
Cheap Sandwiches has prowess to power past rivals
Session two of round two of the English Derby takes place this evening in Towcester and the last of the heats is the hottest of the lot.
With five first-round heat winners in the line-up, there is little room for error, but Irish Derby runner-up Cheap Sandwiches should have the measure of his rivals on the run go the bend, and that swings the verdict firmly in his favour.
Graham Holland's dog can take this at the expense of last year's runner-up, Boylesports Bob. The latter impressed with his track craft when winning in round one and is capable of turning closer this time. However, picking up the selection is likely to prove too much for him and the other four runners.
The selection's kennel companion, Bombay Pat, should have little trouble following up his first-round win when he contests heat 10. He is always the quickest out of boxes but has the type of early pace which should prove too hot for these rivals.
Yet another kennelmate, Bockos Diamond, also has what looks like a straightforward task in heat 13, and there seems little point looking beyond the Irish Derby winner.
In Shelbourne Park, the Sporting Press Online Edition Irish Oaks gets underway with nine heats, and A Lucky Julie, who dead-heated with Fleadh Saraide in the final of this competition in 2024, can make a winning start to her defence by taking heat two. Jerry Melia's bitch hasn't run for a long time but a recent 17.48 spin around Newbridge should have put her ready to do herself justice.
The last of the nine heats looks tough but Puppy Oaks winner Shebetheone is in great form and can extend her winning run against the brilliantly consistent Glengar Martha and the returning Ballymac Danica.
The 2025 Open 750, with a prize fund in excess of €11,000, gets underway at Curraheen Park and Callaway Hybrid should prove a step ahead of his rivals in the second of the three heats.
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Irish Independent
a day ago
- Irish Independent
Aidan O'Brien says Curragh will ‘really suit' Lambourn as he looks to Irish Derby for his Epsom hero
A son of dual Derby winner Australia, the three-year-old made virtually every yard of the running in the premier Classic under Wayne Lordan, providing O'Brien with his 11th Derby success. Speaking yesterday, the Ballydoyle handler reported his three Derby runners to have returned home none the worse, with Lambourn's stablemates Delacroix and The Lion In Winter set to drop back in trip after finishing ninth and 14th. 'The horses have been out for a walk and a pick of grass [this morning] and everybody seems very happy with them,' said O'Brien. 'We were expecting Wayne was probably going to go forward to make the running on Lambourn – unless there was someone going very fast he was going to end up in front and that's what happened. Wayne gave him a great ride, he had to be aggressive from the gates and he is a horse that stays very well.' O'Brien felt there were excuses for Delacroix, the chosen mount of Ryan Moore, and the Colin Keane-ridden The Lion In Winter. He added: 'It got a little bit rough up the hill, I think Ryan got chopped up at the top of the hill and Colin ended up a little bit more forward than he thought he was going to be and out a little bit. 'To have one horse in any race and it go right is very difficult, so if you have three in a race it's usually not going to go right for them all. 'We learnt that Wayne's horse stays very well and is a very straightforward, uncomplicated horse, we learnt Colin's horse could be a miler, so he was probably a mile out of his ground, and it's very possible that Ryan's horse is a mile-and-a-quarter horse, even though their races didn't go as well as they'd have wanted. 'In the Derby every year you get fairly straightened out and sort out what you are or you aren't. The Derby and the Oaks are the races that expose the whole three-year-old generation, their flaws and their weaknesses and their strengths. You usually know where you're going after it.' On future plans for the winner, he said: 'The lads [owners] will make that decision and we'll see how he is when he gets back cantering in 10 days, but it looks like he's an Irish Derby horse and it looks like the Curragh would really suit.' ADVERTISEMENT The trainer also praised the winning rider, who was winning his first Derby. 'Wayne is an unbelievable horseman and the most genuine, uncomplicated person you'll ever meet in your life,' O'Brien added. 'He's grateful for everything and expects nothing – that's Wayne totally. He' an unbelievable person to work with and an unbelievable rider, horseman and jockey all rolled into one.'


