AFL great Nicky Winmar has cancelled his NAIDOC week visit to Tasmania's north-west after "consistent harassment" of his controversial manager, Ricky Nixon.
Winmar was set to hold a football clinic in Smithton on Friday and present Indigenous-designed football jumpers to the Circular Head Saints ahead of its NAIDOC Round clash on Saturday.
But the visit was called off late on Thursday, with the Circular Head Aboriginal Corporation blaming it on a "factually incorrect and misguided diatribe" targeted at Nixon.
Nixon said "the actions of an individual in Smithton" meant authorities had advised the pair not to travel.
"Nicky Winmar and I have decided that the priority has to be, and will always be, the community's safety, hence we will not be coming to Tasmania this weekend on the advice of authorities," he posted on Facebook.
"We will, however, be assisting the community in other ways in the next few months which we will announce soon."
But Winmar said he was not advised by authorities to cancel the trip.
He said he was not personally threatened or harassed and made the decision to postpone the visit after discussions with trusted friends and family members.
"I am horrified that individuals are being harassed, threatened and blamed for the cancellation," Winmar said.
"I am sorry for any distress caused for individuals and disappointment to those that were looking forward to the advertised visit."
Winmar said Nixon was travelling with him as his former St Kilda teammate, not his manager.
A campaign had been waged against Nixon appearing at the events, highlighting his dealings with a 17-year-old girl that led to his AFL player agent accreditation being suspended.
The AFL Players' Association Accreditation Board found he had breached its code of conduct in 2011 after the girl released footage of a man she claimed was Nixon, pictured semi-naked on a Melbourne hotel bed.
Nixon admitted inappropriate dealings with the teen at the hotel but denied having sex with her or supplying her with drugs and alcohol.
In 2015, he was reportedly arrested over alleged offensive social media posts where he threatened to assault a two-year-old child.
Nixon declined to comment further.
Circular Head Aboriginal Corporation chair Selina Maguire-Colgrave said the campaign against Nixon was waged by a community member who "actively and deliberately undermined this opportunity for the community on the basis of misinformation".
She said Nixon held the Victorian equivalent of a Working with Vulnerable People card, and the positivity of Winmar's visit should not have been clouded by Nixon accompanying him.
But Smithton resident Melissa Wells said she publicly aired the concerns about Nixon's "highly questionable" prior behaviour because of legitimate worry. She denied CHAC's allegations she had been malicious or harassed the organisation, Nixon or Winmar.
She said she was simply seeking assurances he had a valid Working with Vulnerable People card.
"We personally went in and privately spoke with the manager at CHAC and tried to keep this all private, and our main concern was: did he have a Working with Vulnerable People card? So why [wasn't] I told a few weeks ago when I asked that he did have a card," she said.
"I'd still be concerned about the prospect of him coming but I'd feel that I wouldn't be able to have a vocal and outright opinion about it because he does have a card."
Circular Head Saints president Keith Billing said it was a "great disappointment" to the club and the wider community that Winmar was no longer attending.
"That disappointment is going to be spread across individuals like school students and elderly residents of [Emerton Park nursing home], and then of course the football [community] and our club that were going to get the opportunity to meet him and perhaps get their Indigenous jumpers signed by him," he said.
Mr Billing said his view was that Nixon was a "colourful character" who had "taken his penalties on the chin" for his past wrongdoing.
"I had no problem with them being a package deal, obviously. Nicky Winmar trusts his agent and the agent carries the Victorian equivalent of a Working with Vulnerable People card, so the man should be free to walk around like everybody else does," he said.
Editor's note 11/7/22: A statement from Nicky Winmar has been added.