
Scandinavia sees off Illinois for Ballydoyle one-two in Goodwood Cup
Illinois attempted to make all but Scandinavia drew upsides over a furlong out and the two had it between them, with the concession of 14lb ultimately proving too much for Moore's mount, who went down by three-quarters of a length. French Master stayed on for a never-nearer third.
O'Brien immediately signalled the St Leger at Doncaster as the big aim for his winner.
'Wayne gave him a lovely ride – in the race at Ascot (Queen's Vase) he was trapped six wide all the way and then at Newmarket Ryan said he felt like a very good horse,' he said.
'Illinois went out there in front and looked to have the race won, but then the other horse got him.
'We went to the Gold Cup (with Illinois) without a preparation and I know we haven't seen the best of him.
'Scandinavia is a typical Justify, he just won't lie down, he puts his head down and won't be beaten.
'Lambourn didn't go to the King George as we had one eye on York for him. It's all out in the open and this horse is ready made for the Leger, which is where he will go.
'He (Scandinavia) travelled very well through the race, he has a great mind. Lambourn can go for the Voltigeur and then maybe for the Arc.'
O'Brien was also pleased with the performance of the runner-up, feeling his best is still to come.
He added: 'I thought Ryan did everything perfect today on Illinois. He was out there and had the race won, and then the other horse just came and got him.
'I don't think we've seen the best of Illinois yet because I think we went to the Gold Cup a year too early and his preparation wasn't right to win a Gold Cup.
'He ran an unbelievable race, and he'll have the rest of the season, but often when that happens it can stop the progression you would really want to come. I really think we haven't seen the best of him yet.'

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


Daily Record
5 hours ago
- Daily Record
Alistair Johnston gets Celtic penalty pain perspective from fellow newlywed as key question answered
Aberdeen defeat threatened to put a dampener on Johnston's big day until getting sage advice from another groom to be It was a summer of mixed emotions for Alistair Johnston. An agonising penalty miss at Hampden handed Aberdeen the Scottish Cup and ended Celtic's Treble dreams in the cruellest fashion. For Johnston, it wasn't the way the season was supposed to finish. Especially not with the biggest day of his life around the corner as he prepared to marry his long-term partner Peyton. It can take weeks to get a defeat like that out of the system. Especially when it's usually Celtic doing the celebrating on the podium. But after a heart-to-heart with close pal and ex-teammate Greg Taylor, it wasn't long before newlywed Johnston was smiling again. He said: 'I talked actually a lot to Greg about it because he had done something similar the year before. "He had his wedding the week following the cup final. I asked him, 'Does a result kind of really affect the wedding?'. "He's like, 'Look, once the season's done and you're fully focused on your wedding, it's the biggest day of your life'. It's exactly that. "Once I got there, saw my friends, family I pretty quickly forgot about football. You remember that there are still more important things in life, your family, your wife. "It was nice to kind of put the failure of that cup final behind me and kind of really just reset, focus on the people that were there and then get ready for the internationals. "Once we got through that tournament, I remembered, 'Okay, we've got something to come back and try and win back when I get back into Scotland'. "So I think there's an extra level of motivation now. You can see it through the entire group. "There's definitely a bit of a burning passion there to get back what we think is our trophy. So that's something that we have a challenge of this year.' Now entering his third full season at Celtic Park, Johnston has already racked up an incredible seven trophies - including a Treble and back-to-back Doubles. But the Canada international - who helped his country reach the quarter-finals of the Gold Cup - is determined to make amends this season. He said: 'If you never lose, then you kind of forget what the feeling of winning really is. "I want to sit here and say that I want to win every single trophy. That is the case. "But, at the same time, when you do lose one you probably come back with a bit more of a fire in your belly to go out there and really kick on that following year. "So I don't think that it's necessarily a bad thing. It is in the past. Obviously, we would have loved to have won a treble. It didn't happen. "But now that gives us all the extra motivation to go out there and try and make it happen this year. "So I think that that's a really positive thing that comes out of it. I think you need to try and find what are the learnings and the growths from that match so we can learn from it and make sure that doesn't happen again. "But at the same time, that's football. You're not going to win every single match. "We'd love to do that. So I think that, you know, going into this year, it really does just kind of add a little bit of extra fire to everyone that's in this. "You want to put things right and ideally to have our trophies back is kind of the plan.'


