1977 Irish Greyhound Derby

The 1977 Irish Greyhound Derby took place during July and August with the final being held at Shelbourne Park in Dublin on 13 August 1977.[1]

1977 Irish Greyhound Derby
VenueShelbourne Park
LocationDublin
Start date25 July
End date13 August
Total prize money£17,500 (winner)

The winner Lindas Champion won £17,500 and was owned, trained and bred by 21-year old Michael Barrett from Ballingarry.[2] The competition was sponsored by Carrolls.

Final result

At Shelbourne, 13 August (over 525 yards):

Position Winner Breeding Trap SP Time Trainer
1st Linda's ChampionMonalee Champion - Merry Linda27-229.53Michael Barrett
2nd Brush TimSupreme Fun - Gormanstown Aye1100-3029.54Francie Murray
3rd Greenane DeccaMonalee Champion - Fit Me In37-4f29.66Paddy Nugent
4th Boolas HillYanka Boy - Rokeel Rebel620-129.78Eddie Lawlor
5th Rokeel LightBlessington Boy - Boola's Countess45-130.26Paddy Tubridy
6th Black BartSole Aim - Quarry Willow59-130.38Gay McKenna

Distances

Short-head, 1½, 1½, 6, 1½ (lengths)

Competition Report

The Irish Derby trial stakes held around Ireland had previously failed to produce an ultimate winner of the Irish Derby but in 1977 this changed. The Kilkenny Greyhound Stadium trial stakes winner Linda's Champion had entered the stake for just £5 and gained a free entry to the competition itself by winning the Kilkenny heat.[3]

The first round proper featured 105 entries and despite a Racing Managers strike which had closed most Irish tracks for a month. Heading the ante-post betting was the litter brothers Greenane Decca and Glen Rock both trained by Paddy Nugent, and the newly crowned Welsh Greyhound Derby champion Instant Gambler handled by Jack Murphy. English hope Gaily Noble recorded 29.17 before one of the leading contenders Glen Rock pulled up and stopped in a later heat.[4] Other winners included Shady Monkey (29.19), Brush Tim (29.23) and Ballintee Star (29.26).[5]

Instant Gambler impressed with a time of 28.94 in round two; Brush Tim recorded 29.02 for new trainer Francie Murray, Francie had taken over from his father Mick. Gaily Noble went well again in 29.07. Linda's Champion won in 29.25 and remarkably was competing in the Tipperary Cup at the same time as the Derby.[5]

In the quarter finals Instant Gambler failed to progress further and the Eugene McNamara trained Swibo defeated Gaily Noble. Linda's Champion and Greenane Decca won the remaining two heats. In the semi-final Gay McKenna gained success by claiming the first heat with 10-1 shot Black Bart from Brush Tim and Linda's Champion. The second heat resulted in Rokeel Light beating Greenane Decca and Boolas Hill.[3]

Greenane Decca had beaten Linda's Champion in the National Produce Stakes final earlier in the year but this time the tables were turned as Linda's Champion led all the way before holding off a late challenge by Brush Tim. The photo finish went in favour of the former and Greenane Decca finished third. Linda's Champion also won the Tipperary Cup during the event.[3]

gollark: Brute force all possible regular expression substitution things to find the shortest working one.
gollark: The bridge doesn't bridge edits, you know.
gollark: * quantity
gollark: Besides, all groups of parents form a unified hive mind.
gollark: See, that's still actually bad and not good.

See also

References

  1. Genders, Roy (1990). NGRC book of Greyhound Racing. Pelham Books Ltd. p. 261. ISBN 0-7207-1804-X.
  2. Comyn, John. 50 Years of Greyhound Racing in Ireland. Aherlow Publishers Ltd.
  3. Fortune, Michael. Irish Greyhound Derby 1932–1981. Victory Irish Promotions Ltd.
  4. "Remember When - July 1977". Greyhound Star.
  5. Fortune, Michael. The 75 Years History of the Irish Greyhound Derby. Irish Greyhound Review. ISSN 0709-0609.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.