In recognition of decorated national team career, and his service to Adelaide United, the southern end of Hindmarsh Stadium is named the Vidmar End.[2]
Vidmar started his professional career with localAdelaide teamAdelaide City before moving to Europe in the mid-1990s to Belgium, where he was the league's top scorer in the 1994–95 season. He also played in Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands and in Japan before returning to Australia in 1999 to rejoin City. Vidmar signed withAdelaide United when they took Adelaide City's spot in theNational Soccer League and was awarded the captaincy by then coachJohn Kosmina. Despite plans to play in the inauguralA-League season he retired in 2005[3] bringing an end to a 20-year playing career in which time he played 517 games scoring 127 goals.
Vidmar pictured with a fan during his time atMelbourne City.
After his retirement in 2005 he took up a role of assistant coach working under Kosmina, he was appointed as head coach on 2 May 2007. The2007–08 A-League season was not very successful for Aurelio Vidmar, his side finishing 6th out of 8 teams on the ladder the first time Adelaide failed to make the finals. Calls for his resignation were being made and his unsuccessfulAsian Champions League campaign, albeit against talented opposition, only fuelled these accusations, coming 3rd in his group with only the winner progressing to the quarter-finals.
Vidmar began to regain the support of the United supporters by securing valuable acquisitions such asCristiano andSasa Ognenovski and built up Adelaide's defence and improved their attacking options. He created history by leading Adelaide to the2008 AFC Champions League Final, becoming the first Australian team to achieve such a feat. This led Adelaide UnitedCEO Sam Ciccarello to re-sign Vidmar and his assistant Phil Stubbins for another three years in November 2008.[5]
Vidmar was inducted into theFootball Federation Australia Football Hall of Fame in the same month.[6] He is also in theFootball Federation of South Australia Hall of Champions.[7] He made a controversial diatribe after thesemi-final against Melbourne Victory, in which Adelaide lost 4–0, and 6–0 on aggregate.[8] Post-match, he claimed that Adelaide was a "piss-ant town", and that politics within the club was to blame for the loss. He later apologised for his remarks.[9]
However, with the start of the new season, Vidmar was unable to retain the form from the previous season with a slow start by taking only five of the 15 available points. He has been criticised for his use of playing a lone striker. Adelaide finished last in the 2009–10 season. As a result of comments he made at a media conference in November 2009 about "beheading his players like they would do in Saudi Arabia" if they did not perform well, Adelaide United handed Vidmar a two-match touchline ban. The club also issued Vidmar a $10,000 fine.[10][11] After leaving Adelaide United, Vidmar became the coach of the Young Socceroos.[12] Vidmar was the caretaker coach of the Socceroos team for one match in 2013, afterHolger Osieck's contract was terminated.[13]
He was appointed in 2018 as Director of Football forAdelaide United FC.[14] After five months, the club announced on 6 February 2019, that Vidmar had resigned from his role.[15]
In 2022, Vidmar was named as coach ofBangkok United, the struggling Thai League 1 side.[16] On 28 December 2022, Vidmar resigned his post for personal reasons.[17]