
Blue Bolt strike sees Keane waste no time in celebrating Juddmonte position
It was the first time the six-time Irish champion had donned the famous colours of the Abdullah family since his appointment was announced on Monday, as he took the reins aboard Andrew Balding's Windsor scorer Blue Bolt, who was sent off the 6-4 second-favourite for the Darley EBF Fillies' Novice Stakes.
The Irishman left little to chance with a positive ride and having asked his mount to quicken and put the race to bed passing the two-furlong pole, Blue Bolt soon put distance between his rivals.
Although seeing her advantage shortened by Roger Varian' Majaz in the closing stages, Blue Bolt was still a length and a quarter clear at the winning post to help rubber stamp Keane's position as first choice to one of the leading ownership operations in racing.
His first ride and it's a first winner for Colin Keane in the @JuddmonteFarms silks since his appointment!
Blue Bolt looks to be a filly going places as she doubles up with a taking performance at @NewburyRacing for @AndrewBalding2! pic.twitter.com/ts6QHp1vh9
— At The Races (@AtTheRaces) June 12, 2025
Keane said: 'It's the perfect start and she is a nice filly who was a good winner the last day and seems to have stepped forward again.
'She's very uncomplicated, she just gallops on and is a nice filly. It felt very easy for her in the first half of the race and I was trying to take her back a little bit and she just got a bit lonely once she had quickened away from them. But I would say she is a filly with a nice future.
'I'm very privileged to be asked to wear these colours and they are iconic in racing. I have grown up looking at them and their farm is only up the road so I'm in a very privileged position.'
Although this was Keane's first ride on a member of the Juddmonte string in an official capacity, he has twice tasted Classic honours in their silks when winning the Irish 2,000 Guineas with both Siskin in 2020 and John and Thady Gosden's Field Of Gold only last month.
It is the latter that could prove Keane's trump card at Royal Ascot next week and speaking to Sky Sports Racing he added: 'He was very good on the day (in the Irish Guineas) and he felt like a proper horse. I don't think I've ridden one as good as him to be honest.
'Only time will tell, but I think a fast pace would help him and bring him along further (in the St James's Palace) and hopefully he's then good enough to pick them off.'
Earlier on the card George Boughey's 8-11 favourite Moonfall opened his account at the third attempt when a two-length winner of the first division of the Local IQ EBF Novice Stakes, while Charlie Appleby's heavy odds-on favourite Time To Turn was turned over in the second division by Clive Cox's 28-1 outsider A Bit Of Spirit.
Hashtags

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

Leader Live
39 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Saba Desert catches the eye with winning start at Sandown
The Godolphin-owned and bred colt is by Dubawi and out of Finespun, a daughter of Luca Cumani's Irish 1,000 Guineas winner Gossamer. Godolphin and Appleby chose the same race as a career starting point for Native Trail in 2021, who went on to win two Group Ones by the end of his two-year-old year and was the Irish 2,000 Guineas winner the following term. Now then … 👀 Dubawi colt 𝐒𝐚𝐛𝐚 𝐃𝐞𝐬𝐞𝐫𝐭 makes a most impressive racecourse debut @Sandownpark 🔥 A certain Native Trail won this in 2021 for @godolphin 🔵🔵🔵 — Racing TV (@RacingTV) June 13, 2025 Those are big shoes to fill, but under William Buick the 4-7 favourite looked potentially nice in prevailing by three-quarters of a length to get his own juvenile campaign under way. 'It was important to get some cover on him and do everything as you'd want to first time out,' Buick said. 'He's a very fast horse, with a good attitude and a good mind in everything he does. I was very pleased with what he did there. 'He's got plenty of pace. When you ask him, he's there for you. He's a very talented colt.' Rising Power also made a winning start in the British EBF Novice Stakes, to give Godolphin, Appleby and Buick a double. The Wootton Bassett colt was sent off as the 1-2 favourite over a bare-minimum five-furlong trip. He found an adversary in Rod Millman's 2-1 chance Killavia, but after the two locked horns it was Rising Power who took a three-quarter-length verdict. 'He was very gutsy. It was a little bit harder work than I probably would have liked or expected, but he's a horse that probably wants six furlongs now, or even seven,' Buick told Racing TV. 'He ran against some speedy types there and showed his quality, that's always good to have, he battled on and kept responding the whole way. 'He's not the biggest horse, but he's got a big heart.'


