Dubawi’s Alfred Munnings A New TDN Rising Star

Aidan O'Brien trainee Alfred Munnings (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}–Best In The World {Ire}, by Galileo {Ire}) was all the rage for Friday's seven-furlong Irish Stallion Farms EBF Maiden at Leopardstown and justified market support, and then some, with a dominant debut performance, earning a TDN Rising Star rosette by 4 1/2 lengths on his birthday. The stable had won the contest in recent years with G1 Dewhurst S.-winning sire War Command (War Front) and G2 Vintage S.-winning sire War Decree (War Front) and also prepared Gleneagles (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) to finish fourth in 2014. The eventual winner was away sharply and shadowed the leader in a close-up second through halfway. Sent to the front off the home turn, the 8-11 favourite quickened beyond recall soon after passing the quarter-mile marker and maintained a high tempo under minimal encouragement in the latter stages to easily outclass Segomo (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) by daylight.

“Aidan [O'Brien] was very happy with that and the plan is to go for the [Listed] Chesham [S. at Royal Ascot],” revealed Ballydoyle representative Chris Armstrong. “He was very professional, he knew his job and delivered on the promise he's shown so far. He's a good mover and has the pedigree behind him. Fingers crossed now he has a good chance in the Chesham. Hopefully, it's a proper maiden and he's won it very impressively.”

Alfred Munnings, half-brother to a weanling colt by Wootton Bassett (GB), is the third of four foals and second winner out of G3 Give Thanks S. victrix Best In The World (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), the first being last year's runaway G1 Epsom, G1 Irish and G1 Yorkshire Oaks-winning sensation Snowfall (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). Best In The World is a full-sister to three pattern-race winners, namely MG1SW G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe-winning superstar Found (Ire), GSW G1 Epsom Oaks and G1 Irish Oaks placegetter Divinely (Ire) and G3 Noblesse S. victrix Magical Dream (Ire). Found's first foal is G2 Vintage S. victor and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf and G1 St James's Palace S. placegetter Battleground (War Front). The May-foaled bay's second dam is G1 Matron S. and G1 Lockinge S. heroine Red Evie (Ire) (Intikhab).

1st-Leopardstown, €16,000, Mdn, 5-13, 2yo, 7fT, 1:33.64, gd.
ALFRED MUNNINGS (IRE), c, 2, by Dubawi (Ire)
1st Dam: Best In The World (Ire) (GSW-Ire, $141,246), by Galileo (Ire)
2nd Dam: Red Evie (Ire), by Intikhab
3rd Dam: Malafemmena (Ire), by Nordico
1ST-TIME STARTER. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $9,965. O-Westerberg, Susan Magnier, Michael Tabor & Derrick Smith; B-Coolmore (IRE); T-Aidan O'Brien. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

 

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O’Brien Reveals Plans for French Classics

ROSEGREEN, Ireland–He may have drawn a blank in the opening Classics of the season at Newmarket but Aidan O'Brien is taking dead aim at ParisLongchamp on Sunday and nominated Toy (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) to be on course for the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches while The Acropolis (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}) will be the sole Ballydoyle representative in the G1 Poule d'Essai des Poulains on the same afternoon.

Toy, a sister to seven black-type horses, including 2,000 Guineas winner Gleneagles (Ire), got off the mark at the third attempt over seven furlongs at Cork last month but O'Brien is of the opinion that she will be seen to best effect when stepping up to a mile or even ten furlongs in time.

The Acropolis won just one of his eight starts as a juvenile but created a big impression on his return when chasing home Dr Zempf (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) in the 2000 Guineas Trial at Leopardstown last month.

Speaking ahead of his two-pronged attack on ParisLongchamp, O'Brien said, “We are going to aim The Acropolis for the [French] 2000 Guineas and Toy will run in the 1,000 Guineas.

“We thought the world of The Acropolis last year but I couldn't get him to do anything but we were delighted by his return at Leopardstown. He ran home well to finish second in the 2000 Guineas Trial at Leopardstown. I don't  think we'll over-race him this year. Maybe we over-raced him a little last year, so it will be interesting to see what he does at the weekend. He's a horse with plenty of speed so he shouldn't have any problem around Longchamp.”

On Toy, he added, “Toy is from a fantastic family. They are not slow and, while it looks like she will get the mile quite well, I think she could be even better over ten furlongs. I thought she could be a French Guineas filly and then she might develop into a Diane filly. We raced her over seven furlongs and from a bad draw purposefully at Cork, just to see would she be able to do it with a view towards the French Guineas, and I thought she did it well. It will be interesting to see how she gets on.

“I'm not sure if she'd get a mile and a half. I think she'll get 10 furlongs alright, but a mile and a half, I'm not sure. You need a filly that will go along at a good gallop and one who can quicken–it's a tough race.”

It is also a big week for the sprinting fraternity at Ballydoyle. Commonwealth Cup-bound colts King Of Bavaria (Ire) (No Nay Never), Cadamosto (Ire) (No Nay Never) and New York City (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) will advertise their Royal Ascot claims this week with O'Brien keen to keep the speedsters apart.

