Former AFL player and Noongar man, Nicky Winmar has been found guilty of dragging a woman by the hair and smashing her head against a door.
The St Kilda star, 60, argued the woman lied about the attack but Bendigo Magistrate Trieu Huynh on Friday found she was being truthful and convicted him of three charges.
The woman, who cannot be identified, alleged Winmar attacked her at Cohuna in northern Victoria on May 14, 2025.
She claimed Winmar became unexpectedly angry before he grabbed her arm, twisted it and then dragged her by the hair.
The woman also accused Winmar of pushing her against a wall, spitting and yelling in her face, and then bashing her head repeatedly into a wooden door.
Winmar admitted he slapped the woman's arm above the elbow but denied throwing any punches or making her tumble.
He claimed she was the one who punched him five or six times to the face area.
The magistrate found the woman was a credible and truthful witness who was honest in her evidence about the attack.
He convicted Winmar of two charges of common law assault and one count of unlawful assault.
The charges related to the allegations Winmar grabbed the woman by the arm, dragged her by the hair and hit her head against a door.
Winmar was acquitted on the fourth charge of intentionally causing injury, with the magistrate finding the woman's "substantial pain" fell short of the sort of injury required for the charge.
Winmar, who appeared in the Bendigo court in person, dropped his head into his hands after the magistrate handed down his decision.
He will face a pre-sentence hearing at a later date.
Winmar became the first Aboriginal footballer to play 200 games in the AFL, finishing his career with 230 games at St Kilda and 21 for the Western Bulldogs.
He fought back against racism in his career, including standing in front of an abusive Collingwood crowd in 1993, lifting his jumper and proudly pointing at his skin.
Winmar is also co-leading a landmark racism class action against the AFL in the Victorian Supreme Court.

