
Puerto Rico can deliver as derby weekend opens
An eye-catcher on his debut over course and distance three weeks ago, Puerto Rico might get punters off to a successful start in the Lock 13 Gastropub&Brewpub 2-Y-0 Maiden which kicks-off Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby weekend at the Curragh.
A Wootton Bassett colt, trained by Aidan O'Brien, he was sent off as 10/1 Ballydoyle second-string for his debut but, ridden by Declan McDonogh, made late progress under Declan McDonogh to finish fourth, beaten three lengths, by his stable-companion Flushing Meadows.
That form has been boosted by the third, North Coast's smooth success at Down Royal last weekend and, sure to know a lot more about his job this time, Puerto Rico should prove a tough nut to crack.
Ger Lyons has won three of the last four runnings of this maiden and relies this time on Learntodiscover, sent off a strong 13/8 favourite for his debut over course and distance, when having to settle for third spot behind a couple for Ballydoyle colts, Brussels and Kansas, rock-solid form.
The Havana Grey colt should take a step forward from that run, but might not cope with Puerto Rico.
A step-up to seven furlongs and the addition of a hood should help Cape Sounion's bid to make it third-time-lucky in the seven-furlong O'Driscolls Whiskey 2-Y-0 Fillies Maiden.
This No Nay Never filly was green as grass when she bumped into Ballydoyle hope Simply Astounding on her debut in Naas and was then a beaten favourite when third to her stable-companion and subsequent 'Albany' third Balantina in a six-furlong Curragh maiden.
Donnacha O'Brien's charge sets a formidable form standard and gets the nod over Ballydoyle hope Minerva, a £1.5m. yearling, who is expected to improve dramatically from her debut third behind another O'Brien filly Moments Of Joy.
This daughter of Frankel, highly-regarded in Ballydoyle, looked virtually clueless at Leopardstown but, with that run under her belt, she should prove a different proposition here against Cape Sounion.
Elsewhere on a card which includes three handicaps and a charity race. Joseph O'Brien's consistent but luckless Tswalu might make her breakthrough in the Diageo Luxury Spirits Maiden.
A daughter of Justify, she has filled the runner-up berth in all three of her starts, this season behind Catalina Delcarpio, Darzina and Royal Entry (went on to win the Ulster Oaks) respectively.
A real galloper, she is rated 4lb below another frustrating sort in Game Point but looks more straight-forward and is preferred.
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Irish Examiner
9 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Puerto Rico can deliver as derby weekend opens
An eye-catcher on his debut over course and distance three weeks ago, Puerto Rico might get punters off to a successful start in the Lock 13 Gastropub&Brewpub 2-Y-0 Maiden which kicks-off Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby weekend at the Curragh. A Wootton Bassett colt, trained by Aidan O'Brien, he was sent off as 10/1 Ballydoyle second-string for his debut but, ridden by Declan McDonogh, made late progress under Declan McDonogh to finish fourth, beaten three lengths, by his stable-companion Flushing Meadows. That form has been boosted by the third, North Coast's smooth success at Down Royal last weekend and, sure to know a lot more about his job this time, Puerto Rico should prove a tough nut to crack. Ger Lyons has won three of the last four runnings of this maiden and relies this time on Learntodiscover, sent off a strong 13/8 favourite for his debut over course and distance, when having to settle for third spot behind a couple for Ballydoyle colts, Brussels and Kansas, rock-solid form. The Havana Grey colt should take a step forward from that run, but might not cope with Puerto Rico. A step-up to seven furlongs and the addition of a hood should help Cape Sounion's bid to make it third-time-lucky in the seven-furlong O'Driscolls Whiskey 2-Y-0 Fillies Maiden. This No Nay Never filly was green as grass when she bumped into Ballydoyle hope Simply Astounding on her debut in Naas and was then a beaten favourite when third to her stable-companion and subsequent 'Albany' third Balantina in a six-furlong Curragh maiden. Donnacha O'Brien's charge sets a formidable form standard and gets the nod over Ballydoyle hope Minerva, a £1.5m. yearling, who is expected to improve dramatically from her debut third behind another O'Brien filly Moments Of Joy. This daughter of Frankel, highly-regarded in Ballydoyle, looked virtually clueless at Leopardstown but, with that run under her belt, she should prove a different proposition here against Cape Sounion. Elsewhere on a card which includes three handicaps and a charity race. Joseph O'Brien's consistent but luckless Tswalu might make her breakthrough in the Diageo Luxury Spirits Maiden. A daughter of Justify, she has filled the runner-up berth in all three of her starts, this season behind Catalina Delcarpio, Darzina and Royal Entry (went on to win the Ulster Oaks) respectively. A real galloper, she is rated 4lb below another frustrating sort in Game Point but looks more straight-forward and is preferred.


