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CHUCKLE BROTHERS; INTERVIEW.


Byline: Emma Berry meets Michael and Noel Quinlan, who have plenty to smile about after Royal Ascot Royal Ascot

annual horserace, occasion for great fashionable turnout. [Br. Cult.: Brewer Dictionary, 49]

See : Fashion


Royal Ascot

England’s fashionable annual event. [Br. Cult.
 success last week

IT'S midsummer's day Midsummer's Day or Midsummer Day
Noun

June 24, the feast of St John the Baptist: one of the four quarter days in England, Ireland, and Wales

Noun 1.
 and while the temperature is hardly sizzling, Michael Quinlan Michael Quinlan may refer to:
  • Sir Michael Quinlan, former top official in the British Ministry of Defence.
  • Michael R. Quinlan, former McDonalds CEO.
  • Michael Quinlan, musician.
  • Michael Alan Quinlan Jr., student at Georgia Southern University.
 has the sausages coming along nicely in his home overlooking Tattersalls in Newmarket as his younger brother Noel holds court at the kitchen table.

Though Michael's name is on the licence, the training operation, run in partnership with Noel, is universally referred to as 'the Quinlans'. The brothers had plenty to celebrate last week with their first Royal Ascot winner, Langs Lash, which was followed up by a first-time-out victory for Le Brocquy, who got the better of a Luca Cumani-trained odds-on favourite at their adopted home course on Friday evening.

"It was hopping," says Noel of the atmosphere after Langs Lash's win, which did not come as a surprise to the team.

He continues: "Alan Munro Alan James Munro (born 19 February 1937) is a British immunologist and entrepreneur.

Munro was born in Madras, India and educated at the Edinburgh Academy.[1] He attended the University of Cambridge, specialising in biochemistry.
 rode her the Thursday before Ascot - she worked well and he came back and said he thought it was his best chance of a winner at the meeting. We were really happy with her and knew she'd run well. We couldn't be confident that we'd win the Queen Mary Queen Mary, Queen Marie, or Queen Maria may refer to: Queens
Britain

England

  • Mary I of England (1516–1558), queen regnant of England, was the daughter of Henry VIII of England (by his first wife Catherine of Aragon), and the
, not in a month of Sundays, but there was no way the Bell horse Bahamian Babe could beat us again on any course, and she was 8-1 and we were 25-1."

The neat Noverre filly, who was unsold at Goffs' Kempton breeze-up sales in March, can now look forward to a short break before resuming training ahead of her next planned outing in York's Lowther Stakes For other uses, see Lowther.
The Lowther Stakes is a Group 2 flat horse race in the United Kingdom for two-year-old thoroughbred fillies. It is run over a distance of 6 furlongs and 3 yards (1,210 metres) at York Racecourse during the Ebor Festival meeting in August.
 and looks likely to be racing in America next season for new owners.

"She came to us from Willie Browne Willie Browne (born Longford) was an Irish soccer player during the 1960s.A Bohemian F.C. legend, he was the last amateur to have been capped for the full Ireland national team for 43 years until Joseph Lapira was capped against Ecuador in May 2007.  when she failed to sell - all our best horses have been those who haven't sold at the sales or who have been bought cheaply, such as Frank Sonata, who was bought for us by David McGreavy for 10,000gns," says Noel.

"When she came off the lorry I was surprised at what a nice filly she was considering she was unsold. She used to hang on the gallops and we had her checked out completely by the vet and then the dentist, but we couldn't find anything wrong with her. We ended up putting a rubber bit in her mouth and two days later we knew she was good."

Noel's lively post-race celebrations were captured by the BBC BBC
 in full British Broadcasting Corp.

Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927.
, but his more reticent brother was notable by his absence.

"I went to Royal Ascot once and it wasn't really my scene - I like Aintree or Cheltenham," says Michael, preferring to concentrate on breakfast preparations rather than the interview, happy to let his brother and the horses do the talking.

It was Noel who first came to Newmarket from their native Tipperary 25 years ago, with Michael, who rode as an amateur and trained "in a small way" in Ireland, joining him 14 years later.

