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Mark Nunan

Mark Nunan

Wren's Breath flies home to land Listed contest

Wed 21st Jul 2021, 18:03

Wren's Breath and Gary Carroll (left) beat More Beautiful  Wren's Breath and Gary Carroll (left) beat More Beautiful
© Photo Healy Racing

Wren’s Breath (17/2, from 11/1 on the show) was a striking winner of the Listed Yeomanstown Stud Irish EBF Stakes (Listed) on just her second start.

The field split into two groups and the Henry de Bromhead-trained filly, owned and bred by Peter Molony, was being ridden along at the rear of the stands’ side group over a quarter mile from home.

When switched by Gary Carroll to make her challenge right down the outside under the stands’ rail, she picked up very strongly to collar Most Beautiful (11/1) in the closing stages and win going away by three quarters of a length. The 11/4 favourite Tereza Mendoza was a further two lengths away in third.

The winner, who was full of running after the line and jumped a path before finally consenting to being pulled up, had been runner-up in a Barrier Trial at Dundalk behind subsequent impressive maiden winner River Eden before finishing second on debut at Navan earlier this month.

She was the second winner on the card for Ballyhane Stud sire Elzaam after the newcomer Recurrent Dream took the opener.

“She did that nicely, it was a big ask for her second run in a listed race,” said Carroll.

“She's a filly that is blind in one eye and when I was behind horses, till halfway I wasn't going anywhere.

“I'd say her spatial awareness with one eye is not great but when I got out and got a bit of daylight she picked up very well and got to the line strong.

“She's a nice filly, there is more black-type to be got with her. I'd say she'll learn to sprint, sharpen up, and make into a nice filly.”

Quotes from Gary Carson

About Mark Nunan
Mark has followed racing since he was a teenager and worked for many years as a broadcaster with the Irish version of Racecall. He joined the Press Association in 2019 and is also a contributor to the Racing Post. A native of Kildare, he now lives in Sligo.