Joseph O'Brien seeking more Dundalk glory
Equitant (Shane Crosse) winning at Dundalk last month
© Photo Healy Racing
Joseph O’Brien's powerful team are in red hot form at present, and he looks the man to follow at Dundalk again this evening with a total of seven runners.
The 25-year-old Piltown trainer set a new record of 34 winners in a calendar year on the Polytrack with a treble here last Friday, and will be hoping for something similar at the latest stage of the winter series.
O’Brien also has a couple of reserves on the programme, and this year’s Irish Derby winning handler launches a particularly strong bid for the featured www.dundalkstadium.com Handicap with King’s Field and Equitant
This pair certainly will not lack for assistance from the saddle with champion jockey and the trainer’s brother Donnacha aboard King’s Field, and the leader amongst the apprentice brigade, Shane Crosse, will steer Equitant.
Equitant is going for a fourth win in a row, having started the sequence when with Richard Fahey at Chelmsford City in October. The handicapper is making it more difficult for the three-year-old but perhaps there is even more to come from the chestnut. Captain Joy heads the weights in this mile heat. Tracey Collins’ nine-year-old is a four-time scorer over the track and trip, and of course the grey’s finest hour arrived when he triumphed in the All-Weather Mile Championships Conditions Stakes at Lingfield in 2016.
It is easy to forget that Joseph O’Brien only officially started training in 2016 and he began as he was to continue with four winners on his first day with runners.
Another handler based in County Kilkenny, now setting out on the road in what promises to be a fruitful career, is Ray Cody. He sends out his third runner when Pampushka goes in the Happy Christmas From All At Dundalk Stadium Maiden.
This daughter of So You Think has the 84-rated Wajaaha to beat, but there was more than the hint of better to come in her staying-on third placing here a fortnight back. A step-up to this extended mile-and-a-quarter distance promises to suit well.