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Minnie Hauk secures an 11th Oaks success for Aidan O'Brien at Epsom

Minnie Hauk secures an 11th Oaks success for Aidan O'Brien at Epsom

Irish Timesa day ago

Aidan O'Brien
teed up perfectly for the Betfred Epsom Derby with Oaks glory for Minnie Hauk on Friday, a success that also completed a Group One double for jockey Ryan Moore.
After Moore on Jan Brueghel upset Calandagan in the Coronation Cup, Minnie Hauk delivered O'Brien a remarkable 11th Oaks success when beating her stable companion Whirl.
The Irish trainer made history in 2012 when completing the Oaks, Coronation Cup, Derby hat-trick and will try to pull off the same feat on Saturday. He is represented by his trio of Delacroix, The Lion In Winter and Lambourn in the colts' classic.
It was O'Brien's 46th English Classic and the Ballydoyle team outpointed their Godolphin rivals, whose hot favourite Desert Flower looked all at sea on the Epsom contours before staying on to finish third.
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Minnie Hauk made 'abnormal' progress from her previous Chester success according to her trainer and at one point looked likely to win with authority.
However, after hanging down the camber, her comparative inexperience allowed Whirl to rally. Wayne Lordan had been keen to make the running on his mount and she showed admirable resolution to make her stable companion fight hard for a neck success.
'She's a very classy filly. She was just ready to run at Chester, she barely made it, but she made abnormal improvement from Chester, which we thought she might – it was all class rather than stamina or fitness, she just has a lot of class,' O'Brien said.
'Whirl ran a great race, she stays, she's by Wootton Bassett and it is very unusual what they are doing, they are speed horses but a lot are staying as well. She was fighting back again at the line, that's incredible really,' he added.
EPSOM, ENGLAND - JUNE 06: Ryan Moore riding Jan Brueghel (R) win The Betfred Coronation Cup during Ladies Day at Epsom Downs Racecourse on June 06, 2025 in Epsom, England. (Photo by)
Jan Brueghel progressed to Classic success in last year's St Leger and although he lost his unbeaten record over an inadequate trip on his seasonal reappearance it set him up ideally for more top-flight success here to earn O'Brien a 10th success in the race.
The French star Calandagan got a perfect tow into the final furlong but couldn't overhaul his Irish rival, who rallied to win by half-a-length on the easy ground conditions.
'He was unbeaten last year and he was the biggest penalty kick ever in the Melbourne Cup, but didn't get to run [after failing a pre-race veterinary test in Australia],' O'Brien said.
'At Group One level he is a mile-and-a-half-plus horse and he's a very tough horse who would still be unbeaten if I hadn't run him at the Curragh,' he added.
The international weekend Classic action finishes minutes into Sunday morning in upstate New York as the final leg of the US Triple Crown, the Belmont Stakes, takes place in Saratoga.
With Belmont Park still being redeveloped, its most famous race has been moved again, and the result is a drop in trip to 10 furlongs to suit Saratoga's layout.
The race off just after midnight on Saturday (12.04am Irish-time) sees the first three from the Kentucky Derby – Sovereignty, Journalism and Baeza – renew rivalry.
In the interim since Churchill Downs, Journalism has won the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico, the second leg of the Triple Crown, a race bypassed by Sovereignty to wait for the Belmont.

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Cork boss Pat Ryan makes penalty admission after his side reclaim Munster title
Cork boss Pat Ryan makes penalty admission after his side reclaim Munster title

Irish Daily Mirror

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  • Irish Daily Mirror

Cork boss Pat Ryan makes penalty admission after his side reclaim Munster title

Jubilant Cork boss Pat Ryan hailed his side's fighting qualities as they bounced back from a 16-point drubbing to take the Munster title. Limerick's long reign in the province is over after a dramatic penalty shootout saw their seven-in-a-row dreams dashed as Cork ran out 3-2 winners with the sides were deadlocked at 2-27 to 1-30 after extra time as Darragh Fitzgibbon's last gasp 65 saved a draw for the Rebels. It came just three weeks after Limerick destroyed them at the TUS Gaelic Grounds in the round robin phase, but they're now Munster champions for the first time since 2018. Ryan said: 'We didn't fight the last time we came up here and the lads, look, obviously they worked really hard, we fought really, really hard. 'It just took penalties to separate us and we're just delighted to get the trophy.' He added: 'We know that we're a really, really good team. But it's the same with every other team, there's loads of good teams out there and it's all about the attitude you bring and whether you're going to fight. 'We fought today really, really hard. We were missing a couple of fellas, a couple of bodies came on and sometimes that actually freshens up the team. 'I thought the lads came off the bench today and did a fantastic job. Robbie O'Flynn, Tommy O'Connell, Shane Kingston, I thought they were really, really good.' Cork scored three of the four penalties they took as Conor Lehane, Shane Kingston and Alan Connolly converted while Fitzgibbon saw his effort saved, though Ryan admitted they hadn't gone through a penalty routine collectively in the build-up to the game. 'None, none,' he said. "All the lads are practising a lot, I think. We had really, really good confidence in them. Eoin Downey probably practised more penalties than anyone.' Ryan has been at pains to keep a lid on the hype on Leeside this year, particularly when they stormed to a League title, and he said: "We won by penalties against a brilliant Limerick team. Do you know what I mean? 'This is just the start. This is just one thing. We move on to the All-Ireland series, the semi-finals. We know we're a really good team. 'We saw what we were like when we were not at it three weeks ago. Three or four weeks ago. That's all to play for. We're really looking forward to going to the Leinster final.' Ahead of an All-Ireland semi-final on July 5 as Limerick head for a quarter-final, Ryan added: "This is one less game. This is probably three or four weeks off. It's probably going to take a bit of managing now. That's something that we haven't accounted for before. 'Limerick have plenty of experience of how they deal with that. That's your four weeks off to manage properly and probably get a bit of advice from fellas that have done it before.'