"We used to do breeze-up horses and we were sent some Italian horses to pre-train one year and they left us with two," explains Noel. "Obviously we couldn't train them because we didn't have a licence, but they ended up running that summer and they both won, so the Italians promised to send us some more and asked if we could get a training licence. Michael took out the licence and off we went, training by accident."

With 45 horses in the yard, the brothers have some decent ammunition under both codes. Notable runners in recent years include the aforementioned three-time Listed winner Frank Sonata, who took the scalp of Scorpion at the Curragh This article is about the plain in County Kildare. For the racecourse on the plain, see Curragh Racecourse. For the willow scrub habitat known as curragh on the Isle of Man, see Curragh (habitat). For the Irish boat, see Currach.  and is now back in training after a year off through injury, and Group 3 heroine Dixie Belle. Friday night's Newmarket winner Le Brocquy is a brother to Lord Howard de Walden's unbeaten Yorkshire Oaks winner Catchascatchcan, whose first foal foal

a junior horse from birth to one year. May be filly foal, colt foal.


foal ataxia
see enzootic equine incoordination.
 was Antonius Pius. Le Brocquy is the second horse the Quinlans have trained for Dermot and Perle O'Rourke, owners of Plantation Stud, with the other, hurdler Virginia Preuil, also scoring on his debut for the yard.

"Michael likes his jumpers but I don't care, I just want winners," says Noel, who is responsible for entries and book work while Michael looks after the horses. "A race is a race to us wherever it is - we'd go if they started racing on Blackpool beach."

Noel's son Jack, one of the leading riders of the pony racing scene, has recently turned 16 and has had three rides for the yard to date. He is set to partner Banjo Patterson at Warwick on Thursday.

"We're trying to find him a winner," says his father. "He's a good lad and has done a lot of work on Le Brocquy.

We're lucky that we have a great team of good riders, headed by our longstanding head man Andy O'Connor."

ATHNID Stables, which is named after Michael's farm in Ireland, forms part of a Celtic enclave on the Hamilton Road, with young Irish trainers David Lanigan next door and Ed Vaughan and Simon Callaghan opposite.

"I couldn't train in Ireland again, I had to travel 60 miles to use good gallops," says Michael, who has now served up a delicious breakfast that has momentarily stopped Noel's flow of conversation. "I can't understand why there aren't more National Hunt horses in Newmarket because the facilities are absolutely fantastic. It took me 12 months to get used to the place but someone said to me, 'you try going away from here and you'll always come back' and they were right."

Noel has finished his sausage and agrees with these sentiments: "In Newmarket, the best thing is not to bother about anyone else and do your own thing. Where in the world could you go to have two racecourses, the best sales complex, a big airport 20 minutes down the road, the best gallops, a great nightclub - and even a lapdancing club?"

While the two brothers now count the town as their permanent home, Ireland has not gone short of Quinlans, as they are but two of ten children.

"There were six boys and four girls; one of our sisters died from cancer a few years ago but the rest of us are still alive," says Noel. "God knows how because we drink and we smoke and use too much sugar, too much butter, too much everything."

For many people, working so closely with family members might also prove to be too much, but this is not the case for the Michael and Noel.

"It's a marriage made in heaven - we never fight," grins Noel. For once, Michael seems determined to have the last word: "You couldn't fight with him," he says nodding at his brother. "He's such a nice fella."

As the trainer-cum-chef sends your reporter on her way with a loaf of homemade bread and a plate of food for later, it would seem the same could be said of both Quinlans.

A race is a race to us, wherever it is - we'd go if they started racing on Blackpool beach

CAPTION(S):

Noel (left) and Michael Quinlan at their Newmarket yard with their Queen Mary Stakes The Queen Mary Stakes is a Group 2 flat horse race in the United Kingdom for two-year-old thoroughbred fillies. It is run over a distance of 5 furlongs (1,006 metres) at Ascot Racecourse during the Royal Ascot meeting in June.  heroine Langs Lash
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Title Annotation:Sports
Publication:The Racing Post (London, England)
Date:Jun 24, 2008
Words:1194
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