Scottish Daily Mail

LIVERMORE FURY AT FAN TAUNT OVER BABY’S DEATH

- By MATT BARLOW

WEST BROMWICH ALBION have confirmed Jake Livermore was the target of abuse about the death of his newborn son from a West Ham supporter. Livermore became embroiled in an altercatio­n and stepped into the crowd near the tunnel area at the London Stadium during West Ham’s 2-1 win on Tuesday evening. The midfielder and his partner Danielle lost their son, Jake Junior, shortly after he was born in May 2014. An inquest the following April found the baby’s death had been avoidable, causing Livermore — then at Hull City — to ‘self-destruct’. In May 2015, he tested positive for cocaine and did not play for four months but was spared a ban because of the circumstan­ces which had followed the death of his son. Livermore admitted to Sportsmail in 2016: ‘The way in which (his son’s death) happened made it difficult to fight my own demons. ‘If you lose a child in God’s hands, it is completely different. To find out why he had died, that was too much for my head and my heart to take. That pain and hurt, it makes you do some desperate things. ‘I love my family more than life itself. You take that out of my life and you’re basically taking away me as a person. And that is what happened, I lost myself. I was broken. I could not deal with the loss and the circumstan­ces of it, as well as the pressures of everyday life and trying to keep my team in the Premier League. ‘If I was thinking with a cool head, I would have asked for time off. But I didn’t want to let anyone down, I just saw it as another injury that I could play through.’ West Ham identified and ejected the fan who hurled abuse at Livermore. The club have promised to continue their inquiry into the incident but the West Brom midfielder has insisted he does not wish to make it a police matter. The FA have asked both clubs to respond. A West Brom statement read: ‘Following his substituti­on, Jake was subjected to general abuse from home supporters, which he shrugged off. ‘However, he acknowledg­es that he moved to confront one spectator who chose to make a comment about the death of his infant son. ‘The club would like to think that all right-minded football supporters could understand this reaction, which did not result in any physical exchanges before Jake was led away to our dressing room. ‘Jake is an outstandin­g young individual who has the total support of everyone at the club and he has made it clear he considers this statement to be an end to an unhappy incident.’

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