
State Man records statement win at Punchestown as Constitution Hill flops
The Grade One contest staged a mouthwatering rematch between the Willie Mullins and Nicky Henderson-trained superstars, who both fell in the Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham in March, with the presence of Jeremy Scott's eventual Champion Hurdle heroine Golden Ace adding further spice.
Despite suffering a second successive fall in the Aintree Hurdle, Constitution Hill was a heavily-supported 8-13 favourite to get back on the winning trail on his first trip to Ireland, but he was a spent force from before the home turned and weakened rapidly out of contention.
In contrast, 9-4 shot State Man – who looked to have a second Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham at his mercy when crashing out at the final obstacle at Prestbury Park in mid-March – continued to pour it on in front under Paul Townend and came home with four and three-quarter lengths in hand over Golden Ace.
State Man led from the front to beat the favourite, Constitution Hill, in the Boodles Champion Hurdle. #rteracing
📺 Watch: @rte2 & @rteplayer https://t.co/XnOP6grnB7
📱 Results: https://t.co/dPRVwHr6zR pic.twitter.com/bpFLVlcLBZ
— RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) May 2, 2025
Mullins said: "It's the performance we always thought he had in him. In fairness to Constitution Hill, I don't think he turned up on the day. It's very hard to travel from England after having two falls and things just didn't go right for him.
"Our fella has run his true race and that's been a constant thing in his racing life, he always turns up and runs his race. It was a huge performance.
"He's just very genuine without ever being flashy. I think the cheekpieces have made him a bit flashier than he used to be. He's a lazy horse and cheekpieces just help him.
"Paul has been adamant about this horse for the last few years, people are going on about Lossiemouth and State Man – he's always thought State Man every day of the week and it's been proven.
"I think we were all waiting for this contest and it delivered. We're just delighted."
Watch the Punchestown Festival from Tuesday to Saturday with RTÉ Sport. Coverage begins at 3.30pm for first three days and on Friday at 4pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player. Watch on Saturday from 3pm on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player.
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
a day ago
- Irish Examiner
John Sheridan the new general manager of Fairyhouse
John Sheridan has been appointed general manager of Fairyhouse Racecourse, HRI has confirmed. Sheridan joins from Vodafone Ireland, where he was Commercial Lead for the Consumer Prepay Division. He previously worked with betting firm Betdaq and for five years with Showjumping Ireland as Marketing Manager. Paul Dermody, CEO of HRI Racecourses, said: 'I am delighted to welcome John Sheridan to the role of General Manager at Fairyhouse Racecourse. John joins us at an exciting time for the racecourse team with interest in our flagship festivals increasing and an ever-growing list of race day and non-race day events demonstrating the popularity and appeal of the venue. "John will lead our engagement with the local community, commercial partners, tenants and industry stakeholders to drive Fairyhouse Racecourse on in a collaborative and sustainable way. 'John's commercial experience will bring so much to the role. One of his notable responsibilities at Betdaq was the management of the sponsorship of the Betdaq Champion Hurdle at the Punchestown Festival. John, a Kildare native, also enjoyed a spell as an amateur rider and he rode in a bumper at Fairyhouse in 2006.'


Irish Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Washington Rose tells of grandad who denied Kerry a five-in-a-row All Ireland
Washington Rose Soracha McGrath has revealed late grandfather PJ McGrath told her he always stood by his decision he made as referee at the 1982 All-Ireland Football final. Soracha is the granddaughter of the late PJ McGrath, who refereed the famous All-Ireland Final between Offaly and Kerry in 1982 when the Midlanders famously denied Kerry the five in a row with a late goal from Seamus Darby. Opening up about the famous match, Soracha told us how her late grandfather, who died in 2021, always told her he made the right decision in that moment. She said: 'He always said he only had seconds to read it and everyone else 20 or 30 years to watch back on tapes. He made the call in the moment, and he did the right thing, and you have to stand with the ref at the end of the day. 'In my grandparents' house, my nana Phil is still with us and she will be at the Rose of Tralee with us, there are photos everywhere of my grandad being a referee. 'GAA is kind of like a religion to us. This conversation has always been a big deal. Like going to Croke Park with my grandad, oh my gosh, everyone knew him. It felt like he was the mayor. 'It was so cool to see him in his element. Growing up we'd always hear about this match, and I never really understood it fully. 'But then he passed during Covid and it was always a topic of conversation, and now I understand the importance of it.' The Rose of Tralee will air on Monday 18 and Tuesday 19 August from 8pm on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player. She said she remembers being told about her dad and her family members being 'escorted' from the pitch at the time just in case. 'My dad will still tell me, it was the craziest day ever. It was a crazy day for Kerry people but I think for Offaly people it was the best day of their life.' Soracha opened up about how she is feeling ahead of the final few days of the festival, which will be hosted by Dáithí Ó Sé and Kathryn Thomas. The televised event will take place on 18 Monday and 19 Tuesday, August from 8pm - with a break for the Nine O'Clock News and resuming at 9.35pm - live on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player. 'I'm feeling great about it. I love to chat, so I am looking forward to going on stage. It'll be just a normal chat. I'm not going to think too much about the TV part of it. 'But it'll be a really nice conversation, so I am looking forward to it and it'll be a great experience as well.' Dáithí Ó Sé and Kathryn Thomas steer the ship at the launch of the 2025 Rose of Tralee International Festival as they meet this year's 32 International Roses at MV Cill Airne, North Wall, Dublin. 'I have been watching the festival since I was five years old. Both my parents are from Claremorris in Mayo and every summer we would be shipped to our grandparents. 'My nana Carmel has been the biggest Rose of Tralee fan her whole entire life. She probably always wanted to be a Rose. 'It's always been with me. I moved to the US when I was 13 and every year without fail, we have always watched it. 'Entering the DC selection has been so important to me because it is my journey from Ireland to the US. The US has been in my life for so long and at such a pivotal point. 'Representing Washington DC is such an honour and a privilege,' she added. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.


