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Lambourn delivers workmanlike performance to complete Epsom-Curragh Derby double

Lambourn delivers workmanlike performance to complete Epsom-Curragh Derby double

Irish Times8 hours ago

It was workmanlike but Lambourn ultimately landed Sunday's €1.25 million Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby and became the 20th colt to complete the Epsom-Curragh 'Blue Riband' double.
The 8/13 favourite ground out a three-parts-of-a-length victory over his 28/1 stable companion Serious Contender, with the Epsom runner-up Lazy Griff in third and Tennessee Stud fourth in front of an official crowd of 11,200.
Ryan Moore discarded Lambourn at Epsom, allowing Wayne Lordan in for a career-defining victory in his place, but took the reins this time and became the first jockey to win Ireland's premier classic three years in a row.
It was also a landmark moment for
Aidan O'Brien
, enjoying a 17th win in the race, and completing an unprecedented hat-trick of Europe's three major Derby races in one season.
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At the start of June, Camille Pissarro landed the Prix Du Jockey Club at Chantilly, six days before Lambourn made most of the running at Epsom.
As widely anticipated, the month ended with a classic trifecta on home ground and if Lambourn's performance was more stolid than spectacular, the substance of the overall achievement is massive.
At 55, and almost 30 years at the helm of Ballydoyle, O'Brien's grip on Europe's major classic prizes has never looked tighter.
Sunday's race was his second Curragh classic of the season so far, a tally equalled in France and coming on the back of a Derby-Oaks double at Epsom.
Lambourn is a son of O'Brien's 2014 double Derby winner Australia, who's by the legendary Galileo, who managed the feat also in 2001.
Aidan O'Brien and Ryan Moore with Lambourn after victory in The Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho
It's the sort of lineage that's likely to only extend and the Irishman's partnership with Moore also shows no sign of slowing down.
Saturday's Pretty Polly Stakes success for Whirl was their 150th Group/Grade One victory together. Number 151 mightn't have been spectacular enough to feature too highly in their highlights reel. But there was a remorselessness to it that surely resonates with both men.
Usually economical with his post-race comments, Moore was more vocal than normal and keen to reassure that Lambourn's performance was much more controlled than it might have looked.
'It wasn't pretty, but he's got a big engine,' said the Englishman, who insisted he was 'always in control' on a straightforward colt that stays very well.
Moore was keen to make the most of those virtues and quickly bustled the Epsom hero up to the front alongside the English outsider Sir Dinadan. Turning into the straight, the favourite's rider quickly got animated and briefly looked vulnerable to Serious Contender.
Considering Serious Contender had previously been beaten in an Ascot handicap it was a remarkable step up in performance and only in the final 100 metres did Lambourn assert.
If none of it crackled with the sort of excitement that greeted previous 'sexier' winners such as Nijinsky or Montjeu, it was a welcome Irish Derby outcome for a race under pressure.
Only Serious Contender disrupted the first three from Epsom, a result that suggests it is Europe's best three-year-old form at 1½ miles right now. On a warm day there was also a healthy-looking crowd.
Ryan Moore after completing his Irish Derby hat-trick. Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho
In a show of unity, Moore ventured outside his usual post-race repertoire and commented: 'I grew up watching Irish Derbys and the great horses who have won it, so it is a really important race. It would be great if it could get back to where it should be.'
Coolmore Stud supremo John Magnier was present and O'Brien urged more positivity about both the race and the redeveloped Curragh opened six years ago at a cost of €81.5 million. As for his sixth dual-Derby winner, all options are open.
'He's a little bit laid-back, a little bit lazy and you could see up the straight he was waiting all the time but that's him. Ryan thought he would keep pulling out and he was pricking his ears all the way.
'He could be a King George horse, he could be an Arc horse. He gets the trip well and is very sound and very genuine,' O'Brien said.
'We minded the second horse for a handicap in Ascot that we thought he couldn't get beat and then a horse came and beat us that was entered in the King George, so it just goes to show what can happen,' he added.
Having won in 2023 on Auguste Rodin, and last year on Los Angeles, Moore again had to work harder than might have been anticipated. But having overlooked Lambourn at Epsom he's unlikely to make the same mistake again.
'He stays well, is straightforward and is typical of his sire and how Aidan trains them. He'll keep getting them to progress, to be consistent and he'll keep running big races all year.
'He hasn't done a huge amount there and I just had to keep him awake. If was in front he might have focused a bit better. He was lazy out there today but has loads of ability and was always in control,' Moore said.

