
Aidan O'Brien's Lambourn aiming to become the 20th colt to land Epsom-Curragh double
It's like old times in some ways for Sunday's 160th Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby as
Aidan O'Brien's
Lambourn bids to become the 20th colt to complete the Epsom-Curragh 'Blue Riband' double.
Lambourn confounded expectations that he was O'Brien's third string at the Epsom Derby three weeks ago and he made almost all the running and won in style under Wayne Lordan.
Ryan Moore, who landed the Chester Vase in May on Lambourn, is back on board this weekend and the English rider has a shot at history by becoming the first jockey to win the Irish Derby three years in a row.
Where the Curragh was once an all-but-automatic option for an Epsom Derby winner, Lambourn is just the fifth in the last decade to try to follow up, albeit 2020 was a Covid outlier.
READ MORE
With O'Brien having half the 10-strong field as he pursues a record-extending 17th victory in Ireland's premier classic, and the first three from Epsom lining up, it appears like a rather vintage Irish Derby renewal. In other ways, it's ultra-contemporary.
Wayne Lordan rides Lambourn to victory at Epsom. Photograph: Matt Alexander/PA
Once again, the Derby is run on a Sunday and is the centrepiece of a marathon nine-race programme to facilitate inclusion in lucrative World Pool betting.
The biggest co-mingling market in the world is run by the Hong Kong Jockey Club and, depending on turnover, Sunday's action could be worth up to €700,000 to the Curragh, the Irish Tote and Horse Racing Ireland.
Generating maximum turnover requires lots of runners and races not dominated by heavy favourites. Once again,
Ballydoyle
is helping the Derby reach double-figures. Sunday's card also contains six competitive handicaps.
That has come under fire for a consequent lack of quality action and the makings of an unappealing Derby undercard. In contrast, Saturday's Curragh programme has the Group One Pretty Polly Stakes backed up by a Group Two and a pair of Group Three contests.
Similar criticism emerged in Britain after an Epsom Derby card that featured in the World Pool but ultimately attracted a very disappointing attendance on the ground.
The logic of such an argument will make it interesting to examine Saturday's attendance. Last year's Irish Derby attendance was 11,418, which was hardly outstanding, but was much bigger than the crowd that watched a Pretty Polly won by no less than Bluestocking.
Ultimately, there is abundant evidence of how the quality of flat-race action has little impact on crowd figures in Ireland. The contrast between how many go to Irish Champions Weekend and the Listowel festival is an annual September exercise.
It's hard not to suspect then that switching a couple of more Group races to Sunday would have had only a negligible impact this weekend. The €1.25 million classic inevitably dwarfs everything else and is the overwhelming reason to attend.
Admittedly, seeing it through from a 1.15pm start to almost 6pm will be a test of stamina for those there. But as the Curragh always struggles for footfall, the prospect of a windfall from playing ball with Hong Kong has an inevitable financial logic to authorities here.
Ireland's most valuable race is off at 4.10pm and presents a first-rate chance for Lambourn to join some of the sport's most famous names as a double-Derby winner. These include a handful of O'Brien-trained horses, among them Lambourn's own sire Australia in 2014.
Hardly ranked among Ballydoyle's leading lights at the start of the season, the likable colt showed a superb attitude to dominate at Epsom. If the argument is that he got an unchallenged lead there, another one is that the Curragh's stiffer stamina test should suit him even more.
Up to 5mm of rainfall is expected over the weekend and that's enough for the connections of Epsom runner-up Lazy Griff to try their luck again. He was also second to Lambourn in the Vase.
It is Tennessee Stud, third at Epsom, that bookmakers seem to reckon is Lambourn's big threat. But he does have five lengths to make up while Pride Of Arras, one of two Ralph Beckett runners, has a lot more than that.
Green Impact could prove the one to shake up Lambourn and victory for him would mean
Jessica Harrington
is the first woman to train an Irish Derby winner.
