logo
Ben Cousins shows off some VERY rare photos of him with his kids on a wild Aussie holiday

Ben Cousins shows off some VERY rare photos of him with his kids on a wild Aussie holiday

Daily Mail​7 days ago
Ben Cousins might find himself fielding AFL contract offers from battlers like St Kilda if he is not careful, after his latest Instagram post showed the former West Coast star looking shredded while taking a break with his children.
Cousins' battles with addiction have been well documented since they became public in 2007 after a series of off-field incidents, including arrests and suspensions.
He was suspended from the AFL in 2007 and returned in 2009 to play two seasons with Richmond before retiring.
Cousins faced numerous legal issues between 2010 and 2019, including drug possession, breaching restraining orders, and stalking, which led to multiple jail sentences.
He was last jailed in 2019 but had all outstanding charges cleared by the end of that year.
Since then, Cousins' fight against drug addiction has seen him make a comeback that has completely turned his life around.
While the 47-year-old tends to keep his private life out of the spotlight these days, he recently shared happy snaps from a visit to the north of Western Australia on holiday with his young family.
Cousins travelled to Kimberley Sands Resort in Broome with his two children Angelique, 11, and Bobby, 13, from his previous relationship with their mother Maya.
Cousins was also joined on a cruise by a host of other A-list Australian celebrities, including radio presenter Fifi Box, former host of The Project Carrie Bickmore, and former West Coast Eagles teammate Chris Judd and his wife Bec Judd.
'Holidays up North… even better than I remembered,' he posted.
'Great stay Kimberley Sands Resort, already planning a trip back.'
While many footy fans remember the sad and alarming images of an emaciated and bearded Cousins during his addiction battle, he looked a picture of health on his family holiday.
With a ripped physique that would put many current players to shame, he engaged in a series of wholesome activities with his children including fishing, swimming, and a helicopter ride across the WA terrain.
Cousins has previously been busy with his media duties and appearance on Dancing With The Stars.
Normally a very private person, Cousins was happy to pose and smile for photos on his journey with his son and daughter
'Benny, you're a f***ing legend brother,' one commented.
'Every single person in Australia is happy to see you up and about my brother. You are a true inspiration and a true Aussie.
'Congratulations on the new life and enjoy every second.'
'So proud of you Ben, every time I see your smiling face it is just lit up with joy,' another posted.
'Love seeing you happy and love listening to you every morning on the radio - this is what we always dreamed of for you. Looks like an awesome trip.'
Since turning his life around, Ben Cousins has taken significant steps to rebuild both his career and reputation.
He returned to football in a community role with the West Coast Eagles, helping promote youth development and engagement.
Later, he began coaching the Perth Demons' under-19 colts team, contributing to the next generation of local players.
Cousins has also re-entered the media, taking on roles as a football analyst and more recently as a co-host on a Perth breakfast radio show.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gold Coast standard: Suns finally look like they belong with the AFL's big boys
Gold Coast standard: Suns finally look like they belong with the AFL's big boys

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Gold Coast standard: Suns finally look like they belong with the AFL's big boys

Temperamentally, it's hard to imagine two more different footballers than Jeremy Cameron and Matt Rowell. Cameron kicked 11 goals on the weekend, and slotted each one with the same laconic air as when he's whacking golf balls into the lake on his farm. Rowell had 37 possessions, most of which were earned in a footballing form of hand-to-hand-combat. Rowell met considerably stiffer opposition than Cameron, whose bag came against a lamentable North Melbourne, a team that is driving its fans to despair. Rowell's 37 came against a crack midfield, with one of the sport's best two-way runners in his back pocket all afternoon. Rowell's motor often takes half a quarter or so to properly turn over. And Josh Dunkley, who has blanketed him in recent meetings, seemed to have his measure in the early minutes of the Queensland derby. He was doing all the right things – bumping him off balance, blocking him at stoppages and involving himself in possession chains. But in horseracing parlances, this was run on a Heavy 9 and Rowell is built for those conditions. He's low slung, incredibly strong through the glutes and legs, and excellent at holding his centre of gravity. Scrimmaging on his hands and knees – one of the more exhausting things you can do on a football field – he'll shovel out the handball at the fourth or fifth effort. For such a brute of a footballer, he also has fast feet and a recurring sight all afternoon was of him giving Dunkley the slip at stoppages – sometimes with twinkle toes, sometimes just sledgehammering his way out. It's impossible to write about Rowell and not mention Noah Anderson. The best friends are polar opposites as footballers. One pursues the ball in an almost demented manner. The other glides and slaloms his way through congestion. Anderson took a while to adapt to Damien Hardwick's ways. But he has been exceptional this year, and would be a worthy Brownlow medallist and All Australian captain. In a recent profile on the AFL website, three people who coach and work with him compared him to Scott Pendlebury. Words like 'calm' and 'unfazed' were peppered throughout the article. It's a shame he and Rowell aren't playing in front of 80,000 people every other week. But they drew their marbles, went where they were told and have made Gold Coast a serious football team. There are several things that stand out about the Suns. The first is how much they resemble Hardwick's great Richmond side just as it was about to pop – the frantic, raus raus football, the determination to attack from half back in great sweeping waves. Like Richmond's Tigers, and unlike any Suns side in its first dozen years, they don't drop their bundle following a bad loss. And there's finally a bit of mongrel about them, an attitude that GWS had right from the beginning but which the Suns failed to cultivate. A lot of them, including Rowell and ruckman Jarrod Witts, are prepared to do the dirty work, allowing thoroughbreds like Anderson the full expression of his game. Like Melbourne, they wined and dined all the prominent media figures in February. All the big movers and shakers were there – the president, the CEO, the coach, Anderson, Rowell and a lot of the best players. They were selling their story. They were asking for a fair ride from the media. And underpinning everything was a steely resolve that they weren't going to roll over for anyone anymore. Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL Weekly Jonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL stories after newsletter promotion Yeah yeah, most probably thought, thanks for the dinner but we've heard it all before. After all, this is the time of year where the Suns traditionally fall in a heap. In the last seven games of a season, they've never won more than three of them. They had a poor recent record against Brisbane, they were towelled up by Adelaide last week and they were without Daniel Rioli and Touk Miller. But they took on a premiership midfield, a midfield with depth and variety and talent to burn, and they obliterated them. Their 12th win is the most they've registered in a season. At the final break, in teeming rain, coach and players were squeezed in tight and grinning broadly. I'll take a stab and suggest Hardwick was saying something along the lines of 'How good is this?' and 'we finally belong with the big boys'. A final word on Rowell and Anderson. There's a photograph of them with Nick Daicos in the same school team in 2019. Pity the poor VCE students, concerned mainly with their studies, their social lives and playing a bit of footy on a Saturday, who had to try and quell that trio. The poor buggers should get a spot in the motorcade on grand final day.

