
Meet The Open's most unlikely star: Ryan Peake spent five years in one of Australia's toughest jails for a vicious assault - now the former motorbike gang member is revving up for the tournament of his lifetime
Peake is a 32-year-old from Perth, Australia. He was a contemporary of Cameron Smith, the 2022 Champion at St Andrews, and grew up as prodigy with rare gifts; he's built like a heavyweight boxer and booked his ticket for Portrush by virtue of a fabulous win in the New Zealand Open.
But golf isn't going to be on the agenda much during the next hour, as we talk in a room adjacent to the 18th fairway. Peake will talk about taking a swing but this one, in 2014, ended with him being sentenced to five years in prison, part of which was spent in Hakea, one of Australia's toughest jails.
Having fallen out of love with golf, Peake signed up to become a member of The Rebels, a motorcycle group. It became all-consuming, a brotherhood that had their own code of conduct. Differences between rival gangs often get settled with fists but this went too far. Way too far.
'How did it unfold?' Peake asks. 'Basically it was the life I was living. Someone else out there was living the same sort of lifestyle and was making threats. I'm not saying it's right I've gone and beat someone up but I haven't gone and beat up a dad who's just doing nothing on his front lawn.
'He was a person that was living my lifestyle. I'm not justifying it. But that's how we would speak to each other. I mean, meet their character with your character and whatever prevails from there. He was doing some bad things, we had knowledge then he made some pretty heinous threats.
'So we went to deal with it. Honestly, it wasn't meant to happen like that. We were generally just going there for a chat. He was probably going to get a couple of punches, that's it. It just happened to be the threats he threatened us with were true. He was armed and it escalated from there.'
One of Peake's associates was wielding a baseball bat and the victim ended up with a fractured skull and fractured arms. When the police came to arrest him, he held his hands up immediately. Honesty is a value he holds dearly and it leaps out of every word he says.
Jail, clearly, left a mark. You can see it in his eyes as he talks about Hakea, in Perth; the trauma of being in a single occupant cell with another man for company; the sights, the sounds, the smells, the potential to be humiliated by prison officers.
'It was bad,' he admits. 'But I have the saying: if you don't like the accommodation, don't book the reservation. I booked that one for myself. So I can't sit here and say, you know, it's pretty appalling. It's more appalling for the fact of there's limited space. They try and cram so many people in.
'They're just way too overpopulated. And I think the whole justice system, essentially, yeah, you've done a crime. You go to jail. I don't argue with that. But going to jail is to try and rehabilitate you to come out as a better person.
'And by putting people in, I guess, places like that, where it's disgusting, you're treated unfairly, it's overpopulated, three people in a cell where there's only meant to be one, it's disgusting. That's not necessarily rehabilitating you.
'That's making you more p****d off. And you're probably going to come out an angry person as well because you've just been treated like c**p. Not all of them, but some of them are. But in saying that as well, it was my choices that I made that led me to there.'
But now he is out and thriving. Golf provided a chink of light in the darkness, a worthwhile cause to pursue. He needed to ask permission, remarkably, from the leaders of The Rebels to be able to concentrate on the sport once again – he couldn't commit to long national rides, from Perth to Adelaide, if he was playing in a tournament – but they gave him the green light.
But he now has the opportunity of a lifetime - or at least 'the biggest tournament' of his year
When Peake first picked up a club after six years, the rust was dreadful and the shot he hit was, in his words, '****', but he has persisted. Good people around him have kept him moving forward and now he arrives in the North of Ireland ready for an unforgettable experience.
The journey here has been fraught – he travelled on a British passport, which he obtained thanks to his father, as obtaining a Visa with a conviction on an Australian document would have been unlikely – but the very fact he will tee up on Thursday is another calling point on the road to redemption.
'I'm not trying to be a role model or be someone's superhero,' he says. 'I'm just basically living the best life I can, and whatever people see from that, that's what they see. I don't feel self-conscious. I put in some hard work to try and get to where we are today. I've earned being here.
