Sunderland NewsCareer May be uncertain as Aaron Connolly bravely opens up on alcohol addiction
Sunderland NewsCareer May be uncertain as Aaron Connolly bravely opens up on alcohol addictionSunderland new
boy Aaron Connolly has revealed an alcohol addiction has marred the last few years of his career, as he looks to make a fresh start on Wearside.
The Republic of Ireland striker is building up his match fitness with the Black Cats after his summer release from
Hull City. The former Brighton prospect used World Mental Health Day on Thursday to open up on his his past
demons, having sought treatment for his alcoholism.
Connolly burst on to the scene in the Premier League with a brace for Brighton against Tottenham, and had spells
on loan at Middlesbrough before moving to Hull.
Speaking with brave honesty about the low mental state he was in at the time, Connolly told the Sunderland club
website: “Tottenham, It was one of the best days of my life, but also one of the worst because the following five years
was from that.
“I just stopped working, stopped doing the things I should have kept doing. I started to believe the hype, and I just
didn’t turn into a good person after that. I was tough to be around. Nobody could tell me anything, I’d done it all
myself, nobody else helped me get to where I’d got to. That’s what I believed.
“My parents did try, but I just let myself believe everything people were saying online and it just took over. I always
say to my parents, I started to live the life of a footballer without the football side of it. That was the hardest thing to
admit at the time, that I wasn’t doing all the things that had got me to the position where I could go and get my
house and treat my family, and do all that sort of stuff.
“It hurts to look back and speak about it because I know if I had done everything right, maybe I would still be in the
Premier League. Maybe I wouldn’t, but at least I’d know I’d given it all I could to try to stay at that level.”
Off-field issues saw him fall down the pecking order at Brighton before he arrived on loan at Boro to try and
resurrect his career. When that didn’t go to plan there was a short stint in Italy before he spent 18 months at Hull.
Though his form on the pitch picked up, he admits he still wasn’t in a good place.
“It was obvious I had a problem with alcohol for a good few years,” continued Connolly. “I had my parents, who
never drank before and were always telling me when I was younger to stay away from alcohol. That was always their
thing because of addiction to alcohol in my family.
“I didn’t listen, clearly. It got me into a lot of trouble and a lot of problems, and it just became something that I
relied on. It felt like my buzz used to come from football, and winning games and scoring goals, and it got to a point
where the buzz was more from drinking alcohol than going out on a football pitch.
“I used to look forward to the games finishing so I could have time to go and have a drink and socialise. I say
socialise, but it was just an excuse to go and get drunk, to go straight to alcohol, and that was where I got my buzz
from, whereas before, it was always the buzz of football and being around an environment like I am now. For three
or four years, that just wasn’t there.
“I had one of my best seasons last year at Hull, but off the pitch, my life was a mess. The manager at Hull, to be fair,
always looked after me, and always tried to help. But it just got to a point where, it wasn’t like life wasn’t worth
living, it wasn’t a big dramatic thing, but it was just that my life was so unmanageable and I couldn’t control what I
could do and couldn’t control my alcohol.
“It just got to a point where I had to make a decision where I needed to go to a treatment clinic, and I spent a month
there in the summer. I just said to my agent, ‘I don’t want you to contact any clubs. I’m not doing this for football,
I’m doing this so I can get my life back, and if stuff in football comes with that, then that’s a bonus’.
“It’s an addiction, and the toughest thing I ever had to do was go in there,” Connolly added on World Mental Health
Day. “There’s no price tag or no amount of money in the world that can cure it. It’s a disease, an illness. But going to
the clinic was the best and worst month of my life.
“I just hope this might help people. I had everything every young boy would dream, but I couldn’t get hold of my addiction without that help.”
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