Career
Born in Sheffield, Kay played for Sheffield Wednesday before becoming Britain"s most expensive football player when transferred to Everton for £60,000 in 1962. A left-sided wing-half, Kay started his career with hometown club Sheffield Wednesday. He transferred to Everton in December 1962, signed by his former manager Harry Catterick, and soon became the team captain.
Everton were a work in progress under the ownership of the Littlewoods owner Sir John Moores and had earned the tag "The Mersey Millionaires".
Kay was an important part of Catterick"s evolving Everton side and the following May they were crowned League Champions for the first time since 1938-1939 season. Conviction for fraud
In 1964, the Sunday People newspaper broke the story that Kay, along with fellow Sheffield Wednesday players David Layne and Peter Swan, through the instigation of former Everton player Jimmy Gauld, had bet on their side to lose a match in December 1962 against Ipswich Town.
The three were convicted of conspiracy to defraud, Kay on the basis of a taped conversation, one of the first times such evidence was admitted in an English court. Kay was fined £150 and sentenced to four months imprisonment.
On his release, after serving ten weeks, he was banned from football for life by the Football Association though the ban was rescinded seven years later.
Kay claims subsequently to have been summoned to London to explain the use of taped evidence to the Kray twins. Kay was 28 years old when released from prison. He never returned to the professional game, but did play some amateur football.
He later spent twelve years in Spain, avoiding arrest for selling a counterfeit diamond.
On his return to the United Kingdom Kay was fined £400 and in later years he worked as a groundsman in south east London. Upon retirement, Kay returned to the North West to settle back on Merseyside.
A few months short of 40 years since his transfer from Sheffield Wednesday in 1962, Tony Kay was once again present on the pitch at Goodison Park among a group of 100 Everton Legends, as the club celebrated a record 100 seasons of top flight football at the start of the 2002-2003 campaign. He received a standing ovation from the crowd.
Tony Kay is portrayed by Jason Isaacs in the 1997 television film The Fix, directed by Paul Greengrass, which tells the story of the scandal which ended his career.
The story was also dramatised in the November 2009 British Broadcasting Corporation Radio 4 play The Tony Kay Scandal by Michael McLean, which included excerpts from a 2009 interview with Kay.