Daily Mail

CULTURE CLASH

English haughtines­s and Greek honour at centre of Maguire’s Mykonos nightmare

- IAN HERBERT Deputy Chief Sports Writer

ALITTLE local PR goes a long way for a Premier League footballer on the island of Mykonos. Just a trip to a local clothes boutique was all it took to propel Jesse Lingard into the local media there last week.

‘All the stars of world football prefer Mykonos,’ proclaimed the headline above images of him in the store and later wearing their kit on a sports field with some teenagers.

Lingard, who had also been pictured with Harry Maguire on the island before the world caved in on the Manchester United captain, was celebrated for ‘the polite way he played with young players’ in a local team.

The lunatic economics of the island might mean you will pay £750 for a few bottles of Jack Daniel’s but they are still looking for some flattery when superstars visit and feel the sting of indignatio­n when they think their reputation is impugned.

What has played out in the eight days since Maguire’s night from hell is little less than an internatio­nal culture war. Sections of the Greek media re-hash Maguire’s side of the story, as told in the British media, strengthen­ing the resolve of those responsibl­e for prosecutin­g the player on the island not to budge one inch.

Maguire reiterated in an extraordin­ary BBC interview on Thursday night that he has nothing to apologise for, though some sources on the island still insist this would have been enough to remove much of the case against him.

‘There is a degree of honour at stake here,’ says one source. ‘There is an impression that Maguire, with his expensive lawyers and the football team behind him, think themselves superior and better than those trying to police the island.’

The full 35-minute interview, not all initially broadcast, is vivid.

Maguire reaches the brink of tears at one point near the end, momentaril­y needing to pause when talk with the BBC’s Dan Roan turns back to his sister Daisy, who was allegedly stabbed with a needle during an initial altercatio­n at round midnight in the island capital’s Fabrika Square.

The 27-year-old describes kneeling with his friends outside the police station, hands up, one of his wrists in handcuffs, while his legs are kicked by four men — the most aggressive of whom tells him his career is over. ‘No more football. You won’t play again.’ This goes a long way to explaining the lack of contrition.

But in Greece, the most revealing words of the week came from Ioannis-Iakovos Paradissis, the ubiquitous lawyer representi­ng the police officers Maguire has been accused of assaulting. ‘What we don’t like is we found their behaviour to have been totally unsportsma­nlike,’ Paradissis said when emerging from a courtroom where Maguire was initially convicted on Tuesday. ‘When you are a sportsman and a role model you have to accept what you have done and say you are sorry. Today, no apology was received.’

The notion of contrition securing acquittal is risible. The demonstrab­le facts of any case are paramount in any court of law. But the closing of ranks we have seen among Greek law enforcemen­t agencies, intent on being shown

some honour, does not entirely surprise some British officers.

‘If you are going against them, they are going to stick together,’ said one experience­d former officer. ‘There is potential for it to become, “our world versus your world”. They are saying, “our law is our law”.’

For all that, there is no sense from any British police sources that their Greek counterpar­ts lack modernity and transparen­cy. When Manchester United met

Olympiacos in Athens in 2014, 2014 police officers from the two countries evidently found plenty of grounds for mutual respect.

The subsequent appeal and adjournmen­t of the Maguire case does create time for answers to some puzzling aspects of the case. Reports of Tuesday’s court case suggested that the ‘little stamp mark’ and ‘ needle mark’ on Daisy’s arm which Maguire described to the BBC was caused by two assailants attempting to inject i j th her with ith a date dt rape serum. Maguire said his fiancee, Fern Hawkins, had seen his sister’s eyes ‘go into the back of her head’. She was ‘fainting and she was in and out of consciousn­ess’.

Though Maguire says she was in this state for only two minutes, this is potentiall­y a gravely serious assault. Detectives here presume that she would have been taken to a medical facility at some stage on Friday to be tested.

Details of any ensuing medical examinatio­n would help Maguire’s case. It will also have helped the player’s case if, despite the trauma, she was able to provide testimony to someone before leaving the country at the weekend.

It is likely that Maguire’s lawyers will also be looking for independen­t witnesses to the initial altercatio­n, none of whom seem yet to have come forward.

It will also help if the incident took place within the range of CCTV cameras, though this is also unclear. ‘Hopefully we can get the CCTV from the event,’ Maguire told the BBC.

The player defended his lack of a security detail, though relatively few present or former players actually chose to take such support staff on holiday.

Those who do — David Beckham, for example — tend to have the safety of their children in mind. United’s security company, CES, could certainly have provided a detail of perhaps two officers, working discreetly and paid for by the player, or Maguire could have employed local security staff, as Beckham sometimes does. But he would have been the exception to the rule had he taken this option.

There is little doubt that any such staff would have discourage­d Maguire from holidaying quite so publicly, making himself a target for those intent on trouble. ‘Naive’, it the former British officer’s descriptio­n of how Maguire chose to spend his break.

Maguire insisted he would clear his name. ‘The retrial will give us more time to prepare. The truth will come out.’

But his BBC interview sent Paradissis straight back into the Greek TV studios. ‘He has invented a pack of lies,’ the lawyer declared. ‘And he has not had the decency to apologise.’

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 ?? REUTERS/BBC ?? Holiday hell: Maguire is escorted by Greek police last week and is close to tears in his TV interview (right) after coming home
REUTERS/BBC Holiday hell: Maguire is escorted by Greek police last week and is close to tears in his TV interview (right) after coming home

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