Enniscorthy Guardian

Classic from Aidan

O’Brien still re-writing record books

- BY PEGASUS

AIDAN O’BRIEN showed that his team are in rude good health when he won his sixth Qipco British 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket on Sunday with an impressive run by Love, following up on second in the 2,000 with Wichita, and second in the Group 1 Coronation Stakes with Anthony Van Dyck, in the preceding two days.

Love (4/1) was his only runner in the fillies’ classic, and Ryan Moore had a pretty untroubled run for this level.

They surged clear to romp in by four and a quarter lengths, reversing last year’s clash with the favourite, Quadrilate­ral (5/2), who was third a head behind Richard Hannon’s Cloak of Spirits (12/1). It is Aidan’s fourth time to win it in the past five years.

This was his 36th English Classic and he is now second of all time. Overall leader on 40 is John Scott, who died in 1871, and Henry Cecil on 25 is in fifth place and is the only other person from the modern era to figure.

He has won an incredible 330 Group 1 races on the flat - 149 in Britain, 102 in Ireland, 45 in France, and 24 in the U.S.A. - and he has also won them in Canada, Australia, Hong Kong, Italy and the U.A.E.

In 2017 he set a world record with 28 Group 1s in a single season. If you add in 22 in National Hunt early in his career, he has a total of 352.

Aidan had a team of four in the first Classic of the season, the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket on Saturday.

Arizona was thought to be O’Brien’s number one and the choice of Ryan Moore, but he drifted in the betting and all the money came for his Wichita, ridden by Frankie Dettori, backed from 15/1 into 15/2.

Pinatubo, unbeaten in six races as a twoyear-old, was the hot favourite at 5/6, but

Wichita saw him off after a lengthy battle.

However, Kameko (10/1) came bursting through at the end to get by them both by a neck and a length under Oisín Murphy. O’Brien’s other three were down the field, with Arizona the last of them in eleventh place.

His Anthony Van Dyck won the Epsom Derby last year but has failed to win since, though competing at a very high level. He was second again in the first Group 1 of the campaign, the Coronation Stakes.

He was as game as ever but he could not overhaul all-the-way leader and favourite,

Ghaiyyath (11/10f), though he did beat old rival, Stradivari­us (4/1), into third.

Irish racing resumed behind closed doors at Naas on Monday, but all the attention is on the Curragh this weekend for the Tattersall­s Irish Guineas Festival, with the 2,000 on Saturday supported by three other Group races, and the fillies’ race in the 1,000 on Sunday, supported by the Tattersall­s Gold Cup. Aidan will be hoping to add to his Classic tally.

Taghmon jockey, P.J. McDonald, was in the spotlight for the most unfortunat­e reason on the first day of racing’s return at Newcastle on Monday, June 1, after a 76-day Covid-19 break.

He was involved in a serious incident in the eighth race when his horse, December Second, clipped heels and came down, also bringing down Jim Crowley’s mount, Financial Conduct. Sadly, while both jockeys were able to walk away, December Second sustained a fatal injury.

Falls on the flat are thankfully quite rare. However, when they do happen they can be serious as the horses are travelling at a much higher speed than the jumpers.

McDonald was back in the saddle for the tenth and final race.

The Taghmon man has propelled himself, through dedication and hard work, to the top of his profession in the past five years and in the 2019 calendar year he rode 132 winners. He was joint fifth in the official championsh­ip, a great achievemen­t from a total field of 450 profession­als and 300 amateurs.

He did get off the mark for this new season at Newcastle on Tuesday when winning a five-furlong maiden on Victory Heights (6/1) for Jim Tate, and he scored a nice-priced double for trainer Mark Johnston on the high-class card at Newmarket on Saturday, on Blown by the Wind and The Trader (both 6/1).

 ??  ?? JJ Slevin on Mighty Blue (left), and Fasel Khan on Trissha, on the gallops during a Joseph O’Brien yard visit at Owning Hill in Kilkenny on Sunday.
JJ Slevin on Mighty Blue (left), and Fasel Khan on Trissha, on the gallops during a Joseph O’Brien yard visit at Owning Hill in Kilkenny on Sunday.
 ??  ?? Jockey P.J. McDonald from Taghmon.
Jockey P.J. McDonald from Taghmon.

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