DAVID O'Meara, on the mark with Amazing Maria at Royal Ascot last week and trainer of two winners at Wetherby on Monday evening, can ring the bell at Carlisle this afternoon.

HE'S NO SAINT, the mount of Fergal Lynch, represents the North Yorkshire trainer in the £30,000 bookies.com Carlisle Bell and is fancied to take plenty of beating after a promising effort at York earlier this month.

He's No Saint finished third to his stable companion Regal Dan, staying on all the way to the line over seven furlongs. The step up to a mile should suit the four-year-old this afternoon and, well drawn in stall one, he is napped to capture this historic race.

The Carlisle Bell Consolation Handicap, for horses which failed to get into the main event, looks a useful opportunity for CHISWICK BEY. Richard Fahey's gelding has won his last two races, the latest of them here, and this step up to a mile should not faze him. Sammy Jo Bell, who gets on well with him, again has the mount.

The £30,000 totepool Cumberland Plate could also fall to Fahey, courtesy of INNOCENT TOUCH, who finished third in the Queen Mother's Cup at York on his latest outing. The fitting of cheekpieces for the first time could work the oracle on Jack Garritty's mount in a wide-open race

The £40,000 British Stallion Studs Eternal Stakes, which carries Listed status, has attracted a useful field. If Fahey's Lacing could rediscover the excellent form she showed last season, she would be a leading fancy in this event, but on current form, TOUCHLINE makes stacks of appeal.

Trained by Michael Bell for Her Majesty the Queen, the three-year-old was beaten only length and a half to Osaila in the Sandringham Stakes at Royal Ascot last week. Confidence in her ability to take top spot here is tempered only by the fact that she is turning out very quickly after her Ascot exertions.

At Salisbury, Ryan Moore – the hero of last week's Royal Ascot meeting – looks set to be the jockey to follow again.

He is fancied to win the £22,000 Ashbrittle Stud Bibury Cup handicap on DARSHINI, trained by Sir Michael Stoute.

A winner at Doncaster on his penultimate outing, Darshini has since chased home the in-form Resonant at Goodwood. He now steps up to a mile and a half for the first time and the extra distance is fancied to bring out further improvement in him.

Moore may also win the 'Molson Coors Handicap on the Roger Varian-trained REKDHAT, who won two of his final three starts last season and appeals as a horse which still has potential to fill as a four-year-old.

HAIRDYER (2.10), a son of Motivator, trained by Richard Hannon, could provide Moore with another winner, while he also has a solid chance on Stoute's promising PLANE SONG (5.25).

Malton-born apprentice Cam Hardie also has some useful mounts on the Salisbury card. The smart 3lb claimer teams up with the Hannon-trained RACQUET in the New Forest Farm Machinery/John Deere Auction Stakes. The speedy juvenile was a seven-lengths winner on this course a fortnight ago and looks capable of coping with this step up in class.

Hardie can also win the Inspire Foundation Handicap Seniors' Sprint on John Spearing's WHITECREST, narrowly denied a hat-trick of victories at Lingfield a few days ago and clearly a sprinter in excellent heart.