Vieira retires to take up new City post
France World Cup-winner Patrick Vieira has retired as a player to
take up a new role of football development executive at current club
Manchester City, the English Premier League side said Thursday.
Born in Senegal the 35-year-old midfielder won three Premier League
titles with Arsenal and four FA Cups before adding another FA Cup with
City as the club ended their 35-year-wait for silverware by beating
Stoke in last season's final.
He also won 107 caps for France and was a member of their 1998 World
Cup winning side.
"This role is a fantastic new challenge for me and I am very grateful
to Manchester City for offering me this opportunity," Vieira, who also
won the European Championship with France in 2000, said in a City
statement.
"I have a lot to learn about the non-playing areas of the business
but there are many very experienced people here for me to learn from and
I am confident that I can make a significant contribution to the club's
ongoing success." According to City, Vieira's new post will entail "a
wide ranging role, helping to deliver the club's social responsibility
programme, both in the UK and abroad, as well as working closely with
City's commercial partners".
The statement added Vieira would also take an "active role in the
development of youngsters at the Platt Lane complex, providing mentoring
support as part of the Academy's Multiskills Programme, which seeks to
provide a well-rounded lifestyle education for the club's junior
players". Vieira, who became manager Roberto Mancini's first signing at
City in January 2010, having worked with the Italian at Serie A side
Inter Milan, added: "I am particularly pleased to be given the
opportunity to work with the club's community scheme.
"Manchester City has a great reputation for its commitment to its
community and charity partners and I believe I can help to take that
message to an even greater audience.
"Everyone at Manchester City the fans, the staff and the players have
made me and my family feel very welcome here over the past two years and
I am very happy to have been given the chance to stay and develop my
career away from the pitch," added Vieira, as he called time on his 18
years as a pro footballer.
Vieira will report to City's chief football operations officer, Brian
Marwood, who said: "Patrick is the ultimate professional and it is our
very great privilege to introduce him as our new football development
executive.
"His experience in the world of football is virtually unparalleled
and he will be a huge asset to our club as old and young alike benefit
from his knowledge.
"His contribution to world football during his time as a player was
extraordinary and he will be remembered as one of the greatest players
to grace the Premier League."
Vieira was not a regular starter at City but his 47 appearances in
total yielded six goals and what turned out to be his final bow came as
a late substitute in the FA Cup final win over Stoke at Wembley in May.
He made his name in English football at Arsenal after joining the
London club from AC Milan in 1996. At Arsenal, he became club captain
and was a member of the 'Invincibles' team that did not lose a Premier
League match in the 2003-04 season. But his career with the Gunners also
saw him collect 10 red cards.
Vieira left Arsenal to join Juventus, winning the Serie A title in
2006 although the Turin club were stripped of the Championship in the
ensuing match-fixing scandal that engulfed Italian football.
He moved on to Inter but his time there was best by injuries and he
arrived in Manchester before the club's 2010 Champions League triumph. |