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Review galway 1st Aug

< Banna Man took top honours on the final day of the festival at Galway as Bryan Cooper gave the 10-year-old a great ride to land the Connacht Tribune Handicap Chase.

Racing from 6lb out of the handicap but crucially a course and distance winner at Ballybrit a couple of years ago, he came there cruising upsides Truckers Delight after the last.

It looked like the 8-1 chance would go on to win easily, but 7lb claimer Cooper had to keep him up to his work to secure a two-length success over Arkendale

Winning trainer Thomond O'Mara said: "He won here on this day two years ago. He was thrown in here off a nice weight.

"He ran well here on Monday evening over hurdles and we decided to take our chance. I thought the ground might have a been a shade quick.

"I'm delighted he won a big pot and Bryan was good on him. It's his first time riding for me."< Kilmurry was an emphatic 12-length winner of the Galway Bay FM Beginners Chase for Henry de Bromhead and Andrew Lynch.

Third previously on his fencing debut at Killarney, the five-year-old jumped like an old hand and never looked back after leading three out. Prince Erik was sent off the 9-4 favourite but was an early casualty.

"That was brilliant, I was delighted with him," said the winning trainer.

"He was always going to be a chaser so that's why we decided to kick on with him, even though he is only a five-year-old.

"He ran well first time out at Killarney and one of the lads involved in him was keen to come to Galway.

"There is a two-and-a-half-mile novice chase at Tipperary in October that springs to mind for him."< Prince Chaparral s victory in the galwayraces.com Handicap made it a day to remember for Pat Flynn after the County Waterford handler had struck in Group Three company at Cork with star mare She's Our Mark < Impersonator (11-2) completed a hat-trick when holding Acclaimed in the Easyfix Handicap Hurdle, leading two flights from home and keeping on well up the hill to beat Acclaimed by a length and a quarter.

Trained by Tony Mullins, it was a first