The McMullen/Dwyer combination have aided each other throughout the season, with each complementing the other in the quest for new individual milestones.
Williewa Lightning’s victory was the 73rd success this term where McMullen has driven one of Dwyer’s runners, with the pair boasting feature race success throughout the year with Shes Miss Devine and Unknown Son.
The second half of the season has been the strongest for McMullen, receiving the bell at the half-way point of the term on 133 wins and reaching 300 with 21 days of the current season remaining.
After not taking a drive in the first seven meetings of the year, the start of the season was an indication of how 2021 would progress, winning at his first attempt for the year.
That win came on January 12 when Leader Peter did his thing, leading throughout for a comfortable victory aboard Boomchuckalucka, with the next 299 winners coming one day short of 11 months.
Becoming the first Queensland driver to land 300 wins in a season, McMullen joined some elite names in Australian Harness racing history and becomes just the fourth to reach that many winners in one season.
Kerryn Manning was the first, breaking through for a 300-win season when steering home 371 winners in 2002/03 and backing that up with over 300 in each of the next two seasons.
Daryl Douglas was the next to reach the feat in 2006/07, going on to land over 300 in four successive seasons.
Chris Alford landed his first 300 in 2011/12 and since then has had another two seasons in excess of the magical number, and a further two seasons in excess of 400 winners.
If Pete can build on his mammoth season next year the way his three predecessors were able to in following seasons, will we be looking at a new benchmark in season 2022?
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THE BAD
There is bad Doug, and there is good Doug.
Since September, bad Doug has been making his presence felt at The Creek with the enigmatic square gaiter putting together a six-pack of performances where errors had proven costly and ended his chances.
After an improved effort to finish second to Sir Fahrenheit on December 4, there were some nervous moments on Saturday night when the strands released, and it looked as if bad Doug had again made his way to the track as he was chancy in the early stages.
Once the start was put behind him and he had settled cleanly into a trot, the switch flicked and it was good Doug turning, with the Graham Dwyer-trained trotter bouncing back to winning form.
Aided by a patient Pete McMullen drive, Doug settled in a rearward position before making a sustained run from the 500-metre point.
Sweeping up strongly wide off the track to hit the lead, McMullen really allowed Doug to open up, pulling clear of the pack and racing away to claim victory by 22 metres.