Pubdate: Sun, 11 Mar 2001 Source: Sunday Telegraph, The (Australia) Copyright: 2001 News Limited Contact: 2 Holt Street Surry Hills, NSW, 2010 Fax: (02) 9288-2300 Feedback: http://toolchest.news.com.au/feedback/ Website: http://www.news.com.au/ Author: Sarah Blake HOW A FOOTY HERO FELL FROM GRACE WHEN Gary Ablett peeled off his famous No. 5 jersey for the last time in 1997, he was left stranded between two worlds.In one he was the celebrity freeloader, with adoring fans at every turn reminding him of his glory days at Geelong AFL club. Many still rate him the best footballer ever. In the other, he was dodging the media, living in rehab, and undergoing treatment for an alcohol and possible drug problem that was referred to throughout his career as his "off-field issue". Little wonder then that when he met the blonde, smiling and bubbly Alisha Horan at half his age a smitten fan he fell hard. But the short hard romance of the highflyer nicknamed "God" and the barmaid from his footy-mad, regional hometown was to end in tragedy. After a five-day drug and alcohol binge, Horan was dead from a massive overdose. She had suffered irreparable brain damage and was found to have traces of heroin and amphetamines in her blood. At an inquest in Melbourne Coroner's Court last week, Ablett refused to answer questions about exactly what drugs Horan had taken on the grounds that he could be incriminated. Notoriously media-shy Ablett spoke sparingly at the inquest and returned afterwards to his new home in regional Victoria. He also refused to answer questions about his own drug use and his documented relationship with drug dealer Clayton Brown. The inquest heard that Brown was suspected of supplying Miss Horan with some of the drugs that killed her green and white ecstasy tablets. But Brown fled to London after Miss Horan's death and like Ablett refused to answer questions about her drug use. Brown and his girlfriend Emmie Osawa were traced to London by Scotland Yard, but cannot be extradited to Australia because Victorian police do not have enough evidence to charge them with supplying ecstasy. All of which prompted the chief investigator into Horan's death to comment that Ablett and Brown had been reluctant to help him. "The most disappointing aspects of the investigation were Ablett's refusal to discuss his involvement in the drug use that caused Ms Horan's death and the . . . indifferent refusal of Mr Brown to assist the investigation in any way," Senior Constable Thomas Nairn said in his statement to the coroner. Coroner Noreen Toohey reserved her findings on the three-day inquest, but a lawyer for Horan's distraught family made clear their case. John Smallwood, QC, said Horan was "basically partying a mile out of her depth . . . out of her league". The inquest heard that Ablett and Horan's acquaintance went back to her days as a die-hard teenage fan hanging around Geelong's changerooms. She had plastered her walls with posters of her idol, and was, in the words of Const Nairn, "infatuated". The pair met again on the night of February 11 last year at a private room in the Wild Westcoast Saloon bar on Geelong's main drag, Ryrie St. Horan was now 20 and a barmaid at the pub owned by Ablett's good friend, Stewart Harrison. After the nightclub closed at 5am they stayed and drank with a group for a couple of hours and struck up a friendship that was to continue until her death five days later. Between that first meeting and her death on February 18, the pair attended a barbecue and stayed two nights at Ablett's Geelong house. They then headed the 70km to Melbourne to continue the bender, taking up free accommodation at the Park Hyatt. By the night of her death, Ablett told the court, he had the "staggers" and passed out as soon as they arrived at their suite. But when he came to, Horan was having trouble breathing and, after trying to resuscitate her, Ablett was forced to call for medical help. As her unconscious body was wheeled from the suite by paramedics, Ablett saw Horan for the last time and was "devastated", he told the Court. The couple had become "intimate" and "close friends", in the time they spent together, he said. But the inquest heard that Horan's family had been concerned about the friendship from the beginning. Her father had called at Ablett's Geelong home concerned for his daughter two nights before the couple left for Melbourne and the Park Hyatt. "He wanted her to get in his car and go but she didn't want to," Ablett told the inquest. The Horan's have refused media interviews since being thrust into the spotlight last year. Instead, a friend in Geelong said they were waiting for the results of the inquest and remained hopeful that charges would be laid over her death. "But the one thing they all think now is that they wish they never heard the name Gary Ablett, this thing has been a tragedy for them," the friend said last week. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F