
Golden girl Ariarne Titmus steals the show in the AFL Big Freeze as full house sign goes up at MCG to honour MND battler Neale Daniher
Neale Daniher is more than a former AFL coach. He is a national hero.
Diagnosed with motor neurone disease in 2013, Daniher chose to fight back - not just for himself, but for every Australian impacted by the cruel, incurable condition.
The former Essendon star and Melbourne coach co-founded FightMND in 2014, launching the now-iconic 'Big Freeze' as its flagship event.
Held annually at the MCG on the King's Birthday public holiday, it has raised over $115million for MND research and support services.
Ten years on, the 2025 AFL Big Freeze was the biggest yet - played to a full house of fans who turned out to honour Daniher's legacy and laugh, cheer and shed a tear in equal measures.
Before the King's Birthday clash between Collingwood and Melbourne, Australia's sporting elite lined up to take the plunge in icy water, raising funds and awareness in Daniher's name.
First down the slide? None other than Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus.
Wearing a sparkling pink outfit inspired by Olivia Newton-John's Grease role, Titmus opened the show with flair and heart - setting the tone for an unforgettable afternoon.
Cycling legend Cadel Evans followed, rocking an outfit that made him look like a miniature version of Melbourne Demons captain Max Gawn. It was capped off with Gawn himself waiting at the bottom to congratulate him.
Collingwood royalty Peter Daicos appeared dressed as the Joker, telling Tim Watson, 'I'm at home… this is how I dress normally.'
With sons Nick and Josh preparing for the match elsewhere in the MCG, Daicos soaked in the spotlight solo.
Actor and former footy player Matt Nable descended dressed as Angus Young from AC/DC, guitar in hand, channeling pure rock energy.
Netball star Liz Watson came out dressed as Barbie, paying tribute to Margot Robbie in full pink - crop top and all.
Matt Shirvington followed in full Thor gear, complete with hammer and dramatic cape that nearly took his head off during his icy landing.
Australian cricket captain Alyssa Healy earned huge cheers dressed as Sharon Strzelecki from Kath & Kim, honouring Magda Szubanski, who recently announced a stage 4 cancer diagnosis.
Former Melbourne Demons fan favourite Aaron Davey wore the red and black once more, this time dressed as Bombers icon Michael Long - linking the moment to his time under Daniher's coaching leadership.
V8 great Craig Lowndes brought Mad Max to the slide before closing act Mark Taylor came out as the late Shane Warne, complete with floppy white hat and a ball in hand.
'I'm coming out at No.10, where Warnie should've batted,' he said, bringing the crowd to its feet.
But despite all the colour and costumes, the heart of the Big Freeze has always been Neale Daniher.
Daniher debuted for Essendon in 1979, captained the club in 1982, and overcame serious injury to remain a beloved part of Bombers history.
Later, as coach of Melbourne from 1998 to 2007, he led the club to multiple finals, including a Grand Final appearance in 2000.
When MND hit, Daniher didn't retreat. He rallied. He used his public profile to raise awareness, fund research, and inspire courage in the face of despair.
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Telegraph
23 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Three moments that secured Maro Itoje's Lions immortality
British and Irish Lions captain Maro Itoje delivered a performance for the ages as the tourists secured a famous series win. Telegraph Sport breaks down three crucial moments on a defining day for Itoje. 63 minutes – Conan tackle and Itoje turnover Langi Gleeson carries past Bundee Aki only to be felled by a desperate tackle from Jack Conan, allowing Itoje to swoop and secure a turnover Until the final quarter, Itoje had not been enjoying his finest hour as a player. He had conceded two penalties in a first half that was dominated by the physical presence of Rob Valetini and Will Skelton, who seemed to especially enjoy ruffling the plumage of his one-time Saracens team-mate. It was understandable that Itoje's influence would start to wane. This was his 33rd game, all starts, of a gruelling season that will run to 12 successive months if he starts next week. For the second successive season, English rugby's most prized asset has sailed past the governing body's own game-time limits, now downgraded out of pitiful shame to guidelines. While Itoje joked at the start of the tour about having 'no wrinkles' such a workload is bound to have an effect. Last summer he clearly ran out of steam at the end of England's pair of Tests against New Zealand. Similarly, Itoje looked completely gassed in the final 10 minutes of the first Test victory against Australia. That result, however, was never truly in the balance whereas at the MCG the Lions had been trailing since the fourth minute – at one stage by 18 points – which was going to require one last final push from Itoje. And in those critical final 20 minutes, Itoje duly played lights-out rugby. The Lions won two turnovers in the final quarter, both by Itoje – first on the isolated Gleeson and then at a maul with eight minutes to go. That proved a huge momentum shift, coming straight after Will Stuart had conceded a penalty inside the Australian 22 for taking an extra roll allowing the Wallabies to kick to touch. Australia 's maul was already beginning to fragment allowing Itoje to come through the middle to sack the ball-carrier. It prompted a huge roar of celebration from Andy Farrell in the coaching box. That Itoje was awarded the man-of-the-match honours afterwards owed entirely to his efforts in this final quarter when his fuel light was blinking furiously. 