AFL WAG Kellie Finlayson has revealed the terrifying moment she feared for her life after her footy star husband Jeremy went back on his word and entered a busy pub at the height of her cancer treatment during the Covid pandemic.
Finlayson, who has been battling terminal lung and bowel cancer, opened up about the incident in her book There Must Be More, detailing how a single decision left her ‘inconsolable’ and triggered a fiery confrontation that shocked her family.
Strict precautions were in place to protect her fragile immune system at the time while she underwent treatment, with clear rules set to minimise any risk of infection. But those rules were broken.
Kellie said she had been at home with family when she checked on Jeremy and his friends, only to discover they were not where he said they would be.
‘I opened the Find My Friends app, and it looked like they were inside the pub. Not outside, as per our agreement,’ she wrote.
What followed was an explosive reaction driven by fear, not anger.

Kellie Finlayson revealed she feared for her life after Jeremy entered a busy pub during the strict Covid precautions period, when she was undergoing intense cancer treatment

Kellie (pictured after recent surgery) became furious, fearing Covid exposure could interrupt her cancer treatment and threaten her chances of survival

Jeremy initially misunderstood Kellie’s anger, thinking it was about his gambling rather than the serious health risk involved
‘I lost my s**t. I had never felt so upset with Jeremy,’ she said.
‘I was furious at him for putting my health at risk by being inside a busy pub.’
However, the situation escalated when Jeremy initially misunderstood why she was so distressed.
According to Kellie, he believed her frustration was about gambling rather than the far more serious health risk.
‘He got defensive and tried to minimise the situation. “I never play the pokies. It was just a little slap, not a big deal,”‘ she wrote.
That response only intensified her fears.
‘You don’t understand,’ she told him.
‘If you pick up Covid from inside the pub and give it to me, I can’t continue my cancer treatment. This treatment is the only thing keeping me here.’

Kellie’s book There Must Be More revealed how the argument became a turning point, forcing everyone to understand the seriousness of her condition

Kellie said Jeremy had not fully understood the seriousness of her condition until the argument
The gravity of the moment hit hard, with Kellie admitting she completely broke down.
‘I was inconsolable,’ she wrote, adding that her mother had ‘never seen me like that before’.
The emotional confrontation became a turning point not just in their relationship, but in how seriously those around her understood her condition.
‘The tension was heavy. And my reaction was a reality check,’ she said.
Kellie explained that Jeremy had not fully grasped the risks she was facing, partly because she had shielded him from the harshest realities of her diagnosis.
‘He didn’t realise the severity of the situation because he hadn’t had to face it yet,’ she said.
‘Maybe he didn’t fully comprehend it because I had shielded him from so much.’
It took that moment of anger and fear to bring everything into focus.

Kellie later admitted the argument made her fully grasp the gravity of her cancer diagnosis for the first time
‘It took my wrath to make him realise just how serious it was. It was an eye-opening experience for everyone.’
The following day, the fallout from the argument was still being felt.
Kellie made the decision to attend her hospital treatment without Jeremy, instead asking a close friend to drive her.
‘The next day I was still mad, so I made Zac drive me to the hospital for treatment instead of Jeremy,’ she said.
She noted that Zac had personal experience with cancer through his own family, giving him a deeper understanding of what she was going through.
Looking back, Kellie admitted the incident forced her to confront the full weight of her diagnosis.
‘My blow-up made everything feel more real to me,’ she said.
‘Up until then, I don’t think it had properly hit home yet.’
While she had known she was battling cancer, the stakes became undeniably clear in that moment.
‘I mean, I understood I had cancer, but I hadn’t yet fully grasped the gravity of the situation.’
The argument, she said, brought clarity not just for her, but for everyone around her.
‘It took an almighty argument to put things in focus. For me, and everyone around me.’


