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Book Excerpt: When It Comes to Event Horses, When Is Compromise Okay?

In this excerpt from How Good Riders Get Good, Denny Emerson talks frankly about the kinds of qualities you must have in an event horse, and when it is okay to compromise.

Photo courtesy of Denny Emerson.

New Zealand’s famous (and very tall) eventer Mark Todd, FEI “Horseman of the Century,” drove quite a long way in 1983 to look at Charisma when he was offered the ride on the gelding while his top horse was laid up. He was surprised to discover that the prospect he’d traveled so far to see was a pudgy and unprepossessing 15.3 hands. Two Olympic gold medals later, Mark had got over the shock, and he and Charisma were a legendary partnership.

Ben O’Meara didn’t get Untouchable off the racetrack until the horse was eleven years old, an age at which most riders would have written him off. But Untouchable became one of the great Olympic Grand Prix jumpers.

Despite being an already “Wow!” jumper, Theodore O’Connor, an Arab/Shetland/Thoroughbred-mix just shy of 14.2 hands, was anything but my impression of a four-star horse when Christan Trainor brought him to my farm as a four-year-old. But Karen O’Connor saw something special in him a year later, and after finishing third at Rolex Kentucky in 2007, they won both team and individual gold at the Pan Am Games.

Victor Dakin wasn’t the prototype of my ideal eventer when I went to look at him in 1973. He was barely sixteen hands, his feet were narrow, his pasterns upright. He was hot as a firecracker to ride in dressage, and the Canadian Team coach had dismissed him, stating, “This bloody horse can’t canter!” He was one-half Thoroughbred, one-quarter Irish Draught, one-eighth Arabian, and one-eighth Morgan—hardly the usual mix for a top eventing prospect.

But he could run and jump forever.

By choosing to “compromise” on Victor, I was able to ride on a gold-medal-winning USET team, win the US National Championship, and ride clear rounds on cross-country over most of the world’s toughest courses for five consecutive seasons. Victor is a good example of a compromise that was a good choice, but I have also made my share of mistakes. I think many of the times I’ve made horse-buying mistakes it’s because I wanted to get something for nothing—or, to put it in plain English, because I’m cheap! I wanted to buy champagne, but I had a beer pocketbook, so I’d often get a horse that had some problem, rather than pay several times as much for a better horse.

By “problem,” I mean I would frequently buy horses that were hard to ride, either too hot or too strong, or very green. Always, of course, I’d do so assuming that I could fix that horse’s particular problems, and that often proved to be a wrong assumption. Hot horses tend to stay hot, and tough, aggressive horses sometimes calm down, but more often they don’t. Green is fixable; it just takes time. But my worst buying mistakes happened when I would compromise quality, a word that means different things to different horsemen, even when they are in the same discipline—and especially when they are in different disciplines.

In eventing, horses with “quality” are fancy movers. They trot with an elastic “flow,” and their canter is buoyant and uphill. Their gallop is silky and reaching, their jump is sharp and full of scope and power. If you start with a horse full of quality, you have realistic hopes. But if you compromise basic quality, you’ll never get there—no matter how much you struggle, and no matter how much riding skill you bring to the equation.

This excerpt from How Good Riders Get Good by Denny Emerson is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.horseandriderbooks.com).

The Spotlight Beckons: Don’t Miss This Casting Call For Virginia Eventers


In wildly exciting news, a documentary film about Kim Walnes and The Gray Goose — darlings of the US Eventing Team and the five-star level of competition through the 70s and 80s — is in the works, and even better? The team behind it is currently on the hunt for a female event rider and a grey horse to stand in for the subjects of the film. There’s some poetry in that: Kim and Gray themselves acted as body doubles in the eventing classic Sylvester, where they delivered the cross-country performances for the titular horse and his feisty rider.

The social media callout reads as follows: “We are looking to cast a female event rider and a gray horse to film some footage in Dublin, VA and Woolwine, VA the week of August 14. The footage would be used for an upcoming documentary.

Rider should be experienced with galloping xc. If interested, please DM riding pictures and video footage along with contact information to Shanyn Fiske or email to [email protected]

Preference for rider / horse pairs in Pulaski County, VA and surrounding areas.”

Kim Walnes and The Gray Goose. Photo by Peter Gower.

Do you have what it takes to stand in for one of the all-time greats of US eventing history? Don’t miss your chance — drop Shanyn an email and get ready for your close-up!

Follow from Home: The Inaugural (Kind of!) Aston le Walls CCI4*-S

Behind closed doors but no less buzzy for it, Aston-le-Walls set the stage for a useful spring four-star in the 2021 season. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This weekend sees a new event on the British calendar take centre stage: Northampton’s Aston le Walls Equestrian Centre, run by former team rider turned coach and selector Nigel Taylor, has long been a stalwart part of UK-based eventers’ season plans, with schooling opportunities galore, affiliated events throughout the breadth of the season, and arena eventing in the winter, too. But now, they’re taking the next step with their own international fixture — something that’s long topped their aspirations as as a venue.

This isn’t actually the first time we’ve seen Aston host a four-star, though: during the pandemic, they first hosted an elite competition weekend, allowing professionals and team pathway riders to give their horses an outing when government guidelines allowed for just that much wiggle room. Then, when Chatsworth couldn’t run its international fixture behind closed doors in 2021, Aston stepped up to host its CCI4*-S, with appropriately challenging courses designed by Captain Mark Phillips, and in doing so, gave many horses their first chance at an FEI event since Covid first struck.

Gemma Tattersall and Jalapeno. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though feedback from that event was positive, Aston’s team was no doubt disappointed not to be granted an ongoing international fixture — but once again, they’re stepping in to fill a gap and save the day. This week would ordinarily be the domain of Wiltshire’s Barbury International, but after disputes between the organisers and British Eventing over unaffiliated fixture timetabling, the organisers decided to pull it from the calendar, leaving a challenging mid-summer space in the calendar. That gap is ably filled by Aston, with its ability to host two phases on a surface, thus minimising concerns about hard ground.

So what can we expect from the next few days of competition? Well, beyond that feature CCI4*-S class, there’s also a CCI3*-S, a CCI1*, several Novice sections — including a Novice Masters class — and a 105 Pony Trials class, too. The CCI3*-S sections are already well underway, and the CCI4*-S will begin tomorrow at 8.30 am, with a full day of dressage on the roster for both Friday and Saturday. Sunday will play host to this class’s jumping phases, beginning with showjumping at 9.00 am and then on to cross country, once again designed by Captain Mark Phillips, from 11 am.

Izzy Taylor’s Monkeying Around will return to Aston, where he finished second in the CCI4*-S in 2021. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s a hefty line-up present in this class, and you can browse entries, check ride times, and keep an eye on live scores here.

