Ben Cousins is set to make a surprise appearance at Sunday’s Brownlow Medal count, ending his estrangement from AFL circles due to his well-documented drug use and jail time.
The 43-year-old Cousins, who won the 2005 Brownlow, is reportedly set to accept an invitation to the AFL’s main award ceremony as he cleans his life up and re-embraces the sport.
Past winners of the award receive invitations to attend the awards night which names the season’s best player, but until now he’s never taken the league up on the offer.
This year, though, the event is going to be held in his hometown of Perth for the first time so he looks likely to attend, The Age reported.
The 43-year-old Cousins (pictured with Susan Backshell), who won the 2005 Brownlow, is reportedly set to accept an invitation to the AFL’s main award ceremony as he cleans his life up and re-embraces the sport

Ben Cousins is set to make a shock appearance at Sunday’s Brownlow Medal count (pictured 2019), in what would be a rare public engagement more than a decade after hanging up his boots

Ben Cousins was the poster boy of the AFL before his infamous meth addiction took over his life
Speaking at a function earlier this month, the midfielder said he’s finally got clean after his infamous methamphetamine addiction and his six stints in jail.
‘I appreciate the support of everyone and how many chances they have given me, more than I deserve and more than I would have given anyone else,’ Cousins said, according to The West Australian.
He has now found work in the demolition industry and said his return to footy as a player in Perth’s Metro Football League had helped to turn his life around.
‘I’m also loving my club footy (with the Queens Park Bulldogs), it keeps me busy,’ he told the audience at the WA Italian Club.

Cousins had a tumultuous relationship with the mother of his children Maylea Tinecheff (pictured right)
This year’s Brownlow Medal count and the AFL Grand Final the following weekend, are being held in Perth due to Covid restrictions in Melbourne.
Players from the two Perth clubs, West Coast and Fremantle, will attend, along with those of the two grand finalist, Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs – albeit in a separate room as they take precautions against any Covid infection.
Cousins, a father-of-two, also divulged how his out of control off-field behaviour rattled his good friends and Chris Judd, the man who replaced him as Eagles skipper.
‘I let my club down and I put Juddy in a tough spot,’ Cousins said. ‘And I feel for him… through my issues I put him in a tough position.’
Cousins’ fall from grace was as sad as it was spectacular.
Virtually untouchable and revered after winning a premiership in 2006, Cousins career quickly took a turn for the worse.
At his peak, Cousins was undoubtedly the best player in the AFL, with his rapid demise and subsequent total unwillingness to rid himself of negative life influences leaving him a disgrace in the eyes of many who previously hero-worshipped him.
The penny finally dropped last year for Cousins.
Sitting in a cold, cramped jail cell for the sixth time in 13 years, the man known as ‘Cuz’ was ashamed and ready to atone.
Buoyed by the knowledge that getting clean and healthy was the key to being a good dad to his children, he soon started talking to Susan Backshell, a mental health support worker.

Cousins leaves the Fremantle Magistrates Court in Perth in 2017. Virtually untouchable and revered after winning a premiership in 2006, Cousins career quickly took a turn for the worse

Ben Cousins and Chris Judd of the West Coast Eagles celebrate their premiership victory in 2006
Ms Backshell managed to achieve what many previously had failed to do with Cousins – establish a positive connection and get in his head space for the right reasons.
She issued him a blunt ultimatum soon after they met: ‘Give your all, or forget it entirely’.
Since last year, he has volunteered at several events in and around Perth with Ms Backshell’s community group KALT Collective, acting as a beacon of hope for disadvantaged youths, addicts and reformed criminals.
‘Nobody actually knows what amazing stuff he’s doing,’ Ms Backshell said.
‘Everybody is willing to judge him, but this guy has worked his ass off to get to where he is today.’
The flow on effect has seen Cousins able to spend more time with his children – his son Bobby, 9, and daughter Angelique, 7.

Cousins is also ‘loving’ playing park footy with the Queens Park Bulldogs – despite his ‘dodgy’ hamstrings

Cousins battled an addiction to narcotics stretching as far back as 2006 when he was a professional AFL player (pictured on his documentary Such Is Life from 2010)
‘His kids are everything to him, he truly is an amazing dad. He’s phenomenal,’ Ms Backshell said.
‘And they adore him.’
Before his well-overdue epiphany, Cousins had been in and out of jail since 2010 on drug and domestic violence charges.
He was also deregistered by the AFL in 2007 after bringing the game into disrepute, before eventually returning two years later with Richmond, albeit a shadow of the player he once was.
Determined his dark days are now finally over, Cousins has also developed an affinity with the Indigenous community in WA and has taken pride in developing relationships.
‘He’s absolutely a role model, an inspiration,’ Ms Backshell added.

Ben Cousins credits Susan Backshell, (pictured right) a mental health support worker, for helping turn his life around

Ben Cousins has been in and out of jail six times, in a sad – and public – fall from grace – he is now determined to stay clean