Simy
Simeon Tochukwu Nwankwo (born 7 May 1992), known professionally as Simy, is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Saudi Pro League club Al-Orobah.[1][2] Standing at 1.98 meters tall, he is recognized for his physical presence and goal-scoring ability in European leagues.[3] Simy's career began in Nigeria before moving to Europe, where he gained prominence with Italian club Crotone, scoring prolifically in Serie B—including a joint-top tally of 18 goals in the 2020-21 season—and making appearances in Serie A.[4] He reached a career milestone by netting his 20th goal in a Serie B campaign, becoming the second African player after Samuel Eto'o to achieve that mark in Italy's second tier.[5] Internationally, he represented Nigeria at the 2018 FIFA World Cup and earned caps with the Super Eagles, though his selection drew debate amid strong club form.[6][7] Throughout his tenure in Italy, Simy faced instances of racial abuse on social media following standout performances, highlighting broader issues in football.[8][9] His transfers, including a controversial move to Belgian side Lokeren in 2019, have occasionally sparked disputes among clubs.[10] Despite such challenges, Simy has maintained a reputation as a resilient forward, transitioning to the Saudi league in 2025 to continue his professional journey.[11]
Early life
Upbringing in Nigeria
Simeon Tochukwu Nwankwo, known as Simy, was born on May 7, 1992, in Onitsha, Nigeria, where he spent his formative years.[12] Growing up in a Catholic family, he was instilled with strong religious values and a belief in God by relatives, which shaped his personal development.[13] As the eldest of three children, with twin siblings—a sister who became a nurse and a brother a physiotherapist—Nwankwo assumed significant responsibilities early on, often acting as a "second daddy" following his father's influence.[6] From around age four, Nwankwo displayed an intense passion for football, constantly kicking a ball at home and in outdoor spaces, to the point where his father recognized his obsession with the sport.[13] His early exposure came through informal play across various local environments in Onitsha, fostering self-taught skills in a setting typical of Nigerian youth football culture.[13] This grassroots engagement, combined with his rapid physical growth to a height of 1.98 meters, highlighted his potential as a towering striker even in childhood, earning him the nickname "Kanu" after the similarly statured Nigerian legend Nwankwo Kanu.[6] Nwankwo's initial structured training occurred at local academies such as Future Hope Academy in Nkpor, where he honed basic abilities amid the competitive street football scene prevalent in the region.[12] Familial support for his athletic interests, underpinned by discipline from his upbringing, directed his focus toward football as a pathway amid Nigeria's economic challenges, though formal education details remain sparse in available accounts.[13] These early experiences in Onitsha laid the foundation for his raw talent, emphasizing physical prowess and informal skill-building over academic pursuits.[12]Club career
Early moves to Portugal
Nwankwo Simy, born Simeon Tochukwu Nwankwo in 1992, transitioned from Nigerian club GUO FC to Portuguese side Portimonense in 2011 at age 19, marking his entry into European professional football without significant prior hype or high-profile agency involvement.[7] This move facilitated by standard youth visa pathways for African talents trialing in Europe, allowed him to adapt to Segunda Liga competition amid Portimonense's relegation pressures.[14] Over two seasons (2011–2013), he accumulated approximately 55 appearances, demonstrating emerging goal-scoring ability with 13 goals in the 2012–13 campaign alone, though consistency was hampered by the team's lower-table struggles.[15] In August 2013, Simy transferred to Primeira Liga club Gil Vicente on a three-year contract as a free agent, shifting to higher-level play where adaptation challenges became evident.[16] During his debut top-flight season (2013–14), he featured in 22 league matches without scoring, reflecting modest output amid physical and tactical adjustments for a tall, raw striker in a competitive environment.[15] His first European goal likely came earlier at Portimonense, underscoring initial promise in second-tier football but underscoring the gap to elite Portuguese leagues, with total early Portuguese appearances nearing 50 before broader contributions at Gil Vicente.[14] These foundational years highlighted Simy's physical attributes over technical finesse, setting a trajectory reliant on persistence rather than immediate impact.[3]Breakthrough and success at Crotone
