Five Weeks In Prison: Stoke City’s Vincent Pericard’s Experience

Five Weeks In Prison: Stoke City’s Vincent Pericard’s Experience

Let that be a lesson to all footballers who think can escape the clutches of justice: playing the beautiful game is sometimes not enough to mellow the heart of a judge.

Vincent Pericard, French-Camerounian striker in force at League Championship club Stoke City, was just recently released from the Exeter penitentiary on a suspended sentence, after a period over one month spent in prison. UK’s most reliable news source The Sun (who else?), snagged an interview with the player, who told the tale of his life behind bars.

pericard Five Weeks In Prison: Stoke Citys Vincent Pericards ExperienceA little bit of history first: in March last year, Pericard was snapped doing 103mph in a 70mph zone in his flash Mercedes CLK 500. He tried claiming his stepfather Jack Henri Pericard was behind the wheel, but what he didn’t know was that British police would track down Mr. Pericard Senior, and confirm that the stepdad had not set foot in the UK for over 3 years!

Late in August, Pericard pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice, and was sentenced to 4 months in jail.

“The greatest fear I had was for my sanity,” said Pericard to The Sun after his release. “I was afraid of losing my mind, going mad, becoming claustrophobic and not being able to express myself any more. (…) I feared my head would explode.”

What nearly sent Pericard over the edge was the prison’s daily routine, made of regular hours and fixed rules. “”We ate in our cells, where we’d be locked up until 11am, and then we’d go and get our lunch, which we’d once again eat behind closed cell doors. It was the same routine again with the evening meal.” A nightmare in essence, just like the measly £7 weekly salary given to each convict, which Pericard used to recharge his cellphone, and buy extra clothing or food. “If you stayed in bed all day you didn’t have enough to eat.”

vincent pericard stoke Five Weeks In Prison: Stoke Citys Vincent Pericards ExperienceTo top it all, the ex-French Under 21 star also witnessed an inmate (in the cell next to his) take his own life… “Prison is a whole other world, a place where no one wants to end up (…) It was a society of criminals with its own way of thinking, where all the laws and rules are different. I was living daily with drug dealers, pedophiles, rapists, murderers (…) people who no longer form part of society, and I do not want to be like them. It is the toughest thing I have had to endure in my life.”

Pericard is now on parole (suspended sentence) after being originally sentenced to 4 months in prison, which means he’ll have to live another 3 months with an electronic ankle bracelet. Not ideal when you’re playing football, but in case you’re wondering: the bracelet never comes off, not even during practice sessions.

“The judge who sentenced me was in a bad mood that day, and he wanted to make an example of a footballer,” argued the forward. “When he passed sentence on me I didn’t know how to react… the police put handcuffs on me straight away and led me to the cells – the shock lasted for days. In my cell I learned that everything in your life can change in the blink of an eye (…) I’d been happy, with my friends and my freedom, but suddenly they took everything away: no contacts, no phone, nothing. It has been a hard lesson for me: from now on I will respect the law and I recommend everyone do the same.”

Fortunately for Pericard, during the hellish 5 weeks of reclusion he received the support of his former coach at Porstmouth, Harry Redknapp, as well as old teammate Teddy Sheringham. The board of Stoke City also gave the Frenchman a big vote of confidence, by giving him a second chance at the club. “They could have easily canceled my contract and saved some money, but they didn’t, they had faith in me and this helped, gave me hope. Now, every day of the week is like Christmas, because I am back with my friends and my teammates.” Far from the convicts of Exeter.

mean machine.thumbnail Five Weeks In Prison: Stoke Citys Vincent Pericards ExperienceOn a lighter note, Vincent must have kept busy during his stay in prison. Don’t tell me that isn’t him next to Vinnie Jones…

Do you know of any other football players that had to serve time behind bars?

