By Jordan Gerrans
More than anything, trainer-driver Nikki Chalk was proud to be able repay the faith her uncle and aunty had put into her career over the years.
Chalk’s beloved uncle, Ron Dixon, was diagnosed with terminal cancer earlier this year after finding a melanoma around four years ago, which doctors believe then spread throughout his body.
Ron and wife Gerry Dixon have long been Chalk’s biggest supporters in the harness racing game, always watching her drives as well as keeping a record of all her performances.
“They bought a horse years ago and he was my first winner as a driver,” Chalk said.
“They bought another horse not long after that I trained…they put the faith in me to train for them, she was a really nice mare, Anxietynecstasy, and we never saw the best of her with a few issues – and she is the mare we bred Mac Sweeney out of.”
With Chalk and their extended family worrying about how long potentially Ron will have left with his inoperable cancer, five-year-old pacer Mac Sweeney is helping to put a smile on their face and provide a pleasant distraction.
Mac Sweeney is a horse owned, bred and raced by Chalk and her family.
He was able to lead all the way at Albion Park late last month – scoring by over three metres over 1660 metres – to give Chalk a sense of relief and for Ron, an opportunity to watch on proudly.
To view his niece go around on a pacer the family bred while he is battling his cancer, it is one of the only times Ron gets any joy or pain relief – watching the horse compete.
It was almost not to be, however.
In Mac Sweeney’s first-up effort just seven days before at Redcliffe, Chalk was handed a suspension, which was likely to cut down her dreams of driving the pacer to a breakthrough victory in the short term – with her first pregnancy to put her on the sidelines for the remainder of the year.
With a good record, Chalk was able to continue driving the next week and deliver the heartfelt victory for her uncle Ron.
“I really wanted to drive a winner on him while my uncle could still watch him and luckily the stewards let me stay and I was able to drive him the next week,” Chalk, who is married to Dale Chalk, said.
“It was really great to get that winner on him.
“Uncle Ron has always watched my drives and been a big supporter, he kept a record and printed them out and put them in a folder for me and kept it updated.
“The win gives him something to be happy about, they have not had much to look forward too lately and they were able to go watch him.
“I put a fair bit of pressure on myself, thinking it could be the last week I would be able to drive a winner on him as I had not driven a winner on this particular horse yet.”