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"Absolute disgrace": Sam Newman fumes at Eddie McGuire's exit

<p>Controversial media personality Sam Newman has claimed the way Eddie McGuire has been treated is an "absolute disgrace" after the Collingwood president handed in his resignation on Tuesday afternoon.</p> <p>McGuire faced copious amounts of criticism after his response to a damning report that accused Collingwood of fostering "systemic racism", which ultimately forced him to step down immediately rather than at the end of the season as planned.</p> <p>The 56-year-old was on the verge of tears as he fronted a press conference to announce his resignation.</p> <p>“I tried my best and I don’t always get it right, but I don’t stop trying,” McGuire said. “Today, effective immediately, I step down from the presidency of the Collingwood Football Club.</p> <p>“From the moment I became the president of the Collingwood Football Club on my 34th birthday back in 1998, my sole motivation was to heal, unite, inspire and drive a new social conscience, not just into this club, but sport and the community in general and build an organisation that would be a place for opportunity for all people.”</p> <p>Newman was a longtime panellist on The AFL Footy Show alongside McGuire and the former Geelong ruckman delivered a scathing response to his comrade’s departure.</p> <p>“It is an absolute disgrace what is happening to Eddie McGuire,” Newman told FIVEaa Adelaide on Tuesday.</p> <p>“Eddie McGuire is a great person, a great member of our community here in Melbourne, and in fact, he’s a great Australian.</p> <p>“He might have erred like everyone might have erred, but he’s tried his heart out to rectify what has gone on at that club.</p> <p>“It is completely unfair what they’re doing to him, and they should be ashamed of themselves.</p> <p>“Why would you single him out? He has tried his hardest. He has set up Indigenous foundations at that club.</p> <p>“This has nothing to do with racism … he is being condemned absolutely unfairly by all and sundry, because they think it’s a great, politically-correct, point-scoring opportunity.</p> <p>“They’re invested in chaos and division.”</p> <p>McGuire and veteran AFL reporter Caroline Wilson have endured a love-hate relationship over the years, but the journalist believed the Collingwood boss "hubris" contributed to his downfall.</p> <p>“There were so many things over the past week or so that just went from bad to worse for him,”<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.3aw.com.au/caroline-wilson-responds-to-eddie-mcguires-shock-departure/" target="_blank">Wilson told 3AW on Tuesday</a>.</p> <p>“Even today, unfortunately, there were just a few signs of the hubris that brought him down in the end.</p> <p>“Everything we say is underlined by the fact we know that he did so much good and that the club, in many ways, is in such a better position ... than when Eddie found it.</p> <p>“He came to Collingwood so determined to unite all the factions and you couldn’t say, last week, that’s what he’d done.</p> <p>“You’d have to say last week they were a club savagely divided.</p> <p>“I think that it’s sad that it’s ended like this for him.</p> <p>“From people I’ve been talking to today, the one thing they were all united on, in the end, was that he had to go and they couldn’t possibly get past this until he did go.”</p>

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Heartbreaking double tragedy behind Eddie McGuire’s resignation

<p>Collingwood president Eddie McGuire and former AFL star Luke Darcy have opened up about their exit from Triple M’s Hot Breakfast show.</p> <p>The pair both made headlines across the nation after it was revealed they were leaving the popular breakfast radio program.</p> <p>McGuire was forced to deny rumours that he and Darcy had been sacked.</p> <p>He instead announced that his family had been behind his decision to walk away from Triple M after 11 years.</p> <p>Both McGuire and Darcy both had their own personal tragedies that pushed them to step down. </p> <p><span>McGuire's mum Bridie died just two days after Darcy sadly lost his father - former VFL football player, David.</span></p> <p>“The self-reflection and losing someone close to you … you re-evaluate things that are important and, for me, it always comes back to family,” Darcy said.</p> <p>“It had a massive impact on me, and a part of my decision making (to leave breakfast radio) as well.</p> <p>“We need to work and pursue great things like the Hot Breakfast to look after our families, but at the same time, you don’t want to miss the point of life. I’m massive on that life balance part.</p> <p>“This year, we’ve had the chance to stop, reflect and look at our situations.”</p> <p>McGuire said his mother's passing helped him understand Darcy's situation.</p> <p>He went on to say his own commitment to his family made the decision to quit easier to make.</p> <p>“Darce’s father was such a great friend of the show, and so well loved. My mum passed two days later, but we knew it was imminent. My view is, If you don’t learn from this year, you won’t learn from much.”</p> <p>McGuire got the opportunity to spend quality time inside the AFL's Gold Coast hub with his son Joe shortly after he lost his mum.</p> <p>“I spent a lot of time with my son Joe, and spent no time with my son Xander and my wife Carla who were back in Melbourne. You think, ‘Hang on, these are the things that matter,'" McGuire said.</p> <p>“We came to work every day for our family. “We don’t regret that we weren’t there to drive them to school. That would be great in a perfect world where money falls off a tree.</p> <p>The Collingwood president revealed he’d always promised his family he would quit breakfast radio once his sons had both finished school.</p> <p>“Those closest to me have always known that I continued with breakfast radio while my boys were at school and now my youngest has finished it’s time too for me to finish up a wonderful 11 year run with a 4 am alarm,” McGuire said last week.</p> <p>The Triple M Hot Breakfast has been losing audience share as of late. </p> <p>The show is down 0.9 points to 5.8% in recent ratings but McGuire denies it is due to him and co-host Darcy's departure. </p> <p><span>“They (Triple M) were keen to look at planning for the next five years, and we thought, ‘This is a good way to finish,'" McGuire told the Herald Sun.</span></p> <p>“But, in my mind, it was probably since June I’ve known it would be the last year.”</p>

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