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Ex-Premier League star Troy Deeney opens up about his life in prison & how he got his first big break in football

Rajarshi has been part of Khel Now since 2022, and he covers world football.
Published at :July 4, 2025 at 8:21 PM
Modified at :July 4, 2025 at 8:21 PM
Ex-Premier League star Troy Deeney opens up about his life in prison & how he got his first big break in football

The striker spent 11 years playing for Watford.

Troy Deeney was welcomed as a guest on GOAL’s brand-new Beast Mode On Podcast, which was presented by Adebayo Akinfenwa.

Troy Deeney talked about a variety of subjects pertaining to his amazing narrative of redemption, including his three-month jail sentence in 2012.

Prior to departing for Birmingham City in 2021, Troy Deeney scored 47 Premier League goals for Watford, more than any other player in the club’s history.

Troy Deeney also provided insight into his physical and mental coping mechanisms while incarcerated following an altercation with a group of Birmingham students.

Troy Deeney talks about his worst time in prison

Speaking to Akinfenwa about his first days in prison, Deeney says:

“I get locked up on the Monday, a perfect storm and realisation that this thing was meant to happen. And I do believe in a higher power. I get locked up, Watford get bought. So in the midst of that they brought in 42 new players. Nobody at any point goes; ‘Where’s the No.9?'”

“Fast forward now from June [2012], to September, when I came out of jail, at the end of August, when you can finally do the last changes for the [squad] numbers, [ex-Watford striker Matej] Vydra was like; ‘Why can’t I be No.9?’

And they were like; ‘Why can’t he be No.9? Who is No.9?’ And they’ve gone; ‘Oh, he’s in jail’. But at this point they’ve not done the first letter, written warning, they’ve not given me anything. It was going to take three weeks for that process to at least get rid of me. I was coming home in 10 days.”

Troy Deeney adds: “In jail, I’m 300 press-ups a day. He (Deeney’s son), didn’t know I was in jail. He thought I was at football camp. I had to phone home every day at six o’clock. Bearing in mind he’s three [years old], it’s easy to lie. The only reason he knew I was in jail was someone at his school told him, years later.”

The former Watford striker revealed how it was his first night in jail

“The first two weeks were fine – I was at Winson Green jail in Birmingham and all my friends from home were there. As soon as you go in, into a holding cell, figure it all out. The biggest part about it, you walk in, I think it’s six x 12, it’s tight anyway. There’s a bunk bed, there’s a guy on the bunk bed and all I could see was, he was there, and the sh*tter was there.”

”And I was thinking; ‘Any time one of us needs to go, this is so compromising’. First thing I said to him was; ‘When do we use the toilet?’ And he was like; ‘When they bring food round, or it’s time for a call, then you go at those times’. Turned out his baby’s mum was in my class at school.”

Akinfenwa notes that Deeney’s experience was not one in which he was attacked by other prisoners, as is sometimes depicted in films. The former striker for Birmingham says:

“Genuinely, it was like; ‘This is where I’m comfortable’. And it’s horrible to say but you’re not going anywhere. You think about your dad being dead, you left your little man at home, you said you’re the man, you’re the provider, and now Mapsi’s (ex-Watford defender Adrian Mariappa) lending me £10,000 to cover the bills. He doesn’t like me saying it but I will always champion him for it, he didn’t have to do that.”

Troy Deeney reveals how he got to know about his call-up to one of the top Premier League clubs

Akinfenwa then questions Troy Deeney about his professional football debut and how he was scouted despite hearing he had scored seven goals in a game while intoxicated. Troy Deeney states:

“I scored a few. What happened was, I used to be a builder, got kicked out of school in Year 10. They let me do Year 11 but I was only allowed to play football matches. I wasn’t allowed to take GCSEs.

I went to Carillion building school, passed that by 17, just about passed that as I was terrible but I got through. I was doing a job, then the job finished that Friday and you’d get £200.”

”You go home [and say]; ‘Mum that’s yours, what do we need?’. And then whatever’s mine I’m out with the lads. Went out Friday, got home about 4am, my mum, still to this day, cleans on a Saturday, tunes on, works her way from top to bottom, gets to my room [and says]; ‘You’ve got to get out”.

“Check the phone, lads are playing, so I’m like; ‘Let’s go and play football’. Asda bag, muddy boots, brush the teeth, fly across. After the game I’m walking in, they used to put out chips and chip butties, when I got there, because I was hanging, I had a double Jack Daniels and Coke to level it off.

As I’m walking in, this guy, Mick Halsall, who changed our family’s life, was like Who are you? Where have you been? How old are you?’ I’m just looking over his shoulder counting how many people have gone in to get the chips. I’m fuming.

”He’s like; ‘Come to Walsall’. And I’d never been outside of Birmingham at this point, so I didn’t know where Walsall was. I’m like; ‘Okay mate, no problem’. [Halsall says] ‘Monday, be there’.”

Then, Troy Deeney describes how he drove out to a party on that same Saturday night, participated in a Sunday league match the following day, where he got into a brawl, and then went out to drink again on Sunday night.

According to Deeney, “The rest is history” after he first forgot he had to attend the Walsall trial.

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Rajarshi Shukla
Rajarshi Shukla

After earning a bachelor's degree in mass media, Rajarshi began his career as a sports writer in 2019, driven by his passion for sports journalism. He has been working in the field for over six years. A devoted fan of Lionel Messi and Barcelona, Rajarshi has been involved in sports since childhood. Before turning his focus to journalism, he even represented his college at the state level. Along with covering football, he enjoys playing the game, watching movies, and experimenting with new recipes in his spare time, as cooking is one of his favorite hobbies.

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