Irish Daily Star

COOL AID CAN HANDLE HEAT

- ■ Ashley IVESON

ANYONE else could be forgiven if they were a little twitchy as the hours count down to saddling the scorchingh­ot favourite for the Qipco 2000 Guineas. But pressure has long seemed an alien concept to Aidan O’Brien (inset).

It helps, of course, that the Ballydoyle handler has been in this position before - training the favourite for the Guineas is almost a yearly occurrence, and he even knows what it is like to have one beaten at oddson, as that fate befell Air Force Blue in 2016.

Buzz

But the build up to City Of Troy’s seasonal reappearan­ce has been a little bit different.

There has been a huge buzz about this son of American Triple Crown hero Justify ever since he made his debut on July 1 last year, when O’Brien told reporters at the Curragh that Ryan Moore had said it was “the first time he’s ever rode a two-year-old that he thought wasn’t going to pull up (after the line)”.

He was even more impressive in winning the Superlativ­e Stakes by six and a half lengths and while connection­s decided not to risk him on the testing ground at home in the National Stakes, they took the plunge in the Dewhurst, the defining race for juveniles, and were rewarded with an imperious display.

Part-owner Michael Tabor went on to say “this horse is our Frankel”, and bookmakers were quick to offer prices for the Triple Crown, last won in Britain by Nijinsky in 1970, trained by the great Vincent O’Brien at Ballydoyle.

Quite incredibly he is as low as 5-1 to win the Derby and St Leger, as well as the Guineas.

Frankel, of course, did not run in the Derby or Leger, but he was unforgetta­ble in the Guineas back in

2011 - being the last odds-on favourite to oblige.

The public were given a rare insight into the workings at Ballydoyle when City Of Troy’s last serious gallop was posted on social media with Champion Hurdlewinn­ing jockey Dean Gallagher, his work rider, waxing lyrical to the camera after it.

Happy

“Everything has been good, we’ve been happy and everything has gone well in the last few days with him,” said O’Brien.

“That piece of work he did last week was the last serious piece he did and thankfully he came out of that really well and everything has been good since.

“Newmarket missed most of the rain earlier in the week and that’s good, when you are talking about Classics you always want to run them on nicer ground.”

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