You can also preview all the weekend’s courses via the cross-country app, with maps and virtual walks available here.

Not able to make it in to spectate, which you can do for a mere £10 on the gate? No worries: you can watch all the action as it happens from home, as ClipMyHorse.TV will be on-site to broadcast the cross-country from all three international classes.

While we won’t have boots on the ground for EN this weekend, we’ll still be bringing you news and updates as the competition unfolds. Until then: Go Eventing!

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Window-Shopping at the Billy Stud

If you’ve ever attended an elite sport horse auction, you’ll know the unique and distinctive feeling of falling in love approximately five times in one evening – and then watching your dream horse be snapped up by a big bank account and, usually, a big-name rider. But that doesn’t make it any less fun to head to these highly-curated sales, and it also doesn’t mean you can’t find a great deal on a seriously classy young horse. My favourite role, though? Going along as ‘advisor’ (read: enabler) to my friends who are actually on the hunt for a new horse. Check out what the process of ringside spectating — and, yes, enabling — is really like with this vlog from British amateur venter Lucy Robinson, who recently attended Pippa and William Funnell’s Billy Stud auction to see some of their fabulous Billy-monikored youngsters in the flesh. Which would you choose?

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Switzerland Announces Team for European Eventing Championships

Team Switzerland take the win for the CCIO4*-S FEI Nations Cup Eventing in Avenches in 2022. Photo courtesy of the FEI/Libby Law

Team announcements season is upon us, and Switzerland are the first nation to deliver their squad for next month’s FEI European Eventing Championships, which will take place from August 9–13 at Haras du Pin, northern France.

Though the Europeans represents a valuable opportunity for the highest-placed non-qualified nation on the final leaderboard to earn a qualification for Paris, Switzerland doesn’t have to worry about that this year: the developing eventing nation qualified for the Olympics at last year’s World Championships, where they finished seventh. Their team for the Europeans is, at its core, exactly the same – though three of the named riders have multiple horses to choose from, including an excellent second in Felix Vogg’s Luhmühlen CCI5* winner, Colero. While nations are permitted to enter six combinations – a team of four, plus two individuals – Switzerland has opted to fulfil just four of those entries.

The selected riders, and their horses, are as follows:

  • Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH – 15-year-old Swiss Sport Horse gelding (Greco de Lully CH x Miola, by Apartos) owned by Jean-Jacques Fünfschilling
  • Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire – 16-year-old Selle Français gelding (Mr Blue x La Guna de Rueire, by Bayard d’Elle), owned by Peter Thürler and Heinz-Günter Wickenhäuser OR GB Keep Cool du Perchet CH – 12-year-old Swiss Sport Horse gelding (GB Konvally x Aquarelle du Perchet, by Akribori), owned by Christina Maier
  • Nadja Minder and Toblerone CH – 16-year-old Swiss Sport Horse gelding (Yarlands Summer Song x Medelyne, breeding unknown), owned by Nicole Basieux OR Victoryhope Treille – 14-year-old Selle Français gelding (Epsom Gesmeray x Diabola du Defey, by Oberon du Moulin), owned by Peter Attinger OR Top Job’s Jalisco – 11-year-old Polish Sport Horse gelding (Pauillac de Meia Lua x Ajka, by Jalienny X), owned by Peter Attinger and Martin Zak
  • Felix Vogg and Cartania II – 12-year-old Holsteiner mare (Cartani 4 x Z-Schatzi, by Clinton), owned by the rider and Phoenix Eventing S.à.r.l. OR Colero – 15-year-old Westfalian gelding (Captain Fire x Bonita, by Bormio), owned by Jürgen Vogg

Dominik Burger, Swiss team chef d’equipe, says, “At the European Championships in Le Pin, we can expect an interesting and difficult cross-country as well as strong competition. We have been able to prepare well in the last few months and at the CHIO Aachen and, after the good results at the championships in recent years, we are highly motivated to get a taste of a team medal.”

The Swiss team will be ably assisted by cross-country coach Andrew Nicholson, dressage coach Gilles Ngovan, showjumping coach Lesley McNaught, and team veterinarian Antonia Müller.

The deadline for nominated entries for the European Championships is the 10th of July, while definite entries close on the 24th. Substitutions can be made up to two hours before the first horse inspection on the 9th of August, in the case of extenuating circumstances, but we can expect to see lots more news and announcements from the nations fielding teams over the next couple of weeks. Keep it locked on EN for all the info as we get it.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

 

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Happy Independence Day to our US contingent — which might sound a funny thing to say, since EN is, at its core, US-based, and began as a way to follow US eventers at home and abroad. But over the last few years, as we’ve expanded our team and our coverage, it’s been so gratifying to watch those numbers shift and expand globally, and now, the numbers have skyrocketed so much that our US readership is actually less than half our total reach! We love knowing that readers in the UK, Germany, France, Australia, China, and beyond are tuning in to EN for all their eventing news, and we love bringing it to you on the daily. But to our originals — our US readers and riders — we are so grateful to you for being along for this crazy ride, and we love keeping an extra-close eye on all the cool stuff you get up to with your horses. We hope you all have a great day celebrating!

Events Opening Today: Waredaca Farm H.T.Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club H.T.The Event at ArcherCaber Farm H.T.

Events Closing Today: Applewood Farm YEH & Mini EventFull Moon Farms H.T.Horse Park of New Jersey Horse Trials IICourse Brook Farm Summer H.T.Silverwood Farm Summer H.T.The Event at Rebecca Farm

News & Notes from Around the World:

Ludger Beerbaum’s decision to retire from top-level showjumping at Aachen came as a shock and a surprise to everyone – including him. He talks about the spontaneous decision to hang up his boots in this piece – give it a read.

I love a holiday sale, and SmartPak is dishing up one of those in honour of the 4th of July. Move fast and you’ll get 20% off, plus a free trickle net, if your order is over $150. (Let’s be real, when is it not?) Click here for the discount code.

It’s nearly time for entries to open for this year’s AECs! A tentative schedule and omnibus has been posted to help you along with your major summer planning – check them out here.

Sponsor Corner: Summer is in full swing and for many in the US, that means hot days are becoming the norm. Is your horse at risk for dehydration this summer? Find out with this infographic from Kentucky Performance Products.

