Gary Neville was one of the most famous people in English football for more than twenty years, first as a fierce right back for Manchester United and then as a TV commentator who always had something to say. It really came as a surprise when, in late 2023, he said on a podcast that there was something he had never been able to talk about in public. One with someone. A broken promise. He kept this part of his life secret for more than twenty years.
Hannah Thornley was at the center of that story. She was the sister of Ben Thornley, who played with Neville in Manchester United’s famous Class of 92. They had been together for four to six years, which was long enough that getting married seemed not only possible but also certain. They had a promise. Then it stopped around the year 2000.
Neville himself said that Hannah had done a placement abroad, spending six months in each of Germany and France. It was fine on the Germany stretch. France was the place where things changed. She became close with someone she met on the course, but when she got back to England, she broke up with him. Neville said on The Daily Ketchup Podcast, “The trust, the feeling is gone,” but then he caught himself. “You’ve got me talking about stuff I never talk about.”
Maybe the timing made everything stand out more. This was Neville’s first season with United. They had won the FA Cup, the Premier League, and the Champions League all in the same season. It was the highest point by any measure. Since then, he’s said that everyone in that dressing room could feel it that night. They were sure it would never be that good again. After that, his personal life fell apart almost right away. The high at work and the low at home happened almost at the same time. People are hurt in that kind of accident.

From the way he talked about it, it sounds like the hurt wasn’t just about the relationship ending; it was about the structure of what he had imagined for himself suddenly not being there. In your early twenties, being in a relationship for six years isn’t just a romance. Everything else fits into that frame, like where you live, what your future holds, and who you call first when something goes wrong. He felt lost after losing that frame, even though the split wasn’t his fault. His shape changed. He fell and hurt himself. Both of them fed each other.
In the same time period, the story of Emma Hadfield, the woman who would become his wife, has its own problems. In 2004, the front page of a tabloid newspaper said Emma cheated on Neville while he was with England at Euro 2004. They called her a “callous love cheat.” The claims were completely false. Emma, who was a student of holistic therapy at the time and was from Middleton in Greater Manchester, took the newspaper to court. They eventually settled out of court, and Emma got £75,000 in damages plus legal fees. The Sun put out an apology.
Emma met Gary in 2004 while she was working as a shop assistant in Manchester. They got married in 2007 and are still together. From the looks of things, the road from that broken engagement to a stable marriage wasn’t easy. But that’s how things usually go.
The fact that Neville chose to share this is interesting in and of itself. A lot of men his age, especially those who grew up with the culture of professional football, don’t talk about their own grief in an open way. The fact that he talked about the breakup as something that “threw him completely” and connected it to a bad stretch of play on the field shows that he has thought about it for a while. He says it was for the best now that he looks back. That most likely is true. Also, it likely took some time to feel that way.