Irish Times
2 days ago
- Irish Times
Lambourn odds-on to become the 20th horse to complete Epsom-Curragh Derby double
Lambourn is odds-on to become the 20th horse to complete the Epsom-Curragh Derby double at the end of this month. Aidan O'Brien's 11th Epsom Derby winner emerged unscathed from his 'Blue Riband' exploits on Saturday where Wayne Lordan made most of the running on the son of Australia. Widely regarded beforehand as the outsider of O'Brien's Derby trio, Lambourn dominated the biggest field for the race in over 20 years to catapult his name on to racing's most coveted roll-of-honour. On Sunday, O'Brien indicated the €1.25 million Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby in three weeks will be next for the colt, who prior to Epsom had won the Chester Vase. READ MORE 'The lads [Coolmore ownership] will make that decision, and we'll see what it looks like after he gets back cantering after a week or 10 days after that. 'It looks like he's an Irish Derby horse, it looks like the Curragh would really suit him. He gallops and he stays, he's very genuine. Then I suppose we'd see after that, it usually works itself out after that but that would look the obvious next step if everybody is happy with that, obviously,' O'Brien reported. It opens another potential piece of history for Ireland's champion trainer who a week ago also landed the Prix Du Jockey Club, the French Derby, with Camille Pissarro. Winning all three of Europe's Derby prizes in the same season would be a landmark accomplishment. The champion trainer's current Classic dominance at Epsom was underlined on Friday with Minnie Hauk suppling an 11th Oaks into the bargain, while Jan Brueghel landed the Coronation Cup. It emulated O'Brien's 2012 hat-trick in the same trio of Group One races at Epsom. Lambourn has been installed a 4-5 favourite with some firms to emulate Auguste Rodin two years ago and add Ireland's premier Classic to his haul. Both his sire, and his grandsire, Galileo, managed the same feat. Camelot (2012) and High Chaparral (2002) also did it for O'Brien. Jockey Wayne Lordan celebrates with Lambourn after the Derby win at Epsom. Photograph: David Davies for The Jockey Club/PA Wire Joseph O'Brien filled third spot on Saturday with Tennessee Stud, who has been made an 8-1 shot with some firms to get the better of Lambourn at the Curragh. O'Brien, who rode Camelot and Australia to their Derby doubles for his father, said: 'I'm very proud of him, it was a serious run, and he came home strongly. I'm so pleased for the owners, it's very good to be placed in the Derby and he's an unexposed type from whom there should be plenty more to come.' Like the 2017 Derby hero Wings Of Eagles, Lambourn broke his maiden as a two-year-old in Killarney. However, he only won due to the wayward Green Triangle crashing out through the running rail in the closing stages when looking all over the winner. Lambourn's circuitous route to Epsom glory then took a rare turn as O'Brien sent him to the provincial track of Craon in northwest France for the Listed Criterium de l'Quest. Ridden by Christophe Soumillon, Lambourn's lazy style resulted in a scrambling victory in front of a meagre audience. Ironically, Soumillon was on board Saturday's runner-up, Lazy Griff. Such a relatively undistinguished juvenile career has been transformed this season. Runner-up to Delacroix in the Ballysax at Leopardstown in March, Lambourn scored at Chester before confirming his mile-and-a-half credentials in the biggest prize of all. Delacroix started favourite for the Derby but was unruly while being saddled and never figured before trailing home in ninth. The Lion In Winter could never land a blow and was 14th of the 18 runners. O'Brien said on Sunday The Lion In Winter could be targeted at mile races in future with Delacroix dropping to a mile and a quarter. Lazy Griff could try to make it third-time lucky in his personal rivalry with Lambourn by travelling to the Curragh and taking him on again. 'I said after Chester that Doncaster [St Leger] would be his place, but to run so well leaves us dreaming about the rest of the year,' his trainer Charlie Johnston said. 'I would say it will be the Irish Derby or the Grand Prix de Paris. The Irish Derby would mean going into the lion's den I suppose, but it will be one or the other I would say.'


Irish Independent
2 days ago
- Irish Independent
Wayne Lordan comes back to reap Derby reward after recovery from serious injury
However, the Lordan story does not begin and end within two days in June and when the 43-year-old was unshipped by San Antonio half a mile from home in the 2023 Irish Derby, some may have been forgiven for thinking that would be the end of his Classic dreams. Lordan suffered fractures to his legs and elbow, as well as a nasty laceration to his arm in an incident which left him not only knocked out but spending eight months on the sidelines. It is often said that loyalty is a two-way street and during his darkest days he knew he could count on Aidan O'Brien. The master of Ballydoyle was ready and waiting to repay one of his most trusted lieutenants for years of service and when the moment came, Lordan delivered a sublime ride to provide O'Brien with a record-extending 11th winner of the premier Classic. 'Racing is a tough game and lots of jockeys get injured and thankfully I had the support of Aidan and everybody at Coolmore to help me get back,' said Lordan. 'I suppose when you are coming back to ride horses like this it gives you an even stronger focus and I was lucky I had such a good job to come back to. 'I never wanted to be negative so I always told myself I would be fine even when it was tough. I tried to stay focused and got in the gym and just told myself I would soon be back.' When riding for O'Brien it is far from picking up scraps once Moore has had his say from the swelling team of Ballydoyle Classic prospects. But for a man who had finished third for O'Brien aboard Japan (2019) and subsequent Irish Derby hero Los Angeles 12 months ago, there was only one colt for him this time around, as O'Brien explained. 'I knew there were two horses Wayne wanted to ride this weekend and once Ryan knew what he was going to ride, Lambourn and Whirl were the ones Wayne wanted,' said O'Brien. With Moore and big-race favourite Delacroix only ninth and Irish champion Colin Keane and The Lion In Winter even further adrift, the stage was set for Lordan to steal the show and he had the perfect co-star for what was a spellbinding display. ADVERTISEMENT 'He was the first string for me anyway, so I was happy,' explained Lordan. 'When you're getting into racing, this is the race you want to ride in. I've run well in the Derby before and lost nothing in defeat, but I'm just glad today it worked out. 'I was happy once I passed the line, but there is always horses flying home here. I knew the ones coming to get me would have to stay well and there was always chance they would, but thankfully my horse is a tough, genuine horse.' After eight years of working for an operation created to thrive at Epsom in early June, Lordan's winning ride was one perhaps honed to perfection at Ballydoyle. Now he has his name etched forever on the long and distinguished roll of honour of the blue riband. O'Brien explained: 'Everything at Ballydoyle is about Epsom and this is how the thoroughbred breed is assessed every year. 'Everything at Ballydoyle is left-handed and every piece of work they do they practice going round our Tattenham Corner, even the sprinters. 'It's the ultimate test really and it has to be that. It's great for Wayne to win the Derby, he's a massive part of our team and he rides so many of our big horses in work. 'He's in every day and it's a privilege to have him. He's so straightforward and such a team player, but he can be ruthless when he has to be and he's strong and determined.'