The Scottish Mail on Sunday

End for Barton?

Tinpot philosophe­r who never learns from his mistakes

- By Stephen Davies

Barnsley scuffle shows that great philosophe­r Joey just never learns from his mistakes

JOEY BARTON has always tried to hide behind the mask of the troubled genius. If you believe his own narrative, Barton is a character of such depth and complexity that his constant dance with controvers­y is merely the collateral damage of his wisdom.

How often does that veil have to slip for the reality to show itself for what it is?

How many incidents does it take for it not to matter how often you tweet quotes from George Orwell, Aristotle and Friedrich Nietzsche, or engage in debate with students on a part-time philosophy course, or adopt an intellectu­al French accent in press conference­s, for it all to become an obvious façade.

It says much about your reputation and your character that when allegation­s surfaced that Barton had assaulted Barnsley manager Daniel Stendel in the tunnel following Fleetwood’s defeat at Oakwell and a hastily-deleted tweet from Tykes striker Cauley Woodrow claimed Stendel had been left with ‘blood pouring from his face’, that the initial reaction was one of shock but little in the way of surprise.

Why would you be surprised? This is, after all, a man who began his career by stubbing out a cigar in the eye of young team-mate Jamie Tandy at a Manchester City Christmas party.

Barton was fined £60,000 in wages and would have to pay Tandy £65,000 in damages.

Barton spent six months in prison in 2008 after being caught on CCTV in Liverpool city centre punching someone 20 times and leaving a teenage boy with broken teeth.

Barton avoided any police action for dropping his shorts towards Everton supporters at Goodison Park in 2006, but was sent home and fined eight weeks’ wages by City a year earlier after a bar brawl involving a 15-year-old Toffees fan on a pre-season tour in Bangkok.

That incident ended with Barton sinking his teeth into the hand of his team-mate Richard Dunne. Is that enough? Barton was also suspended by City, charged with assault given a fourmonth suspended jail sentence, hit with a 12-match ban — of which six were suspended — and fined £25,000 after a training-ground incident in 2007 put team-mate Ousmane Dabo in hospital.

For someone apparently driven by philosophy, the quest for knowledge, understand­ing and ethics of human behaviour, Barton does not appear to have learned all that much. If he had, the incidents would have stopped. They would not have followed him, like Peter Pan in pursuit of his shadow, wherever he went.

Barton found himself banished from Rangers’ training ground in 2016 after an altercatio­n with team-mate Andy Halliday following a defeat to Celtic.

His latest indiscreti­on saw him banned for 18 months and fined £30,000 after he admitted placing more than 1,200 bets on matches between 2006 and 2016.

It was upon the return from this absence that he was appointed as Fleetwood Town boss last June.

In less than a year, the mask has slipped again.

But the incident which perhaps sums up Barton best comes from his time at Burnley. During an FA Cup fifth-round tie against Lincoln in 2017, Barton stamped on Matt Rhead before then diving to the floor himself in an attempt to get his opponent sent off.

And that, in essence, is what he is all about. It’s misdirecti­on. It’s the philosophe­r’s new clothes.

Surely this time, if he is found guilty, his actions will be enough to show once and for all what is really behind the mask.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 3 WAIT FOR IT: A Barnsley steward stands in front of the car to prevent Barton and his driver from making an exit 2 HOLD ON A MOMENT: A female police officer dashes forward and signals for the driver to remain at Oakwell 1 GRIM-FACED: Barton leaves the Barnsley changing rooms with Fleetwood officials and heads for his car PREVIOUS: Jason Tandy was a victim of Barton at Manchester City FIERY: Barton on the touchline during Fleetwood’s defeat
3 WAIT FOR IT: A Barnsley steward stands in front of the car to prevent Barton and his driver from making an exit 2 HOLD ON A MOMENT: A female police officer dashes forward and signals for the driver to remain at Oakwell 1 GRIM-FACED: Barton leaves the Barnsley changing rooms with Fleetwood officials and heads for his car PREVIOUS: Jason Tandy was a victim of Barton at Manchester City FIERY: Barton on the touchline during Fleetwood’s defeat

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom