Words like “controversial” and “disappointment” and “reclusive” have followed James Hird, the former AFL coach at Essendon Football Club, since February 2013.
Especially the world “guilty”. It’s been used a lot.
February 2013 was when Essendon self-reported to the league’s regulatory bodies. The club, where Hird was senior coach, asked the authorities to investigate concerns about the inappropriate use of supplements during the 2012 season.
It came just before the Australian Crime Commission found professional sport in Australia was ”highly vulnerable to organised crime infiltration”, including doping. It was dubbed the “blackest day in Australian sport.”
Now, Hird has been admitted to a mental hospital following a suspected drug overdose on Wednesday night.
The Victorian ambulance service was called to the family home to attend a “poisoning overdose” just after 10pm two nights ago. The cause of his hospitalisation is yet to be confirmed. It’s been reported to be of a “serious and disturbing nature”.
We should have seen this coming.
Likely, you know about the doping scandal.
A supplement program which, implemented at the club in 2012 under Hird's supervision, should have involved vitamins and amino acids. Instead, it saw the administration of prohibited drugs.
The club was ruled ineligible to participate in the 2013 AFL finals series. Hird was suspended from involvement in any football club for 12 months, effective August 2013.