Carl Recchia

Carl Recchia (born 13 December 1984) is an Australian footballer.

Carl Recchia
Personal information
Full name Carl Recchia
Date of birth (1984-12-13) 13 December 1984
Place of birth Melbourne, Australia
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Playing position(s) Centre midfield / Centre back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2003–2004 South Melbourne 9 (0)
2005–2006 Melbourne Victory 12 (0)
2006 Fawkner Blues 15 (6)
2006–2007 Queensland Roar FC 1 (0)
2007 Fawkner Blues 25 (1)
2008–2009 Altona Magic 53 (10)
2010–2011 South Melbourne 35 (4)
2011–2012 Moreland Zebras 21 (8)
2012–2013 South Melbourne
2014–2017 Pascoe Vale 35 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 30 September 2016

Biography

Recchia played as a central midfielder for the Melbourne Victory in the inaugural season of the Hyundai A-League. He was let go at the end of the season, and returned to the Victorian Premier League with Fawkner Blues. On 20 October 2006 it was announced that he was to join Queensland Roar FC on a short term contract.[1] Recchia returned again to the Victorian Premier League to captain Altona Magic to their Back-to-Back championship win in 2009 before returning to his first club South Melbourne FC to play for them in the 2010 and 2011 VPL seasons.

gollark: Can you generate and detect different *colors*?
gollark: Assuming you can switch the light on and off pretty fast, and the magic can respond quickly, you might actually get decent data rates out of it.
gollark: Well, in that case I guess you could do automatic Morse code (or some variant), and if you could make a bright enough light (and maybe focus it on the receiving tower with mirrors or something), that might be longer-range than having to actually see the individual semaphore arms.
gollark: Oh, right. Hmm.
gollark: You probably could do an actual Morse code light, but I think if you can only move things around and heat them instead of actually generating light directly it would be more efficient to do the movable arms thingy.

References


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