The Celebration Stakes (2.55pm) is one of two Listed races on Sunday's card. Currawood could be the solution over the English raider, Skukuza, who impressed in a handicap here last time but may prefer more testing conditions. The Curragh specialist Big Gossey may secure a popular success in the earlier Dash (2.25pm).
Hashtags

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


Irish Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Galway v Meath live score updates from the All-Ireland quarter-final
The All-Ireland quarter-finals resume on Sunday afternoon as Meath meet Galway in an intriguing last eight match-up. The Tribesmen will be heavily favoured for this one but those inside the Royal County are quietly confident that an upset is on the cards. Meath impressed in their last outing in the All-Ireland series, beating Kerry by nine points. Throw in the fact that they beat Dublin in the Leinster Championship and Galway's patchy form, there is plenty to be excited about. Galway supporters, however, are hoping that they are just timing their run. A Connacht title win was met with a below-par group stage performance and there were stages in the second half of last week's preliminary All-Ireland quarter-final against Down that they appeared on the ropes. Battle hardened and with plenty of Croke Park experience in recent years, Padraic Joyce's side will be looking to kick into gear as they look to end their 24-year hunt for the Sam Maguire. Today's game takes place at Croke Park with throw-in set for 1.45 pm. RTE Two and the RTE Player will have live coverage of the game and the broadcaster will also show Armagh v Kerry at 4 pm. Meath: Billy Hogan, Seamus Lavin, Seán Rafferty, Ronan Ryan, Donal Keogan, Seán Coffey, Ciarán Caulfield, Bryan Menton, Adam O'Neill, Conor Duke, Ruairí Kinsella, Cathal Hickey, Jordan Morris, Keith Curtis, Eoghan Frayne (captain) Replacements: Seán Brennan, Brian O'Halloran, Eoin Harkin, James McEntee, Cian McBride, Conor Gray, Aaron Lynch, Daithí McGowan, Shane Walsh, Diarmuid Moriarty, Mathew Costello Galway: Conor Flaherty; Johnny McGrath, Sean Fitzgerald, Liam Silke; Dylan McHugh, Sean Kelly, Cian Hernon; Paul Conroy, John Maher; Cein Darcy, Matthew Tierney, Cillian McDaid; Robert Finnerty, Shane Walsh, Matthew Thompson. Subs: Connor Gleeson, Jack Glynn, Kieran Molloy, Sean O Maoilchiarain, Daniel O'Flaherty, John Daly, Peter Cooke, Sam O'Neill, Tomo Culhane, Johnny Heaney, Damien Comer. Meath - 3/1 Draw - 8/1 Galway 1/3 Hello and welcome to live coverage of Meath v Galway as the two sides meet in today's All-Ireland quarter-final. Croke Park plays host to an intriguing double header with the first of the two games taking place at 1.45 pm followed by Kerry v Armagh at 4 pm. Both games are available to watch live on RTE Two and the RTE Player. We will have all the score updates for the match right here on the Irish Mirror in what will hopefully be a thriller. We already know who two of the All-Ireland semi-finalists are with Donegal flexing their muscles to battle past Monaghan on Saturday followed by Tyrone beating Dublin.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Meath v Galway: Royal county look to bridge 16-year gap with All-Ireland semi-final place up for grabs
Surprise package Meath will look to make a first All-Ireland semi-final since 2009 but last year's beaten finalists Galway stand in their way as the Tribesmen look to go one better this season.

