When Ferguson left Tannadice and joined Rangers for £4m, the move was the measure of his dreams.
He played for the Rangers. He revered the manager, Walter Smith. He adored Ally McCoist, a famous striker.
The whole thing became a nightmare. Lack of game-time, scrutiny, trouble, minders, and claustrophobia in a wild living. And then he went for McStay.
Smith told him that he had to leave Glasgow for his own good after placing him down. Sentencing was coming – Barlinnie not far away – but in the meantime he needed a new start. He obtained a three-month loan from Everton, which led to a love affair.
TE: When Walter said you had to go, how did you feel?
When he said it, DF: I cried out in my eyes. I’d let him down. I’m sure he was telling me I was returning after the loan, but I’m not sure if he was right at the time. But I cried. I had gotten it wrong. I was drinking heavier. I had lost all control.
TE: The book is so honest. It’s a fantastic read. You weren’t at Everton long and you got done for drink driving.
DF: Yes, that’s correct. On my own. the center of the city. Saturday night. What do you do? I went for a drink, stupidly. I’m out on a Saturday night and have a game against Liverpool on Monday. Nuts.
TE: Joe Royle’s first game as manager of Everton?
DF: Yeah and I’m in the police station, 3am Sunday. Monday at Liverpool. The star striker’s in the nick.
TE: That story has a satisfying conclusion.
DF: Yeah, they let me out.
TE: You did, yes, but you did well.
DF: Of course. I’m not that, is it? That’s me. No instruction. In the jail. Leave, and the rest will be history. I battered them. particularly the second half. Guilt. That was the focus of my efforts. Guilt.
And you win the FA Cup, TE? You scored 73 goals in 273 games for Everton across two spells spanning a decade. Down there, they adore you. How long did it take for you to realise Everton – this is the place for me?
DF: Approximately a week. Once I was in that city, I wasn’t coming back. I didn’t mind. Nobody was targeting me. They were aware of me, but it wasn’t a Rangers-Celtic thing, was it? There’s no sectarianism. I experienced freedom. And I was fitter. And I was receiving minutes.
TE: Why does this club mean so much to you?
DF: I was taken over by the fans. There was never any trouble off the pitch, only the drink driving offence. At the club, they needed someone like me. The team wasn’t very good. They had a strong Scottish number nine tradition. I fitted that mould.
TE: They could sense the sincerity.
DF: I was aggressive. That was liked by the fans. They wanted somebody to get stuck in for them. Then, everything flipped for me. You’re playing against Liverpool, Man Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham. You are competing with some formidable adversaries. It brought the best out of me. I still adore the city. I still live down there. It’s a fantastic setting.
TE: Striker, captain and then manager. That must have been cosmic, in your opinion?
DF: What a feeling. It was a truly amazing experience for both my life and my career. One that I’ll never forget. I had first led the team, I had many goals scored for the club, and then I had to run them. So I’ve done it all there, really.
TE: You praised Carlo Ancelotti at Everton and worked for him.
DF: I was on my mate’s boat in Croatia, right? And his own boat is in the area. He’s on the phone. “I’m coming to see you,” “OK, no problem, Carlo”.