

Duncan Ferguson headbutted Raith Rovers player, John McStay, on the pitch at Ibrox in April 1994 in one of Scottish footballs most controversial moments.
Incredibly, referee Kenny Clark missed the incident, but the authorities didnt overlook it, and a year and a half later, the striker was sentenced to three months in prison owing to a breach of probation because of other assault convictions on his record.
Speaking exclusively to FourFourTwo over thirty years later, Ferguson is adamant he didnt deserve to go to prison.
I think it was harsh, what happened, he explains calmly. So, regret? Yeah, I wish it hadnt happened. There was slight contact it wasnt a full-blooded headbutt and he went down, but I didnt expect what came next.
It was a big moment for me in my Rangers career and in Scotland, because its one of the reasons why I moved to the south.
Walter Smith, God bless him, said I needed to get out of Scotland. In the end, it cost me my Scotland career.
In addition to the prison sentence, Ferguson was banned for 12 games with the Scottish FA refusing to count games missed while he was in jail.
It left a bitter taste that Ferguson was never able to get over. No Scotsman has scored more Premier League goals than him, yet he never scored for his country at international level, appearing only seven times.
My heart wasnt in it. Thats the truth of it. Id had the stuffing kicked out of me, Id had the fight taken out of me. I was bitter, I was upset.
When I came out the nick I retired then. Craig Brown, bless him, said Duncan, no. Im not going to tell anybody [that youve retired] because this is ridiculous. Youre only 23. Youve got your whole career ahead of you.
They kept on pulling me out of squads, they kept on making up excuses. My dad, a proud Jock, a proud Scotsman, said get back. I ended up going back. I didnt want to go back. I played a couple of games but my heart wasnt in it. In the end I said to them: Im no good to you.
its the biggest regret of my career not playing more for my country. I shouldve broken goal records. There wasnt a centre forward who was going to take my place.
Thats just words now, people forget. My records not there.
There is a bitter irony that Ferguson found himself inside a world he thought hed escaped thanks to his ability on a football pitch, because of his actions on a football pitch.
Barlinnie is a notoriously violent prison in Glasgow, and Ferguson lived inside it as a Rangers player, on loan to Everton at the time, having joined the Ibrox club for �4 million two years prior.
I got looked after, he admits, adding matter of factly: but that wont stop somebody throwing a bucket of s**te at you.
From slashings to suicide, Ferguson was exposed to most of the horrors associated with incarceration.
I saw it all. Crazy things. People drinking shampoo to make themselves puke up drugs. It was f**king terrible.
I worked in the hospital wing and people would always steal needles, drugs. People were s**tting out balloons full of drugs onto newspapers.
They were swallowing the drugs, then going into the nick and s**tting it out.
One day feels like a week in prison. Once you settle and get into the rhythm of the thing, you forget youre Duncan Ferguson; you forget about your family. Youre a prisoner: youre in there and you get on with it.
Id just won the FA Cup, and it was tough everyone knows who you are. You have a target on your back.
You would worry about somebody coming behind you, cutting you. You could get cut in Barlinnie for two quid.
There were some Everton fans in there, too. There are always Scousers everywhere!Upon release, Ferguson, who was 23 at the time, was collected by Everton officials and driven south to resume his football career outside of Scotland.
Big Dunc: The Upfront Autobiography by Duncan Ferguson, written with Henry Winter, is available to buy now from in hardback, eBook and audiobook (read by Duncan)
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