Kirillidis said she entered greyhound racing by accident about six years ago.
“I had finished school, went on a gap year to visit my family overseas and then came back and was looking for a job,” Kirillidis recalls.
“I applied for plenty of jobs online, including David’s (prominent greyhound trainer David Burnett) plumbing shop. It was for office work. I got that job and I ended up being a delivery driver and a couple of months later I was letting out dogs on his farm.
“Like a lot of young girls, I had wanted to be a vet, or a zoo keeper, and I did my certificate three in animal studies. I almost got a job at a horse stud farm back in Melbourne.
“Working for David I became more and more involved in his greyhound business, even looking after his farm when he went on holidays. Soon I was also involved in the racing side of things."
Kirillidis started working for Burnett just before he got Simon Told Helen.
Simon Told Helen had 48 starts for 26 wins, 15 placings, claiming $912,691 in prize money.
“I had grown up with dogs. My father bred rottweilers and German shepherds, so I was very familiar with dogs," Kirillidis said.
“On David’s farm I just fell in love with greyhounds, got my handler’s licence and then my next goal was to become a trainer.