Eddie Betts, a former rules footballer, has a large family of seven, including his wife Anna Scullie and five children.
A retired Australian rules football player, Edward Robert Betts III played for Carlton and Adelaide Football Clubs in the AFL.
Betts was selected by Carlton with the third overall pick in the 2004 pre-season draft, and spent nine years there before signing with Adelaide as a free agent in 2013.
In 2014, Betts’ first season with Adelaide, he had a series of difficult shots from the right front pocket at the north end of Adelaide Oval.
Since August 5, 2015, Eddie Betts and Anna Scullie have been married. She manages special projects for Betts’ Eddie’s Lil Homies series and is the general manager of Frankly Eco.
She was born in Victoria, where her family continues to reside. As the big striker scores pocket goals at Adelaide Oval, Betts’ wife of six years is the rock of his life and making sure everything goes smoothly.
Before getting married, they dated for a long time and Betts even planned a surprise wedding for her on her 30th birthday.
At the city’s Public CBD, the event started out as a celebration of Anna’s 30th birthday, but Eddie stunned everyone, including her fiancé, by throwing a wedding ceremony.
With his wife, three sons and two daughters, Eddie has a large family.
Anna Scullie, in her thirties, and Eddie Betts, 35, are parents to a twin daughter and three sons. The couple’s young son was born in December 2020.
Their two eldest sons are over five years old and their twin daughters turned four this year.
Lewis, Billy and identical twins Alice and Maggie were among their earliest descendants. They often go on family vacations and their family portraits are beautiful.
As he announces their pregnancy, Betts respects his wife and calls her a “superwoman”.
Betts said on Fox Footy’s AFL 360 that leaving his family in Melbourne was difficult, mainly because his wife was carrying twins at the time.
Eddie Betts, a 35-year-old former football player, has made a name for himself in the sport, sparking interest with his career earnings.
In 2015, Eddie won Goal of the Year for the second time in his career after controlling the ball halfway on the boundary.
And then from 50 yards away on the boundary line, he fired a left-footed torpedo clearance, which dribbled for a goal against Fremantle. The player, on the other hand, is valued at $2.5 million.
In 2015, 2016 and 2019, Betts’ season-winning goals all came from the opposing pocket, the left front pocket on the same side.
A report on the fallout from Eddie Betts’ recent boot camp
Eddie Betts is the first Crows player, past or present, to speak publicly about the controversial Adelaide 2018 pre-season camp.
In his memoir, The Boy from Boomerang Crescent, Betts expresses his rage, embarrassment, and shame at the way the camp was run.
There is one notorious camp chapter in Betts’ memoir compared to 23 in Eddie’s.
Eddie’s story included a number of claims and details from before, during and after camp.
Betts claimed the camp had a huge impact on his performance and left the star striker unsure of his position in the game.