Name: Antonio Bellopede
Country:

Italy
Club:
A.C. MessinaPosition: *
SWP,
CBSide: RF/BS
Age: 28-31 years (14/12/1956)
Height: 175 cm
Weight: 74 kg
Attack:
65Defence:
77Balance:
81Stamina:
83Top Speed:
76Acceleration:
75Response:
78Agility:
75Dribble Accuracy:
74Dribble Speed:
72Short Pass Accuracy:
76Short Pass Speed:
73Long Pass Accuracy:
78Long Pass Speed:
73Shot Accuracy:
63Shot Power:
79Shot Technique:
66Free Kick Accuracy:
61Curling:
68Header:
72Jump:
74Technique:
77Aggression:
69Mentality:
79Goalkeeper Skills:
50Team Work:
81Injury Tolerance:
BCondition:
6Weak Foot Accuracy:
5Weak Foot Frequency:
5Consistency:
6Growth type:
Late/LastingCARDS:S08 - Slide Tackle
S10 - DF Leader
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Sliding - D-Line Control
Attack/Defence Awareness Card:
Defence MindedINFO:Bellopede was a sweeper or centre back. He spent most of his career in Serie C, first at Sorrento from 1974 to 1981 and playing 162 league matches, then at Messina from 1982 to 1987 and playing 152 league games. He also played two seasons in Serie B, one during his last year at Messina and the second the following year with Arezzo. He spent seasons also at Savoia, Voghera and Pro Vercelli, where he retired in 1990.
Messina's historic captain and leader, Bellopede was the type of player who set his teammates straight when needed: during a match Salvatore Schillaci received a yellow card after a bad foul, then he committed it again, risking to be sent off; so Bellopede reproached and slapped him a bit to calm him down. A part of that, the defender was an implacable sweeper, especially behind the defensive line. He was always ready to tackle his opponents and take the ball away from them, sometimes even hitting their ankles depending on the situation. Moreover he had class and was gifted with good technique and vision of the game, considered way superior to most Serie C players: he often advanced out of his own area with ball on his feet and head held high, ready to deliver an accurate pass. Despite his not too defensive attitude, he didn't score many goals − 3 with Sorrento and 4 with Messina − but they were never made by chance: an example is a goal he scored in 1986 against Monopoli, when he raised the ball with the right heel before shooting with the same foot; in the same match he also delivered a cross from near the left corner flag to assist Schillaci who eventually scored.