By Alex Nolan
Young trainer Dyllan Heddles can’t shake the greyhound racing bug.
The son of long-time dog man Jim Heddles is making his own mark in the sport after previously being content to sit on the sidelines as an owner.
A fitter and turner by trade, Dyllan recorded an early career highlight when he presented Tiki Bar to win her heat of the Group 3 Vince Curry Memorial Maiden at Ipswich last Saturday.
The 29-year-old said to win a heat of the prestigious series so early in his career was a truly special moment and likened the feeling to an addiction.
“It’s great owning a winner but to win a heat of the Vince Curry is an unreal feeling, especially after all the effort you put into a pup,” he said.
“I couldn’t do it without someone like Dad to bounce ideas off and learn from … this industry is hard for a young person coming through so it’s a god send to have him helping out.”
Tiki Bar did almost everything right at her racetrack debut.
Heddles said the 20-month-old bitch, by Fernando Bale out of Matriculate, had shown all the signs of running out a strong 500 metre effort in trials but he was concerned about her lack of early dash.
“She was never running extreme times where you’d be over-confident about her winning,” he said.
“But last weekend she did everything right and a bit of luck went our way.”
Heddles knows his bitch faces a tough task against fastest qualifier Litigate, in box one, when she leaves from box three in Saturday’s first semi-final, which is race five on the program.
“If she can jump and get across in behind Litigate then I’m confident we can jag a place,” he said.
“The series will do her a world of good because I believe she has plenty of improvement to come.
“It’s a great series. I love seeing the young dogs and new sires coming through.
“It’s also a credit to all the trainers taking part because it takes a lot of hard work to get a dog ready for it.”