'I guess it's going to be the biggest tournament I play for the year. If I didn't have other big events to play in, I'd probably be a little bit more overwhelmed by it all. But after this week's done, I'm back to other major tours. This week's a big opportunity, but it's not going to determine my future either.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
.jpeg%3Ftrim%3D1%2C0%2C1%2C0%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)

The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Air India crash reignites decades-old debate
The recent fatal Air India crash has reignited a long-standing debate within the aviation industry regarding the proposed mandatory installation of cockpit video recorders. Advocates, including International Air Transport Association head Willie Walsh, argue that video footage would significantly assist accident investigations by providing crucial visual data, complementing existing voice and flight data recorders. A recent Australian Transport Safety Bureau report highlighted the invaluable role of cockpit video in determining pilot distraction in a 2023 helicopter crash, strengthening calls for wider adoption. Conversely, pilots' unions in the US, such as ALPA and APA, oppose the measure, citing concerns over privacy invasion, potential misuse of footage for disciplinary actions, and the risk of sensitive material being leaked to the public. While cockpit voice recordings are typically kept confidential, the International Federation of Air Line Pilots Associations expresses strong scepticism that similar confidentiality could be maintained for video data, given the demand for sensational content.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Victim of First Guardian super fund collapse speaks out on the horror toll of losing her life savings at 39
A gardener who lost $80,000 in the First Guardian Master Fund superannuation scandal has revealed she struggles to sleep at night and has constant headaches as a result of the stress. Danielle Adams, at 39, can still handle working as a gardening and lawn maintenance labourer in Brisbane and the Gold Coast for a company with local government contracts. But she shudders at the thought of delaying her retirement and working into old age for another 28 years, until she can get the age pension at 67. All because she trusted bad financial advice. 'I get to work in my home area and keep the public spaces beautiful. It is a physically demanding job but rewarding,' she told Daily Mail Australia. 'I knew retirement is very far off in the distance for me so I had a future plan where I was hoping to wind down to part time work if my body begins to fail me, however with this blow, winding down will not be possible.' Her problems began in October 2023 when she had contacted Reilly Financial asking for advice on super after a referral from Super Wise. 'I was not after ridiculous growth, but steady growth and lower fees,' she said. Rhys Reilly, who ran Reilly Financial, still operates in Perth and was previously associated with Venture Egg, a marketing firm which First Guardian's parent company Falcon Capital had paid millions to aggressively sell its superannuation product. Ms Adams said she had lost the $80,000 in super she had built up over more than two decades of work, after agreeing to put her savings into First Guardian's growth strategies retirement product, via Diversa's AusPrac platform. Her account was frozen in March when the Australian Securities and Investments Commission made a Federal Court order to liquidate the assets of First Guardian Master Fund and its parent company Falcon Capital. 'Very stressful time but I have not lost as much as others have. I currently have 80k frozen and lodging all my formal complaints,' she said. 'Thank you for working on getting the word out about the highly deceitful and illegal web of scums that are involved.' She is one of 6,000 people who have lost their super, as she and her husband Ben pay off a mortgage, with two dogs, five chickens, a blue-tongue lizard and a turtle their only dependents. 'My mental state is taking a toll on my physical state,' she said. 'Sleepless nights, constant headaches, tight neck, sick gut. 'I can only count my blessing that I am dealing with this whilst on a forced closure from work due to it being the slow period. 'The thought of having to perform at work on top of this would be too much.' Ms Adams and her husband are now reconsidering plans to travel around Australia. 'We always wanted to do the lovely travelling around Australia,' she said. 'We have a mortgage that we are paying off, but since this crap we are more focused on trying to get it paid off as quickly as humanly possible so that when I do have to keep working we won't have a mortgage over our heads.' A First Guardian Facebook discussion group alleged someone had committed suicide as a result of losing their retirement savings, a claim Daily Mail Australia has been unable to verify. The loss of her super means she is planning to keep on working, with even plans for a modest retirement looking beyond her reach. 'That was kind of one of the plans we throw up in the air but we never really settled on anything except us both winding down and doing part retirement,' Ms Adams said. 'We knew our super would not be able to support a lavish retirement but we were expecting a retirement. 'I will work now until I can't. Also throwing ideas around for a second income stream. I guess my future looks very busy now.' The situation is also looking bleak with the Compensation Scheme of Last Resort's chief executive David Berry telling The Australian Financial Review only $300million was likely to be available for those who lost money from First Guardian Master Fund and Shield Master Trust - making up only a third of total losses. This is despite lost retirement savings of $1billion for both funds. The non-profit government scheme covers victims of financial misconduct, following a determination from the Australian Financial Complaints Authority. FTI Consulting, the liquidator of First Guardian Master Fund and its parent company Falcon Capital, estimates retirement savers are still owed $446million. It last week told creditors the fund had paid $40million to a Venture Egg entity, Cornerstone Strategic Management, along with Atlas Marketing and Indigo Group, now all in liquidation, between August 2021 and February 2024. The creditors' report also revealed Falcon Capital director Simon Selimaj, 63, had spent $548,000 from other people's retirement savings on a Lamborghini Urus SUV. The fund also sent $242million offshore, making up almost half of the $505million fund. Director David Anderson had bought a $9million mansion on Melbourne's Yarra River in December 2020, in the upmarket suburb of Hawthorn.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE I left a bad review for a rubbish collection company - what followed was the worst year of my life and now my young family could be homeless
