Favorite Australia wins English Derby

Favorite Australia wins English Derby

Published Jun. 7, 2014 12:06 p.m. ET

NEWMARKET, England (AP) Race favorite Australia comfortably won the 235th English Derby by 1 ¼ lengths on Saturday as Aidan O'Brien became the first trainer to saddle the winner three years in a row.

Sent off at odds of 11-8 and ridden by the trainer's son, Joseph O'Brien, Australia powered to victory in the final straight to triumph ahead of Kingston Hill and Romsdal in the mile-and-a-half classic.

"Joseph was very happy, he had in his mind where he wanted to be and he gave him a beautiful ride," Aidan O'Brien said after congratulating his son. "We always thought he (Australia) was very special, the way he's bred and the pace that he has."

It was Aidan O'Brien's fifth Derby winner following victories in the classic with Galileo (2001), High Chaparral (2002), Camelot (2012) and Ruler Of The World (2013).

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Australia, who came third in the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket last month, had a nearly flawless race and kept on well in the closing stages. The son of Galileo and 2004 Epsom Oaks victor Ouija Board hit the front over a furlong out before accelerating and moving clear of the 15-2 Kingston Hill.

"Horses don't come easier to ride than this fellow, he's the best (I've ridden)," said Joseph O'Brien, winning his second Derby after Camelot's victory two years ago.

John Gosden's Romsdal outran his 20-1 price to finish third, another 3 1/4 lengths away.

A crowd of more than 100,000 attended the race at Epsom, south of London, including Queen Elizabeth II, who returned from a three-day state visit to France for the 70th anniversary of D-Day.

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