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Aston Villa vs Arsenal: Stiliyan Petrov - 'To be able to play again is something you can't describe'

Stiliyan Petrov was Aston Villa’s captain the last time they reached Wembley in 2010. But then his career was brought to a halt by leukaemia. Now recovered, he tells Simon Hart about life’s simple joys, like playing for his local over-35s side

Simon Hart
Sunday 31 May 2015 12:00 BST
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Stiliyan Petrov
Stiliyan Petrov (ANDREW FOX)

Stiliyan Petrov is sitting in a pub, talking about cup finals. For the man who led out Aston Villa when they last played in a Wembley showpiece, there is plenty to discuss, with his old club preparing to face Arsenal in the FA Cup. But there is a different final – played out far beyond the media glare – to reflect on first.

It was a final, he says, that left him feeling “like a little boy again” and it took place in front of just 300 people. It was the Central Warwickshire Over-35s Premier Division One Cup final for Wychall Wanderers, the Sunday league team he has spent this season playing for. He scored a goal and Wychall won, though for a man forced to retire from professional football during his fight against acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, the simple act of stepping on to a pitch and kicking a ball again is the real source of joy.

Petrov smiles as he describes a pre-match routine that takes him back to his childhood in the Bulgarian town of Montana, when he was still dreaming of travelling the path that lay ahead with CSKA Sofia, Celtic, Villa and the Bulgaria national team, for which he won 106 caps.

“When I was younger I used to get up in the morning around seven to have my breakfast because I’d play a game at 10.30, and that was something I’d look forward to,” he tells The Independent. “Now I am back to that again. I get up in the morning, I get excited: I’ve got breakfast with the boys and I’ve got banter in the dressing room; I can put the boots on again. Obviously I am still overweight and don’t have the same movement but, after what I’ve gone through, to be able to go out there and play and smile again is something you can’t describe. I text the boys and ask, ‘Are you in bed, there’s a big game tomorrow?’ and I don’t think they like that!”

Petrov flew back from a family break in Dubai to play in Wychall’s season finale last month but will not be doing the same for the FA Cup final on Saturday, having arranged a half-term holiday in Turkey with his wife Paulina and sons Stiliyan and Kristiyan, before Villa booked their Wembley place. “I will watch it and will support them,” says Petrov, 35, who helped Tim Sherwood in his opening weeks as manager at Villa Park, of which more later. “Everybody involved in the club – fans, players, staff – is looking forward to this after three and a half hard seasons.”

Stiliyan Petrov pictured at Villa Park - alongside a show of support for the midfielder (GETTY IMAGES)

If Villa fans have found recent times tough, it pales beside what Petrov has endured in the three years since the former midfielder made what turned out to be the last of 219 appearances for the club – against Saturday’s Cup final opponents Arsenal.

The date of the match was Saturday 24 March 2012 and afterwards nothing would ever be the same again. “That day my muscles weren’t reacting the way they used to and I knew through the game that something was not right,” he recalls. “But you never think that something will come and change your life in about a week. Within a week of being healthy, being a Premier League player, being an international player and fit as a fiddle, I was diagnosed with leukaemia.”

For Petrov, a new existence had begun. “I thought my treatment would be about six months and after that everything would go back to normal but it wasn’t like that,” he says. “I was constantly hit with intensive chemo for one year, and put on about 13 kilos with the steroids and drugs.”

After six months he was told by his specialist, Professor David Lynch from University Hospital London, that he would not play football again. “For three hours I was just crying. As much as I was fighting for my life, I didn’t want to accept that I needed to give up football. The next six months I got really down and it hit me really hard. I was constantly in hospital and couldn’t go out for months because my immune system was down and I was gaining weight.”

Stiliyan Petrov playing for Aston Villa (GETTY IMAGES)

Yet he knows that he was blessed to receive the support he did, and not just from the Villa fans, who sang his name in the 19th minute – after his shirt number – of every match. “I had letters from all around the world. I was privileged to have all this support, especially from the Villa and Celtic fans.”

Petrov sips green tea as we talk in a pub in the Warwickshire village of Lapworth and he describes his life today. “I drink a lot of vegetable juice, especially beetroot juice which is good for your blood,” explains the 35-year-old. “I have no sugar, no fizzy drinks, no fried foods. People ask if it helps. I tell you what, I am still here.”

His aim, now that he has received the all-clear, is to help others, and the conversation turns to his plans for a charity match at Villa Park on 6 September to raise funds for his Stiliyan Petrov Foundation, following the success of a similar event at Celtic Park in 2013. The foundation’s goals, he explains, are to fund research trials and to support the families of children undergoing treatment for leukaemia. “[With] a lot of families, their kids are having treatment on the other side of the country and they need to come over here [to Birmingham Children’s Hospital] and they can’t afford that. The foundation makes sure we look after them.”

For Petrov his own long weeks in hospital, when he could not hug his two boys but “only see them through the door because they had sneezes and coughs”, was the hardest time of all. “At this moment you realise what you can lose,” he adds. It was his wish to focus on his family and his foundation that meant he turned down the offer of a permanent coaching role at Villa this year, following a period spent helping Sherwood after his appointment as Paul Lambert’s successor.

“When Tim Sherwood took over I spoke with him and he wanted me to be involved with the team,” Petrov says. “Our conversation was [for me] to come in and give the boys a little bit of a lift, trying to speak to individuals. He needed individuals to pull it in the right direction and I was helping, especially in the first couple of weeks.

“Tim is a very positive man and I was very impressed with the way he approached players and people working in the club,” he continues. “I think the Villa fans have seen passion [in] the way the team have played and reacted under pressure.”

Aston Villa manager Tim Sherwood (GETTY IMAGES)

Petrov – a beaten League Cup finalist against Manchester United in 2010 – is optimistic that Sherwood has the tools to hurt Arsenal as Villa seek their first trophy in 19 years at Wembley. “A final is 50-50. Villa have the speed and ability to break teams down, and having Christian Benteke up there – he can unlock any defence. As long as the delivery is right then this boy is untouchable.”

He also cites the key role of Fabian Delph, Villa’s England midfielder, describing him as “another player standing shoulder to shoulder with Christian. I am glad to see he has stayed for the club and glad to see the club has done everything to keep him”.

It is Delph who will follow in Petrov’s footsteps as Villa’s Wembley captain and the pair have spoken about what lies in store. “It is an honour and something you can’t describe,” Petrov says. Life has taught the Bulgarian to value every good moment, be it at Wembley or with Wychall Wanderers, and he recalls the precise words of his conversation with Delph. “I spoke to Fabian and said, ‘You need to enjoy every minute because it comes and goes very quickly and if you don’t realise what it is, you will lose some moments – the fans, the bus journey to the stadium, the preparation, the game itself’. I told him to cherish every single second.”

For more information about the Stiliyan Petrov Foundation, visit thestiliyanpetrovfoundation.com

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