
Jessica Harrington's Hotazhell goes for Grade One US glory in $750,000 Saratoga Derby
has a handful of runners for this weekend's
Galway festival
action, although her primary focus is sure to be on potential Grade One glory in the US on Saturday.
Morning line betting suggests Harrington has found a prime top-flight opportunity for Hotazhell, who lines up in the $750,000 (€649,000) Saratoga Derby on the prestigious Whitney Stakes card.
The colt that beat Delacroix to Futurity success as a two-year-old was behind his old rival in Sandown's Eclipse, before which he ran third to Field Of Gold in the Irish Guineas.
It's a level of form that has encouraged local odds of as short as 7/5 about Hotazhell emerging on top in the nine-runner contest.
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Shane Foley is in Upstate New York for the ride, and Harrington's daughter and assistant Kate told local media: 'He came out of Irish Guineas very well and ran very respectably in the Eclipse, coming back at them at the line. He seems to have travelled over to the States very well.'
Other Irish interest in the 10-furlong contest will come from Adrian Murray's Tiberius Thunder, who will have Frankie Dettori on his back. The Italian's mount ran fourth to Trinity College at Royal Ascot on his last appearance.
Among the local hopes are Belmont Derby winner Test Score and Tiztastic, who won the Louisiana Derby on dirt earlier this year.
Dylan Browne McMonagle on Goodie Two Shoes wins the Darley Irish EBF Stanerra Stakes at Fairyhouse in July. Photograph: Lorraine O'Sullivan/INPHO
Joseph O'Brien
's State Of Rest won the Saratoga Derby in 2021, but the trainer's overseas interests on Saturday stretch no further than Goodwood, where Goodie Two Shoes lines up in the Group Two Lillie Langtry Stakes.
The JP McManus-owned mare, formerly campaigned over hurdles and fences, has taken her form on the flat to another level and landed the Stanerra Stakes at Fairyhouse last time.
'We are a little worried about the rain, so we'll be taking a watching brief on that, but she's in good shape and has prepared well for the race,' O'Brien said.
'Since coming back to the Flat she has really taken her form to another level over staying distances, and we'll be trying to make her a Group Two winner after winning a Group Three last time.'
Saturday's €110,000 feature at Galway is the BoyleSports Handicap Hurdle where the remarkable Teed Up tries for a seventh course victory.
The latest of these came in a flat race on Wednesday when Emmet Mullins's stalwart overcame all but coming down at a critical point to overhaul Shoda.
Teed Up, ridden by Conor Clarke, on the way to winning the Adare Manor Opportunity Handicap Hurdle at the 2023 Galway festival. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA
Jockey Ronan Whelan emerged from it with a 10-day ban for careless riding after Teed Up met with serious interference. But the horse, acclaimed by his trainer as 'a soldier', was pluck itself and that can see him go close again over flights.
Mullins has four in the feature, but relies solely on Toll Stone in the preceding hurdle. Another with proven course form, he failed to land a blow in Monday night's amateur highlight and is worth another shot.
The Ballydoyle colt Action, a half-brother to this season's dual-Derby hero Lambourn, will be hard to beat in the juvenile maiden on the back of his Curragh debut behind two stable companions.
Tuesday's big Mile winner Dunum is back on familiar territory for Sunday's festival highlight, the Ahonoora Handicap. Natalia Lupini's stable star won this in 2023 and was third last year.
Dunum is raised 7lbs for his narrow defeat of Bear Profit earlier in the week and that could make his job difficult over the shorter trip. Princess Child was unlucky over course and distance on Thursday when just pipped in a Listed contest and may go one better.
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RTÉ News
4 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
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They battled various setbacks throughout the season - spare a thought for Lauren Magee who suffered an ACL setback mid-season - but a deep panel ultimately pulled them through. Captain Carla Rowe, who struck 0-04, Sullivan, Eilish O'Dowd and Player of the Match Orlagh Nolan all had huge games while Nicole Owens and Niamh Hetherton supplied the crucial goals. There was a superb defensive effort too as Meath were restricted to just four points from play overall. For the seven Dublin starters who also lined out in the 2021 final, when their five-in-a-row bid was undone by Meath, it will go down as a particularly sweet win. Meath supporters figured beforehand that despite being beaten three times this year by Dublin, once in the league and twice in the Leinster championship, the results were trending positively for them. Dublin beat Meath by 2-19 to 0-09 in the league last March but just seven points separated them in their provincial championship group game. And Dublin had to come from behind with eight unanswered points late in the Leinster final to secure a 12th consecutive title. Meath went with the same side again too, bar the injury enforced absence of corner-back Katie Newe who was replaced by the ultra experienced Shauna Ennis. Two-time All-Ireland winning captain Ennis started and finished the first-half in the inside forward line though played the majority around the half-back line. She was part of a Meath defence that was under siege for long spells in that opening half. Tyrrell, who'd sniped 8-33 in seven games between the start of the Leinster championship and the final, was picked up by Aine Sheridan, who fared well overall. Tyrrell did open the scoring when fed by the busy Sinead Goldrick but that was her only point from play until the 43rd minute. Team skipper Rowe was more influential, winning a free that Tyrrell converted before feeding Owens for the opening goal in the sixth minute. Suddenly, Dublin led by 1-02 to no score and Meath were already in serious trouble. Meath didn't get their opening score until the 10th minute and, by that stage, Dublin had 1-03 on the board. Meath didn't score from play at all in the opening half, Emma Duggan converting four frees. Niamh Donlon, just in the team in 2023 when Dublin won their last title, picked up Duggan who was frustrated to drop three score attempts short. Dublin really turned it on between the 14th and 23rd minutes, hitting 1-05 without response and effectively wrestling the Brendan Martin Cup their direction. Rowe struck the point of the game during that blitz, starting on the left sideline and dancing by a couple of Meath defenders before blasting over into the Davin End. Meath goalkeeper Robyn Murray was under pressure with her kick-outs and Dublin gathered one of them and turned it into a Sullivan shot that Murray did well to tip over. 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Dublin: Abbey Shiels; Niamh Donlon, Leah Caffrey, Jess Tobin; Sinead Goldrick, Martha Byrne, Niamh Crowley (0-01); Eilish O'Dowd, Hannah McGinnis; Nicole Owens (1-00), Carla Rowe (0-04, 0-02f), Orlagh Nolan (0-01); HannahTyrrell (0-05, 0-03f), Niamh Hetherton (1-01), Kate Sullivan (0-04). Subs: Sophie McIntyre for Owens 48, Aoife Kane for McGinnis 50, Hannah Leahy for Donlon 53, Laura Grendon for Tyrrell 54, Chloe Darby for Sullivan 56. Meath: Robyn Murray; Karla Kealy, Mary Kate Lynch, Aine Sheridan; Shauna Ennis, Sarah Wall, Aoibhin Cleary (0-01); Orlaith Sheehy, Marion Farrelly; Megan Thynne, Niamh Gallogly, Ciara Smyth (0-01); Kerrie Cole, Vikki Wall (0-01), Emma Duggan (0-07, 0-06f).


RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Aoife Horisk the hero as Tyrone claim TG4 All-Ireland Intermediate decider
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Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Horisk and Muldoon goals vital as Tyrone secure Ladies All-Ireland intermediate title
Ladies All-Ireland IFC final: Tyrone 2-16 Laois 1-13 Goals in either half from Aoife Horisk and Katie Rose Muldoon proved pivotal as Tyrone edged out Laois by six points to capture the TG4 All-Ireland intermediate football final at Croke Park. Having succumbed narrowly to Leitrim in last year's decider, it was Tyrone's turn to celebrate on the biggest day of the year as they finished the contest strongly to deservedly secure the Mary Quinn Memorial Cup for the first time since their sole success in 2018. Tyrone enjoyed a 1-7 to 1-5 interval lead with Horisk's 27th minute goal cancelling out an equally superb finish from Laois' Shifra Havill four minutes previously. There was little to separate the teams throughout a nervy second half but the decisive moment arrived in the 54th minute as Muldoon left Laois goalkeeper Eimear Barry helpless with a shot from close range. It was Tyrone that seized the early initiative through points from Sorcha Gormley and Cara McCrossan before Laois struck back to level parity by the fourth minute courtesy of scores from Jane Moore and Emma Lawlor. Lawlor edged Laois in front in the seventh minute, immediately after their corner-back Faye McEvoy had produced a superb goal line clearance at the opposite end, with parity restored soon after through a Niamh O'Neill free. Parity continued as Emily Lacey and Aoife Horisk (free) traded points by the end of the first quarter with the Ulster county re-establishing their two-point advantage thanks to Sláine McCarroll and the lively Gormley. Niamh O'Neill's seven points proved crucial for Tyrone. Picture: Leah Scholes/Inpho However, their inaccuracy up front undermined their general control as O'Neill placed her shot too close to Eimear Barry in the 22nd minute and that profligacy was punished in an instant as Lawlor worked well in releasing Havill for an emphatic finish to the roof of Amelia Coyle's net. Frustration continued for Tyrone in the 26th minute as Gormley was denied from the penalty spot following a foul on Horisk but the latter made no mistake a minute later as she drilled home from ten yards to edge her side two points clear by half-time. Laois wasted little time in getting back on level terms as Mo Nerney and Fiona Dooley both scored within three minutes of the restart. Crucially, Laois were unable to get in front as this time as O'Neill (free) and Horisk responded for Tyrone, with the latter becoming increasingly influential as the contest evolved. The same could be said for Nerney, who added two points in quick succession to bring Laois to within a point by the 43rd minute. However, their momentum stalled ten minutes from time as Ciara Crowley was yellow-carded and O'Neill's subsequent free helped double Tyrone's advantage. The contest was effectively settled as Muldoon followed up well to net after fellow substitute Emer McCanny had been denied and they pulled away by the final whistle thanks to insurance points from O'Neill, Gormley and captain Aoibhinn McHugh. Scorers for Tyrone: N O'Neill 0-7 (3f), A Horisk 1-3 (0-1f), S Gormley 0-3, K Muldoon 1-0, A McHugh, S McCarroll, C McCrossan 0-1 each. Scorers for Laois: E Lawlor (3f), M Nerney (3f) 0-5 each, S Havill 1-0, F Dooley, J Moore, E Lacey 0-1 each. TYRONE: A Coyle; J Lyons, G McKenna, E Quinn; C Campbell, M Mallon, C Canavan; A McHugh, S McCarroll; E McNamee, S Gormley, A Horisk; N O'Neill, C McCrossan, M Corrigan. Subs: E McCanny for McCrossan (36), K Muldoon for McNamee (45), A McGahan for Campbell (53), C McCaffrey for O'Neill (58), J Barrett for Horisk (59). LAOIS: E Barry; S Farrelly, C Dunne, F McEvoy; A Gorman, A Moore, A Moran; F Dooley, J Moore; S Havill, E Galvin, C Crowley; E Lacey, E Lawlor, M Nerney. Subs: L Kearney for Gorman (39), M Cotter for McEvoy (45), K Donoghue for Lacey (47), A Fitzpatrick for Havill (56). Referee: Shane Curley (Galway).