Simeon Nwankwo, known as Simy, joined FC Crotone in July 2016 from Portuguese club Gil Vicente on a permanent transfer.[17] During his tenure, spanning multiple seasons in both Serie A and Serie B, he emerged as the club's all-time leading scorer with 66 goals across 159 competitive appearances.[17] His contributions were particularly pronounced in Italy's second division, where his physical dominance proved decisive in promotion efforts. In the 2018–19 Serie B season, following Crotone's relegation, Simy scored 14 goals in 33 league matches, aiding the team's consolidation in the division.[18] His form elevated markedly the following year, as he netted 20 goals in the 2019–20 Serie B campaign, clinching the league's top scorer title—the first for an African player in an Italian professional league—and propelling Crotone to automatic promotion via a third-place finish.[19] These tallies underscored his effectiveness in lower-tier Italian football, where consistent double-digit scoring became a hallmark. At 1.98 meters tall and right-footed, Simy's aerial prowess and positioning exploited set-piece opportunities prevalent in Serie B tactics, allowing him to outmuscle defenders in a league favoring physical strikers over technical virtuosos.[20] However, empirical performance data revealed inconsistencies in open-play finishing, with higher miss rates evident in transitions to Serie A, where quicker defensive lines and reduced aerial duels limited his conversion efficiency compared to second-tier dominance.[3] This reliance on physical attributes highlighted causal factors in his Serie B success, contrasting with adaptation challenges against elite opposition speeds.Serie A experiences with Salernitana
Simy transferred to Serie A side Salernitana on a season-long loan from Crotone on August 19, 2021, with an obligation to buy valued at approximately €6 million including bonuses.[21][22] The deal became permanent in January 2022.[23] In the 2021–22 campaign, amid Salernitana's battle against relegation—surviving by a single point on the final matchday—Simy featured in 28 league appearances, scoring 1 goal and providing no assists.[24] His physical profile offered hold-up play and aerial threat, but limited technical finishing exposed vulnerabilities against Serie A's defensive organization, contrasting his prior prolific output in lower-tier Italian football. The 2022–23 season marked a sharper decline, with Simy managing 3 goals across 28 appearances as Salernitana finished bottom and suffered relegation.[24] Injuries sidelined him for 5 matches, while he started just 7 games and entered as a substitute in 15, reflecting tactical shifts under coaches like Davide Nicola and Stefano Colantuono that favored quicker forwards.[25] Data indicated over-reliance on his 1.95-meter frame for duels won (averaging 4.2 per 90 minutes), yet pace deficiencies—evident in recovery runs against elite center-backs—led to frequent benchings and reduced influence, underscoring adaptation challenges to Serie A's elevated tempo and pressing intensity.[26] Overall, Simy's 4 Serie A goals in 56 appearances for Salernitana highlighted a ceiling constrained by technical limitations in a top-flight context, where empirical metrics like duels and touches in the box yielded diminishing returns compared to his Serie B peaks.[24] This phase revealed how physical attributes alone proved insufficient against sustained defensive quality, contributing minimally to team outputs amid broader squad underperformance.Loan spell at CFR Cluj
In August 2025, following his departure from Salernitana, Simy entered advanced negotiations with CFR Cluj for a potential loan move to the Romanian Liga I club, with terms reportedly including a one-year deal and an option for an additional season.[27] [28] At age 33, the striker sought to revive his career in Eastern Europe amid limited opportunities in higher-profile leagues, where his goal-scoring output had declined to 3 goals in 15 Serie A appearances during the 2023-24 season.[29] However, the transfer did not materialize, resulting in zero appearances or contributions for CFR Cluj.[30] The failed deal underscored pragmatic challenges in Simy's late-career trajectory, including adaptation to a lower-quality league that might have further highlighted technical limitations observed in prior Italian stints, such as reduced efficiency in aerial duels compared to his peak at Crotone (where he won approximately 55% of aerial challenges versus under 45% in recent Serie A data).[26] CFR Cluj, contenders for the Liga I title, pursued Simy as a replacement option amid their squad rebuilding, but opted not to proceed, reflecting mutual assessments of fit at an age where physical attributes alone proved insufficient for extension-worthy impact.[28] This episode represented a brief flirtation with Romanian football rather than a substantive stint, signaling ongoing career stagnation without prestige or statistical revival.Recent transfer to Al-Orobah
