logo
Kyprios gives Aidan O'Brien a major injury scare as hot favourite for Ascot Gold Cup limps out of Leopardstown winning enclosure

Kyprios gives Aidan O'Brien a major injury scare as hot favourite for Ascot Gold Cup limps out of Leopardstown winning enclosure

Daily Mail​17-05-2025

Seamless on the course, headaches in the winner's enclosure. Kyprios did what everyone expected him to do as he extended his winning run to a perfect 10 but Aidan O'Brien left Leopardstown concerned about his old friend.
Life has not been straightforward for this wonderfully talented seven-year-old, who came back from a condition that threatened his life in 2023 to win every Cup race last season, and there was some angst for O'Brien again after Kyprios had tootled away with the Levmoss Stakes at Leopardstown.
The race was everything O'Brien had hoped it would be, a solid workout without any threat to his supremacy. There was a reason he was sent off 1/14 – nobody in the betting ring availed themselves of those odds – and the gallop had put him on course for Royal Ascot.
But then, as he was posing for a picture with connections, O'Brien noticed that Kyprios had taken a couple of tentative steps. He didn't know whether it was something or nothing but it was enough to ensure that his mind was occupied on the way back to Tipperary.
'He might have just sprung a shoe,' said O'Brien. 'Listen, with this horse's history, he is scanned and checked before every race. If it's his shoe, we can fix that but we will see what happens when we look at him. We will find out. But no chances will be taken with him.'
What a concern. Kyprios, the king of the stayers, was last beaten in October 2023, some 82 weeks ago, and in peak form, nothing would stop him collecting a third Gold Cup at the Royal meeting next month. Clearly, though, it cannot be taken for granted that he will make the starting line.
'He is a great horse and has been unbelievable,' said O'Brien. 'His constitution is incredible. Ryan (Moore) was very happy with him and that will have put him right for Ascot but maybe he has stood on his shoe. We will have to see.'
The evening had started for O'Brien on the best possible footing. Italy, another son of Coolmore's increasingly influential stallion Wootton Bassett, had left those close to him thinking that he had plenty of gears and he showed that through a taking final furlong.
He had been sent-off the 4/9 favourite, so it was anticipated he would break his maiden at the first time of asking, but he was given a fright when Thesecretadversary slipped away around the home turn and went clear. It was taking, then, just how Italy mowed down the front runner.
'This fella has got a bit of quality about him,' said O'Brien. 'Wayne (Lordan) gave him a lovely ride and he will have learned plenty from it. We would think he'd be a horse for the Tyros Stakes back here. We like him.'
There are more runners for him to follow today. In the UK, O'Brien has a number of chances on a high-class Newbury card, chief among them Ides Of March in the Carnarvon Stakes (1.25pm); there is no Ballydoyle representative in the Lockinge Stakes, however, with Rosallion a hot favourite.
'It's probably the best Lockinge we've seen for a long time,' said the colt's trainer Richard Hannon, of last season's Irish 2000 Guineas winner. 'But I'm just hopeful that he returns the same horse he was last season. If he is, then he should have a good year.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Republic of Ireland 'sloppy and boring' in Luxembourg draw
Republic of Ireland 'sloppy and boring' in Luxembourg draw

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Republic of Ireland 'sloppy and boring' in Luxembourg draw

Republic of Ireland boss Heimir Hallgrimsson bemoaned his side's "sloppy" and "boring" performance in their 0-0 friendly draw with twice hitting the woodwork, it was a laboured performance from the Boys in Green, who lacked the intensity that was evident against Senegal in Dublin on was disappointed with their showing against a side ranked 31 places below them by Fifa in their last game before the start of World Cup qualifying in September."Let's be honest, we're not happy with this performance," the Icelander told RTE."It is good to keep a clean sheet, it's the first one since I have come in, but we all felt the first half we were sloppy and the game was boring."All the good things we did against Senegal were missing, all the quick movements, the press and the ball speed. The effort was so much less than against Senegal." 'We must play the same way against everyone' Having endured a difficult start to his reign - which included a resounding 5-0 Nations League loss to England at Wembley - Hallgrimsson has overseen steady progress in 2025. Two wins against Bulgaria in the Nations League play-off and a credible friendly draw against Senegal helped lift their spirits going into Tuesday's game. But while the goalless draw against Luxembourg stretches their unbeaten run to four games, Hallgrimsson called for improvement before September's qualifiers against Hungary and Armenia. "We changed in the second half, more tempo and won more duals but not good enough," he added."We go in September and play the higher ranked team first and then the lower ranked team away so this is something we can learn from, we must play the same way against everyone, whether an end of season friendly or a group stage game."This game will just teach us a lesson; it is understandable that players will think we have a break after a long time and our players have played a lot of matches."

Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw
Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw

It will be a very different team which the Icelander sends out for the opening qualifier against Hungary in Dublin in September, but it will also need to be a very different performance if Ireland are to launch their campaign with the kind of result they will need to stand a chance of making it to the finals. Asked what he would take from the game, head coach Hallgrimsson, who presided over a far more impressive 1-1 draw with Senegal on Friday night, said: 'Firstly, you always use these games to get answers to questions. We got some answers – maybe more negative answers than positive from this tonight. 'The take from this is obviously when we go in September when the serious games start, we play a higher-ranked team first at home and then a lower-ranked team (Armenia) away just like we did now. We need to learn from this performance before September. 'We can take a lot of things. Mostly it's psychological or mental or whatever for the preparation. I know this is end-of-season so now everyone is in their off-season probably thinking, 'I don't want to get injured' or whatever they are thinking. 'But there's no excuse for a bad performance. Even if we would have scored in the end, I think still the performance was not good enough.' But for O'Leary, who saved from Danel Sinani before the break and substitute Vincent Thill after it, Ireland could have been looking at a repeat of their embarrassment when they were beaten 1-0 at home by Luxembourg in a World Cup qualifier in March 2021. Nathan Collins and substitute Jack Taylor hit the post and the bar respectively for the visitors, but they were pushed all the way by a side ranked 91st in the world by FIFA and Hallgrimsson was full of praise for the Bristol City keeper. He said: 'We have known that all these years, probably. I have worked with him for a year and he's always shown up, he's always done well in training, he's always supported the keeper that has been number one – which is Caoimhin [Kelleher] since I came and Gavin [Bazunu] before I came. 'He's just a fantastic team player, but he's also a good goalkeeper and now the fans got to see him.' Luxembourg boss Luc Holtz was pleased with what he saw from his team as they gear up for September's opening qualifier against Northern Ireland in the Grand Duchy. Holtz said: 'I'm very happy with the performance of my team. We managed to give big problems to Ireland. Ireland has a fantastic football team which plays with high speed and intensity and we managed to find solutions. 'This was a really good test for the upcoming match we play in September against Northern Ireland.'

Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw
Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Heimir Hallgrimsson seeks answers after disappointing draw

Heimir Hallgrimsson was left with more questions than answers after watching his Republic of Ireland side scrap out a 0-0 friendly draw in Luxembourg. The visitors twice hit the woodwork at the Stade de Luxembourg but needed two saves from keeper Max O'Leary, making his senior international debut six years after first being called up, to emerge with something to show for their efforts. It will be a very different team which the Icelander sends out for the opening qualifier against Hungary in Dublin in September, but it will also need to be a very different performance if Ireland are to launch their campaign with the kind of result they will need to stand a chance of making it to the finals. Asked what he would take from the game, head coach Hallgrimsson, who presided over a far more impressive 1-1 draw with Senegal on Friday night, said: 'Firstly, you always use these games to get answers to questions. We got some answers – maybe more negative answers than positive from this tonight. 'The take from this is obviously when we go in September when the serious games start, we play a higher-ranked team first at home and then a lower-ranked team (Armenia) away just like we did now. We need to learn from this performance before September. 'We can take a lot of things. Mostly it's psychological or mental or whatever for the preparation. I know this is end-of-season so now everyone is in their off-season probably thinking, 'I don't want to get injured' or whatever they are thinking. 'But there's no excuse for a bad performance. Even if we would have scored in the end, I think still the performance was not good enough.' But for O'Leary, who saved from Danel Sinani before the break and substitute Vincent Thill after it, Ireland could have been looking at a repeat of their embarrassment when they were beaten 1-0 at home by Luxembourg in a World Cup qualifier in March 2021. Nathan Collins and substitute Jack Taylor hit the post and the bar respectively for the visitors, but they were pushed all the way by a side ranked 91st in the world by FIFA and Hallgrimsson was full of praise for the Bristol City keeper. He said: 'We have known that all these years, probably. I have worked with him for a year and he's always shown up, he's always done well in training, he's always supported the keeper that has been number one – which is Caoimhin [Kelleher] since I came and Gavin [Bazunu] before I came. 'He's just a fantastic team player, but he's also a good goalkeeper and now the fans got to see him.' Luxembourg boss Luc Holtz was pleased with what he saw from his team as they gear up for September's opening qualifier against Northern Ireland in the Grand Duchy. Holtz said: 'I'm very happy with the performance of my team. We managed to give big problems to Ireland. Ireland has a fantastic football team which plays with high speed and intensity and we managed to find solutions. 'This was a really good test for the upcoming match we play in September against Northern Ireland.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store