Former England captain John Terry said yesterday he was nothing like the popular image portrayed of him being a hellraising, hard drinking womanizer but was more likely to be seen bathing his children and staying in.
The 29-year-old told the Times — in an interview conducted before the revelations of his extra-marital affair with former Chelsea team-mate Wayne Bridge’s ex-girlfriend which led to him being sacked as national captain — that he rarely touched alcohol nowadays after several embarrassing episodes that made the front pages of the tabloid press.
“I probably don’t go out as much as I should do with my wife,” said Terry, who has flown out with Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti’s blessing to Dubai to try and patch up his marriage with his wife Toni.
“She tells me a lot we should go out more. I’m away with football a lot so when I get home I just really enjoy being at home, and its a case of having to get the balance right with my marriage, keeping the wife happy, keeping the kids happy, making sure everything runs smoothly,” he said.
Terry, who had tried England manager Fabio Capllo’s patience prior to the latest revelations with stories about him selling trips round the England training grounds, painted a picture of his qualities as a father — something for which he won a “Dad of the Year” award last year.
“Nine times out of 10 I will get in the bath with them [three -year-old twins, a girl and a boy] then get myself into my pyjamas and put my feet up, get ready for Eastenders [BBC soap opera],” he said. “I just try to enjoy them and give all my time to the kids really. That’s a normal day.”
He credits his children with helping him reduce his alcohol intake, which had seen him involved in among other things a boorish and tasteless outburst — along with several Chelsea teammates — at a group of American tourists at a hotel at Heathrow Airport on the night of the Sept. 11 2001 terror attacks.
“The kids have helped me grow up quite a bit, something which I probably needed ... there was a stage when I first got into the first team when after a game I’d be out on a Saturday night and have a good few drinks,” Terry said.
“[Last] Christmas I had one sip of champagne to be polite and then pushed it to the middle of the table. If I go for a nice meal with my wife, I’ll have one glass of wine and that’ll do me,” he said. “I just enjoy being able to appreciate nice restaurants with my wife, who’s stuck by me for a long time now.”
Terry makes clear that but for his forklift driving father’s encouragement he might never have made it at the top of his profession.
“He [his father Ted] drummed it into us, me and my brother, to crack on and get our heads down, work very hard every day, which is what we done,” he said.
Terry says that despite revelations in the papers about his parents — his mother being caught along with his mother-in-law shoplifting last year and his father allegedly trying to sell cocaine to an undercover reporter — that he will always forgive them no matter what.
“You can never choose your parents and I’ll always love them,” he said.
Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday held their nerve to beat Liverpool 4-1 on penalties and reach the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals after their tie finished one-apiece on aggregate, while Bayern Munich saw off Bayer 04 Leverkusen to complete a 5-0 win over both legs. Lamine Yamal and Raphinha fired Barcelona into the next round as the Catalans bested SL Benfica 3-1, and Inter booked a last-eight meeting with Bayern by seeing off Feyenoord 2-1. At Anfield, Ousmane Dembele netted the only goal of the night as PSG bounced back from Liverpool’s late winner last week to force the tie to extra-time and penalties. Maligned
Taiwan’s Lin Chun-yi on Wednesday inflicted a first-round defeat on former badminton world No. 1 Viktor Axelsen at the All England Open. Lin came out of top after a back-and-forth first game before Axelsen dominated the second, but the Dane was not able to keep that form in the decider as Lin reeled off six points in a row on the way to a 21-19, 13-21, 21-11 victory. “If I don’t play my best, everyone can win against me,” said Axelsen, the world No. 4. “Today’s opponent played a fantastic game; it was disappointing, but that is how it is.” “I just tried
Two-time Indian Wells champion Iga Swiatek on Thursday avenged her shock Paris Olympics loss to Zheng Qinwen with a 6-3, 6-3 win over the Chinese eighth seed, setting up a semi-final against 17-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva in the California desert. In the men’s singles, Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz put on a show with his acrobatic shotmaking under the lights to close out the day’s action, overcoming a 4-1 second-set deficit to defeat Francisco Cerundolo 6-3, 7-6 (7/4), while Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei crashed out of the women’s doubles. Swiatek, one of the gold medal favorites when she lost to eventual champion Zheng in the
UNDERDOG STORY: Lee said that he did not expect to do this well, overcoming French favorite Alex Lanier to advance to his first BWF World Tour Super 1000 final Taiwan’s Lee Chia-hao on Saturday continued his fairytale run at the All England Open, dispatching France’s Alex Lanier to set up a final against world No. 1 Shi Yuqi of China after press time last night. Lee, staged a comeback after losing the first game to overcome in-form Lanier, the last remaining European in the competition, 19-21 21-14 21-17, as the Taiwanese shuttler advanced to his first BWF World Tour Super 1000 final. “The victory hasn’t sunk in yet. I didn’t expect that I would do this well,” the world No. 22 said. “I’m so surprised by the result myself.” “I was really