Max Gawn speaks after Simon Goodwin airs personal issue in post-match press conference
Simon Goodwin has been criticised for inviting questions about Max Gawn’s private life in a cryptic post-match press conference. Now, the Demons captain has spoken publicly for the first time.
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Max Gawn says he has “no issue” with coach Simon Goodwin’s cryptic post-match press conference as he and his family navigate the long-term illness of one of its members.
Gawn, 33, revealed that a family member had been battling illness for the last two years and while things had “escalated” over recent weeks, things have settled for now.
“I am OK. There’s an illness in the family, there has been for a while — about 24 months, to be honest,” Gawn said on Triple M on Tuesday.
“And I’ve put myself in a really good spot throughout that 24 months, to be honest … played some good footy, got some great people at the club, great people in my family, and I’ve turned up every single day ready to be a captain and player and turned up at home ready to be a husband and dad as well.
“I’m in a really good spot. And so is the family member at this point. It did sort of escalate over the last three or four weeks, but back to a steady state now.”
Gawn said he had been open about the matter within the club but wouldn’t reveal whether Goodwin had apologised after the Sunday night media conference where he inferred that Gawn – who was comprehensively beaten by North Melbourne ruck Tristan Xerri – had a “backstory” to performance.
"We'll support Max... There's a backstory to everyone's performance."
— AFL (@AFL) March 23, 2025
Simon Goodwin has discussed Max Gawn's performance against the Roos: https://t.co/asVCPOXoVH#AFLNorthDeespic.twitter.com/ri1zwW9OlR
“We spoke a lot yesterday … there’s no issue with me and Goody,” the Demons skipper said.
“I can clearly see what he was trying to do — he was trying to show me love and support and I don’t mind. I spoke to that family member yesterday. They don’t mind. It’s fine.”
He said Goodwin was “showing love”.
“I love that my coach loves me and it clearly shows that he cares. He’s 100 per cent right. There is reasons behind performance,” Gawn said.
“That wasn’t me on the weekend. I’d got myself to a really good point to be able to play, I just got beat. We all just got beat … I won’t hide behind that. But I understand what the coach was doing. He is a father figure for me and he was showing love and showing care and I appreciate that.”
The skipper said if Goodwin had had his time again, he may have said he “just got smashed by (Tristan) Xerri” rather than the revelation, “but it’s fine”.
And he said he would not hesitate to step away from playing if personal issues became too much to bear.
“I’ve got myself in a really good spot. And I know I’m a mental health advocate. I’d clearly stand aside from football if I was struggling, but I’ve got some great people at both the club and at home that keep me in a good place.”
GOODWIN’S CRYPTIC ‘BALLS-UP’ CRITICISED
There is “no way” Simon Goodwin should have opened the door to Max Gawn’s personal life in his post-match press conference, two-time All-Australian David King has declared, labelling the move “a balls-up”.
And former Collingwood coach Nathan Buckley has warned it is a “slippery slope” to open the door on players’ personal lives and impact on performance.
Goodwin said there was “a backstory” to Gawn’s performance in Sunday’s loss to North Melbourne, throwing his support behind the star ruck while cryptically revealing “there’s some stuff in life” that was running in the background for the Demon.
The Herald Sun understands Gawn has a family member who is currently unwell, and that the premiership captain had no foresight that the matter would be raised by Goodwin, who is a close friend.
But King said it never should have been raised in that forum.
“It’s a balls-up, really. There’s no way Simon Goodwin should have broached this in the post-match,” King said on SEN.
“Just (say), ‘Max got beaten today, he’s been pretty good for a decade, we take the mulligan and we move on’.
“There’s no need to put this out in the public sphere, and now all this does is have everyone hunting after a story.”
Gawn, 33, is expected to appear in a regular radio slot on Tuesday morning where he will no doubt address the matter.
Gawn was well beaten by North Melbourne ruckman Tristan Xerri in the Roos’ thumping 59-point win.
When pressed on his skipper’s performance, Goodwin wouldn’t go into specific detail but said: “In life there are other things that are going on.
“We’ll support Max, he’s a great person, he’s a great leader and there’s a backstory to everyone’s performance.
“Max is someone that we take enormous pride in and he’s going to continue to be a great leader for this footy club and he’ll be a big part of our response.
“I’m not going to go into the details but … you know there’s footy and there’s some stuff in life, which you’ve got to understand that people all have backstories.
“He’s someone we love and he’ll certainly be a big part of our response.”
Buckley said the move “asks more questions than it answers”.
“You don’t know what you don’t know,” he said on SEN.
“But quite clearly, that is an attempt at a coach to wrap his arms around and support a friend and a player and a leader in his organisation that he’s been through the good and the bad with along the way.
“I thought the intentions were pure and I think the intentions were good, but I don’t know if that’s the way to go.
“Two points – one, did Max Gawn have agency on that? Is that something that he would have been happy to be put on the table? I don’t know whether he would have.
“Times are changing. I’m not talking about being gruff and pushing everything down and being unfeeling and uncaring – that’s not what we are … and two, if you’re going to start with that, you will never stop.
“I think it was well-intentioned, but I think it’s a slippery slope.
“There is no excuse (for poor performance). There’s reasons, but there’s no excuses. He was beaten, and that’s fine. You’re beaten. He’ll be part of the response. But when you put something like that on the table … it’s a slippery slope, because he wouldn’t have been the only one out there with personal challenges.
“It asks more questions than it answers.”
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Originally published as Max Gawn speaks after Simon Goodwin airs personal issue in post-match press conference