78 mins – Itoje calls line-out to himself The Lions are still trailing 26-24 and have a line-out just inside their half. Itoje calls the line-out to himself and claims the ball just in front of Nick Frost and Jeremy Williams In a few years' time, this will seem like the inevitable crowning of Itoje as this generation's 'Lions king' and only the second successful English Lions captain in the postwar era after Martin Johnson. Farrell was gushing with praise in the post-match press conference. 'Cool, calm and collected, 100 per cent,' Farrell said. 'I thought he was outstanding in his captaincy today. He was across the game. As the game started to unfold in front of us, he was calm.' Yet there was nothing pre-ordained about Itoje's coronation. In all likelihood, Caelan Doris would have been the Lions captain but for the Ireland No 8's shoulder injury. As early as January this year, Itoje had never captained an international team until England head coach Steve Borthwick decided to unceremoniously depose Jamie George. Eddie Jones famously opined that his star player was too introspective to be a captain. There are many forms of leadership. By his own admission, Itoje 'leads by actions'. As footage in the changing room before the first Test shows, Itoje was happy to delegate the emotional tone-setting to Ellis Genge, the England prop. Churchillian speeches are not Itoje's style. He does not swear. He does not tub thump. How Itoje leads is by taking responsibility on his own shoulders. With the series on the line in the final 10 minutes, Itoje calls the final two Lions line-outs to himself. Australia knew exactly where the ball was going and challenged him both times. Ronan Kelleher's throws were on the money on each occasion but Itoje still needed to claim each catch under ferocious pressure. One misjudgment and it is highly probable Australia are 1-1 in the series. This can happen to the very best. In the final minutes of the third Test of the 2001 series, Johnson called a line-out to himself only to have Justin Harrison pinch it from his grasp. Itoje ensured there would be no Wallaby robbery II. 80 mins – Itoje cuts Wilson's protests short Hugo Keenan crosses for the winning try but Australia captain Harry Wilson immediately appeals to referee Andrea Piardi for an illegal clear out by Jac Morgan on Carlo Tizzano in the previous phase. Itoje immediately interrupts Wilson's protests and after both captains are ushered away the officials agree that no infringement has taken place This was not quite on a par with Sam Warburton's Jedi mind-trick on Romain Poite in the 2017 series against the All Blacks, when the French referee reversed his penalty decision in virtually the last play of the third Test, but Farrell seemed to have no doubt that Itoje's influence at least had an influence in ensuring Piardi stuck with his on-field decision. 'He understood what was needed and how we communicated with the referee,' Farrell said. 'The flow of the game, he was absolutely spot on. If you listen back to the messaging that was on the referee's mic in time, you'll realise just what a class act he was.' Earlier in the tour, Itoje was asked what his approach was to dealing with referees, which he says he tailors to each individual referee. 'It's slightly different depending on the refs,' Itoje said. 'You have to make an assessment. Some refs are more amenable to communication than others and you have to take a read. You have to choose your moments.' With Piardi that meant approaching the Italian at every possible opportunity. Skelton sparked an early fracas after a cheap shot on Tadhg Furlong which sparked a furious response from Itoje. This was quickly re-enacted after Dan Sheehan's opening try to which Piardi tried to calm both captains down. Itoje, though, slyly tried to shift the blame. 'Yes sir, yes sir. But sir, he started it,' to which Wilson incredulously replied: 'Don't be a schoolkid.' On 65 minutes, Itoje was again in Piardi's grill after Tizzano had won a turnover inches from the Australia's try-line. Although his protests fell on deaf ears, Ronan O'Gara on the Sky commentary voiced his approval for Itoje 'asking all the right questions'. It is difficult to listen to an uninterrupted feed of the final, fateful exchange with Piardi, although Itoje definitely succeeds in cutting short Wilson's protests. When asked about what he said to Piardi afterwards, Itoje said: 'I don't really know to be honest. It was fine. Naturally, their captain was trying to get his point across and, in my view, argue for something that didn't happen. I guess I was just arguing for something that did happen.' Whatever influence his intervention did or did not have, the officials ruled in the visitors' favour, confirming the series win and putting Itoje on that narrow pedestal of successful Lions' captains. Player of the Match and Lions captain Maro Itoje gives his immediate reaction to an epic comeback win at the MCG! 😍🗣️ — Sky Sports (@SkySports) July 26, 2025


