One of the real personalities of Victorian harness racing, Jason Lee, went to extraordinary lengths last Saturday (Sept 6) to combine two of his sporting passions – football and harness racing.

Lee faced a dilemma: he was due to play his 150th game for Nirranda in the Warrnambool Football League – in a preliminary final, no less – but he also had a book of strong drives at Melton’s Saturday night harness meeting.
Determined not to miss either, Lee turned to a page out of the playbook of other sporting greats who have relied on a little aviation assistance.
Aussie Rules Hawthorn legend Peter Hudson once made it from Tasmania to Melbourne’s Waverly Park thanks to a helicopter dash, while cricket superstar David Warner famously landed on the SCG outfield just hours before a Big Bash appearance after attending his brother’s wedding.
Lee hatched a similar plan to deal with a sticky situation, meaning he could play the bulk of Nirranda’s clash before catching a plane flight west in time for Melton.
Forunately, Nirranda had the match against the unbeaten Merrivale “in the bag” – booking a spot in this Saturday’s grand final against Allansford at Warrnambool’s Reid Oval – before Lee had to dash off!
Although he narrowly missed his first engagement at Melton on Viney (a winner in race 1 for catch-driver Allan McDonough), Lee wasted no time making up for it.
He drove a treble to underline his reputation as one of the state’s most consistent and competitive reinsmen.

He was successful in The Tatlow on Letstartinheaven (Rock N Roll Heaven) (Emma Stewart); Keayang Tokyo (Captaintreacherous) (Marg and Paddy Lee) in the Hip Pocket Castlemaine Free For All; and in the last race, the Aldebaran Park Trotters Free For All on Jilliby Ballerini (Majestic Son) (Marg and Paddy Lee).
Hoofnote: AFL star Peter Hudson was living in Tasmania in1973 and running a hotel when the Hawks asked him to fly a day early for a Saturday fixture at. “That was out of the question because I had a special fully booked pub show featuring Norman Gunston on the Friday night,” Hudson explained. “The Hawks reluctantly agreed that I could fly over on the Saturday morning, but when I finally landed at Tullamarine (the flight had been delayed owing to thick fog) I had no time whatsoever to get to the ground (Waverly Park, on the opposite side of the city). So, a helicopter was suggested and that got my wife and I to the game on time.”
In the case of Warner, in January last year he completed a mad dash from his brother’s wedding in the Hunter Valley to the Sydney Cricket Ground in a helicopter. He landed on the outfield just hours before his first Big Bash appearance of the season – suiting up for the Sydney Thunder against cross-town rivals Sydney Sixers in a sold-out T20 blockbuster.
From Terry Gange for Harnesslink
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