Career
He used to serve as the South American football correspondent for British Broadcasting Corporation Sport, writing a weekly column for the corporation online. His last article in the British Broadcasting Corporation being in 2014. Vickery frequently writes for World Soccer and Sports Illustrated and he is also an analyst on SporTV"s main morning programme, Redação SporTV. After leaving school, he took a series of jobs, ranging from menswear shop assistant, labourer, comedy writer, box office assistant and finally a theatre manager in Brazil"s favelas.
There he met a series of international performance people, becoming fascinated with the Brazilian pre-occupation with football.
As a result, in 1994 having trained as a Teaching English as a foreign language teacher, he left the United Kingdom and travelled to Brazil to teach English, learn the local language and immerse himself in Brazilian football. Supporting himself through his Teaching English as a foreign language income, he started writing a series of articles for various Brazilian football fanzines.
Today Vickery is perhaps best known for his work on The World Football Phone-in, which airs weekly, hosted by Dotun Adebayo, as part of Up All Night on British Broadcasting Corporation Radio 5 Live on Saturday mornings (200-400 am United Kingdom, 900-1100 pm ET). On the show Vickery is known as the "Legendinho" or "Vikipedia" for his vast knowledge of football in Brazil.
Vickery starred in the 2006 United Kingdom television show "International Football factories" with Danny Dyer, a documentary about football hooligans in Brazil.
As of 2008, Vickery is Brazilian correspondent for World Soccer Daily and continues his role on World Football Daily, the video podcast that replaced WSD. Since May 2011, he published weekly news on Sambafoot.com website. He occasionally appears on football discussion programmes on the Brazilian television channel SporTV. Vickery appeared as a pundit on the British Broadcasting Corporation, throughout their coverage of the 2014 World Cup during which time saw the number of Tim’s Twitter followers double in size.