
Robin Goodfellow's racing tips: Best bets for Tuesday, July 15
Beverley
Robin Goodfellow
2.30 Monica's Lad
3.00 Pearl Fortune
3.30 QUIRKE ON PAROLE (nap)
4.00 Jack Of Clubs
4.30 Pole Star
5.00 Sunny Orange
Nottingham
Robin Goodfellow
2.10 Recobella
2.40 Jacquelina (nb)
3.10 Eclipser
3.40 Secret Sonata
4.10 Mrs Trump
4.42 Two B Tanned
5.13 Read All About It
Gimcrack
2.10 Sassy Glory
2.40 ABATE (nap)
3.10 Eclipser
3.40 Just Queen High
4.10 Four Adaay
4.42 Surprised
5.13 Read All About It
Thirsk
Robin Goodfellow
5.30 Atmosphere
6.00 Calafiori
6.30 The Kamikaze King
7.00 Harry Palmer
7.30 Bette Davis Eyes
8.00 Brazilian Belle
8.30 Lunar Power
9.00 Langholm
Gimcrack
5.30 Miss Yorkshire
6.00 Liverpool Star
6.30 Yorkshire Glory
7.00 Harry Palmer
7.30 Tardaff
8.00 Tiva (nb)
8.30 Daaris
9.00 Langholm
NEWMARKET – 5.30 ATMOSPHERE (nap); 6.00 Mwaki (nb)
NORTHERNER – 8.00 Tiva (nb); 9.00 WITHOUT DELAY (nap)
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
33 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Robert MacIntyre opens up on his chances of winning The Open - and why his explosive personality HELPS him as he targets £2.3m purse
The invitation from Bob MacIntyre to allow your imagination to run wild was too good to turn down but it also came with a serious warning. MacIntyre left North Berwick on Sunday in mood that could kindly be called volcanic. His defence of The Genesis Scottish Open title, won with such joy in 2024, had ended miserably – his game, he said, was 'horrific' and five words spun around his mind during a tortuous back nine: get me out of here. In the end, he finished 17 shots off the pace but his personal disgust was obvious. There was no point trying to engage in small talk or those close MacIntyre knew full well not to attempt to offer any words of consolation as the fury fizzed within. Losing is part of a golfer's life; in many ways, they are similar to jockeys in that the good days, those moments in the sun, must be embraced. How they deal with those losses, though, is intriguing and MacIntyre was only too happy to provide a window into his world. 'I can do whatever I want for an hour,' he explained. 'Just anything I want.' It begged the obvious question: like what? 'You can break things,' he said with a smile that left you wondering whether he was serious. 'I can literally do whatever I want for an hour. After that hour is gone, my job's done. For an hour and a half before my round, two hours before my round, I'm preparing – so nobody gets in my way. 'It's warm-up, stretching, gym work, all of that. So there's a seven or eight-hour window when I'm working. If you have a bad day at work, you'll be annoyed, won't you? It's been difficult in the past to reset, but nowadays, there's so many tournaments, you don't know what's coming the next week. 'Actually, I thought Saturday, Sunday, I played better than I did Thursday, Friday. The scores didn't show that, but I wasn't in the thick of it, so there was no buzz for me. Sunday just wasn't a good day, but I'm here this week – and I'm as ready as I can be.' This exchange was all good natured, his audience laughing at times. Some might not like the idea he is so combustible behind-closed-doors but, equally, would he be the player he is – one with genuine potential of becoming a Major winner – without that flame burning within? 'I'm fiery on the golf course when I'm in tournament rounds,' he agreed. 'I'll drop a few bad words in there! I'll hit the bag. I'll say some harsh things, but that's what gets me going. If I walk around and I'm all happy I just made a double bogey or people are clapping, thanks very much, that's not me. 'I'm needing to smash something up. I want to rip a glove. I do something to get that anger out. It's better out than in for me. Some people, it's better for them holding it. But, for me, it's get it out and then just do not let it affect the next shot. Simple.' If only that word applied to negotiating the four days when The Claret Jug is on the line. Conditions will be more suitable for MacIntyre and there is no doubt how much he enjoys these surrounds: this, after all, was the place he made his Major debut in 2019 and finished sixth. Six years have flashed past in the blink of an eye. In the time since, he's won three times on the European Tour, played in the Ryder Cup and gone heartbreakingly close to winning The US Open but you could just sense what it would mean to join the giants on this causeway. 'It was tough, standing on that first tee in 2019, with those nerves,' MacIntyre, who is now 28, recalled. 'You've always dreamed to play in these competitions. You've watched The Open on TV since you were a young kid – and there I was, I'd got to just live another dream. 'Yeah, it was difficult, but I got a little bit lucky when I managed to finish in just the proper time when the storm came in. I remember sitting in the player's dining area and it just kept blowing. I thought the roof was coming off the place! 'Then I was just like: 'Keep coming, keep coming!' I was just watching it, watching me get further up the leaderboard. It's a different week this week. I'm going to go out there and enjoy playing Royal Portrush again and give it my absolute best. That's all I can guarantee.' Play like he did at Oakmont and there is no reason why he can't be in the mix again. He took defeat to JJ Spaum with outstanding grace and there was no sense of 'what if' as he reflected on it; all he did was strengthen the suspicion that his turn might not be far away. 'I thought it was an absolutely brilliant effort,' said MacIntyre, who played 18 holes yesterday. 'When I finished, I thought, if someone beats that, fair play. JJ played better during the week. But that's as good a performance as I can put in a round on probably the hardest golf course on the planet. 'I'm going to prepare the same as I've tried to every week. I'm going to try and win The Open.'