In September 2025, Simeon Nwankwo, known as Simy, joined Al-Orobah FC of the Saudi First Division League on a free transfer following the expiration of his contract with Serie B club US Salernitana 1919 at the end of the previous season.[31][20] The 33-year-old Nigerian striker, whose deal with Al-Orobah is reportedly short-term given his age, had been without a club since June 2025, amid earlier links to Turkish second-tier side Sakaryaspor in July.[32][33] Al-Orobah, recently relegated from the Saudi Pro League after finishing 17th in the 2024–25 season, competes in the physically demanding First Division, a second-tier competition emphasizing endurance over technical finesse, which aligns with Simy's profile as a 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) target man known for aerial prowess and hold-up play.[34][35] The transfer underscores a career trajectory shift for a player whose peak Serie A output occurred earlier, with recent seasons yielding modest goal tallies (e.g., 5 goals in 28 appearances for Salernitana in 2024–25), reflecting typical striker aging patterns where performance declines post-30 due to reduced speed and recovery.[36] Early indications suggest adaptation potential in the Saudi context, where veteran imports often secure lucrative terms prioritizing stability over top-flight contention; Simy scored twice in a league win over Abha FC on September 29, 2025, contributing to Al-Orobah's 2–0–1 start and sixth-place standing after three matches.[37] However, sustained output remains unproven, as historical data on aging forwards in transitional leagues indicates variability tied to injury risk and team dynamics rather than guaranteed revival.[20]International career
Debut and appearances for Nigeria
Simy earned his first cap for the Nigeria national team on 28 May 2018, starting and playing the full 90 minutes in a 1–1 friendly draw against the Democratic Republic of Congo in Asaba.[38] His inclusion came late in his career at age 26, following consistent scoring in Italy's Serie B with Crotone, where he netted 7 goals in the 2017–18 season.[6] This debut marked him as a late bloomer among Super Eagles forwards, selected amid a squad refresh ahead of the 2018 FIFA World Cup.[39] Simy was named to Nigeria's 23-man squad for the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia, providing depth as a centre-forward behind starters like Odion Ighalo and Ahmed Musa.[40] He made brief substitute appearances in two group stage matches: entering in the 86th minute against Croatia on 16 June (0–2 loss) and the 90th minute against Argentina on 26 June (1–2 loss), accumulating just 3 minutes of tournament play without scoring.[40] Nigeria advanced to the round of 16 but exited after a 2–1 extra-time defeat to France; Simy remained unused in that fixture. His minimal involvement highlighted the team's reliance on established attackers and his role as a physical backup option rather than a starter.[6] Across five total senior appearances for Nigeria through 2018—all friendlies or World Cup matches—Simy recorded one goal, yielding a modest goals-per-game ratio of 0.2.[41] That solitary international strike came in a September 2018 friendly, his last cap to date.[42] Despite subsequent club success, including 20 Serie A goals in 2020–21, he received no further call-ups for Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers or majors, with coach Gernot Rohr citing familiarity with his attributes but prioritizing other forwards amid Nigeria's depth.[19] This pattern underscores selection favoring versatile or higher-output players like Victor Osimhen over Simy's aerial prowess, which proved underutilized internationally.[43] By October 2025, Simy remained uncapped since the World Cup era, reflecting his non-core status in a squad boasting multiple elite strikers.[44]Playing style and attributes
Strengths and physical profile