Watch This:

Perfect your canter and line through accuracy questions — specifically, a skinny-ditch-skinny coffin combo — with this great advice:

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Okay, okay – maybe it’s a little shameless to lead today’s News & Notes with my own photos – but I’ve just woken up from the first big sleep after another crazy week at CHIO Aachen (and let me tell you, the post Aachen big sleep really does hit different), and I’m still getting butterflies when I think about yesterday’s Grand Prix. Even just getting the chance to watch one of the biggest showjumping classes in the world would already be a huge privilege, and Aachen is everyone’s favourite competition because of all that rare exposure we get to the very best of the rest of the disciplines. But getting to shoot it from inside the ring; to hear the roars and whistles and gasps of over 40,000 enthralled spectators; to feel the ground shake beneath you as horse and rider rollback around the fringes of the photographers’ pen; to hold your breath and squeeze the shutter and will your subjects on to a win is something that really is beyond special. I’ve loved Marcus Ehning’s Stargold for a while – and he became a firm favourite this February, when I was called in to run the media centre at Qatar’s CHI Al Shaqab 5*, and watched him buck and frolic his way to the Grand Prix win here – and watching him take this title yesterday was a real top-ten moment. Marcus is a serious legend of our sport, and even he couldn’t contain his tears after he realised he’d pulled it off by less than a second – and that love for the horse, and the gratitude for a partnership, is what this is all about. I can’t wait to go rewatch every class, frankly.

National Holiday: It’s National Stay Out of the Sun Day. If you can’t do that – duh, horses are an outside job – make sure you slather on the factor 50 and consider treating yourself to some protective riding gear. I like this detachable sun visor for helmets, which means you don’t have to invest in one of those expensive wide-brimmed hats, and these sun shirts all have built in UPF protection that’ll help keep you safe.

US Weekend Action:

Twin Rivers Summer H.T. (Paso Robles, CA): Website, Results

Inavale Farm H.T. (Philomath, OR): Website, Results

Summer Coconino H.T. I (Flagstaff, AZ): Website, Results

Chattahoochee Hills + Area III Championships (Fairburn, GA): Website

Global Weekend Coverage:

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Your Monday Reading List:

There are few things I love as much as a seriously epic save. This one, expertly delivered by British event rider Chloe Pearson en route to a placing in an Intermediate class, is one of the best I’ve seen this year. Check it out – could you stay on board?

Let’s talk ration balancers. Balancers are one of those enigmatic feeding products that promise the world, but that few horse people seem to really understand the true benefits or purpose of. Can they really revolutionise your horse’s meals, or are they a snake oil money pit? Here, a nutritionist explains the functionality.

Horse Network is back at it again with a bit of barn-bitchiness satire. I am here for it.

And finally, the world’s oldest Olympic equestrian medallist has passed away at the age of 102. Eventer Dr Wilhelm Büsing won two medals at the 1952 Olympics, and then returned to his initial career plan as an equine veterinarian, as well as serving as chef de mission for the German team for a number of championships. He was also heavily involved in the German breeding industry, and completed his doctorate with a thesis in Oldenburg breeding. Read all about him here.

Morning Viewing:

I can’t stop thinking about that Marcus + Stargold jump-off round, so let’s relive it together, shall we?

 

“It Feels So Surreal”: World Champ Yasmin Ingham Wins Aachen in Day of Surprise Upsets

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

If, hypothetically, you’d won the World Championships at the tender age of 25 years old, and had won every British national age title going along the way, and had been second in one of the world’s foremost five-stars last year, you might be forgiven for thinking that winning comes pretty easily, and places on teams at the world’s most prestigious events are a foregone conclusion.

Unless, of course, you’re Yasmin Ingham. Despite her accolades, and the statistical probability of her success at any given outing, she still retains an air of gentle surprise to find herself on the top of a leaderboard, as she did today with her World Champs partner, Banzai du Loir.

“It feels so surreal,” she says with a broad smile. “Like, I just never thought it was going to happen — to be here at this sort of calibre event with my best horse. He’s my best friend; I love him to bits, and to show him off to everybody and try and get the best out of him is so great. He certainly did that, so to come out on top feels incredibly special. It’s just been amazing to be here all week, and the vibes have been so good, with great team spirit. I really enjoyed it.”

Yas and Banzai, who she rides for owner Janette Chinn and the Sue Davies Fund, set up in honour of its late namesake, who had taken enormous pride in owning horses with her daughter for the talented young rider, first found themselves in this position yesterday, when they took the first-phase lead on a score of 23.5. But although they delivered a clear round in last night’s showjumping phase, they slipped down to third – by an achingly narrow margin – after adding 2 time penalties. That, though, put the 26-year-old right where she preferred to be as she headed out of the start box – not as the final rider in the starting order, with everything to lose, but ten or so from the end of the class, with it all to gain.

“I think I personally prefer catching up from behind, but it’s something that you have to learn to deal with as a sports person, to sort of handle the pressure,” she says. “If I’d have gone clear yesterday, inside the time, I would have been out last, and you do have to learn to deal with that. So I think, maybe not this time, but I’m glad that I snuck up from the back on the two ahead of me – I think it was very lucky. I mean, I was 0.1 ahead of Michi, so I think that’s a bit too close for comfort really!”

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That 0.1 margin came when second-placed Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH added 2.8 time penalties to their two-phase score of 24.4 – and Yas, for her part, added 1.6 as the joint-fastest round of the day. No one would catch the optimum time of 6:55.

“It’s like a sort of racetrack out there, really,” she says. “It’s an intense short format, and the fences come up thick and fast; you’ve got combinations with an ABC and D, so lots of elements. Banzai came out the start box a little bit like a fire-breathing dragon,  so for the first minute, I was fighting with him a little bit and I just sort of said, ‘Just give me this minute and then I’ll let you gallop’, because we had a couple of stretches after the first minute. So once I’d let the handbrake off and I’d kind of let him gallop, he was like ‘okay, I feel better now’, and we got into a bit of a rhythm. He was looking for the flags and jumping brilliantly, so I couldn’t really fault him — and to come so close to the time is obviously a big achievement for me after my very slow performance in the show jumping yesterday, so I feel like I might have redeemed myself a little bit in that matter!”

Once Yas had returned with her very swift clear in the bag, all she could do was wait: teammate Tom McEwen, who would be the last out of the box as the overnight leader, was still ahead of her with the former Nicola Wilson ride JL Dublin, as was Michi, and few riders would be less likely to succumb to pressure than those two. When Michi added his own small handful of time penalties, she was in the clear by one – and so then, it was just about waiting to see if Tom and the reigning European Champion could be fast enough.

In the end, it wouldn’t be time that would push Tom out of the top spot. Aachen’s cross-country is always a rollercoaster of emotion – with a top-end CCI4*-S track to match its top-end calibre of competitors, it’s much more akin to a five-star short in intensity, and even the very best of horses and riders can pick up shock run-outs over designer Rüdiger Schwarz‘s twisty, turning accuracy challenge. And that’s exactly what Tom and ‘Dubs’ did: as they traversed the influential Turkish Bank complex at 16ABCD, which is peppered with driving obstacles that can distract the eye, the gelding skimmed right past the C element, picking up just his second-ever career run-out in an FEI event. Yas had won Aachen, and in doing so, became the first ever British winner of the enormously prestigious competition.