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
Tyrone take major step, dominant Donegal, Monaghan's second-half struggles
1. Tyrone take major step It was far from a freewheeling classic of a football game, but at this stage of the season the outcome is the only real currency. Tyrone had already lost twice in this summer's championship before they arrived in Croke Park last night. If Dublin joined Armagh and Mayo in that list of conquerors, then Malachy O'Rourke's side were bound for the exit door. Instead they took a major step forward. For the first time since 2021 when they lifted Sam, they will contest on the last four stage. Their performance was pockmarked by errors, the match was nervy and anxious for long stretches, but Tyrone cleared their minds and pushed on confidently at the decisive phase. They looked at Luke Breathnach pointing in the 64th minute to pull Dublin within one, and then struck 0-7 without reply in the remainder of the game. Four of those were supplied by substittutes. The electricity provided by Eoin McElholm and Ruairi Canavan suggested Tyrone have the depth and attacking range to trouble anyone. There was a few moments of brilliance by Darragh Canavan as he hit three points from play over the course of the game. And the big moments by their experienced core of Peter Harte, Mattie Donnelly, Niall Morgan, and man-of-the-match Kieran McGeary, illustrated that they remain a team with a lot of big game know-how. 'You talk about the skill and the work but it is that raw bite and fight for the jersey,' remarked Malachy O'Rourke afterwards. Advertisement 'That's probably the most pleasing thing of all. You're obviously looking at quality and a good high skill level and everything else. 'But if you don't have that bite and you don't have that, the fellas prepared to work really hard for each other and there's no such thing as a lost cause, you're not going to win. So really delighted with that. In fairness to the boys, they've shown great application all year.' Tyrone's Kieran McGeary is hugged by her mother Kathleen after the game. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO 2. Dominant Donegal 'Donegal, Donegal' rang out around Croke Park down the stretch yesterday evening. The Tír Chonaill faithful headed for the Hills happy, McGuinness and co set for their second All-Ireland semi-final on the bounce. They had to dig deep to overcome Monaghan at Croke Park yesterday, Donegal trailing by seven points at half time, 1-15 to 0-11. They looked leggy, the six-day turnaround and hectic schedule appearing like it may catch up with them. But they found another gear in the second period, outscoring their opponents 1-15 to 0-5 — and 0-11 to 0-0 from the 46th to 68th minutes. In all, they scored 1-26 from 26 scoring chances and hit just four wides, three of those from Michael Murphy. He finished with 0-4, split evenly between play and wides. Donegal had nine different scorers, all but one hitting more than a point. Michael Langan led the charge with 1-3 on his 100th appearance for the county, while himself, Murphy, Conor O'Donnell, Ciarán Thompson, Oisín Gallen and Shane O'Donnell all clipped 0-3 or more. This, of course, all stemmed from defensive solidity, goalkeeper Shaun Patton bouncing back after a nervy opening period. Their bench press was key too, with Patrick McBrearty kicking two big scores which encapsulated their experience and composure through the endgame. The substitute clenched his first and let out a roar after raising his first white flag through the blitz, himself and the Donegal faithful loving it and hoping there is more to come. McBrearty celebrates. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO 3. Monaghan's second-half struggles Rory Beggan landed a mammoth two-pointer after the first-half buzzer and Monaghan headed for the dressing room seven points up. They will have been pleased with their 35 minutes' work. Gabriel Bannigan's side had Donegal on the ropes. His nephew, Míchéal, was the goalscorer, while they kicked four two-pointers, with brilliant Beggan and Andrew Woods on song. There was room for improvement too, with a fair share of wides recorded. But Donegal utterly outplayed them from there. Monaghan failed to score for 22 minutes. They tried to force matters down the stretch, often overcomplicating things as they desperately tried to stop the rot, and finished with 12 wides in all. This was a puzzling collapse, a limp exit. Related Reads Dessie Farrell steps down as manager of Dublin footballers Jim McGuinness: 'We, the management and the players, had nothing to do with the statement' Donegal dominate in second half against Monaghan to reach All-Ireland last four 'It was definitely a game of two halves,' Bannigan said afterwards. 'The first-half performance from Monaghan, to me, gives you a glimpse of what this team is capable of. But we need to be able to put two halves like that together if we're going to take out a team like Donegal.' Struggling to put his finger on it all, he added: 'The things that we were doing brilliantly in the first half, we just weren't able to replicate them in the second half. 'There were handling errors, there were poor options taken, we were getting shots blocked down, we kicked more wides. We didn't seem to have the same hunger around the breaking ball. All of those things just went against us.' *****