Simeon Nwankwo, known as Simy, measures 1.98 meters in height and weighs 84 kilograms, providing a robust physical framework ideal for a target striker.[20][45][46] This stature underpins his dominant aerial presence, with records showing 61 aerial duels won during the 2020–21 Serie A season at Crotone, averaging over 3 per 90 minutes.[47][47] Simy's aerial strength translates to efficacy in scoring from headers and set-pieces, particularly within crossing-oriented tactics employed by clubs like Crotone in Serie B, where he netted 20 goals in 2019–20.[47][3] His ability to win duels in the air, as demonstrated in matches like the 4–0 victory over Napoli where he secured four aerial wins, bolsters team build-up from defensive transitions.[48] In hold-up play, Simy leverages his physicality for possession retention and link-up, facilitating progressive passes—62 recorded in the 2019–20 Serie B season—and neat lay-offs to midfield runners, suiting lower-tier systems reliant on a focal point forward.[47][4][49] Endurance marks another asset, with Simy maintaining high availability through seasons of 30-plus appearances, including 37 matches in 2019–20 and 38 in 2020–21, reflecting resilience in demanding Italian leagues.[47]Criticisms of technical limitations
Simy has been critiqued for deficiencies in pace and dribbling ability, which limit his effectiveness in high-transition environments like Serie A. At 1.98 meters tall, he lacks explosive speed, often described as a drawback that hinders his capacity to exploit spaces behind defenses or evade markers in open play.[50] His progressive carries averaged 0.67 per 90 minutes during the 2020–2021 Serie A season with Crotone, placing him below typical thresholds for forwards who contribute to build-up phases (sub-1.0), resulting in frequent isolation when teams shifted to faster, counter-attacking styles.[47] Successful take-ons hovered around 1.10 per 90 in the same campaign, further underscoring limited ball-carrying prowess compared to more agile strikers.[47] Concerns over finishing efficiency have also emerged, particularly outside lower-division peaks. In Serie B during 2019–2020, Simy overperformed his non-penalty expected goals (npxG) by 1.3 (16 goals from 14.7 npxG), suggesting some luck in conversion rates amid higher-volume chances from direct service.[47] However, in the 2020–2021 Serie A, he underperformed slightly with 12 goals against 12.8 npxG, and his shots-on-target percentage of 43.6% reflected inconsistent clinical finishing under greater defensive pressure, where big-chance opportunities were scarcer and required finer touch.[47] This pattern contributed to perceptions of reliance on volume rather than precision, with career metrics indicating rarer overperformance in top-flight scrutiny. Adaptability to varied tactical systems represents another limitation, as Simy has thrived primarily in direct, target-man setups but faltered in fluid, possession-oriented attacks. His progressive passes received per 90 dropped to 5.35 in 2020–2021 Serie A from 7.34 in the prior Serie B season, signaling reduced involvement in intricate build-up against compact defenses.[47] Subsequent spells, such as at Salernitana in Serie A (where output declined amid relegation) and loans to CFR Cluj, highlighted struggles in integrating into less route-one frameworks, favoring aerial and hold-up play over dynamic movement.[47] At age 33, these traits align with historical patterns for physical strikers, where post-30 declines in mobility accelerate plateauing below elite levels, as evidenced by his 2024 transfer to Saudi club Al-Orobah.[47]Personal life
Family and fatherhood
Nwankwo married Chidinma Chinenye in 2017.[51] The couple welcomed their first child, a daughter named Belmira Chimdezirim Nwankwo, on October 13, 2018; the name Belmira derives from Portuguese meaning "beautiful woman," while Chimdezirim is Igbo for "God has written my destiny."[51] By 2020, Nwankwo referred to his children in plural terms when discussing societal issues in Nigeria.[52] In interviews, Nwankwo has described fatherhood as transformative, stating in December 2018 that "nothing compares to the joy of fatherhood" and that it represented a "special blessing" altering his daily life positively.[51] He dedicated a goal scored on October 28, 2018, to his newborn daughter and expressed relish in childminding responsibilities despite his professional commitments in Italy.[51] A year later, in November 2019, Nwankwo elaborated that fatherhood had instilled greater responsibility, remarking, "Fatherhood has taught me a lot and it has made me to be more responsible," with family now taking precedence over individual concerns.[53] He noted enjoying the experience fully, anticipating its positive influence on his overall life and performance.[53] Nwankwo has maintained a low public profile regarding his family dynamics, avoiding sensational disclosures in favor of emphasizing personal growth through parenthood.[6]Name origin and public image
