
Curragh boss says marathon World Pool programmes not a problem for racegoers
Next Sunday's €1.25 million Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby will be the centrepiece of another bumper nine-race card and Curragh officials insist such marathon programmes are not an issue for racegoers.
Last year, Irish racing's HQ hosted the first nine-race meeting in modern times to facilitate the lucrative Tote World Pool betting.
The Curragh first hosted the pool
run by the Hong Kong Jockey Club in 2023
, when it prompted the Derby date to be switched to Sunday for the first time in 14 years.
Almost €30 million in global betting turnover was generated on the Curragh action in 2023. Sunday's action could end up being worth up to €700,000 for the Tote here, as well as the Curragh and
Horse Racing Ireland
.
READ MORE
Last month's Guineas festival at the Curragh was part of the pool for the first time and also saw a nine-race programme for 2,000 Guineas day.
It prompted some complaints about the length of the card, while there was also disquiet at Epsom earlier this month when Derby day there was included on the World Pool and led to an eight-race card.
The pool is the biggest co-mingled market in world racing and operated at Royal Ascot last week. The Irish Champions Festival in September is also included in it.
The Curragh's Derby festival kicks off on Friday and once more, a €100,000 handicap has been added to Sunday to make it nine races.
Brian Kavanagh, chief executive of the Curragh, said he wasn't aware of criticism relating to the length of the programme at last year's Derby or at last month's 2,000 Guineas.
'I think the big days are days when people are here for a day out,' he said on Sunday. 'We've had days when, at the finish, people are looking for more races.
'It has worked fine. It's a chance to put on a €100,000 handicap as an extra race for three-year-olds, which was run for the first time on Derby day last year. Hopefully it will generate plenty of interest and activity."
Part of the commentary at Epsom last month revolved around a lack of quality in some of the contests that backed up the big race. Kavanagh said that won't be the case this coming Sunday.
Horse Racing Ireland put the fixture list together; that's not just our call
—
Brian Kavanagh
'These are all premier handicaps, very competitive races, backed up by a number of Listed races and obviously the Derby, the feature race itself,' said the Curragh boss.
'I think people come for the day and whether they stay for all the races or some races is a matter for themselves. It's a good opportunity to put another high-value race and Hong Kong, the World Pool, will take nine races if we put them on. That's the logic to it.'
Ticket pricing for the Irish Derby has also come under the spotlight in recent years, nominated sometimes as a contributory factor to underwhelming attendance figures for Ireland's premier classic.
An official figure of 11,418 was returned for Derby day last year. The capacity in the grandstand alone is 13,000.
Kavanagh pointed out that the entry cost for Sunday's action is €35, providing people buy their tickets online up to Friday. He says this is 'very good value'. After the Friday cut-off, tickets increase to €45.
He also confirmed that officials will look at reducing next year's Guineas festival to two days and losing the Friday evening card. However, a similar move in relation to the Derby festival won't be considered.
'Horse Racing Ireland put the fixture list together; that's not just our call. We will look at that (Guineas festival) for next year,' he said. 'But three days is well established for the Derby. The Friday for the Guineas was added just before or just after Covid. The Derby has been three days for more than 20 years, so I doubt that will change.'
[
Kevin Prendergast, influential trainer, dies aged 92
Opens in new window
]
An unsettled weather outlook for the week ahead could prove an important factor in deciding likely opposition to the Epsom Derby winner Lambourn on Sunday.
Aidan O'Brien's star is odds-on in most betting lists ahead of Tuesday's latest acceptance stage where supplementary entries can be made.
However, some ease in the going could make the Curragh a possible option for the Epsom runner Lazy Griff. The Dante winner Pride Of Arras failed to act around Epsom and is another potential cross-channel contender.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The 42
43 minutes ago
- The 42
Kildare and Limerick progress in Tailteann Cup semi-finals
Tailteann Cup semi-finals Kildare 1-13 Fermanagh 0-9 Limerick 2-18 Wicklow 1-17 KILDARE AND Limerick, the only two unbeaten teams left in the Tailteann Cup, will place their perfect records on the line when they meet in the final on 12 July. With almost matching final quarter performances in their respective semi-finals this afternoon, both teams finished strongly at Croke Park to keep alive their hopes of a golden ticket to the 2026 All-Ireland SFC. Limerick's four-point defeat of Wicklow was by far the more entertaining, with the Division 4 league champions looking down and out with less than 20 minutes to go. They trailed by seven points at that stage to an Oisin McConville-led Wicklow that had dominated the third quarter. Three Dean Healy points for Wicklow in that third quarter, along with a goal from Malachy Stone, had propelled the Garden County into a 1-16 to 1-9 lead. Oisin McGraynor punched the air in delight after his 50th-minute point left seven between them. Advertisement But Limerick's response was emphatic and decisive, a blistering 16-minute burst of scoring that yielded 1-9 in total. Rob Childs got the blitzkrieg underway with a Limerick fortuitous goal — or a victory for never giving up, depending on your attitude — as he dispossessed Wicklow goalkeeper Mark Jackson after a routine catch and kicked to an empty net. Limerick goalkeeper Josh Ryan then took centre stage with two brilliant long-range free-kick conversions, amounting to 0-4 for his team, while Danny Neville added a point to bring his tally to 1-2 for the day. It was an unlikely scoring burst from a Limerick side that took off prolific forward James Naughton due to an apparent knock early in the second half. Wicklow's agony was compounded by a wasted penalty kick in the 57th minute, goalkeeper Ryan turning McGraynor's kick onto the post and away to safety. It was Limerick's fifth win in a row in the competition, though they will still go into the final as underdogs against a Kildare side that started the summer as tier two favourites. They too lived on their wits for three quarters of their semi-final against Fermanagh, and the scores were tied at 0-8 apiece with just 15 minutes to go. At that stage, it looked as if Kildare might extend their terrible Croke Park record having lost their previous five games there. But substitute Brian Flanagan made a huge impact, reeling off four points in a row to give his team a vital cushion in a low-scoring game affected by long spells of torrential rain. McLoughlin's third score was a two-pointer, and he drilled over another single late on to bring his tally to 0-5, enough to claim the Man of the Match award. There was a late cameo too from James McGrath, who got forward to score a goal for the third game in a row. The seven-point win flattered Kildare as they'd only led by 0-7 to 0-6 at half-time and added just a single point in the first 20 minutes of the second half. But with 14 wides overall, and four decent goal chances created aside from the one that McGrath converted, they were full value for the win.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Explainer: How the pairings for All-Ireland football championship quarter-finals will be decided
Twelve counties remain in the race for Sam Maguire, with the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals and quarter-finals taking place over the next two weekends.


