Tuesday April 16th (Semi-final)
***BALLYMAC SYD WITHDRAWN***
Dowling’s darling still tops in Kirby numbers game
The 2019 Con & Annie Kirby Memorial has certainly passed
by way too quickly for this commentator and although with hardly a minute to
spare over past weeks, I will still lament its passing come Sunday morning when
facing into an eleven month wait for our next Kirby fix!
This sectional feature throughout the event is pretty much an
enforced piece of research I impose on myself for knowing that any stars of the
Kirby will shape greyhound racing over coming seasons, I see it as essential to
get to know their individual strengths before following them around the country
in future classics.
Our semi-final session did not tell us much more than we
already knew about our six finalists now but it did confirm that what this sectional
examination was telling us over the course of the earlier rounds, was pretty
much on the ball and many were where we expected them to be at the third turn.
Some crowding at the closing bends did influence the first
semi in qualification terms but again saw the tenacious Toolmaker Josie flying
along the back-straight for victory while the second semi confirmed Ballymac
Tas as the fastest of the event.
Having been on the front end throughout, it was a quite
something to see her coming home in 12.03 on a miserable evening where the
track could be labelled no faster than normal at the very best, and probably a
touch slower.
In both heats, the early 300 yard split was back a touch on
what we may have expected but it should be noted that they were racing into a
strong headwind along the back-straight which would surely have affected the
runners to that point.
We have our two strongest stayers well established in
Ballymac Tas and Antigua Rum while excepting Deadly Storm, all other finalists
are strong runners. That is no big surprise on a Limerick circuit which ideally
accommodates that style of racer while also being deceptively testing over the
course of a five round competition.
With that assertion made, what’s so impressive about this
Kirby final line-up is that most all are extremely swift in the early part of
their races also. With the greatest respect to each, and this is completely
offered only in terms of where they are right now, the only weak sections ahead
of the final are Deadly Storm coming home and Antigua Rum starting.
You could label Ballymac Syd’s starting as the very same
over the last few rounds but his first round sectional to the 300 yard mark
remains a looming threat to all ahead of Saturday for if repeated now back in
Trap 5, he would likely be capable of anything his sister is already doing.
In comment below, you will see reference to a best virtual
time. That is the respective runners best early split over the course of four
weeks added to their best finishing split to give a guide as to what they may
post if getting everything right on the night.
Use the figures below to try work out where you think each
will be at the various points of the final and best of luck with any punts in a
fascinating showdown.
*As always, only the
leader's numbers at the respective marks are set in stone while those behind
are calculated but we have done this enough now to know that even when a touch
off the mark, it really will be very minor. Remarks are offered to indicate
that a particular sectional could have been faster with a clear run but again,
use your judgement to assess how much any figure is affected and I would always
assert that the figures here should be analysed while watching the videos to
fully appreciate the splits in the context of how the race was run. Descending
order from quarter-final on top in bold to opening round on the bottom for each
runner.
Semi-final 1 - 28.63
|
||
Toolmaker Josie
|
16.33 ckd
16.28 ckd
16.34 touch
16.22 brush
|
12.30 touch
12.26
12.55
12.33
|
Ballymac Syd
|
16.56 crd / bump
16.65 bmp
16.57 blk
15.93
|
12.21 ckd
12.14
12.33 crd
12.14
|
Deadly Storm
|
16.26 bmp
16.58 crd / bmp
16.34 bmp
16.06
|
12.54 touch
12.61
12.53
12.38 bmp
|
More of the same from Josie and what the numbers reveal is
that he is a very even paced runner throughout the circuit with back-straight
pace his most visually impressive attribute.
There has been runners to outpace Robert Gleeson’s
progressive youngster to the corner in this Kirby but cleverly sneaking around
on the rails he has, for the most part, outpaced those on the approach to the
closing bends. I’ve remarked that he was checked in the early sectional here
but that was very minor while switching towards the rails on the run to the
bend and his 300 yard figure is quite firmly established at approx. 16.25.
He is consistent and it can certainly be claimed that he is
taking the runs well with his finishing sectional varying very little while in
around the 12.30 mark. All in all, there remains finalists who have posted
lower figures in both sections and finding a way to execute his best race is
going to be key in the final for when combining his best splits, it gives a
virtual best time of 28.48. Despite winning here, that says he has time to find
with victory claims more than a touch dependent on his final rivals failing to
implement their best race execution, while finding a way to reach that third
bend in front.