From the glorious chaos of the Gaelic Grounds, the Rebels rise again
From the glorious chaos of the Gaelic Grounds, the Rebels rise again

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

From the glorious chaos of the Gaelic Grounds, the Rebels rise again

Everything about it was staggering: the suffocating intensity, the twists, the spectacular scores and the crazy misses. Cork and Limerick were locked in a clench from teatime until shortly before bedtime and neither of them knew how to let go. The longest night in the history of the Munster Championship ended with a penalty shoot-out and a season set ablaze. Hallelujah. After being eviscerated by Limerick in the round-robin phase, Cork reclaimed everything they had lost three weeks ago. All the doubts about their temperament and their stomach for the fight were obliterated. This group of Cork players couldn't afford to fall over again. They stood up to everything Limerick could muster. The cruelty of penalties is a modern phenomenon in the GAA. For an epic contest such as this to be decided by such a capricious tiebreaker is a function of the condensed calendar and, no doubt, there will be another chorus of dissent. There should be. In the event, Limerick's third and fourth penalties missed the target; in between Alan Connolly buried a penalty with characteristic panache. After nearly 100 minutes, that was the only difference. READ MORE The psychological capital for Cork is incalculable. After their late collapse in Ennis and their abject surrender in the Gaelic Grounds three weeks ago, there were widespread doubts about Cork's credentials as serious contenders. This performance was the only credible answer. Aaron Gillane scores a late point for Limerick. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho The teams were level 17 times in all, but it was Cork who found the equaliser at the end of normal time and at the conclusion of extra-time. Limerick had chances to finish the game in 70 minutes, but Darragh O'Donovan dropped a shot short and Aaron Gillane missed a free from an acute angle. Cork had earned their reprieve. For Limerick there is an obvious cost. For the first time since their breakthrough season in 2018 they must navigate a quarter-final in a fortnight's time, and for an ageing team that is a tax they would prefer not to pay. John Kiely has never made any secret of his fondness for the month long break granted to provincial winners but they must do without it now. At various times in the second half of normal time, when they were playing with the wind, it looked like Limerick would assert control and kick on. But they couldn't. Cork's four-point half-time lead was wiped out in just 11 minutes, but from there until the finish they never led by more than a point. In normal time they managed just 28 shots from play when they would usually expect to register that many scores, or more. When Cork beat them in the round-robin game in Páirc Uí Chaoimh 13 months ago they were the first team to have more shots than Limerick in the Kiely era. Here, they exceeded Limerick's total by eight shots. For Limerick, a team whose potency is built on volume, this was a massive systems failure. Primary possession had been a massive problem for Cork three weeks ago, but that core issue was successfully addressed too. Cork won 59 per cent of their own puck-outs and restricted Limerick to 62 per cent on their own ball; that game that a platform to compete. Cork's Tommy O'Connell in action against Limerick's Barry Nash. Photograph: Laszlo Geczo/Inpho The biggest difference, though, was Cork's aggression and abrasiveness and relentlessness. From the start they stood in the middle of the ring and traded body blows. They were ravenous for turnovers and flew into contests for ball on the ground. This was the fundamental stuff that Pat Ryan has demanded from this group for the last three years but had been so painfully absent three weeks ago. Cian Lynch was hounded by the outstanding Ciaran Joyce and a posse of lieutenants. Diarmaid Byrnes was tormented by Seamus Harnedy, just as he was in the game 13 months ago, and eventually the Limerick wing back was taken off. Kyle Hayes was magnificent in the opening 20 minutes, but by half-time Shane Barrett had scored 1-3 from play on his watch, and for the remainder of the game Hayes was just another bamboozled mortal, going around with his tongue hanging out like everybody else. In a game like this, with both teams going at each other like rutting stags, the referee was bound to be part of the story. Members of both management teams made a bolt for Tomas Walsh as he left the field at half-time and ended up getting stuck in each other. There was pushing and jostling and jawing and shaping and all of it was out or order. It was clear during the first half, though, that both managers had become increasingly wound up by Walsh's refusal to penalise obvious fouls – or at least when it suited them. The fourth official and the linesman on the Mackey Stand side were on the receiving end of constant feedback and hot takes. Limerick's Cian Lynch after the game. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho Just like Brian Cody's Kilkenny years ago, Kiely's Limerick are usually sanguine about matches where the physical contact is unregulated and Cork clearly came to the Gaelic Grounds with the stomach for a battle. Walsh granted permission for illegal contact all over the field and both teams flaked away. In these situations, though, everyone loves the spectacle until they're gasping for a free and there's an unpenalized foul in front of the goal for an offence that had also gone unpenalized in the middle of the field. For Cork's first goal, Brian Hayes and Patrick Horgan were both mangled by Limerick defenders, but Walsh's hand wasn't raised for an advantage before Shane Barrett whipped the ball to the net. There were no laws in the jungle. Walsh booked four players in the first 10 minutes of the second half but there was no end to the viral fouling. It would have been the most delicious of ironies if the game had been decided by a free, but Gillane's effort from an acute angle in the fourth minute of stoppage time flew wide of the far post. Limerick will feel like they blew it, which is the same feeling they had against Cork twice last year. The wheel has turned again.

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