Jeremy Cameron grew up in Dartmoor, a small town between Portland and Mount Gambier with a population of 150 people.
[2] Jeremy Cameron was selected as a 17-year-old underage recruit by the Greater Western Sydney Giants in November 2010, a year prior to their inaugural season in the AFL.
[9] In the 2014 AFL Season, Cameron continued to show signs of being one of the most promising Centre Half Forwards in the game, for his age.
A perforated eardrum proved a hindrance, but repeated ankle problems were the real issue, limiting him to 14 games.
[11] Cameron played his 50th AFL game against Fremantle in round 17, recording 2 goals in a 76-point loss.
[14] Cameron would then kick a mammoth 7 goals in round 6, as the Giants defeated two-time reigning premiers Hawthorn by 10 points.
Cameron was named in the initial 2015 40-man All-Australian Squad, but missed out on making the final team.
[22] Cameron was on track to having a career-best haul when he had 39 goals after round 14, but hamstring issues cut his impact significantly.
[11] Cameron's impact again helped the Giants have a successful season, finishing 4th placed again with a win–loss record of 14–2–6.
In the final round of the home-and away season, round 23, Cameron was behind in the Coleman Medal tally by 6 goals, sitting at 58 while leader Ben Brown was at 64, but Cameron was able to boot a career-high 9 goals against the Gold Coast Suns to end his season with 67 goals and capture his first Coleman Medal, also becoming the first-ever GWS player to win the award, Cameron was also selected into his second All-Australian Team as full-forward.
[25] Topping off a tremendous individual season for Cameron, the Giants made the finals for the fourth consecutive year, finishing 6th on the ladder.
[30] Following the 2020 AFL season, Cameron decided to exercise his rights as a free agent and accept an offer from Geelong, which was matched by the Giants.
[31] After an injury-interrupted 2021 AFL season, his first at Geelong, many regard Cameron's 2022 campaign hitherto as a career-best year.
A lack of injury concerns allowed Cameron to utilise his mobility to play up the ground as both a high half-forward and a key forward.