Liam Dowling’s Ballymac Syd has returned three almost
identical passages in the last three rounds when basically getting himself out
of trouble each time. We can read little into his early figures in those rounds
while battling through traffic but what we did learn is that he has a willing
battling attitude, powerful back-straight pace and sees out the trip strongly.
It is quite a simple wish from his supporters ahead of the
final in that, a return to Trap 5 can spark an early sectional like that he
posted in the opening round. The jury must be out regarding his suitability to
the stripes. Certainly he broke much better from Trap 5 in the first round and
if able to secure a clear run from an improved break, anything in the same
parish as that means he can win the final. A clear path from halfway will see
him come home in that 12.14 which means he only has to be ahead of Tas and
Antigua to the closing bends to have a sniff. His virtual best time remains
28.07 and his chance next week is straightforward, he must return to his best
break.
They may have lost Deadly Diamond from the event last
weekend but Garry Hannon & Michael O’Donovan will crown a hugely
competitive participation with one last chance for Deadly Storm to dominate a
Kirby heat. That is what will be needed from the early pacer if he is to
prevail in the final but he has become quite an endearing character while
securing places from positions he would not want to be in.
Over the past weeks he has repeatedly found similarly
talented early pacers to impede his passage at the point of the race where he
is strongest, to halfway. So many in his early paced bracket were eliminated
for that very reason but he proved to have the best survival skills and plucky
attributes have earned him his final chance.
In the semi, he got his bump from Grangeview West at the
opening bend but back-straight pace saw him just show in front at the third
bend clock mark before another brush while on the outside of three at the crown
of the closing turns. In any case, his finish is not strong enough to convert
from a position like that again but his 16.06 from the opening round is the key
figure. Reproduce that with control of the inside at the first bend, be on the
bunny down the back and take his chances thereafter. A virtual best time of
28.44 from the first round is borderline I’d suggest but it has a much better
chance if executed from the front!
Semi-final 2 - 28.27
|
||
Ballymac Tas
|
16.24 brush
16.39 blk
16.10
16.01
|
12.03
12.13
12.13
11.96
|
Herecomesdahoney
|
16.42 ckd
16.19
16.24
16.45 brush
|
12.13
12.11
12.27
12.13
|
Antigua Rum
|
16.66 blk
16.41 crd
16.39
16.67 crd
|
11.96
11.98
12.19 ckd
11.98
|
A simply phenomenal performance from Tas once again as she again
confirms that she is the fastest runner in the 2019 Kirby.
Three times she has secured clear passage and each time she
has posted numbers that only a true superstar can produce. This week there was
just a minor brush at the opening bend as she rushed up on the inside of
Herecomesdahoney and although they don’t look much in running, these touches
must be factored into the sectionals for they can affect the clock as she is
clearly capable of reaching the 300 yard mark faster than 16.24; and has
already matched some blistering early pacers to that point in previous rounds.
What sets her apart however, is that on top of this early
prowess she comes home like an out n` out stayer! 12.03 for the closing
sectional this week was stunning given the murky conditions and the track
running normal at the very best. She is taking the runs very well judging by
the figures. She can live with the best early and is as good as any coming
home. Win or lose the Kirby final, Liam Dowling has another legend of a bitch
to contest any classic with and her virtual best time, which is in fact her
first round 27.97 victory, keeps her where she has been from the word go, at
the very top of the Kirby tree.
It looked a nightmare draw in Trap 5 for Herecomesdahoney as
Graham Holland had already conceded that the inside is much preferred but with
the pressure on, he found the break to secure a crucial clear passage to the
corner. Although best away, you couldn’t be hard on him for allowing Tas up his
inner to the bend for he was covering more ground on his drift across towards
the rails.
His love of the rails is almost certainly responsible for
getting checked at the second bend also for while on the outside of Tas, he was
surely still seeking to move inward on the run to the back-straight. Once they
straightened up to gallop thereafter, there was little to choose with him and
the leader and it was only about a half-length that he ceded down the back. I
point these out to qualify his 16.42 because he moves faster than that
suggests. You can take 20 spots off that when he has the inside to himself……and
that liking for the inside is his biggest plus point when looking ahead.
It wouldn’t have been so obvious at first look when
track-side as Tas pulled away late on but Herecomesdahoney was booting home
also. 12.13 is brilliant and that is pretty much what he has been doing all
along. Having command of the rails at the closing bends when he’s coming home
like that, even Tas or Antigua Rum would have a job on to go around the
outside!