Simeon Tochukwu Nwankwo's full name incorporates Igbo elements, with "Tochukwu" signifying "praise God" in the Igbo language, derived from "to" (praise) and "Chukwu" (God), while "Nwankwo" denotes a child born on Nkwo market day in the traditional Igbo four-day week.[54][55] The professional moniker "Simy" emerged during his early career in Portugal in the 2010s, stemming from a manager's difficulty pronouncing "Simeon," which was adapted to the simpler "Simy" form and subsequently adopted across his playing career.[7] Nwankwo projects a public image characterized by confidence and articulateness, as highlighted in a 2018 ESPN profile ahead of Nigeria's World Cup squad consideration, where he was noted for his poised demeanor in interviews.[6] Off the pitch, he maintains a low-key persona, prioritizing family life over media sensationalism or branded publicity, with limited engagement in high-profile endorsements or philanthropy initiatives. This approach underscores an authentic self-presentation focused on professional substance rather than superficial appeal.[6]Incidents and controversies
Racial abuse in 2021
In March 2021, Crotone striker Simeon Nwankwo, known as Simy, faced racial abuse on social media following his goals in a 3-0 Serie A victory over Udinese on March 20.[8] The abuse, originating primarily from Italian-language accounts, included slurs targeting his Nigerian heritage after he scored twice in the match, contributing to Crotone's first win of the season.[9] Simy publicly shared screenshots of the messages, condemning the harassment as unacceptable but emphasizing his focus on football, stating it would not deter his performance.[8] Crotone's mayor, Vincenzo Voce, responded on March 27 by granting honorary citizenship to Simy's young son as a symbolic stand against racism and intolerance, highlighting the city's support for the player amid the incident.[56] No formal legal action was pursued by Simy or the club, with the event described in reports as an isolated case enabled by social media anonymity rather than indicative of broader institutional issues at the club or league level.[8] Observers noted that such online abuse often lacks traceability due to pseudonymous accounts, while Simy's resilience was praised by supporters, as he continued scoring, ultimately finishing the 2020-21 Serie A season as Crotone's top scorer with 13 goals despite the team's relegation.[19] The incident did not result in any reported career interruptions for Simy, who maintained his form as one of the league's leading African goalscorers that year.[19]Career statistics
Club statistics
Simy's professional club statistics reflect a career emphasizing physical presence as a centre-forward, with output varying by league level. In Italy, he demonstrated greater scoring consistency in Serie B (35 goals in 82 appearances) than in Serie A (30 goals in 82 appearances), attributable to tactical fit and competition quality differences.[47] Overall club totals exceed 400 appearances and 120 goals across all competitions, with Crotone representing his peak productivity (65 goals in 164 games).[26] The table below aggregates appearances, goals, and assists by club (all competitions, as of October 2025; assists limited in early career records):| Club | Years Active | Appearances | Goals | Assists |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Portimonense SAD | 2011–2015 | 101 | 26 | 3 |
| Gil Vicente FC | 2015–2016 | 43 | 20 | 5 |
| FC Crotone | 2016–2022 | 164 | 65 | 14 |
| US Salernitana 1919 | 2021–2024 | 36 | 4 | 1 |
| Parma Calcio 1913 | 2021–2022 | 34 | 1 | 3 |
| Benevento Calcio | 2022–2025 | 50 | 6 | 3 |
| Al-Orobah FC | 2025– | 7 | 1 | 0 |
International statistics
Nwankwo earned his first cap for the Nigeria national team on 28 May 2018, in a friendly against the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[57] As of October 2025, he has made 5 appearances for the Super Eagles, all in non-competitive friendlies, with 1 goal scored.[58] [59] He has not appeared in Africa Cup of Nations matches, despite aspirations for inclusion in the 2019 and 2021 tournaments, nor in World Cup qualifiers.[60] His limited international output reflects infrequent call-ups, despite prolific club form, with no goals in FIFA-recognized fixtures.[58] The table below details his record by competition:| Competition | Appearances | Goals |
|---|---|---|
| Friendlies | 5 | 1 |
| Africa Cup of Nations | 0 | 0 |
| World Cup Qualifiers | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 5 | 1 |