Dozy has won both her starts, but On The Dark Side ran well at Epsom last time.
From the sport.uk.msn.com
As a proclamation of alertness to dozy morning arrivals, the track is hard to beat.
From the guardian.co.uk
I'm glad there will be a protest, in this excessively herb scented dozy city.
From the theargus.co.uk
Not getting enough hours is the most common cause of dozy mornings, he says.
From the nzherald.co.nz
After an hour of stewing I knew I had been completely dumb and dozy.
From the telegraph.co.uk
He's a nonstop square dance, swinging us around till we're dozy, and he's got all the dough.
From the ocregister.com
Mr Dimon's cost-cutting zeal is as well known as his propensity to shout down dozy managers.
From the economist.com
If they are dozy enough to let things pass, that's their look out.
From the independent.co.uk
Too hot and dozy to bark by day, they howl late into the night.
From the nzherald.co.nz
More examples
Drowsy: half asleep; "made drowsy by the long ride"; "it seemed a pity to disturb the drowsing (or dozing) professor"; "a tired dozy child"; "the nodding (or napping) grandmother in her rocking chair"
Quite sleepy or tired; Intellectually slow
(dozily) In a dozy manner
Adj. Perhaps most kindly represented by the word slow. Someone described as dozy might be a little sluggish at picking things up.
Was the sleepiest of the yolkfolk, and was almost never awake. Dozy could be identified from the rest of the yolkfolk by the fact that he was always asleep, and often had floating Z's to show this. First seen in Fantasy World Dizzy.