We almost knew what we were going to get from Tom O’Neill’s
Antigua Rum before traps opened and he again confirmed his staying abilities by
dipping under the 12.00 barrier for the third time. He is the one runner who can
actually frighten Tas from halfway. The task of course is to get close enough
down the back.
Again he suffered a big bump at the opening bend here and in
fact did very well to keep his paws safely planted in the sand at that point.
When considered that he was only beaten by five lengths, much of that deficit
can be accounted for with his bump. So, he’s not that far off in terms of the
final. Much however will depend on how the final pans out.
If Rum secures a clear run at the first bends, he can reach
the 300 mark in 16.40. He is odds on to be behind at that point and whether his
finishing kick can indeed bring victory, will depend on who is in front of him.
If say Deadly Storm led to that point, it could be game on in behind or with
the possibility of those ahead reaching the third turn in tight quarters, could
some crowding see him closing rapidly. It has to fall right but there is a way
that he can win the final.
________________________________________________________________
Quarter-final sectionals
They say three into two won’t go but in the quarter-final heats of the 2019 Con & Annie Kirby Memorial at Limerick on Saturday, it was more a case of six into three will not go as a dramatic session of quarter-final heats saw supremely talented youngsters scrambling for precious qualifying places where victory became irrelevant while desperately seeking to keep Kirby dreams alive.
You could throw any amount of adjectives at a report on Saturday’s action but I’ve settled on brutal for it was quite scary as simply a racing fan to see this cast of stars thundering into a first bend when you knew that something had to give and that proper outright fancies were certain to be eliminated.
Aside from being capable of posting blistering clocks, it was the depth of talent amongst this cast of 2019 which ensured that this event was the most competitive of a seven year Kirby history and it was always going to reach a stage where some would simply have to cede. At quarter-final stage, we reached our pinch-point!
With so many survivors bearing a similar racing style, we struggled to get accurate sectional times on many for the opening 300 yards this week but those in the early paced bracket had already signalled their abilities before Saturday. Many in that mode were eliminated but an interesting aspect which is revealed below is that we now have a clear “strongest stayer” to focus on as Antigua Rum clearly emphasised how beneficial his stamina can be in an event with so many doing it the opposite way!
Next best in the staying department is Ballymac Tas and you could only be impressed further by her battling performance to qualify from a treacherous position behind Herecomesdahoney in Heat 4. She remains the fastest of the event while enhancing her claims despite defeat and offered relief to Liam Dowling for there should be no Kirby report written this week without offering best wishes to his Cuore Di Ferro.
Gratefully completing the circuit after a fall in the opening heat when facing a nightmare Trap 6 draw, he all but secured qualification before tumbling at halfway. A fate he did not deserve and hammered home the precarious nature of these quarter-finals for a relieved attendance as he made his way along the home-straight.
*As always, only the leader's numbers at the respective marks are set in stone while those behind are calculated but we have done this enough now to know that even when a touch off the mark, it really will be very minor. Remarks are offered to indicate that a particular sectional could have been faster with a clear run but again, use your judgement to assess how much any figure is affected and I would always assert that the figures here should be analysed while watching the videos to fully appreciate the splits in the context of how the race was run. Descending order from quarter-final on top in red to opening round on the bottom for each runner.
Heat 1 28.70
| ||
Deadly Diamond
|
16.22 bump
16.25 touch
16.62 ckd
|
12.48
12.57
12.36
|
Toolmaker Me Dad
|
16.58 bmp
16.15
16.10
|
12.22
12.21
12.17
|
Grangeview West
|
16.65 blk
16.12
16.00
|
12.33
12.44
12.25
|
You really have to hand it to this Michael O’Donovan winner who was made to battle for control of the rails at the opening bend. He needed to lead Toolmaker Me Dad to his inner for qualification hopes and even with a bump to his hinds on the run-up, he again displayed the early pace that keeps his realistic Kirby hopes alive.
Still without a completely clear passage to the 300 yard mark, it is fair to assume that he can pretty much match any of the field in the early part of the race. Excepting his better finishing split on the faster circuit for Round One, what the numbers do reveal is that his outright claims are polarised, in that he must reach the closing bends while in full command. 12.48 this week, and 12.57 a week earlier, won’t see him defend small halfway leads over many who remain to semi-final stage.
