logo
Dettori says Irish rider 'most talented' young jockey: 'A natural talent'

Dettori says Irish rider 'most talented' young jockey: 'A natural talent'

Frankie Dettori has named Billy Loughnane as "the most talented" of the young jockeys coming through at the moment.
The Irish youngster, 19, who is based in Britain, has been working his way up the ranks over the past few years, having transitioned to professional flat racing at 16 following a number of years pony racing.
He was crowned British flat racing Champion Apprentice in 2023, having ridden over 100 winners in his first year. He also secured the British All-Weather Champion Apprentice titles in both the 2022–23 and 2023–24 seasons.
Champion jockey Oisin Murphy described him as 'the most talented rider I have ever seen at his age', and Dettori has also praised the youngster.
The Stake ambassador said: "Obviously Oisin Murphy, William Buick and James Doyle are already established, as is Ryan Moore. I would say the youngest one is Billy Loughnane. He's a charming guy. He listens. He's willing to learn. Horses run for him.
"For a young jockey with that little experience, he seems very mature already. He's quite tall, so he's going to work at his weight more than anybody else, but I think he's a natural talent. To me, out of the young guys, he's the most talented and has a bright future."
He added: "When I started, obviously it was Pat Eddery, Steve Cauthen and Willie Carson as the dominant people when I grew up. Pat came along and then I came along and now there's Oisin Murphy and William Buick.
"There's always going to be someone that people can relate to. I did my section of fame and now I can let somebody else take over. Like I said, it'll always be someone because racing is popular and will always be popular."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘It's very difficult', says Vogue Williams as she opens up on road to success and lifts lid on dream career move
‘It's very difficult', says Vogue Williams as she opens up on road to success and lifts lid on dream career move

The Irish Sun

time40 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘It's very difficult', says Vogue Williams as she opens up on road to success and lifts lid on dream career move

'That was the thing I really always wanted to get into' STAR'S JOURNEY 'It's very difficult', says Vogue Williams as she opens up on road to success and lifts lid on dream career move IRISH model Vogue Williams has opened up about the "difficult" road to success and revealed the career she still has her eye on. The Howth native is now a well-known entrepreneur and podcaster with a thriving career. 2 Vogue has opened up about her 'difficult' road to success Credit: Social Media Collect 2 The Howth native shot to fame when she starred in an Irish reality show Credit: RTE But the mum-of-three admitted it was far from glamorous at the start, with countless unpaid gigs before her career began to take off. Vogue has now revealed the sacrifices she had to make to get to where she is today. She told the Irish Independent: "It's very difficult at the beginning, even getting into this industry I was just constantly doing stuff for free. I feel like you have to do a lot of stuff for free. "Even now you're always like, I'll just do it because it's probably a good thing to do, and I might meet someone and that might lead onto another job, so you're always doing stuff like that." Vogue first shot to fame in 2010 when she starred in the Irish reality show, Fade Street. The series, which ran for 12 episodes, followed a group of young women navigating their careers and social lives in Dublin. At the time, Vogue was juggling modelling work while also trying out acting and DJing. Fifteen years later, the 39-year-old has said she's interested in going down this path again - and has her sights set firmly on expanding her TV career. She said: "I'd love to do more work in TV. That was the thing I really always wanted to get into, but it's so hard. "My management are working really hard to get that [television work] for me. I'd love to have a late-night show hosting something." Vogue Williams daughter is labelled 'mini model' by fans Last month, Vogue and her reality star husband Spencer Matthews jetted off on a sun-soaked escape with their three kids; Theodore, six, Gigi, five, and three-year-old Otto. The celebrity couple are renowned for posting updates of their hectic life raising three little ones on social media. The mum-of-three took to Instagram to share a series of wholesome snaps from their fun-filled family holiday. The Dublin beauty was glowing in the photos as she donned a striking black and white bikini styled with a sun hat, standout gold jewellery and matching sunglasses. TOP TRIP Vogue posed for the smiling snaps with her three little ones and Spencer as they enjoyed a day by the sea. She captioned her post: "I've counted down the days until we got here." Fans and friends flocked to the comment section to share their love for her post. Emily said: "Amazing, have the BEST time." Daisy wrote: "Adorable." Arual commented: "They are so cute! Like little ducklings!" Anne said: "Have a fantastic family holiday in the sun."

Rijeka boss Dalovic insists his side have a battle on their hands against Shels
Rijeka boss Dalovic insists his side have a battle on their hands against Shels

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Rijeka boss Dalovic insists his side have a battle on their hands against Shels

