IT TOOK a jury less than 90 minutes yesterday to clear Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard of affray even though he admitted punching a man three times in a bar.
Gerrard maintained that he had acted in self-defence during the brawl at the Lounge Inn in Southport last December, which was triggered by a row over control of music.
Gerrard (29) had wanted to pick the music in the bar, but Marcus McGee, who was in charge of the CD player, refused his request. The trial was told that although McGee (34) did not throw any punches, the player believed he was about to be hit.
Earlier in the evening, the England international and his friends had seemed to be in high spirits, singing and dancing as they celebrated a crushing victory over Newcastle United.
Minutes after he had been rebuffed by McGee, the footballer approached him as he sat on a barstool. John Doran, Gerrard’s friend, elbowed McGee in the face, making him reel backwards and forwards.
Fearing that he was about to be attacked, Gerrard landed three uppercuts on his face.
During the trial, he apologised for what had happened. Around 100 supporters gathered outside court yesterday and cheered as Gerrard left the building.
Gerrard said: “I would like to put this case behind me now and I am really looking forward to the season ahead and concentrating on football now.”
Judge Henry Globe, recorder of Liverpool, told Liverpool crown court after the verdict that the football player “could walk away with his reputation intact”.
The judge told Gerrard that in hindsight it “may have been unwise of you” to approach Marcus McGee following the trivial disagreement.
“However, that is far from saying you were criminally responsible for the violence that thereafter erupted.”
The judge said when the violence commenced the victim and his partner Gina Lond, who was standing nearby, thought that Gerrard had started it. Gerrard himself had initially thought McGee was the first person to deliver a blow.
“The CCTV evidence obtained later demonstrated conclusively that you were all mistaken,” the judge noted. The judge said the verdict was credible and the jury had demonstrably paid close attention to the full facts of the case.
Six of Gerrard’s friends, two of whom are Accrington Stanley players, will be sentenced next month after pleading guilty to charges of affray or threatening behaviour in connection with the brawl.
Having twice rejected the lure of Chelsea’s riches, “Stevie G”, as he is universally known to the red half of Liverpool, epitomises the one-club player, the local boy made good who has tried to maintain his links to the Bluebell estate in Huyton, where he grew up.
During the trial he appeared to well up as a statement from Kenny Dalglish was read out in court. “He is a very humble man,” the former Liverpool star said, who was “not the archetypal footballer” and had “never forgotten his roots”.
But the England midfielder’s evident puzzlement, then anger, at the man who, in the words of the prosecution, dared to “say no” to Steven Gerrard betrayed the fact that he could never be one of the lads.
Jon Holmes, the veteran football agent whose clients have included David Beckham, said: “Their relationship with their community and the world they’re from has changed enormously. The irony is that Gerrard is probably better connected to his community than others.”
Former Chelsea player Pat Nevin said that there have always been punch-ups and drunken incidents involving players down the years, but in the past they were less likely to make the papers.
“It existed when I was playing and probably before that. You had those whose heads were turned by the fame and the money, even when the money was just twice the average wage,” he said.
“You also have to think about the way society treats these players. They are treated like gods and they are ordinary people. If you treat them like gods you will be disappointed.”
Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez was delighted his captain could now “focus on football” after being cleared.
Gerrard has missed the Far East trip because of the week-long trial, and will be reunited with his team-mates next week when Liverpool return to Britain.
“We are really pleased. He is very important for us and he can now focus just on football. We are all pleased at the club and over here at the training camp.
“We have been supporting him all the time and were just waiting for the decision. Now he can concentrate just on football and hopefully play at the same level as last year,” said Benitez as he prepared his side for tomorrow’s friendly against Singapore.
Guardian Service
Soccer: pages 4 and 5