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'It was so unusual, he's obviously just a total freak' - Aidan O'Brien on the best juvenile at Ballydoyle this year

Albert Einstein: made a stylish winning debut at Naas on Saturday
Albert Einstein: the apple of Aidan O'Brien's eye at the momentCredit: Patrick McCann

There is a clear number one in the pecking order of juveniles at Ballydoyle, where there is a two-year-old who is so quick it is "scary" according to Aidan O'Brien

The master trainer was speaking to the Racing Post for a major interview in Sunday’s newspaper as he continues his relentless surge towards another record-breaking season and tries to beat his own worldwide record of 28 Group or Grade 1s in the year. 

One horse who will not be helping him in that quest is Albert Einstein, who won't be seen again this season, but that didn't stop the trainer from waxing lyrical about the unbeaten colt who is a 12-1 shot for next year's 2,000 Guineas. 

Gstaad was a runaway winner of the Coventry Stakes at Royal Ascot, while Charles Darwin won the Norfolk emphatically at the same meeting and could be Breeders' Cup bound, but there was only one name on O'Brien's lips when he was asked to rank his two-year-olds this year. 

He said: "From day one when we started working him, he was bigger than all the rest of them but the mad thing was that he was so much quicker than all the rest of them, too.

"The horses he was working with back then, he was a step or two above them, and all those he was beating have turned out to be very good. It was so unusual, he's obviously just a total freak."

Albert Einstein was a big talking horse before he made his debut in a Naas maiden back in May and he lived up to the hype with an impressive success under Wayne Lordan, before getting himself out of a hole to land the Group 3 Marble Hill Stakes at the Curragh. Power Blue, the runner-up that day, has since gone on to Group 1 glory in the Phoenix Stakes. 

Albert Einstein missed the Coventry Stakes with a setback but everything appears to be back on the right track now with all roads leading towards the first Classic of 2026.

O'Brien said: "He's back doing light cantering and we'll train him gently through the winter for next year. I'd imagine he'll start back in the Guineas. 

"I cannot tell you how quick he is. If he stays a mile it will be frightening but you would imagine he's a miler. His cruise is so fast, it's hard to believe. It's going to be one exciting spring for him."

He added: "Everything is perfect with him now. Because of the time he missed, we would have had to rush him to get him back for something like the Dewhurst and it wouldn't be the right thing to do by the horse."

One juvenile who could reappear soon is Charles Darwin, who could be destined for Del Mar for the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint.  

O'Brien said: "He's very well and it's possible he could end up in America at the Breeders' Cup. It's possible, but not definite yet. He's big and powerful. He's very, very quick, but this other fella [Albert Einstein] was a lot quicker than him. It's scary how quick the other horse is."

Read more from Aidan O'Brien in The Big Read, available in Sunday's newspaper or online for Racing Post+ Ultimate subscribers from 6pm on Saturday.


Read more here

St Leger hero Scandinavia will not contest the Melbourne Cup as Aidan O'Brien maps out star's future target 

Almaqam set to miss Arc due to the ground as Ed Walker aims star colt at Champions Day 

'There aren't many who've won a Group 1' - Rod Millman eyeing the big league with his Cheveley Park contender 


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