RTÉ News
2 days ago
- RTÉ News
Kevin Doherty delighted with 'deserved' Drogheda United performance
Kevin Doherty pulled off another Drogheda United win at the Ryan McBride Brandywell Stadium that saw both extra time and penalties. The Dublin-born manager feels the win, secured by three successful penalties, was well earned by the Louth outfit. "I thought it was well deserved," he told RTÉ Sport after Owen Lambe fired home the winning penalty. Referencing the small amount of raucous travelling Drogs fans behind him, Doherty says they were a key factor in the performance. "You're doing it for this. I said that before the game, if we had that coming up here, that would give us a right chance." The ex-Shels player said he felt there was an element of surprise in the performance, grabbing a goal from a smartly played free-kick three minutes in. "Probably surprised them a little bit with the two little lads, if you want to call it, up front. "Considering what everyone thinks about how we play and then even with the set piece. So it was great. But then I thought we were absolutely excellent." Doherty is insistent there was no luck involved, Derry may feel hard done by in some of the decisions that didn't go their way made but it was Drogs who maintained composure in the shoot-out, which Doherty revealed was rehearsed in training this week. "Even the penalties, no luck involved there. We practised them and practised them and practised them all week, all week, just in case. And to be fair, the lads stood up and just slotted them away." FT AET: Derry City 1-1 Drogheda United (0-3 pens) The defending champs return to the quarters in dramatic fashion 📺 📱 — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) August 16, 2025 Doherty feels the draw for his side in the cup has been among the most difficult but he is delighted to have come though it and get over Derry for the second year running in the cup. "The lads were out on their feet. And this is one of the, probably with Shamrock Rovers away, this away is by far the hardest draw and we've come through it and we're in the quarter-final of the cup. "And again, we knocked Derry out of it again, which is great. "We certainly haven't had an easy path so far. A lot of people last year would have thought that, despite the fact that we were the only team that had another Premier Division team in the first round." A few from Doherty's side were among the fortunate who bagged tickets to Oasis this weekend, and he says they will maybe enjoy that before refocusing. "We'll enjoy the trip home. A lot of us are going to Croke Park tomorrow so we'll enjoy that and then we'll get ready and we'll train again." It was a dire end to the FAI Cup for The Candystripes, with two saved and one missed penalty int he shoot-out but Tiernan Lynch isn't going to analyse those moments. "The game is 120 minutes and I'm not going to pick three penalties. It's difficult for pressure and all goes with it," Lynch told RTÉ Sport. The Foylesiders boss says he is still figuring out the decisions made in the game, including Michael Duffy's upending deep into stoppage time and Mark Connolly's disallowed goal, but admits he couldn't ask for more. "Obviously we had a penalty shout at the end. "We scored, which I'm still trying to understand where the infringement was in that. People may find this strange, but I couldn't ask any more of my players tonight. I thought they ran themselves into the ground." 113': Derry 1-1 Drogheda Mark Connolly thought he had the breakthrough but Derry are denied by the referee's whistle #RTESoccer 📺 📱 — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) August 16, 2025 Lynch takes issues with the lateness of the decision on the Connolly header in the 114th minute as well as the decisions on fouls in the box. "Also the fact that it took as long as it did to actually give the decision. "As I say, there's that decision and we thought we had two other penalty shouts. Hugely disappointing. "If there weren't penalties, there weren't penalties. From where I was standing, they looked like penalties. Maybe that's a bias on my side... I still don't understand why that goal wasn't given." Lynch made four changes in the 58th minutes which he felt reduced the first-half passivity of his side and ultimately made hero of the day, Luke Dennison work. "I thought the first half was just a wee bit too passive. We moved it and moved it and didn't ask enough questions. "I thought the second half then, we just looked like a totally different team. I thought we made their back three work. We made their goalkeeper work.