Aidan O'Brien is poised to have four runners in Saturday's Derby at Epsom, with Irish 2,000 Guineas hero Roderic O'Connor set to wait for the French Derby the following day.The Ballydoyle handler is set to rely on Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial winner Recital, Dante Stakes runner-up Seville as well as Memphis Tennessee and Treasure Beach.Announcing the stable's runners on Twitter, the trainer's wife Anne-Marie O'Brien revealed: "We hope to run Recital, Seville, Memphis Tennessee and Treasure Beach

Aidan O'Brien is poised to have four runners in Saturday's Derby at Epsom, with Irish 2,000 Guineas hero Roderic O'Connor set to wait for the French Derby the following day.

The Ballydoyle handler is set to rely on Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial winner Recital, Dante Stakes runner-up Seville as well as Memphis Tennessee and Treasure Beach.

Announcing the stable's runners on Twitter, the trainer's wife Anne-Marie O'Brien revealed: "We hope to run Recital, Seville, Memphis Tennessee and Treasure Beach in the Derby on Saturday.

"It looks like Roderic O'Connor will probably go to the French Derby next Sunday with Ryan Moore on board.

"We expect to finalise jockey arrangements sometime tomorrow."

O'Brien also confirmed Wonder Of Wonders and Misty For Me would line up in Friday's Oaks, possibly joined by one other stable companion, while St Nicholas Abbey will be the yard's only runner in the Coronation Cup. Ryan Moore will be on board.

James Given is looking forward to saddling both Dandino and Indian Days in the Coronation Cup.

Dandino edged a thrilling Jockey Club Stakes at Newmarket on his latest start and while his stablemate was beaten four lengths into third, Given feels there is little to choose between the pair.

"I'm very pleased with both of them. Indian Days won the John Porter on his first run of the year, which I thought was a brave effort against good horses on his seasonal reappearance," he told At The Races.

"We slightly changed his training regime earlier this year, he was doing some lunging work in the evening as well as cantering in the morning. I think that extra fitness helped him hold on in the dying strides of the John Porter.

"Dandino was a very emphatic 11-length winner of a conditions race at Ripon and broke the track record.

"Indian Days had to carry a penalty when he ran against Dandino last time and it was only a fortnight after the John Porter, which I think had left a bit of a mark on him.

"He didn't have that spark in his stride that he has now and before the John Porter, so I think the distance he was beaten by Dandino is not entirely accurate.

"I think given level weights and fresh horses, certainly the distance would have been different and I'm not certain Indian Days wouldn't have been fighting it out.

"They are rated exactly the same and I think it's hard to split them.

"A lot of the attention is on Dandino because he won a British Group Two and Indian Days slightly sits in his shadow, which is unfair I think. When he won in Turkey he beat good horses."