The MCG air was thick with emotion for Neale Daniherâs state funeral on Wednesday … and emcee Hamish McLachlan started proceedings with a powerful tribute that instantly won over all who were watching.
Using his highly refined skills from commentating and interviewing, the Channel 7 sports caller did not miss a beat as he poetically recalled the life of the much-loved AFL icon who recently lost an inspiring battle with MND.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Hamish McLachlanâs tribute to Neale Daniher
Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today Arrow
âWelcome to the state funeral service for Neale Daniher. Neale, the great man, back at the colosseum again on a typically Melbourne winterâs day, rain falling all morning,â McLachlan began.
âMy 10-year-old boy, Lex, said on the way to school today, âeven Godâs sad today.â Good crowd in, players, coaches, officials, commentators, family, and friends everywhere, Danihers are all about, feels like game day.
âNeale had a great sense of timing and theatre; the Dees and the Bombers, the next match to be played here. Itâs pretty hard to script.


âThe state funeral, a rare honour reserved for Australians who changed the nation. So today we gather not in grief alone, but in gratitude for a man who turned his hardest days into a gift for the rest of us.
âWhat a privilege to have lived at a time where we could learn from a man we celebrate, honour, and remember. Today, Neale was the best of us in so many ways. He understood something many of us learn when itâs all too late, that a lifeâs worth isnât in its length, but what you do with the time that youâre given.
âHe reminded us all that the mark of a person is not what you say, but what you do, and a lot will be said today about a man who did an awful lot.â
McLachlan went on to have the crowd in stitches, recalling one of Daniherâs famous one-liners.
âThe one line I canât get out of my head is …. one many of us have been told by Neale over the journey … often as he left the house with an order, heâd often utter, just donât muck it up. Muck, I have to say, was pronounced differently when Neale said it,â McLachlan admitted much to the amusement of all.
He also called Daniher a great âfrontmanâ, comparing him to rock ân roll legends Mick Jagger and Bruce Springsteen.
âSo here we all are, keen not to muck it up and get it right for a man who got it right a lot,â McLachlan said.
âNeale loved his music, and I think secretly he would have loved to have been Brandon Flowers from The Killers, Mr Brightside, or Mick Jagger from the Stones.


âBut I think in so many ways he would have been the boss, Bruce Springsteen. Timeless, generational, enduring, unifying, soulful, and just a sensational frontman. Neale was a great frontman.â
But it was a moment of almost stream-of-consciousness poetry that sent shivers through the crowd and highlighted the true brilliance of the 50-year-old McLachlan.
âItâs hard to sum up Nealeâs life in a sentence or seven,â he said.
âThe son of legends, Jim and Edna, the third of 11 kids, the only real-life superhero Iâve ever met.
âHe grew up on the farm which shaped him, worked hard, he was made of the right stuff, given values from Mum and Dad, loved his siblings, very good cricketer, slightly better footballer, captain of the Bombers at just 21, injured, studied theology, married, fathered, grandfathered, played, coached, stared, pointed, scared, diagnosed, taught, fought, mentored, motivated, galvanised, connected, all with humour. Victorian of the Year, Australian of the Year, uniter of a nation, to borrow a line from the family, he has inspired, he has loved, he has lived. Itâs fitting weâre together here today for Neale, the MCG, the venue he turned blue once a year. He did it again on Monday, a record for the Big Freeze, and here we are, blue again.â


The tribute was a spine-tingling success.
Media manager Paul Cochrane said: âGee, Hamish McLachlan is bloody good at his job. An outstanding host and public speaker. Doing a stellar job to get the Neale Daniher service rolling.â
Fans agreed: âCouldnât be anymore true, that underrated of how good of a job he does. His voice hits different. Powerful, unbelievable.â
âSeconded!â added another.
Other highlights included stunning performances from Paul Kelly and Gary Pinto, and emotional speeches from Daniherâs family and grandchildren also brought a tear to the eye.
McLachlan also closed out proceedings with more emotionally charged words.
âNeale was the best of humans,â McLachlan said, his voice trembling, eyes wet.
âTeacher to us all. A man who showed us what is possible, how to live a life full of purpose and to live, importantly, without complaint.
âHe turned personal adversity into national inspiration. He showed us the attitude we choose each day is entirely up to us.
âI think itâs fair to say he changed the way many of us look at the world and the cards weâve been dealt.
âHe never asked much of us because he knew a little from many could change everything.
âSome are measured by what they won on the field, Neale will always be measured by what he refused to lose off it â his hope, his humour, his heart.
âHe never asked us to feel sorry for him, he just asked us to fight alongside of him … and a country picked up the beanie and answered collectively.
âWe are a better community because of you … Neale, you lost your voice and you are gone but your message remains very loud.
âWe honour you today with our grief, and we will honour you, ongoing, with our doing.
âThe world feels less without you, Neale, but much better because you were here.â