Rijeka coach Radomir Dalovic is hoping the return of local hero Toni Fruk can save his job as the fall out from their European campaign threatens to engulf the Croatian double-winners. Fruk has been recently drafted into the national squad, a natural no. 10, he is expected to step straight into Luca Modric's position - if the 39-year-old Modric ever retires! "Toni is now in the national team of Croatia and he can go a long way, everything depends of him," says Dalovic of 24-year-old Fruk's potential. READ MORE: This is the Gavin Bazunu save that even had Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson gushing with praise READ MORE: Shels boss Joey O'Brien tells RTE 'doesn't bother me' as national broadcaster snubs big Uefa night "His play is good, not the exact same as Luca's in style, but he has the potential for the future, to be the future of Croatia." Rijeka haven't been having a good week, losing to Shelbourne at home, having taken the lead 1-0, and picking a red card in a league draw at Osijek on Sunday. It would have been nice for the Irish side had that red card, shown to Slovenian international midfielder Dejan Petrovic close to full-time, led to his being unavailable for this tie. But suspensions only apply to the competition they occur in, so Petrovic will join Fruk and 23-year-old Niko Jankovic who emerged as a €5.6m target for Fenerbache this week in the middle of the park. A trio sure to be the Croatian champions' strongest unit and likely to make for hard work for JJ Lunney and Kerr McInroy in the Shels engine room. Coach Dalovic, for sure, is a remarkable character and could surely write the book about playing games in foreign countries. A Montenegrin who played for his country 26 times, he had two spells as a player with Rijeka as part of a career that spanned 17 different clubs and a vast geographical spread. He initially played top-flight Yugoslavia as well as having stints in Germany (with Arminia Bielefeld in the Bundesliga), China, Thailand, Montenegro, Iran, Croatia, Romania and Turkey. He was also linked with Celtic circa 2009 while a deal with Wigan Athletic who were in the Championship at the time, fell through, a step short. What does he make of Shelbourne, of how his first encounter with Irish football went? "Shelbourne are a good team and they played a good game against us so they didn't surprise us in that way. "We had seen they had played good games against Qarabag, that they have this kind of fight, they fight for every ball, they are strong, they run good, a lot, and they have played 27 games in their championship - we have only started to play rounds in our league. "It's good football, and they have good players, but I hope we will be better than we were in the game in Rijeka." Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email alerts.

Shels at high point of new era aiming to grip the bat lightly
Shels at high point of new era aiming to grip the bat lightly

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Shels at high point of new era aiming to grip the bat lightly

After ripping up the script last week, Shelbourne still need to be word-perfect to write a historic chapter. A club with a trove of memories began this latest journey just under four years ago. Damien Duff assumed control of the team promoted back to the Premier Division, took a scalpel to the squad and it's been incremental progress since. FAI Cup runners-up in 2022, European qualifiers in 2023, top-flight title winners in 2024. Joey O'Brien flanked Duff along the odyssey but now takes charge for arguably the high point of this current run. Cynics were swift to declare the end of this era when the Irish legend walked out of his job on a sunny June morning eight weeks ago at the AUL complex. O'Brien did what has always come naturally by carrying on regardless. Initially as caretaker, Duff's assistant was soon exalted with permanent manager status. Tuesday night against Rijeka will be his 12th game at the helm. Only the swashbuckling Qarabag inflicted defeat on a team he picked and his side confront a schedule capable of turbocharging their season. Last week's 2-1 win in Croatia was a result few saw coming, offering a platform to secure a Europa League playoff spot at home without even having to win over 90 minutes. O'Brien sticking to the line that the Reds remain underdogs despite their lead gains credence when the respective squad values are contrasted. Croatian football, club and international, is streets ahead of Ireland. The only comparison when they're cited as the exemplar for Ireland to replicate is population. Defeat won't be considered a disaster for O'Brien either. By overcoming Linfield in the opening round of the Champions League last month, three lives at reaching the league phase of European competition were granted. This is the second. Failure to maximise their midway advantage would only result in the final parachute being activated – a rematch with either Linfield or Vikingur Gøta for a spot in the Conference League. The Faroese side lead 2-1 heading into Thursday's second leg in Belfast. Irrespective of how this second leg concludes, potentially after extra-time and penalties, Shels will have a playoff next week to determine their league phase route. Prize-money of €3.8m is the crock of gold awaiting. Beyond the European adventure, Shels are well-positioned heading into the final series of nine matches, just four points off second place. There's an FAI Cup last-16 clash at St Patrick's Athletic on Sunday week as well. 'It's not really thinking about what's at stake and what it can do for the club, financial-wise,' reasoned former Ireland defender O'Brien. 'If you start thinking like that, you start gripping the bat too tight. 'It's one of my favourite sayings - you start wondering 'oh, if this happens, we can do this'. 'I just don't think you can play like that. You must have an understanding of what's got you here. It's a big occasion but make sure you're ready to play well and don't have a regret of feeling that I was thinking of what could have been. 'I've told the players to realise these opportunities don't come around too often. You must put your best foot forward and make sure you have no regrets.' Not many in the Shels squad have passed this watershed but centre-back Paddy Barrett has fond memories of reaching the group stage with Dundalk in 2016. A second-leg 3-0 win over BATE Borisov was the glamorous side of a tricky tie. 'We got pumped in the first leg over there, the best 1-0 loss I was ever involved in,' he said, laughing at returning from Belarus relieved. 'There was tension but also confidence because we had a brilliant team. 'This is a big game too with a lot at stake. We know the quality of opposition Rijeka are having got a feel of them over them. Yet we just need to take our own game to them. 'We've worked on some things this week and will have a right crack off them.' Whereas Shels will be missing Seán Boyd from sustaining a calf injury last Wednesday, Rijeka have Toni Fruk returning from suspension. Their €4m recruit from Fiorentina has been linked with a move to RB Leipzig but his club will want a tie-changing impact from their star man first to avoid an embarrassing Europa exit. Europa League, third round, second leg Shelbourne v HNK Rijeka Tolka Park - Tuesday, 7.45pm.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store