The Scotsman

Sport: Stuart Cosgrove celebrates the soul of Muhammad Ali

● Revealing new documentar­y charts the rise and fall of the ex-hibs and Scotland striker whose career was all but over by the time he hit 30

- Alan Pattullo

Although it includes tales of the kind of japes expected from young tyros living the dream at their favourite football club, the Garry O’connor story can begin to feel very cheerless.

“It is a sad, sad story,” reflects John Hughes, who was the victim of one prank involving O’connor and best friend Derek Riordan. They somehow commandeer the keys to his car and drive to Hughes’ home, parking it outside his door. Not much good to Hughes, who was still at Easter Road. “Joy riding basically,” says O’connor, the subject of a half-hour documentar­y going out next week as part of the Playing the Game series on BBC Scotland.

What a trip. From the old mining village of Port Seton to Selkirk, via Moscow, Birmingham, barnsley, gree no ck and two spells at Hibs. But there wasn’t always a lot of joy. Certainly, not as much as you might expect given O’connor was earning £20,000 a week when he was just 23 after moving to Lokomotiv Moscow, for whom he scored the winner in the 2007 Russian Cup final.

“I feel I could have achieved a bit more, but no-one can take they memories away from me. Life is what it is, you have to move on,” says O’connor as he reflects on his career while sitting on a beach in East Lothian towards the end of the documentar­y and shortly before admitting he had considered suicide.

He is still only 37 but it’s a long time since he operated as a footballer. His career was all but over by the time he hit 30. He regrets not making a better fist of one last final-chance at Morton.

Many things have been said about O’connor, some genuinely insulting. He was ridiculed as being so thick he could not even spell his own name, such as the time he was apprehende­d by police in Edinburgh and apparently forgot the second r in Garry when asked for his details. That’s not the O’connor that the programme’s director and editor, the East Lothian-raised Vito Milazzo, grew to know and like. And nor is it the figure producer Sinead Kirwan will recall. “The first time I met Garry was while we were filming the teaser – the BBC wanted to see how he was on camera,” says Milazzo.

“Sinead had previously worked on a miners’ strike documentar­y. And there was Garry chatting to Sinead about the miners’ strike and Thatcheris­m. Not something you would necessaril­y be prepared for if the only things you knew about Garry were from a Google search or the tabloids.”

He once paid £150,000 for a Ferrari in cash but only put 500 miles on the clock. The sense of waste is everywhere in this short – too short – but informativ­e and, importantl­y, educationa­l film. It’s also revelatory in places.

A sense of sadness pervades early on. O’connor recounts his days as a budding footballer. His mother and father were out working so his uncle Mark was a surrogate parent who took him to training. “He was always there to put a foot up my bum basically, he was always pushing me forward,” he recalls.

Mark was killed when O’connor was only 14 after being hit by a drunk driver. O’connor wonders whether he might have followed some of the paths taken had his uncle been there to guide him.

Mentors – or the absence of mentors – is a recurring theme. He suffers for it in Russia first time around (he returns for an ill-fated spell at Siberian club Tom Tomsk). There was no Tony Mowbray, no Alex Mcleish. And there was no – this might shock a few people – Rod Petrie. The chairman stuck his neck out for O’connor after Colin Calderwood brought the troubled striker back to Hibs in 2011.

“I feel I could have achieved a bit more, but no-one can take they memories away from me. Life is what it is, you have to move on”

GARRY O’CONNOR

“One story which does not make it in is that Rod Petrie held a fans’ event shortly after Garry re-signed,” recalls Milazzo. “Some fans were barracking him because Garry at that time was known for substance abuse issues. And Rod broke down in his defence and promised he would come good. And, in a sense, he did.”

His scoring rate – 16 goals in 40 appearance­s – was better than in his first spell. This goal touch deserted him when it mattered in the Scottish Cup final at the end of the season, when Hibs lost 5-1 to Hearts and O’connor, at the postmatch wake at Easter Road, fell off the wagon again.

Petrie struck up a personal connection with O’connor. After all, his transfer fee helped pay for the constructi­on of the club’s new training ground at East Mains.

O’connor was on his uppers after a spell on loan at Barnsley expired and he was released by Birmingham. It later emerged he had failed a drugs test having used cocaine to try and ward off depression as he battled to regain his form after injury.

There’s no question he wasted a lot of money – his monthly outgoings, he reveals, totalled as much as £60,000 long after he had stopped earning anything like that kind of money. He downsized in every way but his weight and moved into a council house.

The series’ title, Playing the Game, is chosen advisedly, with forthcomin­g programmes expected on such subjects as Mark Walters, who was the only black player in Scotland’s top-flight when he joined Rangers in 1987.

“We want to try and let people understand that these guys are not just playing the game,” explains Milazzo. “Hopefully this helps towards a reckoning so football learns to deal with the consequenc­es of asking these guys to play at a high level and have their lives revolve around 90-minute stretches without realising a footballer’s life encompasse­s so much more than that.”

The film ends on a hopeful note. The absence of a mentor is not something Josh, O’connor’s talented 16-yearold son, will lament. He is currently at Hibs, where great things are expected of him.

● Playing the Game: Garry O’connor is being shown on BBC Scotland on Tuesday at 10pm.

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 ??  ?? 2 O’connor celebrates his winning goal for Hibs against Hearts in the Edinburgh derby at Easter Road in August 2003. Inset, former Hibs chairman Rod Petrie who struck up a personal connection with the forward during his two spells at the club.
2 O’connor celebrates his winning goal for Hibs against Hearts in the Edinburgh derby at Easter Road in August 2003. Inset, former Hibs chairman Rod Petrie who struck up a personal connection with the forward during his two spells at the club.
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 ??  ?? 2 Clockwise from main, Garry O’connor in the documentar­y Playing the
Game; scoring for Scotland v Austria in 2005; celebratin­g Lokomotiv Moscow’s 2007 Russian Cup final success; and holding a Birmingham shirt after signing for the Midlands club two months later.
2 Clockwise from main, Garry O’connor in the documentar­y Playing the Game; scoring for Scotland v Austria in 2005; celebratin­g Lokomotiv Moscow’s 2007 Russian Cup final success; and holding a Birmingham shirt after signing for the Midlands club two months later.

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