A first defeat for Toolmaker Me Dad and he simply wasn’t away well enough this time. Trainer Robert Gleeson had hinted that he wasn’t convinced his young star, although an inside seed, truly wants the red jacket but again, it came in handy this week for while reaching the bend on the inside of a line of four behind the leaders, he came off best from a bump when all but assured qualification at the top of the back-straight.
His poor start aside however, he does appear to be holding his form when you examine his finishing split. Three times now he has covered the closing 225 yards within five spots and they are the figures of a strong runner. He will hold claims in any company when front rank to halfway and the 300 yard figures he posted in the earlier rounds clearly show that he can be with the best to that point. Obviously still has a big say.
“We got the rub of the green tonight!” They were Michael Hogan’s words after his gutsy Grangeview West was the chief beneficiary following the fall of Coure Di Ferro. But she had earned that luck in her two brilliant opening successes and her performance here was a brave one, from a draw she really did not want.
Crowding and bumping saw her tail just about last at the crown of the bends and it was no mean feat to subsequently repel Winetavern Don on the run to the line. Back nearer her first round finishing split this week is encouraging and given her rails draw in the semi-finals, her figures from the previous rounds could well see her in the final if repeated.
Heat 2 28.54
| ||
Toolmaker Josie
|
16.28 ckd
16.34 touch
16.22 brush
|
12.26
12.55
12.33
|
Rattling Conor
|
16.52 ckd / bmp
16.36 ckd
16.57 ckd
|
12.44
12.52 ckd
12.26
|
Deadly Storm
|
16.58 crd / bmp
16.34 bmp
16.06
|
12.61
12.53
12.38 bmp
|
Another heat where the run to the bend was always going to be crucial and it worked in Josie’s favour that he was not amongst the leaders when reaching the corner. The concern here will be that he was essentially outpaced by three rivals on the run-up, but, only one of those managed to advance!
He was forced to check slightly before finding a gaping gap on the rails off the second turn but he was highly impressive thereafter. Overall, the figures suggest that he is in and around the 16.20 mark to 300 yards and with this being very close to a clear run, reveal that he is even paced throughout. Just like his kennel companion, that very respectable 12.26 finishing split says that he is taking the runs well and will give him every opportunity of converting if shading the lead beyond halfway but he will need draws to get the run with a few remaining that can lead him to the corner.
Mossie O’Connor’s Rattling Conor is developing an aura in the Kirby which almost exudes a defiant confidence in that they just can’t seem to knock him out. He has yet to find a clear run and we are in the dark as to what he could post for the opening 300 yards. He’ll have to trap and secure a path to show us at some point but what he has shown is flashes of real pace. He was crossed on the run-up here, bumped at the bend and was a bad fifth at the crown. Granted there was trouble for rivals ahead of him but once swinging off the second bend, he displayed a powerful turn of pace along the back-straight. Odd to assert after watching three rounds but he remains a little unexposed. A faster break however is going to be required…..and soon!
Michael O’Donovan managed to guide two through to semi-final stage from his team of four on Saturday and Gary Hannon won’t mind me reporting that he was beaming leaving Limerick as Deadly Storm delivered a second semi-finalist for the Bray owner. Storm was one of three first bend leaders here who raced in tight quarters while all impeding each other.
Only fourth at halfway however, he battled gamely to qualify and he is another of the early pacers who retain the ability to dominate a heat when free to gallop the opening bends independently. I wouldn’t be over harsh on him for that 12.61 finish either because he has done better and had an awful amount of work done before reaching the closing stages this time. His Kirby plan is very simple, must lead and hang on!
Heat 3 28.39
| ||
Antigua Rum
|
16.41 crd
16.39
16.67 crd
|
11.98
12.19 ckd
11.98
|
Tullig Footpad
|
16.40 bmp
16.48 ckd
16.28
|
12.34
12.44 brush
12.35
|
Ballymac Syd
|
16.65 bmp
16.57 blk
15.93
|
12.14
12.33 crd
12.14
|
Simply not possessing the early pace of his rivals here, this heat fell just perfectly for the staying abilities of Tom O’Neill’s Antigua Rum. Sitting in a pocket behind the leaders having been tight for room on the approach, he ducked inward to cleverly find a run at the bends before delivering his powerful challenge on the outside from the second turn.
