Explosive Tell-all memoir puts Ben Cousins in battle * Jon Ralph, Mark Robinson
* Herald Sun
* March 17, 2010 RICHMOND'S Ben Cousins is locked in battle with his publisher and author over an explosive tell-all memoir charting his extensive drug use and gangland connections.
The confessed drug addict was set to rock the football world with details about the behaviour that saw him sacked by West Coast and banned by the AFL.
It is believed the book is 75 per cent completed but is in limbo with its author Peter Wilmoth no longer associated with it.
Cousins has accepted an advance believed to be at least $200,000 but is unhappy with the current product.
Publisher Pan MacMillan wants to release the book this year, but Cousins is unwilling and Richmond nervous about its fallout.
The champion has admitted his drug use but has never revealed details of a long addiction, or his links to crime figures including John Kizon.
Cousins was released from hospital after continuing stomach cramps, with the club rubbishing claims in The Age he had an alcohol problem that led to the complaint.
Discussions over the book, among other things, led to a rift between Cousins and his manager Ricky Nixon, with the 31-year-old now managing his own affairs.
Nixon did not want to comment.
Richmond said it was comfortable with the progress of the book, but would speak to Cousins and Pan MacMillan about its contents.
Richmond football manager Craig Cameron said he believed the book would be published after the season.
"At this stage we are comfortable with where it sits but we need to talk with the publishers and find out what their plans are," he said.
Cousins signed a one-year deal with Richmond but Cameron indicated the club would prefer the book not be released while he was still at Punt Rd.
Wilmoth would not comment, but it is believed he uncovered explosive stories about Cousins' past.
One of his sources is said to be Cousins' father Bryan, who has conceded in the past Cousins has plenty of revelations yet to be uncovered.
"There were probably a few things that he did that no one knew about, and they make up for the ones that were inaccurately reported," he said when the club drafted Cousins.
Richmond has seen extracts of Cousins' book and says it is happy with its progress.
A Pan MacMillan spokesman said the book was due out late this year, with sources saying the publisher has every intention of publishing the book.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/explosive-tell-all-memoir-puts-ben-cousins-in-battle/story-e6frf7jo-1225841583498