Cousins Kicks Off With A Promise
The Age
Thursday December 18, 2008
BEN Cousins' extraordinary episode of public catharsis yesterday - tightly controlled, but only just - began with a promise. The recovering drug addict and new Richmond AFL player wanted to be "open and honest", pledged the club's media manager, Judith Donnelly. "Ben wants to be as frank as he possibly can."
On paper it was an announcement of the fallen star's sensational AFL comeback. But it would quickly become so much more. Cousins would take questions on footy, she said, while suggesting that he was willing to consider other issues. She didn't name them but there are two: drugs and gangsters.The timing was exquisite. Painful, almost. It was like the beginning of another chapter in the drama his life has become.The morning's news was all about Cousins playing footy again but also about a link, revealed in the Supreme Court, to alleged Melbourne underworld figure Angelo Venditti, who is accused of organising a contract on the life of a gangland drug dealer. Police surveillance showed Cousins and Venditti spoke between May and June this year, the court heard. Venditti is linked to others Cousins has associated with - Perth underworld figure John Kizon and Sydney man Fabian Quaid, charged this year with trafficking 45 kilograms of ecstasy.So here Cousins was and Channel Nine was televising live. His combative manager, Ricky Nixon, would try in vain to stay out of the spotlight and stay out of people's faces. The mood was intense and expectant.Cousins came dressed down, which was a new development. Just the Tigers' shirt, plain jeans and runners. Neither was he wearing the self-satisfied smirk that has blighted his often disastrous media appearances until now. He looked confident but he also looked contrite. He looked poised to actually offer something meaningful.First up, the Brownlow medallist said he felt "resurrected" - risen from the dead. He was grateful to Richmond for that. His year-long suspension from the AFL for drug use had been "humbling". Then the dark stuff began. No matter how wonderful a sportsman he has been or may be again, there's always dirt with Cousins.He has admitted using drugs. Last year it was alleged he went on a five-day cocaine binge in America. He has been arrested shirtless and grinning in the Perth morning sun and photographed semi-conscious in the dead of night outside Crown Casino. Last month he avoided a hair drug test by arriving at the appointment with no hair.Right now, he said, he was deep inside rehabilitation. In fact it was still "very early on in my recovery". Rehabilitation, for him, meant "addicts helping other addicts" and "learning about situations I can put myself in and some I can't."The changes he had made to his lifestyle were things he was still "coming to terms with". He was trying to lead a "normal" lifestyle and escape the "harsh reality of my affliction".Cousins was inevitably asked about the police surveillance that emerged in the court trial of Venditti. It wasn't as if, at this moment, with the promises of openness and honesty offered from the outset, that he was going to get away with sharing only something of his drug issues and then chatting about his hamstring.He took the hard question with good grace. It was a "six degrees of separation" thing, he said, and through his "hard times" he had been linked with others who had also fallen on "hard times". What people didn't know, he said, was that some of his associations were "born out of sincere friendship", a common thread between those suffering "hard times".The same reporter, Peter Morris from Channel Seven, who covers crime stories, then asked Cousins if he knew Venditti. Cousins said he did, like lots of people in footy did, but the relationship was not of a criminal nature.Morris then asked Cousins if he knew Kizon. At which point Nixon - the manager - emerged from the shadows. "Have you actually got a footy question," he said to Morris. "Because you're being a knob at the moment."Morris let others take over. There was a sense that it was getting edgy and that Nixon was the type of minder who would pull the plug on an important news conference. But there was also a nagging sense that Cousins, if given the opportunity, would have answered the Kizon question. There was a nagging sense that he would have answered anything, if there was the time and the place to ask.
© 2008 The Age
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