In the summer of 1994, he was purchased by Roma,[2] but a few days later was involved in a transfer with Napoli that brought Daniel Fonseca to the Giallorossi.
Benny Carbone fools his opponents with his feints, but also his team-mates!In the summer of 1995, he transferred to Inter for 6 billion lire.
[6] This, added to his strikes against Darlington[7] and Everton,[8] meant he contributed five goals in Villa's cup run that season.
Carbone started in the FA Cup final alongside strike partner Dion Dublin in a 1–0 loss to Chelsea in the 2000 final, with Chelsea winning the match 1–0 after a goal by Roberto Di Matteo; Carbone nearly scored when his goal-bound shot was cleared off the line by Frank Leboeuf.
[10] Bradford City, who had just escaped relegation from the Premiership the previous season, and were aiming to establish themselves in the top flight, made the best offer to Carbone, and he joined the Yorkshire club on a free transfer.
Parma were in financial trouble and had to sell star players during the season, such as Adrian Mutu, Adriano and Hidetoshi Nakata.
After a one-year stint with Vicenza, Carbone signed a four-game guest contract with the Australian team Sydney FC as a potential replacement for Dwight Yorke, who was the club's previous marquee player.
In his first season back in the lower leagues, Carbone scored five goals in 29 appearances, as Pavia finished fourth from bottom.
[23] He guided Pavia to a safe place in the 2010–11 Lega Pro Prima Divisione standings, leading the club out of the relegation zone in his two months in charge of the first team.
Carbone eventually resigned as Saint-Christophe Vallée d'Aoste head coach due to restrictions placed upon him.
After being linked with the managerial vacancy at Sheffield Wednesday in December 2013, Carbone proclaimed that he wanted to manage the club.
On 10 January 2014, Carbone appeared on Sky Sports programme The Fantasy Football Club, presented by his ex-Aston Villa teammate Paul Merson, and revealed that he was still interested in the role.
[33] On 14 May 2014, Carbone announced on his official Twitter page that his job title was "Special Consultant to the board of directors for sport matters including Facilities & Academy.
[41] Hired as a replacement to Christian Panucci, he resigned in January 2017, after a negative string of results that left Ternana in second-to-last place in the league.
[43] In 2020, he joined Gianni De Biasi's coaching staff in charge of the Azerbaijan national football team.
[44] A quick, mobile, talented, and creative supporting forward with an eye for goal, Carbone was known primarily for his technical skills, his use of feints, and for his ability to provide assists for team-mates as an offensive playmaker.