AFL News

Melbourne captain “embarrassed to be AFL player” following resurgence of condemned act

Two players in the past month have been sanctioned by the AFL for the use of homophobic slurs.

Published by
Aidan Cellini

Melbourne captain Max Gawn says he is "embarrassed to call (himself) an AFL player at the moment" following the second homophobic slur in the past month.

Gold Coast's Wil Powell is the latest offender who has been sanctioned by the league for his outburst during the loss to Brisbane in Round 8.

Powell was found guilty of conduct unbecoming for the first-quarter incident and was whacked with a five-game suspension.

A month earlier, Port Adelaide forward Jeremy Finlayson was discovered to have used a homophobic slur toward an Essendon player and was subsequently handed a three-match ban.

Discussing with host Marty Sheargold on Triple M's Marty Sheargold Show, Gawn is still frustrated by how these scenarios come about and believes the "heat-of-battle" excuse is just a cop-out.

“I'm not too fussed about the punishment. I'm just pretty embarrassed about the AFL cohort slipping up time and time again," Gawn said on Friday.

"This is three (bans) in a year.”

Sheargold: “But it (the bans) has to have some structure, because what if in two weeks' time, ‘old mate' does it and then where do we go from five weeks?”

Gawn: “Well, you go to six weeks, don't you?

“It's embarrassing to call yourself an AFL player at the moment. You're sort of getting slapped with this brand. Hopefully, I know our group, we talk about this. Hopefully, we've learnt the lesson and we can go forward.

 “I think all three of these people would have run with that excuse straight up that it was the heat of battle but that is just not an excuse.”

Published by
Aidan Cellini