87
Richard Villasanti
🇦🇺
Prop, Debut: 2001-02-18
- Age
187 Ht
111 Wt
87
Richard Villasanti
🇦🇺
Prop, Debut: 2001-02-18
- Age
187 Ht
111 Wt

Player Richard Villasanti

Date of Birth
May 20, 1980
Birth Location
Canberra, ACT, Australia
Nationality
  1. 🇦🇺 Australia
Height (cm)
187 cm
Weight (kg)
111 kg
Position/s
  1. Prop
Nickname
Villa, Gorilla
Warrior #
87
Warriors Debut Date
Feb 18, 2001
Warriors Debut Details
February 18 2001, Round 1 vs Canberra Raiders at Ericsson Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand
Warriors Years Active
  1. 2001
  2. 2002
  3. 2003
  4. 2004
  5. 2005
  6. 2006
Signed From
Wests Tigers
Rep Honours
  1. Australia
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Villasanti
Rugby League Project
https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/players/richard-villasanti/summary.html

mt.wellington

Richard Villasanti

Richard Villasanti 2003 4.jpg

Richard Villasanti (born 20 May 1980) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in 1990s and 2000s. An Australia national representative forward, he played his club football in the National Rugby League for Balmain, Wests Tigers, New Zealand Warriors and Cronulla-Sutherland.

Villasanti made his début with the Balmain Tigers in 1999, making 6 appearances from the bench. He remained with the club when they merged to become the Wests Tigers the next season, and made a number of appearances in the team towards the end of the year. A Junior Kiwi, Villasanti was included in the wider Tonga squad for the 2000 World Cup but did not play in the tournament.

Joining the Warriors in 2001, Villasanti was a regular in the team for the next 5 years. The following year, he was in the team that made the 2002 NRL Grand Final, the club's first grand final appearance. He gained a level of infamy for a tackle made in the game, a "head-first hit, which left Fittler bloodied and bandaged."

At the end of the 2003 NRL season Villasanti had gained a reputation as a big-hitting impact player, and became the first New Zealand based player to be chosen to represent Australia at the end of the year, though he was to make only one test appearance on the 2003 Kangaroo tour of Great Britain and France, helping Australia to victory over Great Britain in what would be the last time the two nations contested an Ashes series. While on tour with Australia, Villasanti was accused of stealing more than $5000 from teammates rooms. An investigation by the Australian Rugby League (ARL) did not determine who the thief was but Villasanti claims other teammates blamed him for the stolen items.

In 2006, Villasanti was released from the Warriors mid-season, and joined the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks.

In February 2007, he secured a release from Cronulla, signing a two-year deal with Harlequins RL but never played a first-grade game for the London-based club. Villasanti was signed by the Londoners as a replacement for Solomon Haumono after having surgery on his knee in Australia. He passed a medical on his arrival in London and was expected to be available after four to six weeks but the knee failed to respond to rehabilitation. The persistent knee problem forced him into retirement.

Villasanti signed with the Sawtell Panthers in the Group 2 competition for 2011 in which he won a premiership. In mid-2012, he signed with the Bidgee Hurricanes in the Group 20 competition.


Canberra junior found form as an interchange forward with the Warriors after two moderate seasons with the Tigers. Villasanti was used from the interchange bench in the Warriors’ historic grand final appearance against the Roosters in 2002 but gained a reputation as one of the game’s best impact players – especially with his massive hits – the following year. At the end of 2003 he made history by becoming the first NZ club player to represent Australia on the end of season Kangaroo Tour. Villasanti made his Test debut in the loss to the Kiwis in October but appeared in only two minor tour matches in England. Back in the NRL in the Warriors’ disastrous 2004 season he did not play a part in any representative fixtures during the next two years. In 2006 Villasanti was released early in the season and joined Cronulla.
- ALAN WHITICKER

 
One of the only players to play so well for the Warriors it resulted in a call up to th Kangaroos squad.

How many more have played for the Kangaroos (or even Origin) after their performances for the Warriors? Not including incumbents like Price, Tate, the great Dane Neilson etc
 
One of the only players to play so well for the Warriors it resulted in a call up to th Kangaroos squad.

How many more have played for the Kangaroos (or even Origin) after their performances for the Warriors? Not including incumbents like Price, Tate, the great Dane Neilson etc
Potentially Lillyman for Origin? Although my memory is a bit hazy and he may have already been in the mix pre-Warriors.
 
Known to throw the stink eye your way if you are a big man out socializing, saw it, heard others experience it.

Bit of a dick off the field, a real favorite of mine on it.
 
One of the only players to play so well for the Warriors it resulted in a call up to th Kangaroos squad.

How many more have played for the Kangaroos (or even Origin) after their performances for the Warriors? Not including incumbents like Price, Tate, the great Dane Neilson etc
Lillyman
 
#87 Richard Villasanti

In multiple articles from 2012-2025 Villasanti has been described as a plumber and lately as owning a plumbing business in Canberra, Australia. Unfortunately I cant find a name for that company but I have found his name on the Australian Business Register as a sole trader which leads me to believe that he's most likely sub contracting. His business location of ACT 2903 places him in Wanniassa which is a suburb in Canberra's Tuggeranong district...

Screenshot 2026-04-05 001708.webp
 
Former Kangaroos prop opens up on shock sting operation
Isaac Issa
STAFF WRITER | October 27, 2025 - 5:35pm

Former Australian prop Richard Villasanti has made a shock revelation, exposing an operation over 20 years ago.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, he admitted he was the target of a Scotland Yard sting operation during the Kangaroos' 2003 tour of Great Britain, as authorities sought to identify the culprit behind a $5000 theft from team hotel rooms in Leeds.

Villasanti said police allegedly installed hidden cameras in his hotel room in an attempt to catch him out, but no evidence was ever found linking him to the incident.

“There was a Scotland Yard detective who placed cameras in my room to try and set me up with bait,” Villasanti told the Daily Telegraph.

“He told me on the way to the airport that I was in a set-up sting that I didn't know about.”

The Australian Rugby League investigated the missing cash but was unable to identify a suspect.

Villasanti, who played one Test for Australia on that tour, has consistently denied the allegations for more than two decades.

Now 45, the former Warriors and Sharks forward insists he's long moved on.

“I couldn't give two f…s what people say, and you can print that,” he said.

“It was 22 years ago, any publicity is good publicity.”

Despite the controversy, Villasanti said he still values his Kangaroos memories and remains grateful for the experience.

“Why would I get angry? We all know the truth but we just can't say anything, that's all,” he said.

A veteran of 116 NRL games across stints with Balmain, Wests Tigers, New Zealand Warriors and Cronulla, Villasanti helped lead the Warriors to the 2002 Grand Final, and was remembered for his heavy collision with Roosters captain Brad Fittler.

These days, he runs a plumbing business in Canberra and assists with junior rugby league coaching.

 

Similar threads

  • Showcase: Item Showcase: Item
Replies
121
Views
13K
Back
Top Bottom