He may have finished outside the podium but for Pete McMullen, the experience of just representing Australia in the harness racing World Driving Championship was rewarding enough.
The reinsman returned home to the Sunshine StateĀ on Sunday night following a whirlwind week in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, which saw him go up against the best drivers from across the world.
McMullen had worked his way up the WDC leaderboard to be in second place heading into the last day of the competitionĀ at Trabrennbahn Mariendorf in Berlin, but had to settle for sixth in the end.
āIt was an absolutely amazing experience, and something Iāll cherish forever,ā McMullen said.
āI had a couple of winners but unfortunately heading into the last day of the competition running second and didnāt have a great day and ended up running sixth.
āIt really was an amazing once-in-a-lifetime opportunityā¦Iām forever thankful for being able to represent the country.
āAt the end of the day, to be there was excellent but I always want to do my best and the last day just didnāt work out all that great.
āBut I think sometimes thatās just a bit of luck of the draw and itās part of racing I suppose.ā
Reigning champion Rick Ebbinge from the Netherlands again took home the winnerās trophy, with Canadian Doug McNair nabbing second and Belgian Hanna Huygens taking third.
āLeader Peterā said the trip had given him a new perspective on harness racing, as well as some lifelong friends.
āIt was great to be able to go and see how the rest of the world functions and how they do thingsā¦it opens your eyes up to how everything is on the other side of the world,ā McMullen said.
āTo see different things and how they do different things in different counties and create new friendships for a lifetime was a great thing.
āA lot of little things are different but at the end of the day itās still horse racing and still a lot of things that are very similar.
āI think thatās probably the best part about it is you go and meet people from all around the world and there was some really good people on the trip and the ones that speak English, we sort of made really good friends with them and will look to stay in contact with those people forever.ā
There was no extra time for any sightseeing for McMullen and wife Chantal Turpin, with the duo flying straight home from Berlin to Brisbane.
Arriving on Sunday night, McMullen had Monday off to recover before jumping back into the sulkyĀ with fourĀ races at Albion Park onĀ Tuesday, which included a win on Kalypso Sam.
āItās a big flight – over 24 hours in transit which knocks you round a bit too,ā he said.
āYou donāt really realise the effects of the jet lag but itās good to be home and straight back into it.ā
by Andrew Smith for Racing Queensland