Stories such as these only perpetuate the issue, but the family does understand the interest and enjoys parts of the experience.
“I guess it’s a bit up and down. It’s good having your brother, or a twin, who goes through everything together [with you], but at the same time, I’m my own person,” Jack said.
“I am who I am. We’re not really together – we’re just brothers. We’re not really twins, in some sense, and we’re actually fairly different.”
Matt chimed in at that point: “We’ve always dressed differently. I’ve got the bright boots, and he’s got the darker boots. Mum and Dad raised us as two different individuals.”
Loading
The backyard battles
The Whitlocks’ first and fiercest opponents were each other, on the family’s 80-acre farm, which doubled as a quasi-sports complex.
They spent so much time outside playing sport at home that Jack joked their mum would punish them for misbehaving by locking them inside.
Their 15-year-old brother, Alex, is often handed umpiring duties, but is starting to hit the more serious stage of his own football, although he is more of a “crafty forward” rather than an oversized key-position prospect like his older siblings, Angela said.
We might hear more about Alex in the years to come, too, given he just represented the Goulburn Murray Bushrangers in the under-15 V/Line Cup.
The Whitlocks have old pipes as goalposts at the front of their property, plus a concrete tennis court out the back, along with a basketball court, a wall used for cricket, previously a dedicated soccer area, and plenty of space otherwise to run and kick the Sherrin.
“It’s not every day you can go in the backyard and have one of the best key-position players in Australia to play against, so it’s very valuable,” Jack said.
“It’s good having someone to go through the same battles, and then also the same wins as you through life. We push each other pretty hard.”
Loading
As brothers, the only times they would argue were while debating a foul on the basketball court – where they battled it out one-on-one for hours until it was pitch-black – or if the ball was in or out.
There were also lengthy “markers up” battles, where Angela was almost always the kicker.
“I remember my husband saying, ‘Do we need to get some big booming lights?’,” Angela said. “And I was like, ‘No, if we did that, they’ll never come inside’.”
The Whitlocks played basketball for the Shepparton Gators and represented Victoria Country in that sport as well before giving it up competitively at the start of last year to focus on football.
“I honestly love my basketball, and it was a pretty tough decision for me to stop,” Matt said.
The AFL dream
The Whitlocks were on recruiters’ radars for years, but both took major strides forward in 2024.
Jack made everyone take notice in the opening round of the Talent League, taking seven marks, kicking 4.4 and racking up 13 score involvements in a towering performance at Tasmania’s expense that illustrated his raw ability and athleticism.
It was enough for AFL academy selectors to rush him into the elite squad – and his game drew rave reviews from the league’s talent ambassador, Kevin Sheehan.
“I was dying to see a 200-centimetre boy [break out],” Sheehan told this masthead ahead of this year’s under-18 championships. “He grabbed that match by the scruff of the neck.”
Just as everything was blossoming for Jack, he broke a finger playing for the academy side, sidelining him for six weeks. That injury impacted Matt, too, after he started the year strongly down back, including 11 intercept marks in his first three games.
With his brother and fellow goalkicker Josh Murphy injured, the Bushrangers swung Matt into attack with devastating effect.
Matt kicked bags of five goals twice in his first three matches after the move, and remained up forward for most of the season, while reverting to defence at the under-18 championships.
Loading
The switch was reminiscent of the King twins’ 2018 season, when Max’s ACL rupture saw Ben go forward from defence – and that became his position at AFL level.
“I always planned to swing forward in my draft year because, predominantly, I played down back as a bottom-ager. I had talks with Mark Brown, the Bushies coach, about swinging me forward post-champs,” Matt said.
“I wanted to be that key defender/centre half-back in the Country side, but with Jack and Josh going down with injury, I got swung forward a little bit earlier and played some good footy there.”
Matt has no preference on which position he plays, and prides himself on his versatility – which has impressed talent scouts enough that he is viewed as a potential top-20 selection. Jack returned from injury in time for the championships and finished the season strongly for the Bushrangers as well.
All that is left now is where they end up, with 16 of the 18 clubs visiting the family home.
Angela, who taught her boys in physical education at Goulburn Valley Grammar School, is preparing herself for the possibility her two eldest sons will join an interstate club.
There was some talk among recruiters during the week that the Giants might try to draft them both, but Matt said he would prefer they ended up at different teams.
“It’d be pretty hard for one club to get both of us,” he said. “If that happens, then that happens, but it’d be good to go somewhere else, and sort of grow as your own person even more.”