Up to this point, he was among a handful of runners capable of dipping under the 12.00 barrier coming home but with his fellow stayers losing out at quarter-final stage, notably Redzer Ardfert in this heat, he is now the strongest remaining in the event. We had noted here that his very solid 16.39 in Round Two was an ominous sign if indeed he could get the room to repeat it. His finishing kick will clearly convert victory every time he is front rank to halfway but that early figure is key.
With the heats being so competitive, and the semis likely to be the same, those capable of leading him are scrambling to execute their best race against similar types and as such are being forced to race in tight quarters. His lack of early dash in the context of this Kirby has now almost become an advantage and when considered that our fastest 300 yard split this week was 16.19, Antigua would be only three lengths behind approaching the third turn. No leader would want that and on a circuit that can prove very tiring over five rounds, Tom O’Neill has a challenger who is absolutely relishing the task.
Tullig Footpad ran here like he knew that the Pat Buckley dream of four in-a-row was resting solely with him. I’ve put bump after his opening split and while there was nothing obvious, I’m sure there was more than the odd touch as he competed in tight quarters to the back-straight. He showed smart pace to hit the front when swinging off the second bend and we know he can post faster figures. As with any of the early pacers in the quarters, he avoided a banana skin here but his 12.34 is respectable for an early paced runner and his Kirby task is simple from here on, he must return to his best breaking form and dictate for victories.
Liam Dowling could have been forgiven for thinking that his Kirby challenge was about to come to a crashing halt here as Ballymac Syd raced in last place at the crown of the bends when bumped upon turning. He again got himself out of trouble however with powerful back-straight pace before his confirmed strong running abilities secured qualification. 12.14 is very strong coming home and that seems to be his number. When added to his first round 15.93, that amounts to the figures of a classic winner so it is very straight forward from here, he simply must get back to the better break he showed in Round One because right now, he is struggling to implement his best race from Trap 6 as he is not showing enough on the run to the bend to clear the slick early pacers that remain.
Heat 4 28.30
| ||
Herecomesdahoney
|
16.19
16.24
16.45 brush
|
12.11
12.27
12.13
|
Spoofer
|
16.35 touch
16.18
16.17 ckd
|
12.16
12.32
12.28 bmp
|
Ballymac Tas
|
16.39 blk
16.10
16.01
|
12.13
12.13
11.96
|
On a night where the draw proved crucial, Herescomesdahoney had the best of it and he took full advantage when reaffirming his highly plausible Kirby credentials as the sole Graham Holland survivor.
The figures clearly indicate that he is growing within the event with his best splits both starting and finishing, and, while not the fastest of the Kirby in either section, the sum total amounts to an even paced runner who when left to his own devices can be a classic contender in any company because he has no weak point on any part of the circuit. Yes he has benefited from the red jacket in all three rounds but he broke very well here. You would naturally have concerns when drawn further out, which he will be this week, as many can go to the bend alongside him but his strength beyond halfway means that qualification is not dependent on leading. 12.11 will see him bearing down on many early pacers close home and if you weren’t convinced before this week, you must now be certain that he is a big Kirby player!
Philip Gough would probably have hoped for Spoofer to lead the winner on the inside here but it worked out quite alright when he didn’t. He essentially missed his break and we already know that his 300 yard figure can come down. Being on the rails, a minor brush at the first turn didn’t interrupt his gallop very much and what connections will be delighted to see is the improvement in his finish. Another for whom draws will be crucial and he will have to remedy this latest break. All in all, a very similar type of runner to the winner.
A first defeat for Ballymac Tas here but I suggested to Liam Dowling that she was as good as her opening round victory on Saturday, and I stand over that assertion. Edging left on the approach to the turn, she did remarkably well to keep her legs in what could have been a fateful bump at that point. She was devouring ground along the back-straight until forced to check behind Spoofer at the crown of the closing bends so her finishing split of 12.13 further emphasises her staying ability over 525 yards. She won’t want a draw like this again but this commentator will argue that she is still top dog in the Kirby with her better draw this week adding confidence to that claim.
**This week, we are happy to say that this sectional analysis will appear in print with our good friends at the Sporting Press. However, this coverage of major events as published in the pages of this blog, which delves deeper than any, is available for exclusive purchase by sponsors, tracks, publishers etc., from the author for your website, print or online media publications. Just saying!
**This week, we are happy to say that this sectional analysis will appear in print with our good friends at the Sporting Press. However, this coverage of major events as published in the pages of this blog, which delves deeper than any, is available for exclusive purchase by sponsors, tracks, publishers etc., from the author for your website, print or online media publications. Just saying!
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