AFL 2026: St Kilda livewire Jack Higgins on his road to 150 senior games

For Australian Football League (AFL) forward Jack Higgins, the weeks ahead of his 150th senior career match look just like any other. Life, as he puts it, is “pretty normal” these days. But that very normalcy is a triumph few would have predicted back in 2019, when a devastating on-field injury nearly ended both his football career and his life.

It began after a match for Higgins’ former club Richmond, when persistent concussion symptoms led doctors to a shocking diagnosis: a life-threatening brain bleed that required immediate, high-risk surgery. The procedure carried grave potential outcomes – permanent paralysis or even death – and left the then-rising star wondering if he would ever step onto an AFL field again. In a recent interview with reporters, Higgins recalled the dark uncertainty that followed the procedure. “I didn’t think I’d play another game, didn’t think I’d live a normal life after that,” he said.

Recovery in the early days was grueling. Simple daily tasks that most people take for granted – reading, writing, even getting through a day without crippling headaches – were huge challenges. But with support from a team of elite medical professionals, Higgins slowly rebuilt his strength and his abilities. Today, the residual effects of his surgery are barely noticeable in his day-to-day life. “To play one AFL game and live normally after that, I am happy and proud of myself for it,” he said.

In late 2020, Higgins made the switch from Richmond’s Punt Road ground to St Kilda’s Moorabbin headquarters – a move that held special personal meaning, as St Kilda was the club Higgins grew up supporting. Since the transfer, he has thrived, emerging as the Saints’ leading goal kicker and a core leader of the club’s forward line. Last season, he turned in a career-best performance, nailing 46 goals from 63 scoring shots to cement his place as one of the league’s most reliable attacking threats.

Now, as he prepares to walk onto the field for his 150th career game, Higgins says the milestone feels extra special knowing it will come wearing the guernsey of his childhood team. “It’s a really great achievement, I am really happy I’m playing 150,” he said. “To do it at the club I barrack for was pretty special, I can’t wait to play 150 and hopefully a few more after that. 150 is a great achievement, so I’ll take it day by day.”

Despite already outperforming every expectation set after his injury, Higgins shows no signs of slowing down, and says he still has ambitions to expand his role on the field. For years, he has pushed coaches for the chance to spend more time in the midfield, a role he briefly played as a first-year player at Richmond in 2018. “I would love to play midfield, I have been asking Ross (Lyon) and all my other coaches for the last nine years and they never play me there,” he joked. “I played a bit in my first year at Richmond and that was good fun, I did all right there, hopefully they can look at AFL tables from 2018.”

The milestone match will take place in Adelaide – a city Higgins once joked he had no interest in exploring – but the 200-game veteran-to-be says he does not care where he plays, as long as he gets to keep lacing up his boots at the highest level. He even joked he would play “Martians on the moon” if it meant another AFL match. When asked what would make for the perfect milestone game, Higgins did not hesitate: a solid team performance ending in a win, with himself contributing a healthy haul of goals. “Hopefully I play well, the team plays well and we can celebrate in Adelaide on Sunday,” he said.