Donnacha O’Brien claimed one of the biggest victories of his training career as Commanche Brave produced a polished front-running performance to win the 2026 July Cup at Newmarket on Saturday.
Commanche Brave Wins 2026 July Cup
Ridden with confidence by Billy Loughnane, the four-year-old son of Wootton Bassett travelled strongly throughout the ÂŁ800,000 Group 1 sprint before taking command inside the final furlong. Once in front, Commanche Brave found more under pressure to hold off the late challenge of Venetian Sun by a length, while Japanese contender Satono Reve finished a neck further back in third.
The success marked a significant milestone for Donnacha O’Brien, whose name joined the honour roll of one of Britain’s most prestigious sprint races. While the O’Brien surname has become synonymous with major Flat racing victories, this time it was the younger O’Brien who celebrated on Newmarket’s biggest summer stage.
Commanche Brave had already shown high-class ability with Group 2 success earlier in his career, but Saturday’s victory confirmed he belongs among Europe’s leading sprinters. The strong pace and fast ground suited him perfectly, allowing Billy Loughnane to settle the colt before producing a decisive challenge approaching the closing stages.
Reflecting on the performance, Donnacha O’Brien praised both horse and rider.
“He travelled beautifully and Billy gave him a lovely ride. It was an easy watch,” said O’Brien.
“He was very impressive today. There’s not much between these sprinters and he’s won a Group Two, so where else is there to go but keep trying to win Group Ones?
“We weren’t afraid to try it. I told Billy to let him jump and I thought he travelled very impressively. He doesn’t do a lot once he gets to the front, but I still thought he was impressive.
“He’s entered in all the major sprint races going forward. We want to win Group Ones—that is the goal of our stable.”
Loughnane revealed the opportunity came unexpectedly after receiving the call to partner the colt only shortly before declarations.
“It was a fantastic spare ride to pick up,” the 20-year-old said.
“He’s really beginning to learn how to sprint. He’s been tried over further before, but everything worked perfectly today. I followed the Japanese horse, who gave me the ideal target, and my instruction was simply to nurse him for as long as possible.
“The even tempo suited him much better than some of the six-furlong races earlier this season. Fast ground is ideal and I think he’s a genuinely fast horse. He’s got plenty of gears.”
The young jockey also reflected on reaching another career milestone.
“I love riding in these big races. Winning Group 1 races in England was one of my targets this season and thankfully that’s my third already. Hopefully we can keep building from here.”
Runner-up Venetian Sun once again demonstrated her consistency at the highest level despite conditions not playing to her strengths.
Trainer Karl Burke felt softer ground would have suited his filly better and suggested autumn targets, including the Prix Maurice de Gheest, are now under consideration.
“She likes the rain, which we’re not getting now,” Burke said. “She has shown today that she’s right out of the top drawer.”
Favourite Satono Reve, representing Japan under Christophe Lemaire, travelled comfortably for much of the race but was unable to produce the expected finishing burst.
“He was looking around and racing well but didn’t pick up as I expected,” Lemaire said. “He kept his beautiful stride but just didn’t quicken.”
Commanche Brave’s breakthrough at the highest level gives Donnacha O’Brien another elite sprint performer and places the colt firmly among the leading contenders for Europe’s major Group 1 sprint races later this season.
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