Maddie Riewoldt loved the simple things in life.
“She loved the beach, she loved her dog Oscar, family time at home, family dinners. She loved sport, all sport,” according to her older brother, St Kilda captain Nick Riewoldt.
In fact, the 26-year-old was such an avid AFL fan, she watched her brother play from her hospital bed mid-chemotherapy.
Much to the devastation of the Riewoldt family and football community, Maddie lost her five-year battle with aplastic anemia (a rare disease that causes the body to stop producing vital bone marrow) on February 23.
Nick says his younger sister was robbed of everything she enjoyed at when she was diagnosed with the rare condition at just 21 – a time when “life’s supposed to be about opportunity and adventure”.
Related: St Kilda captain Nick Riewoldt’s sister Madeleine dies, aged 26.
He says he remembers three versions of Maddie: from before she was sick, once she was diagnosed, and during her gruelling final seven months in hospital.
Nick says Maddie loved her friends and family, and fought against the odds to fight the disease – leaving behind a legacy that inspired the social media hashtag #FightLikeMaddie.
“But as hard and fierce as she loved us, she equally hated her illness with the same ferocity,” he said.
Maddie underwent a bone marrow transplant – her only hope of ever leading a normal life – as well as chemotherapy and other treatments. But within a week of the transplant, her body began to react badly and she was rushed to hospital.
Her parents told the Herald Sun that, with a stay of 227 days, Maddie had the misfortune of breaking the record for the longest time a patient had spent at Royal Melbourne Hospital’s intensive care unit.