North Wales Chronicle
an hour ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Saba Desert catches the eye with winning start at Sandown
The Godolphin-owned and bred colt is by Dubawi and out of Finespun, a daughter of Luca Cumani's Irish 1,000 Guineas winner Gossamer. Godolphin and Appleby chose the same race as a career starting point for Native Trail in 2021, who went on to win two Group Ones by the end of his two-year-old year and was the Irish 2,000 Guineas winner the following term. Now then … 👀 Dubawi colt 𝐒𝐚𝐛𝐚 𝐃𝐞𝐬𝐞𝐫𝐭 makes a most impressive racecourse debut @Sandownpark 🔥 A certain Native Trail won this in 2021 for @godolphin 🔵🔵🔵 — Racing TV (@RacingTV) June 13, 2025 Those are big shoes to fill, but under William Buick the 4-7 favourite looked potentially nice in prevailing by three-quarters of a length to get his own juvenile campaign under way. 'It was important to get some cover on him and do everything as you'd want to first time out,' Buick said. 'He's a very fast horse, with a good attitude and a good mind in everything he does. I was very pleased with what he did there. 'He's got plenty of pace. When you ask him, he's there for you. He's a very talented colt.' Rising Power also made a winning start in the British EBF Novice Stakes, to give Godolphin, Appleby and Buick a double. The Wootton Bassett colt was sent off as the 1-2 favourite over a bare-minimum five-furlong trip. He found an adversary in Rod Millman's 2-1 chance Killavia, but after the two locked horns it was Rising Power who took a three-quarter-length verdict. 'He was very gutsy. It was a little bit harder work than I probably would have liked or expected, but he's a horse that probably wants six furlongs now, or even seven,' Buick told Racing TV. 'He ran against some speedy types there and showed his quality, that's always good to have, he battled on and kept responding the whole way. 'He's not the biggest horse, but he's got a big heart.'

The National
an hour ago
- The National
Celtic man's classy farewell involving Lawwell and Michael Nicholson
The Irishman recently departed his role as Professional Player Pathway Manager at the Parkhead club to join Swansea City as assistant to Alan Sheehan. O'Dea took to social media platform X after his Celtic exit was confirmed, outlining the roles of Peter Lawwell, Michael Nicholson, Ange Postecoglou, Brendan Rodgers, Paul Tisdale and Chris McCart played in his time as a coach and then pathway manager. Read more: He said: "It's time to take another step in my career, which means leaving the club I love. "I've had an incredible time and been given the best education, and there are so many people I'm grateful to. "Peter, Michael, Ange, Brendan, Paul are just a few and a special mention for Chris McCart, who's always supported me so much. I'll just be a fan again, and I can honestly say the club is in a great place and the people there make it what it is - family. "Not a 'goodbye' but a 'see you again'." O'Dea spent six years as a player at Celtic before rejoining the club in 2019, initially as under-19s manager. "I am delighted," he told after taking up his new role in Wales. "I knew of the interest and I spoke with Alan [Sheehan] a number of weeks ago. "Obviously, I have been with a club I have grown up in, so it was difficult to come to terms with the decision in terms of leaving, but once I spoke to him and had an insight into what the club is wanting to do, I wanted to join. "I had a good understanding of the club anyway, but it's a really exciting project, one I wanted to be a part of, and I am delighted it is done now. "I would not have left Celtic unless it was for something I felt very strongly about. Of course, the club and its prestige and the intensity of it is something I am used to, and I wanted to work with and for Alan. "You combine those two things, and the conversations I have had with other people at the club who will be working with us, and it just fits. It's something I am really happy to be part of."