Peaceful Tops O'Brien Family Superfecta in Guineas

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Photo: Patrick McCann/Racing Post
Peaceful wins the Irish One Thousand Guineas at the Curragh

With the Curragh at its most tranquil, Peaceful led home a 1-2-3-4 finish for the O'Brien family June 13 as Aidan won his ninth Tattersalls Irish One Thousand Guineas (G1) by beating Fancy Blue, son Donnacha's first runner in a classic.

Seamie Heffernan kept it simple. The most able of deputies was on a thorough stayer for whom the Investec Oaks (G1) has been in mind for some time, so she was not going to stop. Stop she didn't, and in pulling two lengths clear of Fancy Blue, with stablemate So Wonderful in third and the Joseph O'Brien-trained New York Girl in fourth, she propelled her super sire Galileo to the top of the group 1 table.

It was Galileo's 85th time to sire a winner at the top level, edging him past Danehill.

Thurles would not usually be a place you would associate with classic winners, although Melbourne Cup (G1) hero Vintage Crop did make a winning debut there, but it was at the home of mud-splattered jump racing where Peaceful announced herself as a potential star when she won her maiden there by seven lengths in October.

This dominant display from the front confirmed the suspicion that she would be even better at 3, and she was slashed into 5-1 from 16-1 for the Oaks at Epsom by Ladbrokes, with stablemate Love remaining the 6-4 favorite.

Indeed, O'Brien was not entirely ruling out the chances of her turning out again at Royal Ascot next weekend for the Coronation Stakes (G1).

The winning trainer said: "Donnacha loved Peaceful when he won on her in Thurles last year. When she went to Newmarket afterwards, she couldn't walk a yard in the heavy ground, but she still kept fighting and wasn't beaten all that far at the line. That's the sign of a really good filly. She just wouldn't lie down. We knew then that she was obviously very good.

"She loved the ground out there and skipped along. She is very uncomplicated, and we always thought she'd stay a lot further than a mile."

On future targets, O'Brien added: "If she came out of this well, you'd have to look at the Coronation, especially if the ground was nice there. We thought some of these fillies could back up in it. The ground is on the slow side in Ascot at the moment.

"Epsom has to be a possible for her. The lads will decide, but it has to be a possible for all those fillies. We knew he had nice 3-year-old fillies at the start of the season. They are Galileo fillies, and we are just so lucky to have them. They are beautifully bred, big, rangy, scopey fillies, and they get better and better."

Aidan O’Brien in the parade ring before winning the Tattersalls 1,000 Guineas (Group 1) with Peaceful. The Curragh Racecourse.<br><br />
13.06.2020 
Photo: Patrick McCann/Racing Post
Aidan O’Brien (right) in the parade ring before winning the One Thousand Guineas at the Curragh

Donnacha O'Brien, at the age of just 21, is already looking forward to a potential rematch with Peaceful in the Oaks at Epsom, and you can certainly understand why, given the way Fancy Blue grabbed the ground in the closing stages. She was never any closer than at the line.

Donnacha said: "You'd have to be delighted with that. The way she stayed on would make you think that the Oaks would be the right race for her."

So Wonderful was third, thus extending her winless run to nine, but she remains one of the most talented maidens in training.

The big disappointment of the race was the hot favorite, Albigna.

The Prix Marcel Boussac (G1) winner was supposed to supply Jessica Harrington with her second Irish One Thousand Guineas winner, two years after Alpha Centauri provided her with her first, but the best she could do was sixth.

Explaining the below-par effort, Harrington's daughter Kate said: "Shane (Foley) felt that she just didn't handle the quick ground. He said she got away with it at Santa Anita, but she couldn't get away with it twice."

It turned out to be a Peaceful occasion. A smooth, straightforward success for a filly you sense is only going to get better and better this season, with Heffernan stressing, "She could be anything."

Whether is it Ascot or Epsom she appears next, she is certainly not going to have much downtime after her classic-winning exploits. 

Aidan O'Brien added: "It's rapid the way things are happening this season, and it's very hard to make plans because it's changing all the time. You don't get much time to think, but it's just great to be racing."

It is indeed, Aidan. Especially when you have fillies as talented as Peaceful.