But even with the issues that had happened before her ride – including five eliminations, one of which was for missing a fence, six missed flag penalties, and eleven runouts, mostly at fences 16ABCD and 18AB – Yas kept her mind on the routes she’d originally walked, rather than making last-minute changes.

“I tried to stick to my plan when I walked the course,” she says. And luckily, “everything sort of came up as I hoped it would. Obviously, things happen and you’ve got to react quickly sometimes, but I’m just really pleased that after my mistake in Kentucky, I sort of put that to rest a little bit. I really let him down out there and I was so frustrated with myself, and I thought, ‘I need to put things right at this event’. I’m proud of myself, and proud of him, and hopefully we can keep improving now.”

Yas Ingham and Banzai du Loir: your CHIO Aachen 2023 champions. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In horse sports, you either win or you learn – and if you’re really lucky, you do both – and so Yas took the frustration of that early 20 at Kentucky this spring and used it to refine everything she’s been working on with the talented twelve-year-old by Nouma d’Auzay.

“It’s actually really funny, like these sort of problems — not problems, but the mistakes that you make — all stem back to going back to basics a little bit,” she muses. “So we spent a long time just jumping straight lines and then turning left; straight lines and turning right; and making sure that he wasn’t falling in through his right shoulder and making sure that he wasn’t drifting out left. You really do sometimes just have to go back to the basics, nail them, and then crack on again. We spent a lot of time in World Class training and training with Chris Bartle and [dressage rider] Richard Davidson and all the guys that help me on the ground, and we’ve put in a lot of work — and I’m glad that he’s responded well to it out here today.”

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH jump into the tough first water. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Michael Jung couldn’t quite nab the win today – though before he left the start box, he’d moved ahead of Yas on the leaderboard. But his 2.8 time penalties pushed him back into the runner-up slot by a scant tenth of a penalty.

Still, though, it was enough: enough to secure the home nation the win in the team competition, and enough to put the drama of last year’s CHIO, where he was deemed the winner and then stripped of his glory after an appeal saw him given a flag penalty, behind him.

“I think it was a nice course, and fischerChipmunk is an amazing horse,” says Michi, who has previously won here in 2011, with La Biosthetique Sam FBW, and 2016, with Takinou. “He galloped well, and he’s proved himself in the past with really tough, good rounds so I can trust him; I know him.”

Though several riders came achingly close to making the time today, none captured it – and that, Michi thinks, was partly down to the ground, which took a dumping of rain throughout much of the class.

“The ground was a bit soft, not deep — it was nice to gallop, I think, but maybe it takes a bit of energy from the horse,” he muses. “The course was very nice to ride — if you go fast here or there, you take a bit more risk than you want and then you can have a little mistake, but actually, I feel very happy with my horse. Maybe they measure a bit short so that the time was really short, but also the ground takes a bit of energy from the horse so you can’t go really fast from beginning to end — you have to feel a bit into your horse.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though the course exerted influence in both time and jumping faults from beginning to end, for Tamie Smith, “it actually felt a lot easier than I expected it to – I was waiting for it to not ride well, but it rode great!” And the proof is in the pudding there: she and her Kentucky CCI5* champion Mai Baum cruised home with 2.8 time penalties and an impressively smooth round behind them to take third place – two places up from their starting position of fifth, after they posted a 26.9 on the flat, and six up from their overnight ninth, which they slipped to after tipping a rail in last night’s showjumping.

But that smooth round came as the result of careful planning, honed around the nature of the horse she knows so well: “At fence three I knew he’d be spooky, because of the ditch there, but we just kind of clambered through that, and on we went – and the rest was perfect,” says Tamie. “I couldn’t have asked for more. I think it was a really good test; you had to have a solid partnership and a very in-tune team.”

Tight, intense tracks like Aachen, which can yield surprise run-outs and issues for even the most experienced of competitors, require an extraordinary level of communication in order to excel – and that, Tamie says, was their not-so-secret weapon today.

“I think it felt easy because of our partnership – you know, I mean we’ve been doing this together for a while now,” she says. “Watching all the problems happen today, I wasn’t expecting that it would ride as smooth as it did. It’s obviously very special to be on the podium at Aachen — that’s a once in a lifetime horse, and it’s a dream to be able to have a competitive score like that. Hopefully there’s more to come!”

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

If you haven’t been paying attention to young German star Christoph Wahler and his exceptional Carjatan S, here’s your wake-up call: after taking second in the CCI5* at Luhmühlen in 2021, and finishing in fine style in two European Championships, the 29-year-old – who produces his event horses around his ‘day job’ running his family’s busy dressage stud – was then put on the German team for last year’s World Championships, at which he helped secure team gold. Today, he once again got the job done, further proving his consistency in the two jumping phases with the 14-year-old son of Clearway, who began his week in 26th place after posting a 33.6, and finished in individual fourth.

“I think sometimes he makes my life a little bit difficult in the dressage because he doesn’t really enjoy a big atmosphere in the dressage arena,” reflects Christoph, who has previously piloted the gelding to very-low-20s scores, but has sometimes struggled to manage his reactivity in the first phase since revolutionising his fitness programme a couple of years ago. That, though, has been the making of him as a ‘banker’ horse for the Germans, who can rely on the pair to finish very close to whatever score they start with, as they did today with their clear round and 1.6 time penalties – the joint-fastest of the day.

“He’s such a fighter and such a confident horse when it comes to show jumping and cross country,” says Christoph, who felt the full scope of the horse’s fast footwork as he jumped up the steep bank at 11A, touched down too early behind, and then patted the edge of the bank to regain his footing and make it to the B element. “Yesterday evening he had a very nice clear round and gave me a super feeling, and then today, he felt extremely confident at the jumps. He didn’t really enjoy the ground, I think, because it felt like hard work for him, but he was super safe on the jumps, and I tried to ride him as quick as I could, because we’ve known each other for many years now and he’s done some difficult courses before. I knew I would be able to take some risks on the jumps and try and get the time, which in the end we nearly did.”

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a banner day for the US, despite some surprise hitches along the way  – not least, the slew of penalties accrued by 2021 winners and team anchors Will Coleman and Off The Record, who had problems after slipping on the turn at the Turkish Airlines complex at 16ABCD and were penalised for crossing their tracks, too. Each of the riders delivering counting scores, though, managed to pull off a top ten finish – and one of those was Liz Halliday-Sharp, who finished fifth with Ocala Horse Properties and Debbie Palmer’s Miks Master C in his first FEI competition since finishing third in his five-star debut at Kentucky.

“He’s a big, bold, galloping horse, that’s who he is, and he hasn’t had a run since Kentucky, so fair enough,” says Liz, who added 4.4 time penalties to climb from overnight fourteenth.

