japan122
Ecuador2517
Cyprus156
Spain162
Uruguay3514
China PR279
Total324106

Personal life

Ricard has a daughter.[6]

International goals

#DateStadiumRivalGoalResultCompetition
18-6-1997Estadio Centenario, Montevideo  Uruguay1-11-11998 FIFA World Cup qualification
213-6-1997Estadio Ramón Tahuichi Aguilera, Santa Cruz  Mexico1-21-2Copa América 1997
35-7-1997Nacional de Chile, Chile  Chile1-31-41998 FIFA World Cup qualification
47-7-1999Estadio Feliciano Cáceres  Ecuador2-02-1Copa América 1999

Honours

Middlesbrough

Shanghai Shenhua

References