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Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success
Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

South Wales Guardian

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • South Wales Guardian

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Second on her Navan debut in early June, Michael O'Callaghan's filly then finished fifth behind the exciting Venetian Sun in the Albany Stakes less than a fortnight ago later. On the strength of that three-length defeat the daughter of A'Ali was a 10-11 favourite to make it third time lucky under Colin Keane and while odds-on backers were made to sweat by the strong-finishing Yellowstone Lake, Fairy Oak clung on by a neck. 'She was entitled to win her maiden and Colin said she sharpened up plenty from Ascot. He thought after Ascot she wanted seven furlongs, but said six was fine today,' said O'Callaghan. 'He thought the ground slowed her down a little bit and she'd be better on proper fast ground like it was in Ascot. She was probably in front long enough and she felt the last 100 yards. 'She'll step back up into stakes company and showed at Ascot that she's capable of operating at that level. She's in the Lowther and the Moyglare and she's a real two-year-old.' Time Bender caused a 33-1 upset in the Irish EBF Auction Series Maiden. A bargain basement yearling purchase at €2,500, the Gustav Klimt colt pulled a length and three-quarters clear of the chasing pack to make a winning debut for trainer William Durkan and jockey Chris Hayes. Assistant trainer Gary Bannon said: 'He always worked reasonably well and has got stronger since May. We were planning to run him in a barrier trial that got cancelled, so we'd no option but to come here. 'He's for sale. We have the mare at home and it's a nice family.'

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success
Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

North Wales Chronicle

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • North Wales Chronicle

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Second on her Navan debut in early June, Michael O'Callaghan's filly then finished fifth behind the exciting Venetian Sun in the Albany Stakes less than a fortnight ago later. On the strength of that three-length defeat the daughter of A'Ali was a 10-11 favourite to make it third time lucky under Colin Keane and while odds-on backers were made to sweat by the strong-finishing Yellowstone Lake, Fairy Oak clung on by a neck. 'She was entitled to win her maiden and Colin said she sharpened up plenty from Ascot. He thought after Ascot she wanted seven furlongs, but said six was fine today,' said O'Callaghan. 'He thought the ground slowed her down a little bit and she'd be better on proper fast ground like it was in Ascot. She was probably in front long enough and she felt the last 100 yards. 'She'll step back up into stakes company and showed at Ascot that she's capable of operating at that level. She's in the Lowther and the Moyglare and she's a real two-year-old.' Time Bender caused a 33-1 upset in the Irish EBF Auction Series Maiden. A bargain basement yearling purchase at €2,500, the Gustav Klimt colt pulled a length and three-quarters clear of the chasing pack to make a winning debut for trainer William Durkan and jockey Chris Hayes. Assistant trainer Gary Bannon said: 'He always worked reasonably well and has got stronger since May. We were planning to run him in a barrier trial that got cancelled, so we'd no option but to come here. 'He's for sale. We have the mare at home and it's a nice family.'

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success
Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Leader Live

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Leader Live

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Second on her Navan debut in early June, Michael O'Callaghan's filly then finished fifth behind the exciting Venetian Sun in the Albany Stakes less than a fortnight ago later. On the strength of that three-length defeat the daughter of A'Ali was a 10-11 favourite to make it third time lucky under Colin Keane and while odds-on backers were made to sweat by the strong-finishing Yellowstone Lake, Fairy Oak clung on by a neck. 'She was entitled to win her maiden and Colin said she sharpened up plenty from Ascot. He thought after Ascot she wanted seven furlongs, but said six was fine today,' said O'Callaghan. 'He thought the ground slowed her down a little bit and she'd be better on proper fast ground like it was in Ascot. She was probably in front long enough and she felt the last 100 yards. 'She'll step back up into stakes company and showed at Ascot that she's capable of operating at that level. She's in the Lowther and the Moyglare and she's a real two-year-old.' Time Bender caused a 33-1 upset in the Irish EBF Auction Series Maiden. A bargain basement yearling purchase at €2,500, the Gustav Klimt colt pulled a length and three-quarters clear of the chasing pack to make a winning debut for trainer William Durkan and jockey Chris Hayes. Assistant trainer Gary Bannon said: 'He always worked reasonably well and has got stronger since May. We were planning to run him in a barrier trial that got cancelled, so we'd no option but to come here. 'He's for sale. We have the mare at home and it's a nice family.'

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success
Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Rhyl Journal

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Rhyl Journal

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Second on her Navan debut in early June, Michael O'Callaghan's filly then finished fifth behind the exciting Venetian Sun in the Albany Stakes less than a fortnight ago later. On the strength of that three-length defeat the daughter of A'Ali was a 10-11 favourite to make it third time lucky under Colin Keane and while odds-on backers were made to sweat by the strong-finishing Yellowstone Lake, Fairy Oak clung on by a neck. 'She was entitled to win her maiden and Colin said she sharpened up plenty from Ascot. He thought after Ascot she wanted seven furlongs, but said six was fine today,' said O'Callaghan. 'He thought the ground slowed her down a little bit and she'd be better on proper fast ground like it was in Ascot. She was probably in front long enough and she felt the last 100 yards. 'She'll step back up into stakes company and showed at Ascot that she's capable of operating at that level. She's in the Lowther and the Moyglare and she's a real two-year-old.' Time Bender caused a 33-1 upset in the Irish EBF Auction Series Maiden. A bargain basement yearling purchase at €2,500, the Gustav Klimt colt pulled a length and three-quarters clear of the chasing pack to make a winning debut for trainer William Durkan and jockey Chris Hayes. Assistant trainer Gary Bannon said: 'He always worked reasonably well and has got stronger since May. We were planning to run him in a barrier trial that got cancelled, so we'd no option but to come here. 'He's for sale. We have the mare at home and it's a nice family.'

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success
Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Glasgow Times

time17-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Glasgow Times

Fairy Oak holds on for Leopardstown maiden success

Second on her Navan debut in early June, Michael O'Callaghan's filly then finished fifth behind the exciting Venetian Sun in the Albany Stakes less than a fortnight ago later. On the strength of that three-length defeat the daughter of A'Ali was a 10-11 favourite to make it third time lucky under Colin Keane and while odds-on backers were made to sweat by the strong-finishing Yellowstone Lake, Fairy Oak clung on by a neck. 'She was entitled to win her maiden and Colin said she sharpened up plenty from Ascot. He thought after Ascot she wanted seven furlongs, but said six was fine today,' said O'Callaghan. 'He thought the ground slowed her down a little bit and she'd be better on proper fast ground like it was in Ascot. She was probably in front long enough and she felt the last 100 yards. 'She'll step back up into stakes company and showed at Ascot that she's capable of operating at that level. She's in the Lowther and the Moyglare and she's a real two-year-old.' Time Bender caused a 33-1 upset in the Irish EBF Auction Series Maiden. A bargain basement yearling purchase at €2,500, the Gustav Klimt colt pulled a length and three-quarters clear of the chasing pack to make a winning debut for trainer William Durkan and jockey Chris Hayes. Assistant trainer Gary Bannon said: 'He always worked reasonably well and has got stronger since May. We were planning to run him in a barrier trial that got cancelled, so we'd no option but to come here. 'He's for sale. We have the mare at home and it's a nice family.'

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