A Melbourne couple who spoke out online after a trash collection company dumped 26 used mattresses on their driveway has told how they have endured the 'worst 12 months' of their lives as they fight to keep their home. Laura and Jarrod Maultby shared photos of the wall of grimy mattresses left outside their Melbourne home following a disagreement with the service, Junk, last June. The working parents of two daughters had asked the company to pick up and dispose of a pile of disintegrated wood and were billed $514 when the job was completed. The Maultbys claimed they hadn't expected the service to be so expensive, while Junk pointed to the price being outlined in prior paperwork. In the service's terms and conditions, it states that if a customer's bill is left unpaid, it would leave an equivalent amount of waste back at their property. It wasn't long before 26 dirty, old mattresses were dumped outside the family's Langwarrin home in Melbourne's southeast. Ms Maultby, on Wednesday, told the Daily Mail Australia the experience for she and her partner has been 'harrowing' after they had spent $200,000 defending themselves at court. 'Look it's harrowing, it's been the worst 12 months of our lives to be honest,' Ms Maultby told Daily Mail Australia. Ms Maultby also told of the shock she and Jarrod got when they learned they were the subject of a Supreme Court of Victoria lawsuit. 'I think every-day Australians don't expect that sort of thing,' she said. 'I don't want to comment on anything specific but it was 48 hours after querying the invoice that the mattresses were dumped. 'Look, I think given there's two court cases and one tribunal claim against us, and you know, the fact you have to pay to defend yourself, it means we're in a bit of a predicament and we may lose our home, it's not the best feeling.' Ms Maultby said they were happy to pay the invoice and move on but the issue escalated quicker than they expected. 'We're not the ones suing so we didn't instigate any lawsuit, we questioned an invoice, spoke out online and to save us from losing our house we've had to do a GofundMe campaign unfortunately,' she said. The couple now have to be careful what they say in public while the Supreme Court matter is pending. In documents obtained by the Daily Mail Australia, Junk Group Pty Ltd have issued the Maultbys a statement of claim 'pleading injurious falsehood' and breaches of consumer law. Junk, which has previously been contacted to comment, is also seeking loss of earnings due to 'falsehoods' it alleged the Maultbys posted online. According to the document, Junk alleged the Maultbys posted six separate reviews and comments about the business on multiple online platforms June 27 and June 28 last year. Junk has taken aim at three TikTok sequential videos posted by Ms Maultby, a Google review, a TrustPilot review and a review all of which have since been taken down from the internet. Junk alleged the Maultbys made false claims in the various posts including allegations it 'rips and scams its customers' and the business 'charges more than its quotes provided to customers'. The trash collection company also labelled an allegation posted online that Junk owner Richard Furnari, 'made many calls in quick succession' to the couple in a 'harassing manner' as false. Junk claimed it's weekly revenue dropped approximately $25,281 immediately after the Maultbys posted their reviews. Mr Furnari previously told the Daily Mail Australia his company collected the mattresses and they will recoup the invoice through VCAT. Ms Maultby last week launched an appeal for help after spending almost $200,000 on legal fees. She explained on a GofundMe campaign that entities associated with Junk were suing her and her husband in three separate lawsuits across two states. 'We hadn't refused to pay the invoice, we just queried it and wanted to come to a resolution with the business due to confusing quotations,' Ms Maultby wrote. 'We shared our story on social media, asking for help and advice. Our story went viral, and several news outlets covered what had happened. 'Since then, we've received numerous different legal threats from numerous persons and companies associated with the business, and have actually been sued in three separate lawsuits in different jurisdictions: one in the Supreme Court of Victoria, another in the District Court of Queensland by a franchisee of the company, and a third in VCAT.' Ms Maultby said the Queensland lawsuit was 'particularly absurd', comparing it to 'a franchised pizza business in Queensland suing someone in Victoria for leaving a bad review about pizza from a Victorian store'. Despite the couple deleting their social media posts when threatened with legal action, it 'wasn't enough to appease the business'. Ms Maultby said the Queensland matter has been dismissed but could be resumed in Victoria, and that the Supreme Court case is currently on hold. With the possibility of further legal action, the couple have turned to fundraising. 'The last year has drained our resources and nearly broken our spirits. We've already spent close to $200,000 in legal fees - clearing out our life savings, using our annual leave and borrowing heavily from our elderly relatives just to stay afloat,' she wrote. 'We are now facing the heartbreaking prospect of selling our already mortgaged home simply to defend ourselves and repay the family members who have sacrificed so much to support us. 'This isn't just about us, it's about anyone who has ever tried to speak up before. No one should have to defend themselves in three courts across two states for telling the truth.' The couple have so far raised $2,585 at the time of publishing.