1992 Irish Greyhound Derby

The 1992 Irish Greyhound Derby took place during August and September with the final being held at Shelbourne Park in Dublin on 26 September 1992.[1]

1992 Respond Irish Greyhound Derby
VenueShelbourne Park
LocationDublin
End date26 September
Total prize money£50,000 (winner)

The winner Manx Treasure won £50,000 and was trained by Michael O'Sullivan and owned and bred by John Guildford in the Isle of Man. The race was sponsored by the Kerry Group's dog food product 'Respond' who had increased the winner's prize by an extra £20,000.[2]

Final result

At Shelbourne, 26 September (over 550 yards):

Position Winner Breeding Trap SP Time Trainer
1st Manx TreasureGreenpark Fox - Minorcas Fuchsia55-230.53Michael O'Sullivan
2nd Radical PrinceLodge Prince - Garryduff Lassie17-130.55Eddie Wade
3rd Farloe MelodyLodge Prince - Chini Chin Chin66-4f30.74Matt O'Donnell
4th Ballymoss CloverSummerhill Gem - Sandy Lu340-131.00Peadar Lambe
5th Sliding AwaySoda Fountain - Milltown Gem28-131.02Michael O'Donovan
6th Superfine DarkieLow Sail - Lisnakill Carmel47-131.23Alan Black

Distances

head, 2¼, 3¼, head, 2½ (lengths)

Competition Report

Manx Treasure, a brindle dog, had a toe amputated in January 1992 before he had even competed in a single race. When he made his comeback in June he progressed well before suffering a stress fracture on his hock curtailing his recovery. With the Respond Irish Derby fast approaching the dog recovered well and took his place in the qualifying round.[3]

In the first round Manx Treasure was bumped running from a bad draw and finished last but four days later he won by ten lengths in 30.67 in the repechage round. He followed this up with a five length victory in round one recording 30.43. The 1992 English Greyhound Derby champion and double Easter Cup champion Farloe Melody remained hot favourite despite a qualifying round defeat. He then eased to two victories in the first two rounds. Other notable performances in the earlier rounds included Polnoon Chief and Market Rascal.[3]

The quick runs for Manx Treasure were proving difficult for his connections to manage the stress on the hock and he required veterinary attention after each run to ensure that he was fully fit to compete. A second round win in 30.65 put him into the quarter finals. In the quarter finals Manx Treasure suffered a short head defeat to Superfine Darkie while the other heats went to Market Rascal, Polnoon Chief and a dead-heat between Parquet Pet and Ballymoss Clover.[3]

Manx Treasure produced a fast run to win by five lengths in 30.23 from Radical Prince and Ballymoss Clover in the semi finals, the fastest in the competition so far. The second semi was taken by Sliding Away ahead off Superfine Darkie and the hampered Farloe Melody.[3]

In just his eleventh career race on 26 September Manx Treasure was first out of the traps and saw off the challenge of Farloe Melody at the third bend and then held off a late finish from Radical Prince. Farloe Melody were retired to stud after the race.[3]

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See also

References

  1. Hobbs, Jonathan (2008). Greyhound Annual 2008, pages 177-178. Raceform. ISBN 978-1-905153-534.
  2. Hobbs, Jonathan (2004). Greyhound Annual 2005, pages 164-165. Raceform. ISBN 1-904317-58-8.
  3. Fortune, Michael. The 75 Years History of the Irish Greyhound Derby. Irish Greyhound Review. ISSN 0709-0609.
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