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Golf betting tips: The Open Championship 2025 preview
Scottie Scheffler 5/1 Rory McIlroy 13/2 Jon Rahm 11/1 Bryson DeChambeau 22/1 Tommy Fleetwood 22/1 Xander Schauffele 22/1 Ludvig Aberg 25/1 Shane Lowry 25/1 Tyrrell Hatton 25/1 Robert MacIntyre 28/1 Viktor Hovland 28/1 Collin Morikawa 33/1 Matt Fitzpatrick 40/1 Sepp Straka 50/1 (odds correct at time of writing) Already used the bet365 sign-up offer? Check out all the latest free bets and best betting sites The Open Championship selections, by Ron Wood: Bet 1: Jon Rahm outright winner – 1pt each-way @ 11/1 with bet365 (1/5 odds; eight places) Go to site > Bet 2: Jon Rahm top European – 1pt each-way @ 11/2 with bet365 (1/5 odds; five places) Bet 3: Justin Rose outright winner – 0.5pt each-way @ 55/1 with bet365 (1/5 odds; eight places) Go to site > Course overview Royal Portrush Golf Club last hosted the Open in 2019, when Shane Lowry, at 15 under, won by six strokes from Tommy Fleetwood. Rory McIlroy missed the cut, but he broke the record for the course, before it was redesigned, as a 16-year-old in 2005 when carding a 61. Royal Portrush is undulating with some thick rough, and the greens are not the biggest targets, although players do not have to worry about many bunkers. The early weather forecasts suggest the wind will have minimal impact, although there could be plenty of rain in the mix. Who is favourite? Scottie Scheffler heads the outright betting. He is world No 1 for a reason, already a major champion this year, having landed the US PGA title by five strokes in May. However, he was a bit flat in finishing tied-eighth in last week's Scottish Open, and he also came up short in the Masters (fourth) and US Open (tied seventh) earlier this campaign. He was tied-seventh in last year's Open at Royal Troon. The American is capable of brilliance that few players can match, but is not the most tempting option this week. What about the local boy? McIlroy is next in the betting, and the 2014 champion makes some appeal. Of course, he won the Masters at Augusta National in April. Having gone 0-7 since then, the Northern Irishman could be rounding back into form at the right time, having finished tied-second in the Scottish Open. However, it was disappointing he could not get the job done at the Renaissance Club last Sunday, and there is a more tempting option for our first bet. Rahm looks ready Jon Rahm makes the most appeal in the outright betting. He has made the top ten in three of the last four Opens, notably finishing tied-third in 2021 and tied-second in 2023. The Spaniard plays on the LIV tour these days, but he has found some form in the past two majors, finishing top 10 in the US PGA Championship (tied-eighth) in May and in the US Open (tied-seventh) in June. In the PGA, won by Scheffler, Rahm tied the lead during the final round before fading. 'Rahmbo' struggled on the Friday and Saturday of the US Open, but no one shot lower than his 67 on the Sunday around the particularly challenging Oakmont Country Club. Most recently, Rahm finished second in LIV Golf Andalucia, when no player shot lower on the final day than his 65. Now is the time for Rahm to put it all together over four days. He can take heart from those recent showings and looks poised for a big performance, so is worth a decent wager to at least make the top eight, at which point bet365 pays out. Another way to gain with Spain It is also tempting to take Rahm to be the leading European golfer at Royal Portrush this week. This market can be found on bet365 by clicking on the 'tournament' tab, then 'to win outright' followed by 'top golfer by category' and then 'European'. McIlroy heads the market at 10/3, but Rahm can be backed each-way at 11/2, with bet365 paying five places. Don't rule out Rose finally lifting Claret Jug A smaller each-way bet on Justin Rose in the outright betting is also advised. The Englishman burst on to the scene when finishing tied-fourth at the Open in 1998 as an amateur. He is still trying to lift the Claret Jug all these years later, but he was tied for second in 2018 and again last year. Rose was also second , for a third time, at the Masters in April, only losing out to McIlroy in a play-off. That is quite a few near misses, but Rose tasted major success in the 2013 US Open, so he can get over the line in a big event. And he will be feeling good about himself coming into this week. Having lost his form after the Masters in April, Rose finished strongly for sixth in last week's Scottish Open, shooting a field-best 63 on the Sunday.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
What Manchester City's £1BILLION Puma deal reveals about the result of 115 charges case - and why football insiders are resigned to it, writes IAN HERBERT
When there's a threat of reputational damage in sport, you can generally expect 'commercial partners' to be first out the door. Chelsea lost their shirt sponsor, Three, when Roman Abramovich was sanctioned. Coca-Cola axed after some marital infidelity. A string of Marcus Rashford's partners, Levi's, and Beats, have dropped him amid his descent into personal chaos. No one wants the bad optics and fundamental embarrassment.