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AAP
Sport
Roger Vaughan

Kennett welcomes WorkSafe's Hawthorn probe

Outgoing Hawthorn president Jeff Kennett has repeated his criticism of Indigenous players who went public with racism allegations against the AFL club.

He's also welcomed a WorkSafe Victoria investigation into the Hawks, saying he was confident the body would be "very impressed" with how the club operated, and adding the allegations were historic.

In a speech at Saturday night's club best and fairest function, Kennett said it was "unfair" allegations were made public through last month's ABC report.

That report named former coach Alastair Clarkson, his assistant at the time Chris Fagan and ex-Hawthorn welfare manager Jason Burt. All deny any wrongdoing.

The former players, and some family members, initially aired their grievances confidentially with the club, which forwarded a report to the AFL.

"The AFL has a process in place that could have resolved this confidentially and in the interests of all parties," Kennett told 3AW on Sunday.

"But the families, who have been involved themselves in a confidential process, went and spoke to the ABC and sadly having asked for, and we respected the confidentiality of them and their names, they then went and named those they had grievances with, and that took the process to a different level.

"I was dumbfounded by what I read in their stories, and I'm saddened by them, but they are at this stage allegations."

After saying on Saturday night he hoped the matter could be resolved by the end of the year, Kennett admitted it could take far longer.

"While I'm still hopeful all parties can come together, there's now the possibility this could go on for a year - and that's in no-one's interests," he said.

Kennett again said he didn't think Hawthorn was in a crisis, rather a situation that needed to be managed.

WorkSafe have confirmed they are looking into the matter, with inspectors from the health and safety body to visit the club on Monday.

"I'm not worried at all, that's just part of the process and they are entitled to come in and have a look," Kennett said.

"I guess these incidents, I'm not quite sure when they occurred, but somewhere between six and 12 years ago, so it's got a long tail.

"That doesn't mean you excuse it, it doesn't mean you don't deal with it.

"I'm quite sure when they complete their report, they will be, I would suspect, very impressed by the processes that we have in place."

The AFL will establish a four-person panel to look at the allegations.

Clarkson, who was recruited by North Melbourne in August, and Fagan, now at Brisbane, have stood down from their coaching duties.

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