‘Mikki’ is just eleven, and the partnership between the two is still relatively new – and so Liz came to Aachen hoping that the twisty, technical track might solidify much of what she’s been working on with him. At the top of that list? Rideability – the key skill for success over a Rüdiger Schwarz course.

“I thought he was brilliant. This would be a very different track for him, and it was a great learning experience,” says Liz. “The first Aachen for any horse is a lot, and I was thrilled with him. He is a big, bold horse but this proved that he can still be fast around a twisty, turning track, which I was thrilled with. He was a little keen, but now he’s been here and we’ve learned a lot about each other, too, because our partnership is still pretty new. He was maybe a little green in the arena yesterday, but that’s part  of the reason why you bring them [to things like this]. It’s just great to get any horse here in this big atmosphere, and he’s not seen that much of it. He’s not been in a stadium like this, so that was educational. In our relationship he’s not been under pressure to go fast around such a twisty, technical track, so that was a good opportunity to put that to the test. He was world class, like I always thought he was.”

Despite her horse’s game, catty jumping, Liz did have one heart-stopping moment on course: as she negotiated the stiff mounds at fence 6, the Allianz Vertical, she heard a tell-tale thud – but as she discovered at the end of the course, the top rail of the fence hadn’t moved. Instead, they’d managed to activate the safety device on the middle rail, for which no penalties were awarded.

“It was never something that would’ve tipped him up,” explains Liz. “I had a bold distance to it, rather than start pulling on him [on the approach], and he just tapped it on the way up. It was just the nature of the fence, climbing the hill – but I was thrilled, when I finished, to see that it was just the middle rail and not the top one as I originally thought. The way the light was when I looked back, I thought that the top rail had gone – but I thought it best to keep the pedal down just in case.”

Though Liz, too, felt that the ground took a bit of energy from the horses, she says that Mikki “could’ve gone another four minutes – he’s got a freak of a capacity on him.”

Now, with another box ticked for one of the most exciting career partnerships she’s had, Liz is looking ahead to next year – and revelling in every chance to be part of Team USA’s upward trajectory in the meantime.

“I’m so thrilled for the team,” she says. “Everybody worked really hard all week. I couldn’t say anything better than that – everybody was very professional and had their eye on the prize, and it was a pleasure to be a part of it.”

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Phillip Dutton followed closely behind her, taking sixth place after adding 5.2 time penalties – and completing a trajectory that’s seen him climb with Tokyo mount from a first-phase 24th place.

“He was really at his best in all three phases, and it was one of this weekends where you wanted to be a little higher, but it was such a tough competition,” says Phillip, who returns to the competition for the first time since 2019, when he took an unfortunate tumble from the gelding in the Rolex Water.

“We’re really proud of Z and all he’s accomplished,” he says. “The plan was to go as fast as possible without taking a huge amount of risk: I wanted to be accurate, and Z was very rideable. I don’t think there were many places we could’ve gone any faster. He doesn’t have a huge top speed, but he’s very efficient and we saved as much time as we could, so it’s pretty comfortable with what we did today.”

Phillip was quick to sing the praises of his stalwart partner, who he found game and gutsy over the tight, turning track with its abundance of loops and twists.

“He’s such an all-around horse. This probably wouldn’t be quite what he’s best at — more of an open, galloping track would be better for him — but at the end of the day good horses and good riding shines through and he did the best he possibly could.”

Something that made the week all the sweeter for Phillip was the chance to meet Marlies van Bezouw, the sister of Z’s late breeder, who was present at his birth and who journeyed to the show to enjoy a reunion with ‘her’ horse before the start of the competition.

“She traveled down two and a half hours to come and see him, and she just saw him and burst into tears – it was pretty emotional,” says Phillip with a smile. “He means a lot to a lot of people, and [former rider] Duarte Seabra changed sports and went to show jumping after his brother [passed away], and Z was his last event horse. So it’s a full circle of people that this horse has touched their hearts.”

Next up, Phillip hopes, is another trip to Europe later in the year to fine-tune some of the details and put the gelding in the selectors’ minds for Paris next year.

“We’d need to get his dressage a couple marks better, which would then put us up in a higher finish, but we’re talking about going to Pau – he ran great at Maryland last year, and it’s one he’s never been to and I haven’t been to in quite a few years,” he says.

Like Liz, he was delighted to play a part in another US team success, and acknowledged the part that luck – good or bad – can play in riders’ fortunes.

“It’s always great to be a part of the US team and all the riders did well. Will was pretty unlucky slipping coming to that fence, but that’s the risk you take — he was trying to have a real crack at it. Everybody did what they could and we ended up in a good finish — it’s great that America is on a bit of a roll now, I think.”

Though the New Zealand team’s luck definitely wasn’t up this weekend – they finished sixth out of eight after a rider fall for Jonelle Price from McClaren at the Rolex Water complex and two late run-outs for Pratoni teammates Tim Price and Falco, who dropped from fourth to 36th – they did secure a top-ten placing for one of their riders. Caroline Powell and the talented young mare Greenacres Special Cavalier took all that they’d learned from the ten-year-old’s educational trip to Badminton earlier this spring and zipped around today’s much more continental track for 7.6 time penalties and seventh place – a thirteen-placing climb through the competition, and another world-stage placing to add to the fifth they earned on her five-star debut at Pau.

Sweden, too, was well-represented at the business end of the leaderboard, even if they weren’t able to field a team this week: their sole individual rider, Frida Andersen, finished eighth aboard Box Leo with 4.8 time penalties, completing a climb from 33rd in the first phase.

Joseph Murphy and Calmaro. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Likewise, Ireland’s Joseph Murphy was the architect of an impressive climb with the former Laura Collett ride Calmaro, with whom he’s pulled out some of his best results at major events: he was 23rd after dressage on a 32.5, and dropped to 25th last night after lowering a pole and adding a second on the clock, but today’s round, which saw the pair cross the finish line with 4.4 time penalties, spirited them straight back up the ladder to a final ninth place. This marks their third consecutive year at Aachen, their third consecutive swift clear across this course, and their second consecutive top-ten placing at this most prestigious of four-stars.

Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier was one of the earliest riders of the day, riding in the small batch of individuals at the opening of the phase with her Ducati d’Arville. But even without the benefit of the insight that can come from watching others out on course, she delivered one of the classiest efforts of the day, cruising home with 2.8 time penalties and climbing up from overnight 28th to eventual tenth.

Even with one of the fastest rounds of the day under her belt, though, Lara still feels that there was more left in the tank – and, perhaps, the possibility of logging the only clear inside the time of the day, but for a duo of lost shoes.