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Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought
Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought

Irish Examiner

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Letters to the Editor: All-Ireland victory cannot be bought

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Royal run to last four could not have been foreseen
Royal run to last four could not have been foreseen

Irish Examiner

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Royal run to last four could not have been foreseen

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Kieran McGeeney rues 15 minutes he'd "like to forget"
Kieran McGeeney rues 15 minutes he'd "like to forget"

RTÉ News​

time4 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Kieran McGeeney rues 15 minutes he'd "like to forget"

Kieran McGeeney reflected on a 15 minutes he'd "like to forget" after Armagh were overwhelmed by Kerry in the second half of the All-Ireland quarter-final. All appeared to be going swimmingly for Armagh five minutes into the second half, a burst of scores from Rian O'Neill, Darragh McMullan and Oisín Conaty pushing them into a five-point lead. However, 15 minutes later, their campaign was on life-support and the game almost done and dusted. Kerry racked up 0-14 without reply, with just two two-pointers included in that haul, as Armagh were unable to secure possession from their own kickout. "It was probably a disappointing 15 minutes, that's what turned the tide," McGeeney told RTÉ Sport afterwards. "They (Armagh players) never stopped fighting so you have to give them credit. It was just a 15 minute period where Kerry were devastating and we just couldn't get our hands on the ball in the middle. "I think it was 11 out of our 13 kickouts (in that spell) that we lost. If you do that in this game, you have to commit for it and then you leave holes in behind. "Seán (O'Shea), no matter what he hit, was putting them over and everybody else was joining in. "It's a 15 minutes you'd like to forget. But it happens in sport. We've done it ourselves against other teams, so you just have to take it on the chin and move on. "For the first 45 minutes we were very well on top, but the only time to be on top really is at the end." Of that 15 minute spell, when Armagh were unable to gather possession on their own kickout, McGeeney shrugged that there was little that could be done on the sideline. "Listen, that's what we (the public) want. We just want to be able to kick the ball out and make it 50:50. People find that more exciting. That's the game and Kerry were better at it today that us. "I suppose we kept kicking it to the wings. If I could pinpoint the reason for you, we would have stopped it. We were too tied onto the sidelines. They were quicker on the breaking balls at that stage. "It was just their ability to punish. Seanie had just one of those days. He couldn't miss. That's just what happens. "And then three or four goal chances on our side that we miss. It's frustrating but we've all been around sport a long time. Outside of the Dublins and Kerrys, we lose more than we win." In the same seat 10 minutes earlier, his Kerry counterpart Jack O'Connor had taken aim at his team's critics. Kerry were in the rare position of underdogs amid an air of fatalism following their loss to Meath, but McGeeney said he didn't pay any heed. "Not really, it was the Kerry boys that were talking them down, so we wouldn't pass much remarks. "That's what Kerry do. My in-laws are from there. I would hear it direct. "Everyone was saying they weren't a team - National League champions, Munster champions, the highest scoring forward, the highest scorers going into it (the game). "Eamonn (Fitzmaurice) and the boys can write that stuff. But no one really believes it." McGeeney, after years of hard-toil and near-misses, helped deliver the county's second All-Ireland title 11 months ago. With their title defence done, the manager was in fairly reflective mood. "Listen, they've won an All-Ireland. They're only one of two (Armagh) teams in 140 odd years that have won it. They can hold their heads up high surely. "They've been one of the most consistent teams over the last three or four years. You get a few years to push at the top and you have to make the best of it. "Between Dublin and Kerry, they've won 50% of All-Ireland finals. So, you're up against a huge thing. "It's going to be a disappointing for them today. But they've got an All-Ireland medal in their back pocket. "And I'm sure those younger fellas there, and most of the squad, will want to push on and get another one." As for his own position at the end of 11 years in charge, McGeeney showed no indication he was getting tired of it. "I sit down every year and it's always about players. It's all about players, first and foremost, and what they want. And how much they want to push on. "My appetite for football has always been the same. I love it. I enjoy it. Despite the abuse. "It's just one of the things, like. I don't know. Maybe it's an addiction."

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