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Other football ex-cons:

Rene Higuita: Colombian keeper, famous for his scorpion kick against England, served 7 months inside for a drug cartel kidnapping.
Peter Storey: Ex-Arsenal defender got 3 years for plot to counterfeit gold coins in 1980 and later jailed again for importing video porn.
Tony Adams: Drink-driving saw ex-Arsenal defender sentenced to 6 months in 1990.
Peter Swan: Former Sheffield Wednesday star received a 4-month jail sentence in 1962 for his part in a betting scandal.
Terry Fenwick: Drink-driving got ex-QPR and Spurs defender a 4-month sentence in 1991.
George Best: Manchester United legend got 3 months for drink-driving, assaulting a policeman and jumping bail in December 1984.
Jan Molby: Liverpool old boy jailed for 3 months in 1988 after crashing his car outside a nightclub.
Graham Rix: Jailed for 12 months in 2003 after being convicted of indecent assault and unlawful sex with a 15-year-old girl.
Ricky Otto: Robbery as a teenager saw the ex-Birmingham and Leyton Orient winger banged up for 3 years in 1986.
Lee Hughes: Sentenced to 6 years in 2004 for causing death by dangerous driving, the ex-West Brom striker was released early this year and now plays for Oldham.
Duncan Ferguson: Jailed for 3 months for head-butting John McStay during a match in 1995 when he was playing for Rangers.
(Edmundo:) The Brazilian striker is accused of vehicular manslaughter, causing the death of 3 people in 1995. His sentence of 4 and a half years in jail is currently under appeal.

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List of Football’s Lags XI and Vincent Pericard quotes from The Daily Mirror

Marco Pantanella writes on the mCalcio blog

Topics: Features, General Football News

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4 Comments

  1. KingOfZamunda

    Punks the lot of em- they forget where they came from and the laws of the land soon as they start earning footballer’s salaries. Follow the example set by the LTA with the trainees who posted pics and vid of their partying on the web and the selector’s swiftly told em to forget their careers and move onto something else, that’s deter the Lee Bowyers of the future…

    October 10th, 2007 @ 23:20
  2. Hugo Steckelmacher

    You missed out quite a few ex-cons… which is a depressing thing to say. Cantona and Bowyer are two examples.

    October 11th, 2007 @ 01:07
  3. Marco Pantanella

    Actually Hugo, if we trust the information on Wikipedia, neither Bowyer nor Cantona served any time behind bars. Only community service.

    Lee Bowyer
    Following an incident in Leeds in January 2000, in which an Asian student suffered severe injuries, Bowyer and teammate Jonathan Woodgate were charged with causing grievous bodily harm with intent and affray. An initial trial collapsed in April 2001 after an article in a Sunday newspaper and following a second trial, which ended in December 2001, Bowyer was cleared of both charges while Woodgate was convicted of affray and sentenced to community service.

    Eric Cantona
    Cantona (…) became infamous for an incident that occurred on 25 January 1995. In an away match against Crystal Palace, after being sent off by the referee for a vengeful kick on Palace defender Richard Shaw (after Shaw had pulled his shirt without punishment), he launched a ‘kung-fu’ style kick against a Crystal Palace fan, Matthew Simmons. Simmons was later tried for threatening language and behaviour, and attacked the prosecution counsel after being found guilty, leaping over a bench and executing a flying kick of his own. He was sentenced to seven days in jail, but only served 24 hours of his sentence.

    At a press conference called later, Cantona gave what is perhaps his most famous quotation. As the journalists gathered to hear him speak, Cantona entered the room, sat down and said, in a slow and deliberate manner:

    “When the seagulls follow the trawler, it’s because they think sardines will be thrown in to the sea”

    He then got up from his seat and left, leaving many of the assembled crowd bemused. He was sentenced to 120 hours of community service after an appeal court overturned a 2 week prison sentence for assault.

    October 11th, 2007 @ 02:17
  4. Paul Moxam

    what about Mickey Thomas (ex man Utd, wrexham, Chelsea, Stoke wales etc). Went inside for forgery

    October 23rd, 2007 @ 19:02

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