Former Everton chairman Bill Kenwright has died aged 78 (Dave Howarth/PA)
Bill Kenwright would proudly regale anyone who cared to listen about his tales from the Boys’ Pen at Goodison Park, how he took two buses and a tram to watch his hero Dave Hickson, of eating soggy meat pies.
And, even though he graduated from the terraces to the boardroom, he never lost his love for the club. He was a chairman who remained a fan at heart.
It was, however, a stick used to beat him with when money became the driving force in football and the Toffees fell behind the Premier League’s big guns.
Bill Kenwright at Wembley for Everton’s FA Cup semi-final against Manchester United in 2009 (Nick Potts/PA)
Nevertheless, his death at the age of 78 after suffering from cancer will be felt keenly by all associated with Everton.
Born on September 4, 1945 in Liverpool, the son of a bricklayer-turned-builder, his own journey was something considerably more dramatic – quite literally.
He took his inspiration from boyhood hero Hickson, saying: “I found a sort of guide – he taught me how to dare.
“From my family, I had real protection and comfort and, in mum, a spirit that said I could do anything I wanted to.”
Bill Kenwright with Wayne Rooney (Peter Byrne/PA)
His mother, Hope, who died in 2012 aged 93, remained a huge influence on his life and was famously dragged into Manchester United’s negotiations to sign young academy protege Wayne Rooney.
United’s then-manager Sir Alex Ferguson, recalling the talks in his autobiography, wrote: “Bill Kenwright gets on his phone and he hands it to me and says, ‘It’s my mother, she wants to talk to you’. She said: ‘Don’t you dare steal my boy!’.”
Theatre and acting was Kenwright’s second love and he was on stage
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