18+ | T&Cs apply | Wagering and T&Cs apply | Play Responsibly | Advertising Disclosure

Ger Lyons

My Racing StorySponsors

My Racing Story

Ger LyonsGer Lyons
© Healy Racing Photos

When Irish Champions Weekend started, I just wanted to have runners. Then I thought it would be great to have a winner. To leave Leopardstown on Saturday with four from that day alone is just what dreams are made of but the team as a whole deserve huge credit. They knew this is what I was targeting all year. I said all year, Irish Champions Weekend was where we were going. Whatever we had was going to be aimed at it.

It’s one thing doing that, another thing delivering it and everything has to fall right for you and it has. It’s better to be born lucky than rich! I’ve a huge team and we’re all playing our part.

We’re lucky to have the best jockey in the business in Colin Keane, we’re lucky to have Gary Carroll on the team and lucky to have a great string of owners.

It was my first day back racing. It was the first day for (owners) Sean (Jones) and David (Spratt) to go too. I had always intended to come back for Champions Weekend. I’ve been saying all my career that you don’t need trainers at the races if the staff do their job and they’ve proved it. We went because it’s the biggest weekend on the Irish calendar and very important to us. We targeted it and were lucky enough to have horses for it.

Panama Red got us under way in the Ballylinch Stud Irish EBF Ingabelle Stakes. She’s a work in progress. We know she’s a miler for next year. We’ll let her grow up and I’d say that’s her for the year and we'll start her back in one of the trials.

What can you say about Colin? We’re just riding the wave with him and very lucky to have him.

Atomic Jones won the Group 2 KPMG Champion Juvenile Stakes and he could be the same. He was a big horse when he won his maiden and we gave him plenty of time. He’s still a big green baby and I didn’t expect to be running him this year, not to mind see him winning at two. He’s a real horse for next year over a mile plus. We’ll start him at a mile but I’d say more than a mile will be his trip. He did that purely on raw ability. He’s typical of his sire (Wootton Bassett), good, strong and dependable.

I was delighted when Camorra won the Group 3 Paddy Power Stakes with Thunder Kiss a neck back in second. It was special to give Gary a Champions Weekend winner. He’s a huge part of the outfit. As nice a person as you could meet on a day’s walk and probably the best judge in Ireland so he’s a huge addition to me.

Mason and Colin Keane winning at LeopardstownMason and Colin Keane winning at Leopardstown
© Healy Racing Photos

He has enough intelligence and enough experience to read what the race is doing and then to have the confidence to do what he did and it was the winning of the race and fair play to him.

He was there before Colin and he had the backbone to stay when Colin got the No 1 job, so it really was great. You don’t like beating yourself but it’s a high-class problem so to have a 1-2 was brilliant.

I thought the world of Masen. He’s had his issues. He ran a blinder in Killarney coming back off a long lay-off. He did too much, he did it all wrong. You can see him, he’s another work in progress. He’s not doing things right yet and when he does, he’ll be a nice horse so it was great to finish the day on a high with him in the Irish Stallion Farms EBF Sovereign Path Handicap.

We knew we had nice chances but two for the weekend and I would have been happy. Anything after that would have been a bonus. At long as they run their race is our rule. It’s when I go home scratching my head, that’s what we didn’t want. So they all ran their race.

Champions Weekend is special. It was a great innovation by Irish racing and it’s just getting stronger and stronger. We only had four runners in the Irish Champion Stakes but what a race.

As I keep saying about racing to everybody who’ll listen. Stop worrying about the people who don’t wanna come, worry about the people that are here. The people outside will see us enjoying it. We’re enjoying it, the people at the races enjoy it and eventually the penny will drop. So stop worrying about the others.

Latest Stories which may interest you

My Racing Story. Jane Carpenter

I'm from just outside Kells, Co Meath and I suppose racing has always been a passion of mine. I do love the sport, and it is brilliant to make a career out of it now. My family are huge racing fans and I suppose the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. Racing is a highly discussed topic at home with my family as well as farming. The racing is never off the TV. We take an annual family holiday to Galway every year. We go down for the week, and I've been going since I was a child. It is a proper family tradition now. We have going to the same house for the races I'd say for 14 or 15 years now. There are so many bedrooms there and some of my friends from home come down towards the weekend. It is a proper good holiday, and it is always in our calendars every single year. We were in Punchestown recently after Fairyhouse, so we would be big supporters of going racing. My parents are farmers, so I wouldn't have a close association with horses. I grew up on the farm, and I've been surrounded by animals all of my life. I know at first hand the effort, work and dedication that goes into animals and caring for them. I would have helped dad out on the farm alongside my two brothers. We still try to give a hand when time allows. We've no horses here on the farm, but I'm extremely confident that we will one day! I used to do a bit of riding when I was younger at my local equestrian centre. Things just got in the way then, but last summer I took it back up as a hobby. I'm really enjoying that again.