Rebecca ‘Bec’ Judd has revealed what her husband Chris looked like more than 20 years ago when the former AFL player rocked a full head of hair.
The AFL WAG, 42, posted a throwback photo to her Instagram on Thursday which saw her usually bald partner looking almost unrecognisable before he lost his locks.
Chris, 41, who shaved his head following the 2006 AFL Grand Final, sported a mane of brunette tresses in the snap, which was taken in his final year of high school.
Bec poked fun at her beloved with the caption, ‘Caulfield Grammar 2001 man child,’ alongside a heart face emoji.
Caulfield Grammar is a private school in Melbourne which Chris attended from 1996 to 2001.
The former Carlton captain had a quizzical expression on his face as he posed for the school photos in his formal black and white uniform.

Rebecca ‘Bec’ Judd, 42, (right) has revealed what her husband Chris, 41, (left) looked like more than 20 years ago when the former AFL player rocked a full head of hair
Though he kept his hair short, he styled the locks into a dishevelled look. A far cry from the completely bald appearance he is known for today.
Chris decided to get rid of his hair in 2006 when his mother, Lisa Engel, made a brutal comment about the state of it following the AFL Grand Final.
He revealed back in August he was reluctant to go through the huge hairstyle change and wanted to keep his locks, before his mother Lisa intervened.
Speaking on The Front Bar, Chris said Lisa sat him down and told him to shave his head after seeing pictures of his ‘flimsy’ hair at the 2006 AFL Grand Final.
‘I think it was my mum sat me down about a week after the Grand Final and there was a picture of me in the newspaper and she said, “I think it’s time to shave it,”‘ he said.
‘It was looking a little bit flimsy at the front, but I reckon I had another year or two in me to be honest.’
When asked by host Sam Pang why he didn’t ‘stay strong’ and ignore his mother’s advice, Chris confessed that she might have been right in her brutal judgement.
‘It’s an uncomfortable conversation to have. If someone who cares about you has gone to the trouble to say, it’s a fair chance they’re on the money,’ he shared.

The AFL WAG posted a throwback photo to her Instagram on Thursday which saw her usually bald partner looking almost unrecognisable before he lost his locks
Chris then joked he still hasn’t ‘ruled out’ getting a Turkey hair transplant.
The retired footy player shares four children with Queen WAG Bec—son Oscar, 13, daughter Billie, 10, and twin boys Tom and Darcy, eight.
Bec recently threatened to ship her two youngest boys off to a military school after they caused havoc in the family’s $7.3 million Brighton mansion.
She called the twins out on her Instagram Stories on Tuesday for regularly trashing their room and leaving it in a state of squalor.
‘The last day of this bulls***,’ Bec captioned a photo of Tom and Darcy’s messy shared bedroom.
The mother-of-four rang in her 42nd birthday with a lavish party on Saturday night, followed by a long lunch at Montalto Winery on Monday.
After a weekend of festivities, Bec returned to mum duties on Tuesday and was not at all pleased with the state of her boys’ bedroom.
Her photo showed the beds unmade, one with sheets ripped off, and all the drawers in their double dressers left hanging open in a state of disarray.

Chris shaved his head in 2006 following the AFL Grand Final after his mother Lisa Engel pointed out the ‘flimsy’ state of his hair. Pictured in 2006
Shoes, toys and backpacks were also strewn across the floor, with an extra two single mattresses left there, presumably for a sleepover.
‘Back to school you go boys. Considering boarding school for the twins at this point,’ she captioned the post.
‘I’ve also Googled military school and there’s one in Queensland, but they’re too young at this point.’
She ended her caption with a disgusted emoji, followed by a series of laugh-crying emojis.
Military schools are academic institutions that include military cadet education and typically have rigorous educational programs and high levels of discipline.
The minimum age for Australian Army cadet membership is 12.
Parents and students choose military schools for a number of reasons, including the need for more structure or motivation, to improve academics, prepare for university and to gain independence.