Donnacha O’Brien and his sister Ana are out to end their father’s dominance in the Coolmore Stud Wootton Bassett Tom Cooper Irish EBF Futurity Stakes with the exciting
A Boy Named Susie at the Curragh on Saturday.
Aidan O’Brien has won the race a record 17 times, with the likes of Giant’s Causeway (1999), Hawk Wing (2001) and more recently Henry Longfellow (2023) and Henri Matisse (2024) among the distinguished Ballydoyle alumni on the roll of honour.
He is well represented once again with Constitution River, who built on his narrow defeat at Newmarket on debut when scoring nicely at Galway. But it his son who could prove the fly in the ointment with his impressive Killarney winner, who is owned by Ana O’Brien.
Donnacha O’Brien said: “He’s in good form and trained well since Killarney. We’re stepping back in trip a furlong, but I don’t think it will be a problem for him.
“It’s a good step up in class, but everything in the race is probably in the same boat and we’ll find out how good he is.
“I think if I had a colt who was able to compete in the likes of the National Stakes or Dewhurst, it would be him. He obviously won impressively first time out so I was eager to keep him on this path and treat him as a good horse until he proves me wrong.
“Everything has gone to plan and we don’t know where his limits are yet, so it will be good to at least test him at this level.”
It is a similar story in the Alpha Centauri Debutante Stakes, where the Ballydoyle trainer saddles commanding Silver Flash Stakes winner Composing, with Donnacha fielding stiff opposition in the form of
Balantina.
A course winner on her second start, she was third to Venetian Sun in a high-quality renewal of the Albany Stakes at Royal Ascot before being denied by the barest of margins in the Prix Six Perfections most recently.
“She’s been a very solid filly and probably a bit unlucky not to have a few more wins,” continued O’Brien.
“She was slowly away at Ascot in the Albany and finished strongly, then in Deauville the last day she was just nabbed and it was only the nod that went against her when she looked the winner everywhere but on the line.
“She’s in good form and trained well since then. We’re backing her up quicker than ideal since her trip to France, but she’s in very good form and I think the track and trip and everything about the race will suit her, so we’re happy to let her take her chance.”
Ger Lyons’ unbeaten Suzie Songs adds plenty of spice to a race that also includes Willie McCreery’s Skydance and Gavin Cromwell’s Brownstown, who were second and fourth respectively behind likely favourite Composing at Leopardstown.
The line-up is completed by Karl Burke’s Evolutionist, who won a deep Newmarket maiden earlier this month and steps up significantly in grade.
Burke said: “She’s in good form and we’re very happy with her.
“The drop back to seven (furlongs) is not what we originally planned to do with her, but with the race breaking up a little bit we thought we’d let her take her chance.”