“He’s a fantastic horse – he’s really looking for the flags, and he really makes my life easy,” she says with a smile. “Unfortunately, I lost a shoe at fence three, and then later on after the two skinnies I lost the other front shoe – and I thought okay, now the two corners without shoes in front is going to be tricky, so I had to take an extra pull here and there to really ensure that he would stay in between the flags and not slide. So maybe it saved me a place in the top ten, but I do have some little frustration, because I could have kicked here and there a bit more, maybe. But on the other hand, he was just so focused and tried so hard for me, and I think Aachen is one of those tracks where you have to be 100% concentrated from start to finish, and he was – he gave me just the best feeling.”

If redemption has been the overarching theme of the day, there’s no one who can appreciate the joys of a great finish quite like Lara. Her 2023 season has been a rebuilding process – one that’s seen her climb back from the ashes of a heartbreaking Pratoni, where she fell at the first fence, to having her whole string of horses performing at their peak in the first half of this season.

“It takes a village to get here – my trainers, my grooms, everyone – and I’m so thankful to have all these people who kept believing in me despite last year, which was really not ideal. When I felt my head on the ground [at Pratoni], I was like, ‘no way – it’s a nightmare’, but I never woke up. It was reality. And everything happens for a reason; you don’t always know why, but I’m confident it will all come along. The horses I have are so good, and I just need to keep producing them the right way.”

Dan Krietl and Carmango. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

US individual Dan Krietl wrapped up his first Aachen experience with a completion and 35th place with Carmango, which he retained despite a run-out at the first part of the influential Turkish Airlines complex at 16ABCD, which wended its way through an abundance of combined driving obstacles – something that caused six very good horses to lose focus while picking their way through.

The top ten following a hugely influential cross-country at CHIO Aachen.

Though it looked, for quite a while there, as though the US team might snatch the win here, it wasn’t to be – but second by just 3.3 penalties to the home team isn’t too shabby, and finishing ahead of the Brits, as on-form as they are at the moment, is even sweeter.

“It was a great team – and the US has so many other great riders and horses at home, so our depth is getting there, and we’re on the uphill trajectory,” says Tamie, who’s been a consistent part of so many of the team’s efforts on that climb over the last few years. “It’s like no other, so I’m really proud to be a part of it.”

Team USA waits for their turn in the prizegiving ceremony. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just one shock moment marred the team’s scoresheet this week – and Will Coleman was sage in addressing his disappointment after picking up 60 jumping penalties with Off The Record.

“I think turning to the skinnies, my horse slipped a little and lost his rear end, and I really had no chance after that,” he reflects. “We were going for it, and like Michael [Jung] said, when you’re going that fast you bring on a little bit more risk. I paid the penalty today, but my teammates carried the day and I’m really proud of all them and how they rode. All credit to them.”

The Brits, who held top spot after each of the previous phases, suffered a drop to third after that high-profile run-out for overnight leaders Tom and Dubs, a run-out at fence 11B, a brush atop an up-bank, for Kirsty Chabert and Classic VI, and a missed flag for Gemma Stevens and Flash Cooley, which added 55.8 penalties to their aggregate score. Ireland climbed from overnight seventh to a respectable fourth after three clears and a missed flag round for Susie Berry and Kilcandra Capitol, while the French snuck up a singular placing for final fifth.

That’s all from us – for now! – from the SAP Cup at CHIO Aachen, but keep it locked on EN as we bring you more content from this global celebration of horse sport. Until then: Go Eventing.

The final team standings at the culmination of Aachen’s SAP Cup CCIO4*-S.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

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No More a Bridesmaid: Tom McEwen Steps into Aachen Lead After Showjumping

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin take the CHIO Aachen lead. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While this evening’s showjumping phase at CHIO Aachen’s CCIO4*-S may not have been enormously difficult by the numbers – 20 of the 44 starters jumped clear rounds, with 17 of those doing so inside the time, and just 40 rails falling throughout the breadth of the class – it certainly was influential on the leaderboard. That’s because this morning’s dressage scoring was more than a touch reminiscent of that at Luhmühlen a couple of weeks ago: just nine pairs were awarded sub-30 marks, and tenth through 35th place sitting within the scope of five penalties. And so if a pair were to pick up a time penalty or two – or, heaven forbid, a rail – it would cost them dearly.

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was the former, rather than the latter, that saw our first-phase leaders, World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir relinquish the top spot and hand it, instead, to teammates Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. They opted to play it just a touch safe in the spooky Turkish Airlines Stadium, with its 40,000 seats, its busy, bustling arena, and its capacious spookiness, and while that allowed them to pin down a classy round without any jumping penalties, it did see them add two penalties for finishing five seconds over the time allowed. Now, they head into cross-country in third place – Germany’s Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH, last year’s two-phase leaders, step up to second after a penalty-free round – but they’re not far from that top spot, even so: they’re just 1.2 penalties, or three seconds, behind first place.

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom, for his part, was delighted to get the job done with twelve-year-old Holsteiner ‘Dubs’, who he inherited from fellow British rider Nicola Wilson in the latter part of last year.

“He jumped fantastically, to be honest,” says Tom. “He loved the main arena, which is always great, because you’d be hard-pressed to find a better championship-style arena. It’s amazing to get in there — it’s very open and flowing. I found that this year there wasn’t so many turn backs. It wasn’t too technical.”

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom finished third here last year with long-time partner Toledo de Kerser, but found that this evening’s course had a very different feel to the one he’d jumped last year, which was much more centre-weighted in the arena, maximising tight lines and turns.

“I thought maybe it was a bit easier this time, but sometimes with good horses, like Dubs, it can lure you in a little bit,” he says. “And he was jumping so well that it did lure me in a bit, because I decided to take a stride out and go to the planks at seven on five strides. I’d already told Dicky [Waygood, British team performance manager] that I had a fear that I might do something like that. I landed from six and thought, ‘I’ll sit up and get the six’, but then when I saw the five, I thought, ‘well, I might as well keep going!’ Luckily, he’s got plenty of scope and actually, that nearly made him more aware of the course, because he was like, ‘what are you doing?!’ He jumped amazing – he’s a pleasure to ride, and I’m looking forward to being in this position tomorrow.”

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom and Dubs haven’t yet celebrated the first anniversary of their partnership, but already, they’ve finished second at Boekelo’s CCI4*-L last October – their first international outing together – and second at Kentucky CCI5* this spring. At each milestone, Tom has been able to chart the progression in their communication levels as they adjust to one another.

“This morning’s test was the same test as I did at Boekelo, and the difference between tests was near enough polar,” he says. “It’s just learning small quirks. He’s the nicest, calmest, coolest person but there’s a few things I’ve learned. One is that he does actually need a bit more work than I thought – he sort of lures you into allowing him to have an easy time , and actually, he just needs a little bit of work. It’s all been about getting to know him as a person, and he’s been amazing, so we’re starting to get there. This is another step in our learning curve.”

