Adelaide Crows react to Andrew McLeod’s sad admission
Adelaide has responded after Crows icon Andrew McLeod revealed his true feelings about the club he won two premierships with.
Adelaide has responded after Crows legend Andrew McLeod said he doesn’t feel comfortable walking back into his AFL club.
McLeod, who won Norm Smith medals as best-afield in the Crows’ two premierships, said he and some of his retired teammates don’t feel welcome at the club.
“I’m one of those guys that if you asked me if I felt comfortable walking back into the football club, I would say no,” McLeod said on a podcast he co-hosts with retired basketballer Brett Maher.
“It’s one of those things, and I have had this conversation with a lot of my old teammates, that it’s not a place you feel welcomed.”
McLeod is Adelaide’s games-record holder, playing 340 matches in a decorated career highlighted by the 1997-98 premierships and winning three club champion awards.
He has also helped with the club’s indigenous and AFLW programs in retirement.
“You see lots of guys go back to their footy clubs and feel welcomed … for me, the Crows doesn’t really have that vibe,” McLeod said on the Bunji and Brettster podcast.
“It doesn’t have that vibe where you’re really welcomed here … it’s not a place you feel like it embraces you as a past player.”
Crows board member Rod Jameson reacted to McLeod’s comments on Wednesday, saying it was “a little surprising” to hear the club great’s point of view.
“He’s an employee at the club and an assistant coach to the ladies team so his actions don’t reflect what he said,” Jameson said on SEN Breakfast.
“It’s really surprising, I spoke to Andrew and he feels the way he does which is unfortunate.
“If he wants to speak, he should but from our past players’ perspective, we couldn’t be doing anything better from the programs we have in place and the AFL Players’ Association have recognised that for a number of years.”
During his playing career, McLeod infamously fell out with long-term teammate Tyson Edwards in a feud which embroiled their wives and tennis star and Crows fan Lleyton Hewitt.
Hewitt, a long-time No. 1 ticketholder at the Crows, had been a friend of McLeod until the tennis champion released a DVD containing footage of the pair at indigenous sacred sites.
“Seeing myself on something like that was just embarrassing. It was so bad,” McLeod said in his biography, Black Crow.
McLeod launched legal action over the use of the footage and Edwards’ wife Mandy supported Hewitt in an affidavit in a matter ultimately settled confidentially out-of-court.
“I said to Tyson, ‘Why would you put a friendship that you and I have had for over 10 years in jeopardy and why would Mandy go into court against us and talk about something she knows nothing about?’” McLeod wrote in his book. “They (the Edwards) basically chose a four or five month friendship over a 10-year relationship.
“We just couldn’t believe it.”
McLeod and Edwards didn’t speak to each other for a year from 2005, despite remaining on-field teammates.
At Adelaide’s 2006 club champion awards, Mandy Edwards threw a drink at McLeod’s wife, Rachael.
“Things got really ugly,’‘ Mrs McLeod said in the book.
The McLeods expected Crows hierarchy to respond to widespread publicity over that incident but officials remained silent.
After retiring from playing in 2010, McLeod, an AFL Hall of Famer, has managed the Crows’ indigenous programs and also assisted the club’s AFLW team in 2018.
The Crows have been contacted for comment.