‘No respect' – Sports star eats KEBAB on the bench after being subbed off during horribly one-sided victory over rivals
‘No respect' – Sports star eats KEBAB on the bench after being subbed off during horribly one-sided victory over rivals

The Sun

time9 hours ago

  • The Sun

‘No respect' – Sports star eats KEBAB on the bench after being subbed off during horribly one-sided victory over rivals

AFL star Patrick Dangerfield has been slammed for eating a KEBAB after being subbed off in Geelong's win over rivals North Melbourne. The team captain left the field at the three-quarter time during the 150-49 thrashing. 4 4 Dangerfield, 35, appeared very relaxed with his side's domination of the match as he took a seat on the bench. He was then spotted snacking on a KEBAB as he added insult to injury to their rivals. After the game on Saturday, he was asked about the mid-match snack by Fox Footy. He said: "Well, it gets cold in the Marvel Stadium, and the souvlaki came in at three-quarter time, and then they sit there for 50 minutes before we eat them. "So it was nice to chew into it and Shaun [Higgins] was a bit jealous. "He was wondering why I didn't order two. I said I didn't want it to go to his head. "Like it's a big pill that he's got." Dangerfield's team-mate Max Holmes appeared to be left unimpressed by his captain's actions. He said: "That's so unprofessional. "He told me as he was walking in just then that he considered driving home." Football icons' strange hobbies While fans hit out on social media with many claiming that Dangerfield lacked respect. One posted: "No respect for the oppo." A second wrote: "This is bloody embarrassing and a little bit of arrogance from Dangerflog." A third commented: "That's unbelievably disrespectful." 4 4 A fourth said: "Ah, it's all about Paddy, always has been." Another added: "A total lack of respect for fellow professionals." Meanwhile, the 101-point thrashing almost eclipsed Geelong's biggest win against the Kangaroos. That was a 114 victory back in 1981. Geelong are now fourth in the AFL and could look to finish higher with favourable games coming up. The face Port Elizabeth, Essendon, Sydney and Richmond before finishing the season.

St Kilda pull off greatest comeback in AFL/VFL history against Melbourne
St Kilda pull off greatest comeback in AFL/VFL history against Melbourne

The Guardian

time10 hours ago

  • The Guardian

St Kilda pull off greatest comeback in AFL/VFL history against Melbourne

St Kilda pulled off the greatest three-quarter-time comeback in VFL/AFL history, storming home from 46 points down to stun Melbourne in a crazy finish at Marvel Stadium. Off-contract star Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera was the hero, slotting two goals in a frantic climax to pinch a miracle six-point victory. The Saints slotted nine unanswered goals in the final term to win 15.6 (96) to Melbourne's 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 to take a mark just before the siren sounded. Any score would have given the Saints victory, but Wanganeen-Milera went back and kicked his fourth, to a raucous reaction from the crowd. St Kilda are desperate to keep Wanganeen-Milera as he entertains large offers from both South Australian clubs. This performance, one of the best individual efforts of the season, will only lift his value even further. Melbourne forward Bayley Fritsch broke the game open with three first-quarter goals, giving his side a 25-point buffer. The Demons, inspired by tackling machine Jack Viney (16 tackles) extended their lead during every quarter to cruise into three-quarter-time seemingly on their way to a seventh-straight win. Instead, their capitulation ended a six-game losing run for the Saints, with their last victory also against Melbourne in June when they pipped the inaccurate Demons in Alice Springs. Melbourne star Kysaiah Pickett received heavy attention from St Kilda tagger Marcus Windhager. Pickett didn't dominate as he often has this season, but still had big moments, including a heavy tackle on Windhager that left the Saint sore and sorry. Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL Weekly Jonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL stories after newsletter promotion St Kilda received a boost when they swung high-flying young gun Alix Tauru from defence to the forward line late in the second term. The move immediately worked as Tauru took a contested mark, before going back to slot the first goal of what shapes as a promising career. St Kilda youngster Lance Collard hurt his foot in the first quarter, tried to play on, but was then subbed out in the second term for Hugh Boxshall and ended the match on crutches. Melbourne defender Jake Bowey could be in some trouble with the match review officer after a potential dangerous tackle on St Kilda forward Jack Higgins just before halftime.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store