Woman’s Day (Australia)

‘I’M KEEPING MY PROMISE TO JANE’

After they built the Mcgrath Foundation together, Tracy Bevan’s doing her best friend proud

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Afriendshi­p forged over a cup of tea has shaped the course of Tracy Bevan’s life and helped more than 100,000 families affected by breast cancer. But when Tracy, now 56, first met fellow cricket wife Jane Mcgrath at an airport cafe in 1996 she never could have guessed the impact of that relationsh­ip.

“Jane called me the sister she never had and

I’d remind her I was the younger sister because she was three months older than me,” Tracy laughs to Woman’s Day.

“We clicked instantly. We were both from England and had married Aussie cricketers [Glenn Mcgrath and Michael Bevan], and with the boys being away so much we became really close and relied on each other.”

This became harrowingl­y evident just a year into their friendship when, on an Ashes tour in the UK, Jane asked Tracy’s opinion on a lump she’d found on her breast. “I knew Jane’s mum had had breast cancer and I knew Jane was begging me to say I couldn’t feel anything but there was a pea-shaped lump. It was like a soccer-punch in the face,” says Tracy.

Jane, just 31, was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a mastectomy, radiothera­py and chemothera­py.

“You’d never have guessed,” says Tracy. “She always looked beautiful and life didn’t change. She got on with it.”

It was an attitude that stuck over the following years, which included the highs of remission and the birth of Jane and Glenn’s children, James and Holly, and then the lowest of lows when Jane was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in her bones and then, in 2006, when it had spread to her brain.

INSEPARABL­E FRIENDS

“Death was never an option for Jane. We never talked about it because she always said she had so many reasons to live.”

Besides her family, one of those reasons was the Mcgrath Foundation she and Tracy set up in 2005. Jane was lucky enough to have a breast care nurse to support her and the idea behind her foundation was to provide one to every Australian woman diagnosed.

‘She looked me in the eye and said, “Don’t give up on me”’

“It started at my house on a laptop,” says Tracy. “We wanted to have fun and help people at the same time but then we got a $1 million donation from Masterfood­s and that’s when it got serious. We joked we better get some business cards printed!”

By June 2008 Jane needed round-the-clock care. Tracy was by her side in her final days, still laughing and finding fun because the inseparabl­e pair didn’t realise the end was so close.

“She looked me in the eye and said, ‘Don’t give up on me,’ and I told her I’d never,” says Tracy. “When Jane died

I needed the foundation. I had to make it work because, when we meet again, I want to be able to tell her I kept my promise.”

Tracy has succeeded – the Mcgrath Foundation has gone on to fund 185 breast care nurses and is on track for its goal of 250 nurses by 2025.

“I talk to her every day,” says Tracy. “I hear her saying, ‘Bloody hell, Trace, can you believe it?’ She’d be so surprised at how big it’s got, and so proud and honoured to have this legacy.”

Tracy says her friend would also feel enormous pride for her children.

James, now 22, and Holly, 21, were eight and six when she died, and one of Jane’s biggest worries was that they’d forget her. But with godmother Trace around, there seems little chance of that.

“Holly and James both have membership of the board. The foundation is part of their DNA. The only thing Jane would be shattered by is that James isn’t likely to marry one of my girls [Liv or Amelia]! We always had plans to make that happen so we could be proper family.”

LOVING LEGACY

Tracy, who is happily single after an amicable divorce from Michael eight years ago, will be celebratin­g Jane’s legacy for Breast Cancer Awareness month in October.

“I miss her every single day,” she sighs. “But there are still one in five women going without a breast care nurse and I hear Jane telling me, ‘Get your sleeves rolled up, madam’ and that’s what we’ll do.”

To donate or to find your nearest breast care nurse, visit mcgrathfou­ndation.com.au

 ?? ?? Cricket’s golden couple Glenn and Jane in 2004.
Cricket’s golden couple Glenn and Jane in 2004.
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 ?? ?? Tracy and Jane, here in 2003, were family to each other.
Tracy and Jane, here in 2003, were family to each other.
 ?? ?? Glenn with his second wife, Sara Leonardi, and kids Holly, Madison, seven, and James.
Glenn with his second wife, Sara Leonardi, and kids Holly, Madison, seven, and James.

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