Book description
On 11th May 2009, Ward left Kirkham prison in Lancashire, the
one-time top-flight winger had spent four years at Her Majesty's
pleasure for drugs offences. His crime was renting a property in which
cocaine with a street value of £645,000 was found during a police
raid in May 2005. Ward never denied his involvement. Broke and with no
permanent home at the time, he had accepted £400 a week from an
acquaintance to rent a house for an unspecified "stash". He
was sent down for eight years. He has always acknowledged his
"stupid, terrible mistake". A footballer who was once spoken
of as England material, Ward was ever-present in the best league
season West Ham ever had (1985-86), and a top-flight player with
Manchester City and Everton. In the first ever week of the Premier
League in 1992, he helped Everton win 3-0 at Old Trafford. Later he
was player-coach at Birmingham in a promotion season that saw
silverware at Wembley. He had a beautiful wife, now former wife, who
Ward jokes was "the original WAG", and part of "the
good life of a footballer" which included a big house, flash car,
nice clothes, foreign holidays, and a £2,000-a-week contract, which
in the early 1990s still seemed a lot of money in the Premier League.
But the playing days ended, and a desperate fight to stay in the game
Â- at lower-league clubs, then in Hong Kong and IcelandÂ- eventually
had to be given up. The decline led to crime, and prison. Ward
occupied himself by writing his life story, by hand, on prison paper.
He says: "I'm proud of my book. It's just an honest account of my
life, no bullshit." Ward is outspoken about current players who
have achieved notoriety for the wrong reasons. He talks about the
escapades and run-ins with numerous well-known names, inside and
outside football. In one astonishing chapter, "Shooting the
Pope", Ward reveals how, at a 1992 fancy dress Christmas party at
Everton, he shot team-mate Barry Horne, dressed as the Pope, at close
range, in the chest, with a real gun; this incident was never before
made public, nor were many others, until now.