He said, “There are three sprint races this week and I think we will divide King Of Bavaria, Cadamosto and New York City up in each. If the ground looked like it was going to come up slow at Naas we could look at running Cadamosto there and send the other two to England. I'd like Ryan to ride all three of them. They are all in the mix for the Commonwealth Cup.”

 

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The Coming Of Age?

For Aidan O'Brien it had been a week of mostly ups, with one major down. On Friday morning, the winter favourite for the Derby, Luxembourg (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), was found to be lame behind after exercise, having been shortened in the betting for Epsom following his third-placed finish in the 2000 Guineas. By Sunday he had been ruled out of the Derby completely, just as another potential star emerged from the Ballydoyle battalions in the hugely impressive Stone Age (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

A maiden until the end of March on his 3-year-old debut, but with some pretty fancy juvenile placed form behind him, Stone Age performed the almost impossible task of lighting up a Leopardstown afternoon that was already blessed with spotless blue skies and blazing sunshine.

A week of domination of the English Classic trials at Chester and Lingfield gave way to a glorious afternoon on home turf, with O'Brien and Ryan Moore taking both the colts' and fillies' trials, the latter with History (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

Such a positive week in the build-up to the French and Irish Guineas, not to mention Epsom, had clearly provided the trainer with enough fortitude to withstand a Monday morning invasion of the Fourth Estate on his otherwise tranquil and immaculate training establishment deep in Tipperary. 

The Derby media morning had been a regular fixture until disrupted by a pandemic. Though it is easy to imagine that O'Brien might prefer to undergo a session of root canal treatment to answering endless questions as to which of his potential Derby candidates is favoured in his eyes, he faces the pack of pressmen and women with his customary politeness and an easy humour which he doesn't often permit himself to show in the more serious arena of the racecourse. 

Training at any level is of course a serious business, but each horse that passes by during the first few lots at Ballydoyle serves as a written reminder of just how much is at stake for this operation. The names and breeding of these bluebloods are printed on their saddle-cloths, providing a living, breathing roll call of racing's greats. The stallions' names are indicated solely by their initials and, for now, the one which appears most frequently is G. G for Galileo, G for great, G for gone.

As a breed-shaper he lives on, of course, in those crops of offspring still filtering through and, just as we have come to expect, in the current Classic countdown Galileo has been a dominant force. Last Wednesday at Chester, the so perfectly named Thoughts Of June (Ire) took his tally one past Danehill's record number of stakes winners. In the very next race, Changingoftheguard (Ire) lifted Galileo's tally to 350, and, with those floodgates open once more, on rushed Star Of India (Ire), United Nations (GB), History and Stone Age.

It won't last forever, of course, but O'Brien when questioned on his thoughts of what comes after his now finite supply of Galileo's stock muses simply, “It will be interesting anyway.”

Galileo may have been the headline act for so long, but he's not the only show in town. Ten years ago, O'Brien could have been forgiven if he'd wanted to come home and kick the stable cat after Camelot (GB) was so narrowly denied in his quest to become the first Triple Crown winner since another Ballydoyle resident of the previous century, the fabled Nijinsky. On the subject of Camelot's son Luxembourg now having his own Classic chances scuppered he demonstrates admirable equanimity.

“It's only stuff,” he says. “Stuff doesn't matter. Only a few things matter. I am disappointed for the lads. We've done our best, it happened, and yesterday morning the lads said he wants a month or six weeks in the box. It is only a waste of energy thinking about it. He is a very good horse. I don't think Ryan would have had a choice to make if he were fit.”

Moore has had his own personal anxiety to face over the last few weeks while his brother Josh has remained in intensive care following a fall at Haydock. O'Brien would doubtless agree that that's the stuff that does matter, but he would also have had no reason to doubt his stable jockey's focus through that time as, ever the professional, Moore has mined a rich seam of form on the track. 

Two of the major rivals Moore used to face in the weighing-room are now keeping their father on his toes in the training ranks, and O'Brien senior was quick to point to the Ballysax S. one-two for Piz Badile (Ire) (Ulysses {Ire}) and Buckaroo (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), trained by Donnacha and Joseph O'Brien respectively. 

“I tell them everything but they don't tell me anything,” O'Brien said with a grin when asked what Donnacha thinks of the Derby chances of the Niarchos family's Piz Badile.

“Racing is so competitive all the way along. We always do our best to win no matter what, but I am always happy if they beat us,” he adds. “But believe me there's no inch given anywhere. That's our job.

“For us, even with our own lads it focuses your mind. We see how many times it's very competitive everywhere. We knew this would happen with our own lads coming on and everyone else. But you don't get complacent, believe me. You have to get beaten, you have to feel the hurt to experience the joy the next time. It has to hurt and it does. That is what drives you on.”

As if to underline his point, even while buried in a huddle amid questions left, right and centre, O'Brien's mind is never far removed from the horses being walked in hand just behind him as they warm down from their exercise. Without breaking stride in the interview, he says into his radio, linked to the earpieces on every rider, “We'll go for a pick with the lot when you're ready everyone. Thank you.”

