Breaking
INThree Charged in Gang-Rape, Murder of 12-Year-Old; One Suspect LynchedINPune Rain: Orange Alert Issued, 5 Dead in Rain-Related Incidents, Schools Shut in 7 TalukasFRLevées de fonds des fintechs françaises : une hausse de 51% mais concentrée sur quelques entreprisesDESpanien wirft Ronaldo aus der WM, Belgien schlägt USADEAndreas Kroll: "Wir wollen uns von China unabhängig machen"GLOBALSamsung Shares Fall Despite Record Earnings on Spending and Demand WorriesRUМакрон поддержал Мбаппе после расистских нападокTRMacaristan Başbakanı Peter Magyar İstanbul'u GezdiITPanama e Giappone avviano percorso per Accordo di Associazione EconomicaRUРоссийский командир: ВСУ деморализованы после потери КонстантиновкиINThree Charged in Gang-Rape, Murder of 12-Year-Old; One Suspect LynchedINPune Rain: Orange Alert Issued, 5 Dead in Rain-Related Incidents, Schools Shut in 7 TalukasFRLevées de fonds des fintechs françaises : une hausse de 51% mais concentrée sur quelques entreprisesDESpanien wirft Ronaldo aus der WM, Belgien schlägt USADEAndreas Kroll: "Wir wollen uns von China unabhängig machen"GLOBALSamsung Shares Fall Despite Record Earnings on Spending and Demand WorriesRUМакрон поддержал Мбаппе после расистских нападокTRMacaristan Başbakanı Peter Magyar İstanbul'u GezdiITPanama e Giappone avviano percorso per Accordo di Associazione EconomicaRUРоссийский командир: ВСУ деморализованы после потери Константиновки
Newsgather
BackFormer AFL Player and Coach Neale Daniher Dies Aged 65
Former AFL Player and Coach Neale Daniher Dies Aged 65
Sports
Guardian Sport5/25/2026Sports2 min read

Former AFL Player and Coach Neale Daniher Dies Aged 65

Quick Look

  • Former AFL player and coach Neale Daniher has died at 65, 13 years after being diagnosed with motor neurone disease.
  • He was a prominent campaigner for MND research and co-founded FightMND.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Neale Daniher, a former AFL player and coach, passed away at the age of 65, 13 years after being diagnosed with motor neurone disease. He was known for his contributions to football and his prominent advocacy for MND research.

Font size

Former player and AFL coach Neale Daniher has died, 13 years after being diagnosed with motor neurone disease.

The 65-year-old’s family issued a statement on Monday confirming Daniher had passed away at home.

“From day one, Neale was a fighter,” the statement read. “His determination was unmatched – choosing every day to find opportunity where others might only see challenge, and taking the fight to the Beast with everything he had.”

Daniher played for Essendon and later coached Melbourne between 1998 and 2007. He also held coaching positions with Fremantle and West Coast.

“Across every part of his life, Neale left his mark,” the family statement continued. “Many knew him as ‘coach’ or ‘reverend’ during his time at the Dees, while at the Dons he was respected as a fierce and calculating player, with a brilliant football mind.

“He was a natural leader, someone people were drawn to and looked up to. But beyond all of that, he was a loving husband and dad, a proud Poppy, a mucis lover and the one with the biggest laugh in the room.

“He was known for his quick wit, his humour, and his ability to bring people together – qualities that defined him far more than any title could.”

Since his MND diagnosis, Daniher became a prominent campaigner for medical research into the disease. He co-founded the charity FightMND, which among other initiatives spearheads the Big Freeze, an annual fundraising and awareness campaign which culminates at the Big Freeze at the ‘G event. The award for the game’s best player is named the Neale Daniher Trophy.

Last year he was named Australian of the Year for his advocacy work.

More to follow.

Open Questions

  • What was the specific date of Neale Daniher's passing?
  • What were the exact dates of Neale Daniher's playing and coaching careers?
  • What were the specific details of his advocacy work beyond co-founding FightMND and the Big Freeze campaign?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

Related Stories

More on this topicNeale Daniher