AFL player and Channel 7 presenter Amber Laidler separate after 12 years
Former Swans star Jeremy Laidler and Channel 7 reporter Amber Laidler have reportedly called it quits after 12 years together.
The adorable couple in 2022 celebrated the birth of their first child, Will.
As first reported by The Daily Telegraph, the pair have quietly, amicably separated, but are still living together in the same family home with their son.
A quick glance at their social media posts suggests there appears to have been issues between the pair dating back several years.
The former Swans player-turned assistant coach has not featured on Amber's Instagram page since December, 2023.
Amber has not been seen on the 35-year-old former defender's Instagram page since November, 2023.
According to the report, Amber, 32, has not been wearing her wedding ring in recent months.
It is a sad end to a relationship that has stretched back to 2013, when they were first described in news reports as a 'hot new item'.
They were married in 2017 in a glamorous event attended by several Swans teammates, including former co-captain Kieren Jack and his partner Charlotte Goodlet, a fellow news presenter and former model.
Amber, whose maiden name is Greasley, has become a popular presenter at the Seven Network and has built a career in journalism after winning Miss World Australia in 2011.
She previously worked behind the scenes at 7News before taking up her role as an on-air reporter.
The footballer, meanwhile, finished his playing career in 2017, having played 87 games across nine seasons in the AFL.
He previously played for Geelong and Carlton before making the move to the Swans.
The highly-rated assistant coach left the Swans at the end of 2022 to make a move to rivals GWS.
He has been the club's forwards coach in recent years and has helped forward Jesse Hogan return to his career-best form.
Originally published as Channel 7 news reporter and AFL player separate after 12 years
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News.com.au
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- News.com.au
What is the greatest AFL team of the 21st century?
It was the bone crunching hit that echoed around the MCG and footy conversations for years afterwards. When Collingwood's Scott Burns made a beeline for Michael Voss in the 2002 Grand Final and rammed into the Lions captain, you would have forgiven Voss for lying dazed on the turf. Instead he bounced back to his feet immediately and handpassed to Brownlow Medallist Simon Black, who kicked a goal as Brisbane won a thrilling decider against the Pies. It was a passage of play that epitomised the combination of sheer brutality and silky smooth skill that saw Brisbane win three premierships in a row and make the 2004 Grand Final. Nathan Buckley, Voss' direct opponent, won the North Smith Medal that day, but Voss' efforts in the dying stages of that game forced a change so voting is now completed after the final siren. Our 25@25 series will finally put to bed the debates you've been having at the pub and around dinner tables for years – and some that are just too much fun not to include. Ask most footy fans to name the best AFL team of the 21st century and even the most rusted on Victorians tend to nominate the Brisbane Lions under Voss and Leigh Matthews. The Lions had it all. The 'Fab Four' midfield of Voss, Black, Jason Akermanis and Nigel Lappin was as tough and talented as it gets. How many players today could kick goals from an impossible angle on their left or right foot like 'Aker'? Defenders Mal Michael and Justin Leppitsch were as tough as nails, and we wouldn't have wanted to get lost in a dark alley with the Scott twins, who were great players as well as masterful nigglers. The same goes for Jonathan Brown and Alastair Lynch. It's also easy to forget current Collingwood coach Craig McRae was a role player as a small forward in all three of Brisbane's flags. 'For me, I would always go Brisbane of the early 2000s,' Hawks great and Fox Footy commentator Jordan Lewis told 'They were stacked across every line, and it was a game where you really relied on individual battles and individual brilliance. 'When we (Hawthorn) were able to win, it was more sort of team defence and team offence. 'That side for me would stack up in any era and any decade as being the best team that has possibly ever played the game.' How would Hodge-Lewis-Mitchell have gone against Brisbane's Fab Four? 'It would have been a great duel,' Lewis said. 'Maybe we did play each other in the early 2000s, but we were certainly kids, and they were coming towards the end of their careers. 'I mean they're Hall of Fame quality players, and it's quite rare that you get so many in one team, which Brisbane had — All Australians, Coleman medallists, Norm Smith medallists. It was a rich era of football up in the northern state.' FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Who is the best AFL team of this century? Let's break it down. Brisbane, Geelong, Hawthorn and Richmond are the four candidates given they each won three or more premierships in their dynasties. But we're crossing off Richmond given the lopsided grand final wins in 2017 and 2019 against Adelaide and GWS and the reliance on Dustin Martin. Dusty's performance in the 2020 Grand Final win over Geelong was as good as it gets — shrugging off Patrick Dangerfield in the forward pocket to snap a miraculous goal is legacy defining stuff. Hawthorn won four premierships (2008 and the 2013-15 three-peat) with six players featuring in all of those triumphs — Sam Mitchell, Luke Hodge, Jordan Lewis, Cyril Rioli, Jarryd Roughead and Grant Birchall. The Hawks under Hodge's captaincy are probably the toughest team this century along with the Lions. Speaking to Lewis said 'competitiveness' was the defining characteristic of that successful Hawthorn team that allowed them to reset and win back-to-back flags. 'You need the game plan, you need to be fit and healthy and everything to go right, but if you're not competitive, you can't sustain that long period of success,' Lewis told 'Players recognise that when they've been successful for one year and find it really hard to back it up. Then you really appreciate how good those teams that were able to stay at the top of their game and win multiple premierships in a row.' Each of those great teams had an iconic moment or two. Voss bouncing back from the Burns bump, Matthew Scarlett's toepoke to Gary Ablett Jr in the 2009 grand final and Hodge had a couple himself — an likely goal from the boundary in 2015 and planting a kiss on Buddy Franklin in 2014. Jarryd Roughead tackled Sydney's Dan Hannebery so hard in the 2014 Grand Final there might still be a dent in the MCG turf in the shape of Hannebery. The Hawks got revenge for the 2012 decider and blew Sydney away in a 63-point win — the first of four consecutive grand final defeats for the Swans. 'The Roughhead tackle on Dan Hannebery where he crunched him at the stoppage was a big moment,' Hawthorn legend Jason Dunstall recalled. 'That bump on Michael Voss when, that's probably the one that stands out to me because that could sway the game either way. 'If he doesn't get up, Brisbane are in trouble. But if he gets up, all it's gonna do is inspire his teammates and that's exactly what happened. So that to me is probably the one that stands out.' Dunstall broke down the case for Geelong from a longevity point of view given the Cats have been contenders for most of the past 20 years. 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