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
Brian Flanagan admits Kildare feared another Croke Park collapse before late surge sinks Fermanagh
Brian Flanagan says even he was starting to wonder if the Croke Park curse was a real thing for Kildare. 2 Kildare saw off Fermanagh in the Tailteann Cup semi-finals 2 Kildare manager Brian Flanagan he was starting to wonder if the Croke Park curse was a real thing for his side Sub Brian McLoughlin changed the game when he came on early in the second-half, blasting five crucial points. And James McGrath set the seal on a slightly flattering seven-point win with his third goal in a row late on. The scores were tied at 0-8 apiece after 55 minutes and no Kildare fan in the 13,960 crowd was taking anything for granted at that stage. The Leinster semi-finalists had lost their previous five games at Croke Park - and have a poor record generally there over the last 15 years. READ MORE ON GAA They created 32 scoring chances overall but wasted four goal opportunities and drilled 14 wides - leaving Flanagan wondering if another Croker choker was occurring. He said: "I said after the quarter-final win that every team has their challenges and, look, there was a bit made out of our recent history in Croke Park. "The reality is you don't talk about those things when you're developing a new group because in many ways it's irrelevant to us. "But as that game went on, 15 or 20 minutes in, you were thinking, 'Maybe there is something in this, I don't know'. Most read in Golf "So winning became even more important than at that point, so you could throw the shackles off in the future when we come back here." Kildare will be favourites for next month's final and will receive a golden ticket to the 2026 All-Ireland SFC if they can win again at Croker. 'Just in time for Father's Day' - Dublin GAA legends welcome the birth of precious baby daughter Flanagan will have a selection headache because McLoughlin, who struck 1-2 at Croke Park in the 2018 All-Ireland U-20 final win, will feel he has done enough to start. McLoughlin was named Man of the Match despite being on the pitch less than 30 minutes. Attacker Neil Flynn is back in the squad too while versatile half-forward Callum Bolton should be fit again and Jimmy Hyland could yet make it too after calf/Achilles trouble. Flanagan said: "When Brian is in his stride, he's a very good striker of the ball. That's what we were bringing him in to do. "We spoke a lot during the week about our bench having an impact, not just coming in to see a game out but actually impacting the game and he certainly did that." It was a forgettable first 50 minutes or so with Kildare 0-7 to 0-6 up at half-time. Spells of torrential rain left both sets of players soaked and contributed to an error prone spectacle. That explained a lot of the wides and handling errors, while neither side really got their kicking games going. Colm Dalton, Kevin Feely, Tommy Gill and Daniel Flynn all failed to convert decent Kildare goal chances - leaving Flanagan fearing the worst. But McLoughlin was a game changer when he came on and the goal Fermanagh needed in response never arrived. Fermanagh manager Kieran Donnelly said: "Conditions were hard on the players. With us being a mobile team and a young team, it didn't help us on a day like that. We haven't played in those conditions all year." Kildare 1-13 Fermanagh 0-9 Kildare: C Burke; H O'Neill, M Dempsey, K Flynn; B Byrne, D Hyland, J McGrath 1-0; K Feely 0-2, tp, B Gibbons; T Gill, A Beirne 0-1, C Dalton 0-2; R Sinkey, D Kirwan 0-1, D Flynn 0-2. Subs: B McLoughlin 0-5, 1tp for Sinkey 44, J McKevitt for K Flynn 55, N Kelly for Kirwan 63, A Masterson for Gibbons 66. Fermanagh: S McNally; L Flanagan, L Cullen, O Smyth; S McGullion, D McCusker 0-1, J Cassidy; J McDade 0-1, D McGurn 0-1; F O'Brien, R Lyons 0-1, R McCaffrey; Josh Largo Ellis 0-2, G Jones, C Love 0-2. Subs: S Cassidy 0-1 for Jones h/t, C McGee for McCaffrey 50, A Kelm for McCusker 56, Jack Largo Ellis for O'Brien 66, C Cullen for McGullion 68. Ref: K Eannetta (Tyrone).