Whatever happens tomorrow, Tom is counting it all as a positive – because win or learn, he knows the ‘five-star short’ course will help him reach the next level of communication and partnership with ‘Dubs’.

“While we came here as a learning experience, we did so knowing that we can be very competitive at the same time – it’s just putting those two together,” he says pragmatically.

Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Seven of the newly-reformed top ten put faultless rounds on the board: beyond our new top two – who have just a tenth of a penalty between them and thus absolutely no margin for error tomorrow – we saw New Zealand’s Tim Price do the same with his World Champs bronze medallist Falco, which allowed them to retain their fourth place standing; 2021 winners Will Coleman and Off The Record did it, which pushed them from seventh to fifth and now has them best of the US contingent; pathfinder and young German rising star Libussa Lübbeke did it without the benefit of any rounds to watch first, which boosts her and Caramia 34 from ninth to sixth, and her fellow Warendorf student Calvin Böckmann from thirteenth to eighth with Altair de la Cense; and finally, France’s Gireg le Coz did it with his five-star ride Aisprit de la Loge, which saw them step up from twelfth to seventh.

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The spooky, busy arena with its technical lines and big, square efforts did exert its influence on some otherwise excellent jumpers, though: Tamie Smith and Mai Baum, arguably one of the very best in the field in this phase, knocked the planks at fence seven, which fell just twice throughout the class – and that was enough to drop them from fifth to ninth.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C (owned by Ocala Horse Properties and Deborah Palmer) also picked up a rail at 10a, the first of two back-to-back doubles (the course had no treble combination, interestingly, but instead featured three doubles; two of these came consecutively at the tail end of the course, causing ten rails – 25% of the phase’s tally – among them.) That, plus her 0.8 time penalties, saw her move from first-phase sixth to two-phase fourteenth.

US individuals Dan Krietl and Carmango, too, had two rails – the fourth, and the first part of the first double at 5a – which saw them slip from 31st to 35th going into cross-country.

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Phillip Dutton was able to lay down a fault-free round for the US with Z, who’ll be the team pathfinder across the country tomorrow; they now sit eighteenth, up from 24th, thanks to their efforts.

The top ten going into tomorrow’s cross-country.

Though Aachen’s ‘Nations Cup’ isn’t actually a Nations Cup – that is, it’s not part of the official FEI series, which counts towards coveted rewards such as a team qualification for Paris. But even though it can’t be used to get that job done (and, actually, it couldn’t anyway; every nation with a team entered here is already heading to next year’s Olympics), it’s still seriously important, because it’s a chance to see how some iteration of each country’s A-team stacks up against its closest competitors.

With all that in mind, is it even worth mentioning that the Brits retain their first-phase lead going into tomorrow’s cross-country. Hardly: we all already know that they’re on extraordinary multi-year form, even if Pratoni didn’t quite go to plan for them as a team. (For what it’s worth, though, if Oliver Townend had had even half the rails he’d had, they’d have won gold, which might be a bit of an if-my-grandmother-had-wheels-she’d-be-a-bike sort of argument, but it does prove just how fine the margins are between medals and nothing that one round can make such an enormous difference, and it can, as such, hardly be held against the Brits as a loss of form.) Today, just one of their riders – Gemma Stevens, aboard the young, talented Flash Cooley – tipped a rail, giving them an aggregate score of 80.8 after two phases, which puts them 8.3 penalties, or twenty seconds, ahead of now-second-placed Germany, who stepped up a placing after three clears. The home nation did suffer some disappointment: Malin Hansen-Hotopp and Carlitos Quidditch K, eighth after dressage, became the team drop score and slid to 24th after knocking two rails.

New Zealand, too, climbed a spot and now sit third, taking full advantage of an open door left by the US team, who moved from second after the first phase to fourth after the second, though by a small margin: between second and fourth place, there’s just two penalties, or five seconds tomorrow.

Tomorrow’s cross-country, designed by Rudiger Schwarz, begins at 10.00 a.m. local time (9.00 a.m. BST/4.00 a.m. EST). It’ll all be streamed live via ClipMyHorse.TV, and we’ll be bringing you the low-down and analysis, plus chats with plenty of the riders, after the action wraps. Stay tuned tonight, too – we’ll have a preview of what’s yet to come heading your way soon. Until then: Go Eventing!

The team standings after showjumping in CHIO Aachen’s Nations Cup.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

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World Champ Leads CHIO Aachen Dressage; US Team Sitting Silver

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s as much of a treat for eventing fans to get to watch World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir as it is for the talented pair to ride in the most prestigious competitions in the world – and certainly, the young rider is as well known for her gratitude for these opportunities as she is for her extraordinary abilities in the saddle. And where gratitude is given room to flourish, so, too, is grace under pressure, even when things might go a bit pear-shaped – as they did for the pair at Kentucky this spring. They returned to the five-star a year after taking second in the French-bred gelding’s debut there, but after being held indefinitely at the start box, Banzai dropped off the boil just a touch, and they had a shock early run-out before regrouping and going on to finish the competition in fine style.

Now, they’re back at a major competition, and neither looks ruffled by what may be seen as a crucial opportunity to prove themselves ahead of this summer’s European Championships, for which they’ll be hoping for selection. Nor do the British powers-that-be seem concerned: they’ve put the pair in the hugely pressurised anchor slot for the team this week, which means they’ll be the last Brits to head out of the start box and, as such, will need to be prepared to save the day if one of their teammates has a tricky round.

There’s cool under pressure, though, and then there’s this girl. Riding in the final session of today’s dressage, Yas and Banzai danced their way to the lead on a sparkling score of 23.5 – though the margins are so tight today, even with tough marking across the board and an extraordinary number of people sitting in the 30-32 zone, that they’ve got less than a penalty in hand going into today’s showjumping.

“It’s amazing to be here – I feel very, very lucky, and it’s just so special to be at this sort of calibre of event, especially with my number one boy Banzai,” says Yas. “It’s amazing to be able to show him off on a stage again – and obviously, it’s been a couple of months since Pratoni, so it’s so nice to bring him to these big shows. When he performs like that it’s… well, I’m pretty speechless, to be honest!”

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though their test was without errors, Yas still quickly picked out areas that she’d like to improve on for their next outing: “He was really great out in the warm-up, and then just went slightly flat in there. I probably could have had a little bit more tempo and cadence in the trot, and a couple of his changes needed to be a little bit more expressive, but I can’t be too disappointed with that! But obviously, I’m a perfectionist and I like things to be as good as they can be.”

Though she’d been able to see the harsh marking all throughout the competition, which had several riders wondering what the judges were looking for, exactly, Yas stuck to the plan she’s developed with her coaches in order to lay down the marks.