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Ryan Johnson's own goal gives Luton late victory against AFC Wimbledon
A desperate late own goal by Wimbledon's Ryan Johnson may signal a change of fortune for Luton at last after back-to-back relegations. After struggling to break their resilient first visitors of the season, Nahki Wells' hopeful ball forward to Cauley Woodrow was met instead by the head of the Dons' stopper and looped agonisingly over goalkeeper Nathan Bishop, off the underside of the crossbar, and over the line. It may be the start of a brand new season, but football remains as fickle as ever. It is 14 years since these sides met in the Conference playoff final, and the intervening period has been a rollercoaster for both teams. On the opening day of the new season they were coming at each other from opposite directions. AFC Wimbledon are the poor cousins of League One after a surprise promotion last season; Luton are the favourites to go back up to more refined surroundings after their disastrous relegation last season. As if to flaunt their greater relative wealth, Luton spent the day engaging in some retail therapy. Complete the signing of Portsmouth's Cohen Bramall in the morning, spot of lunch, then snap up Swansea's Jerry Yates in the afternoon. Wimbledon are more used to rooting around in the bargain basements and despite their scant resources were able to unveil four new faces for the step up in quality. Forget designer labels, one thing will always remain a constant for the Dons: their keen embrace of an underdog tag. 'It is an opportunity for us to say here we are, don't underestimate us,' manager Johnnie Jackson said ahead of kick-off. Sure enough, they started with energy, passion, and less Wimbledon-like, some neat passing. Josh Kelly nearly caused an embarrassing mix-up in the heart of the Luton defence inside 10 minutes and Luton were soon aware their recent Premier League status was going to earn them few favours at this level. Not that any side operating out of Kenilworth Road would have any illusions of grandeur. Ground has been broken across the town on a long overdue new home, but for now the homely roar from an enthusiastic crowd sparked Luton into life. New signing George Saville began creating danger from set pieces but it may need more training sessions to convert that into end product. Nigel Lonwijk, on loan from Wolves, did look an elegant and more immediate threat on the left wing, but Wimbledon's defending was stout and there were few clearcut chances at either end in a frankly untidy and – unsurprisingly given the brevity of the close season – under-rehearsed first half. Luton's greater quality finally began to assert itself in the second period but they still lacked cohesion. Reuell Walters' low 30-yard drive would have given the game a stunning opener it ill deserved but instead produced the first real save of the match from Wimbledon debutant Bishop. Saville was replaced by Lamine Fanne and Lonwijk by Zack Nelson as Luton looked to convert their superiority into three points. Nathan Asiimwe's desperate body block from Fanne 11 minutes from time was a sure sign Wimbledon were not going to just roll over. If only they had not scored Luton's goal for them instead. It was desperately unlucky for Johnson, but Wimbledon will bounce back, and this was an occasion when misfortune very much had to be kept in perspective. Earlier in the day, former Luton captain Tom Lockyer revealed he is less than a month away from being given the all-clear by doctors to resume his career. The skipper who led the club to the Premier League has not played since suffering a cardiac arrest during Luton's game against Bournemouth at the Vitality Stadium in December 2023, having snapped an ankle ligament during his long rehabilitation. 'I've had a really good few weeks,' Lockyer said. 'Hopefully now I'm four weeks away from getting signed off and told I'm allowed to play football again.'


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Leigh stun Warrington with dramatic late comeback
Betfred Super LeagueLeigh (2) 20Tries: Hanley 2, Trout Goals: O'Brien 4Warrington (8) 16Tries: Dufty, Jake Thewlis Goals: Sneyd 4 Leigh Leopards staged a stunning late fightback with two tries in three minutes to dent Warrington Wolves' Super League play-off hopes with a thrilling 20-16 home bossed most of the game, and after Marc Sneyd and Gareth O'Brien successfully traded penalty kicks, the visitors led 8-2 at the break through Matt Dufty's try, laid on by a stunning run from Josh younger sibling, Jake Thewlis, crossed five minutes after half-time to take Warrington 12 points clear before Umyla Handley cut the deficit back to within a superb 46-metre penalty kick put Wolves 16-8 ahead with 10 minutes left, but Handley crossed again before Owen Trout crashed over for the winning score with less than three minutes to to follow. Leigh: Hodgson; Brand, Niu, Hanley, Charnley; O'Brien, Lam; Trout, Ipape, Ofahengaue, Halton, Hughes, McNamara, Tuitavake, Davis, Dufty; Josh Thewlis, Wrench, King, Jake Thewlis; Williams, Sneyd; Yates, Powell, Vaughan, Stone, Fitzgibbon, Philbin, Matterson, Wood, Liam Moore.