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Footy's grumpiest coach is caught on video in wild act as he parties with team after record-breaking win
St Kilda coach Ross Lyon showed off his wild side by hoisting one of his stars onto his shoulders at a wild party as the team celebrated a win that has gone down in the AFL history books. Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera kicked two goals - one after the siren - to cap off his side's record-breaking win over Melbourne on Sunday, which saw the Saints pull off the greatest three-quarter-time comeback in VFL/AFL history as they erased a 46-point deficit. Lyon - who has forged a reputation as a no-nonsense force to be reckoned with in the league - was recorded chairing Wanganeen-Milera as music blared and other St Kilda stars recorded the scenes on their phones, drinks in hand and family in attendance. The party went off on Sunday night, just after the stunning win at Marvel Stadium, and it was a pre-planned celebration with the team getting a seven-day rest before they tackle North Melbourne. Lyon was in raptures in the coach's box as his side stormed home in one of the most dramatic finishes to a match in memory, and he foreshadowed the party in his post-game press conference. 'Get a bit of belief and we'll all get together tonight,' he said. 'We're trying to build out the mortar of the club, we've got a family function at a hotel. We're all getting there. 'We'll all enjoy each other's company but the cold reality is in 24 hours you're preparing [for the next match]. 'We did talk about the joy at halftime, of playing footy, don't let it get you down. 'As a kid, you'd love to be here.' The Saints slotted nine unanswered goals in the final term to win 15.6 (96) to 13.12 (90). It pips the previous the best last quarter revival, when the Brisbane Bears came from 45 points down at the final break to beat Hawthorn in 1995. Wanganeen-Milera calmly slotted his third goal after flying for a soaring mark with less than 20 seconds remaining. That levelled the scores before a 6-6-6 penalty in the middle was paid against the Demons, to the confusion of all players. Saints ruck Rowan Marshall was able to perfectly pick out Wanganeen-Milera running inside 50 just before the siren sounded. Any score would have given the Saints victory, but Wanganeen-Milera went back and kicked the goal, to a raucous reaction from the crowd. 'Underneath the exterior, I can get emotional,' Lyon said. 'A little bit watery when Nas took that mark. 'I think it's just that emotion, just for the players, just for them. 'Our young players never gave up, and our leaders never gave up, and they found a way.' Lyon also revealed Wanganeen-Milera, who had a game-high 34 disposals alongside his match-winning four goals, was in doubt to play due to a stye in his eye. 'I had a sleep-in this morning. Got up, make my coffee. I see four missed calls from the doctor,' Lyon said. 'Experience tells me this can't be good. 'He said 'Nas has come in' and they upped his antibiotics, given him an injection. 'I rang him (Wanganeen-Milera), he goes, 'No, I'll be right'. 'I just said, 'If you're not right, no pressure, we'll tap you out'. 'He just let us know so it was a good story.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Australia proved a point in Melbourne — but second Test cannot be a false dawn
'ROBBED,' the back page of Sydney's Sunday Telegraph declared the morning after the night before, an opinion with which Wallabies boss Joe Schmidt appeared to agree. 'It was a tough one to take,' the Australia rugby head coach had said after a long explanation of why he felt Jac Morgan's clean out on Carlo Tizzano should have been penalised that included a reference to the lawbook and an accusation that the referees had not put player welfare first. Around the grabby headline, the Sydney paper planted what it felt was incriminating evidence – the law that Schmidt had quoted; Morgan making contact high on the back or neck of Tizzano; the flanker writhing in pain. This one clearly stings. Another official in another circumstance might have seen a Morgan misdeed; Andrea Piardi felt differently and allowed Hugo Keenan's series-winning score to stand. Plenty of those of an Australian persuasion will continue to feel aggrieved but, in time, perhaps they will reflect how encouraging it was that they could be in a situation where a contentious call settled the second