In a heartbeat and with perfect synchronicity, every head is turned inwards to the large queen square, and seconds later those heads are down, quietly chomping at the grass. Six of their number may yet be Derby-bound, several more for the Oaks, but the hoopla of Epsom Downs on the first weekend of June could not be further removed from this bucolic scene.

Among the group of visitors to Ballydoyle is Andrew Cooper, the clerk of the course at Epsom since 1996, five years before O'Brien celebrated his first Derby victory with the horse who would go on to play such a dominant role in the great race through his offspring. 

“It's hugely special,” says Cooper of the Coolmore and Ballydoyle participation at Epsom. “My tenure as clerk has covered the resurgence and pre-eminence of horses coming from here. I remember when Galileo hit the bullseye to become Sadler's Wells's first Derby winner in 2001, followed by High Chaparral.

“That support over this period and the focus from the whole operation here to win the Derby has been absolutely invaluable. Some might even say it rescued the Derby in a sense from that mid-90s period. It has certainly taken it to a different level of competition for others to aspire to.”

Whether the 2022 Derby goes to an O'Brien, or to one of their counterparts from elsewhere, there is little doubt that trying to solve the annual conundrum of the pecking order of the Ballydoyle colts has become an intriguing aspect of the Derby fabric. 

On a sunny Sunday when Leopardstown racecourse was awash with families, did the children squashing their faces against the railings to get a better look at the action catch a fleeting glimpse of this year's winner? Those on that rail 21 years earlier had seen Galileo complete his own Classic trial with flying colours in the same race. Perhaps this is the coming of Age.

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Stone Age The Prime Choice for Moore

ROSEGREEN, Ireland–Ryan Moore will find it difficult to ride anything other than Stone Age (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in the Cazoo Derby, according to Aidan O'Brien, who may be without the ace–Luxembourg (Ire) (Camelot {GB})–in his Epsom pack, but expects to run up to six colts as he bids for a record-extending ninth win in the race on June 4.

Stone Age didn't just open the door to a tilt at the Derby in winning the G3 Derby Trial at Leopardstown on Sunday, he kicked it open and announced himself as a leading player in demolishing the field and skyrocketing to a general 5-2 favourite for Epsom glory in the process. 

O'Brien's breakthrough Derby winner, Galileo (Ire), charted a similar path to Epsom by winning that same Derby Trial at Leopardstown, and the master of Ballydoyle admits it could be hard for Moore to ride anything other than Stone Age next month. 

“I think he [Ryan] would find it hard to not ride the horse from yesterday [Stone Age],” O'Brien said on Monday. “I imagine Ryan will find it hard not to ride him.”

Changingoftheguard (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Star Of India (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), impressive winners of their respective trials at Chester, Lingfield Derby Trial winner United Nations (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and 2,000 Guineas disappointment Point Lonsdale (Ire) (Australia {GB}), will give Moore something to think about, but O'Brien revealed there would have been no decision to make if Luxembourg remained in the picture. 

The long-time ante-post favourite for the Derby, Luxembourg ran a cracker to finish third in the 2,000 Guineas but has been ruled out until at least the autumn after picking up a muscular problem behind.

O'Brien explained, “I am disappointed for the lads. He is a very good horse. I don't think Ryan would have had a choice to make if he were fit.”

When a comparison was made between Luxembourg and St Nicholas Abbey (Ire), O'Brien added, “He probably has more scope than St Nicholas Abbey had. St Nick ran well in the Guineas [sixth] as well but he didn't run as well as this lad did. Luxembourg ran extremely well to make the ground up and finish third. We didn't really see what he was able to do.”

Despite not managing to win in five starts at two, O'Brien outlined how that experience stood to the new Derby favourite Stone Age, who is now unbeaten in his two starts this term and heads to Epsom as the leading Ballydoyle challenger.

O'Brien said, “It'd be hard not to be impressed with what Stone Age did at Leopardstown. You'd like to have something lead him but there was no point in messing him about. Ryan let him bowl along and he was very impressive. 

“He has a lot of experience from his juvenile days. He was happy to get a lead at two. He'd have learnt a lot at two. We were running him and teaching him. He learnt a lot in those races.”

It seems somewhat ironic that O'Brien will face some of the stiffest competition in the Derby from his son Donnacha who appears to have outstanding claims of making his own breakthrough in the race with impressive Ballysax winner Piz Badile (Ire) (Ulysses {Ire}). 

Respecting the opposition, O'Brien said, “We always do our best to win no matter what. I am always happy if they [Donnacha or Joseph] beat us. They are rivals, one hundred per cent, but I am always delighted when we get beaten by them. Believe me, there's no inch given anywhere.” 

O'Brien also holds the key to the Oaks and nominated Tuesday (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a sister to Minding (Ire) and the general 7-2 favourite for the race, as the pick of his team for the fillies' Classic.

Tuesday overcame inexperience to finish strongly for third in the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket and O'Brien is convinced that there's more to come. 

He said, “Tuesday doesn't turn three until the first week in June and, to be doing what she's doing is unreal. Her run in the Guineas would suggest that she's crying out for a step up in trip. She's still only a baby and we are thinking of running in the Irish Guineas and then going on to the Oaks, just like what Minding did.”

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