Irish Examiner
20 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Pride of Arras team 'entitled to keep dreaming' as second derby date looms
Pride Of Arras could continue David and Vimy Aykroyd's brilliant summer when he bids for Classic redemption in the Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby at the Curragh on Sunday. The Yorkshire-based owner-breeders have been making their presence felt this term, with Pride Of Arras claiming the Dante to ignite Derby dreams in May, while Amiloc maintained his unbeaten record in style to give connections a day to remember at Royal Ascot. Trained by Ralph Beckett, Pride Of Arras may have subsequently disappointed when sent off at 4-1 at Epsom following his Knavesmire heroics, but his team are refusing to be downbeat ahead of a trip to Ireland this weekend and a second shot at Classic glory for the talented son of New Bay. "He's come out of Epsom well, we're just still scratching our heads why he ran so badly," explained Patrick Cooper, the Akyroyd's racing manager and also the nephew of David Aykroyd. "It's a bit of a mystery, he obviously didn't handle the hill and Rossa (Ryan, jockey) was easy on him once he knew he couldn't participate in the finish, but we still don't know truly what went wrong, so we can go to the Curragh and hopefully find out more there. "We have to take the defeat and the kicking when you get one and it is just one race, albeit perhaps the greatest race of them all, and you have to move on to the next one. "Hopefully we get the horse back who showed us how good he was in the Dante, he was impressive that day and we're entitled to keep dreaming." Connections also have further big days to look forward to with the exciting Amiloc after he took his unbeaten record to a perfect five out of five in last week's King Edward VII Stakes. Rated just 1lb inferior to his stablemate in the owners' pale blue and white quarters after his victory at the Royal meeting, the gelded son of Postponed is being lined up for a return to Ascot and a step into even deeper waters for the King George VI And Queen Elizabeth Stakes on July 26. "The handicapper only has a pound between them and he doesn't have rose-tinted spectacles like the rest of us and that's how he sees it," continued Cooper. "With Amiloc we just don't know where his ceiling is and he just keeps pulling out more every time we run him. "We're sort of aiming at the King George which would be another step up and we'll see closer to the time. It's next door, the race is worth a fortune and he's a course and distance winner, so it's kind of obvious. "He's a gelding so he will lose his unbeaten record at some point. Hopefully it's not King George day, but we'll just try to go one step further and if we have to step back in grade afterwards then so be it." Read More Argentine Tango waltzes to Newmarket success


RTÉ News
a day ago
- RTÉ News
Rain check before Lazy Griff confirmed for Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby
Lazy Griff's participation in the Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby will be a late call and depend on how much rain falls at the Curragh this week. Charlie Johnston's charge outran his odds of 50-1 under Christophe Soumillon in the Derby at Epsom, getting closet to impressive winner Lambourn, just has he had done in the Chester Vase. However, connections are keen not to ask him to race on ground which they deem to be too quick. "It was good, good to firm this morning and we're in the same situation as applied at Epsom, we don't want to run him on fast ground," said Mike Prince of owners Middleham Park Racing. "We'll keep him in at the forfeit stage (on Tuesday) and then play it by ear. I've seen some forecasts suggest plenty of rain midweek, but others saying only two to three millimetres. "All we can do is keep him in and keep monitoring, it keeps changing every time I look. "It will probably be the Grand Prix de Paris if he doesn't run. It's the German Derby next week or the Grand Prix the week after, those are the options and France is more likely than Germany currently. "He doesn't have to leave until Friday so we don't have to decide until declarations." He added: "He's been fine since Epsom, Charlie's really happy with him and we're going to check in with Christophe, just to see what is what."