Test. There had been few signs of such competitiveness seven days prior, a meek surrender in the first half in Brisbane slightly salvaged by an improved showing after the interval – but all in attendance were under no illusions about which side had been in total command throughout. Indeed, in the run-up to the second encounter at the MCG, it had been fair to wonder just how fully focussed the Wallabies were on this once in a rugby generation series. It had not helped, perhaps, that Schmidt had appeared to bracket these Tests with the Rugby Championship meetings to come against South Africa, or that he had spoken repeatedly of what a great 'learning experience' this would be for a young team. The Australian squad – which is a little short on the sort of fiery characters to charge up this series publicly – hadn't been particularly combative or confident in their public dealings, and while Schmidt had to be talked in using the term 'submissive' in his reflections on the first Test, the genial Kiwi delivered it nonetheless. Thanks heavens, then, for the first 40 at the 'G, where a bellicose Australia that we have not seen for some time showed up en masse. It cannot be overstated just how much difference Will Skelton and Rob Valetini make to the side, each carry and colossal contact making the rest of the squad swell in size. Skelton was in the thick of things off the ball, too – taking it to Maro Itoje, Tadhg Furlong and other senior figures within the Lions squad, niggling and needling and generally being a nuisance. There is a certain game savvy required at Test level that necessitates pushing the boundaries of the law. The tourists – with vastly more experience – had excelled at that in the opening encounter; Ireland under Andy Farrell are masters of just about staying licit in their ruck actions. It was a welcome change to see Australia engaging in some gamesmanship. But it was only 40 minutes, really, for which Australia felt the lead belligerent in the Melbourne melee. Already in the build-up to Jake Gordon's sniping score one could see what the effort was taking out of their forwards – several times the scrum half had to virtually drag heavy furniture into position to be thrown again into the Lions' defensive line. It felt like it could not last – and did not: Valetini, Slipper and Allan Alaalatoa did not re-emerge after the interval; Will Skelton made it only seven minutes more. With them went more than 300 caps – and it showed. 'I felt that we really had the game to challenge them,' Schmidt said. 'We demonstrated that when we built the lead, but [the Lions] are a really good side. The experience they have just allowed them to stay calm and execute their game.' There are good players on the Australian bench – Angus Bell will soon permanently supplant Slipper and both Langi Gleeson and Tizzano are enjoying standout seasons – but the difference in depth gave the Lions a huge advantage in those final minutes. Now, of course, a side drawn from the best of four unions will always have undue superiority in that sense yet the Wallabies' lack of game-changers is an ongoing concern. The exile of Taniela Tupou, bound for Racing 92, feels odd; so, too, the lack of Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, so good for the First Nations & Pasifika XV last midweek. Australia will reflect on some poor fortune before and during this series. The loss of Noah Lolesio was a huge blow, while having neither Valetini nor Skelton able to muster more than 50 minutes across the first two Test has been hugely significant. Harry Potter 's hamstring injury on Saturday night forced scrum half Tate McDermott on to the wing – the makeshift marauder was highly impressive but Australia missed his ability to change the pace coming on at nine. The recent losses to rugby league of Carter Gordon and Mark Nawaqanitawase are still felt. The concern for Schmidt will be that his short tenure may now fizzle out. The New Zealander is only in post through to next summer having agreed a one-year extension to ease the transition to Les Kiss – a smart and worldly character with a breadth of past employers that will serve him well. In Melbourne, one could see the pieces falling into place of the puzzle Kiss must construct before a home World Cup in 2027. While Skelton and Slipper's advancing age will be a worry, it will remain a relatively young squad at his disposal. The tournament will be a vital moment in rugby union's fight for prominence within the nation. The rest of this year may be tricky having missed a chance at a signature win. After the third Test comes two trips to South Africa; a dangerous Argentina follow thereafter for two meetings on Australian soil. A one-win Rugby Championship, like last year, would leave a pessimistic outlook. It makes the last Lions clash surprisingly important for the hosts, one feels. Andy Farrell's side will not ease up consciously as they seek a 3-0 whitewash but Australia will recognise an opportunity to produce another statement performance – the fight shown in Melbourne cannot be a false dawn.