“I try and stick to the way that I know, that myself and Chris Bartle and Richard Davidson have created to get the best out of him,” she says. “I think we just try and stick with that trend, really. It’s worked before in the past, so we try and keep everything fairly similar with his prep and the work in and then obviously going into the ring, we try and ride the test for maximum marks.”

Now, there’s the small matter of tonight’s showjumping – and tomorrow’s cross-country – to deal with.

“There’s absolutely no catching up to be done at the end of the cross-country,” she says. “I think you really need to be up on those minutes early on. Time will be of the essence tomorrow, and here’s some tricky technicla questions scattered around the course. But I like how in the main field, there’s two quite big opportunities to have a good gallop and  ride away from your fences quickly and make up a bit of time there and I’m very lucky to be sat on a big rangy, galloping horse so I’m going to try and make the most of those big stretches and then hopefully we’ll be there or there abouts with  the time

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Further bolstering British team efforts is Tom McEwen, also returning to the world stage after a trip to Kentucky this spring with the former Nicola Wilson ride, reigning European Champion JL Dublin. The pair very nearly managed to take the lead, but as they had been at Kentucky, they were just pipped at the post by Yas and Banzai, and had to settle for a close second place on their score of 24.3.

“I thought, apart from the first halt, that he was so relaxed and in harmony and absolutely loving what he was doing in there – so he was a pleasure to ride, to be honest,” says Tom. “We both had great fun; he’s loving the show, and he definitely enjoyed the appreciation from the crowd afterwards. He’s a truly special horse.”

Tom has had the ride on ‘Dubs’ for less than a full year, but today, they got the chance to revisit the early part of the partnership and evaluate how much they’ve progressed.

“Funnily enough, we did this test at Boekelo when I’d first got him,” he says, recalling the Dutch event in October, where they finished second on the same score as the winners. “Now, I’ve started to understand him, and we’ve really gelled – which is thanks, obviously, to Nicola and all her hard work. All that hard work she’s put in is really paying off.”

Tom, who finished third here last year with Toledo de Kerser, is prepared for a totally different challenge in tomorrow’s cross-country finale.

“It’s very different to last year,” says Tom. “There’s some real galloping sections with no fences, and then some places like the first water, where we’re doing circles within the water. It’ll be really interesting to see how it rides – we might find that it’s a little easier to get the time, but we might also find that it’s a lot harder.”

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s not often we don’t see Michael Jung in the lead here, particularly when he brings out the big guns – which Olympic mount and five-star winner fischerChipmunk FRH most definitely qualifies as. But although the pair trended in the top spot for part of their test, and then flitted, occasionally, into second, a late miscommunication and several subsequent erroneous transitions just moments before the final centreline proved expensive, and the 5s and 4s they earned their pushed their score to a still very respectable 24.4. That sees them head into showjumping in third place, just a tenth of a penalty behind Tom and JL Dublin.

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The last rider in the ring this afternoon put a pin in a seriously smart final session: Kiwi anchors Tim Price and Falco, who were victorious at Pau’s CCI5* in 2021, and took individual bronze at the World Championships last year, took hold of fourth place provisionally with a score of 26. But though the quirky 14-year-old delivered all the right kinds of dance move in his test, the moment his final halt and salute was behind him, his inner wild-child came out, and Tim cantered back out of the arena laughing at the gelding’s much-improved sense of timing.

“In contrast to that, though, his work in his test was some of his softest, most on-side work I’ve had with him,” says Tim. “I think that’s the mark of a proper good horse – he tries so hard, and he does everything through partnership and training, and if I stick closely to that in the ring, then as soon as he has a moment to take in his surroundings, he’s like, ‘woah!’ He becomes very sharp.”

Though the horse is in his mid-teens, he’s a type that looks as though he’s improving year on year – and Tim agrees that he’s a classic late bloomer, as so many sharp-brained horses are.

“I said to [groom] Kerryn [Edmans] on the way over, he’s got quite a lot of old man qualities, and I think he’s going to be a very cool old man, actually, in a couple of years,” laughs Tim. “He’s starting to just go through the motions of the job; he knows where we are in the week, and when the right occasion comes – he knows where to put his flamboyance now a bit more.”

This is Falco’s third trip to Aachen, and Tim’s hoping that it’ll be a case of third time lucky – because previously, it hasn’t gone quite to plan for the gelding.

“The first time it blew his mind; the second time, it was a little better – but we got stuck on the keyhole on cross-country,” remembers Tim. “So we’ll see! The course has been stiffened up this year; it’s bigger, and there’s a couple of places with proper questions that have to be ridden in a certain way. It’s always nice to have a contingency plan B and C, but there’s a couple here where there’s really only one way to make it work well – though I’m sure we’ll see a few versions! The Kiwis are good at being underdogs, so I’m sure we’ll go out and give it a good go.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kentucky winners Tamie Smith and Mai Baum return for their first outing since that momentous win, and will go into showjumping sitting in fifth place – and best of the US team – on a 26.9. While fans of the 17-year-old German-bred gelding will recognise that the score awarded isn’t on even keel with his usual low-20s efforts, Tamie explains that that’s because she’s trying some new tactics in the ring – and those led to some visible early tension, which she deftly rode through.

“I felt wild,” she says with a laugh. “I’m trying to leave a little bit to chance and I had bobbles because of it, but I’m on the right track – I think he’s more in front of me and not just hovering around, which is where I think he loses points. So I experimented a little bit to see, and the beginning was a little frazzled: when he’s tense, he starts throwing one front leg a bit unevenly, but he has to just learn to push and engage, so I went for it and had mistakes, but I’m happy with him.”

Even the most consistent of performers can have days when the buzz of the situation bubbles over, and ‘Lexus’ felt that today – and when he does, Tamie says, it’s not always a straightforward job to get him back on terra firm. Instead, it’s all about the fine art of compromise — and the slimmest of margins – especially in the fishbowl of the Deutsches Bank Stadium.

“He’s a funny horse – he’s awkwardly hot and sensitive but then he’s also behind me,” she says. “It’s a weird mix of knowing how much is enough or not enough, and  it’s millimetre by millimetre; I just kind of corrected him a little bit, more maybe too much. But that’s the sport – they’re pretty electric in there. He halted before I went to go in, and he reared, and he doesn’t ever do that. So he was just feeling it in there. It feels very closed in and claustrophobic, and I think it’s hard on a horse with movement, who needs room to move. They feel like they’re getting swallowed up a bit.”

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C, who she rides for Ocala Horse Properties and Debbie Palmer, find themselves in sixth place after earning a 27.3 – a score that the rider felt didn’t quite reflect the horse’s work in the ring. Nevertheless, she was delighted that the talented gelding’s rideability – an ongoing work in progress – continued to head in the right direction, despite the challenging, compact stadium setting of this first phase.

“I was really pleased with him; he’s still a relatively young, inexperienced horse,” she says. “He’s only eleven, and we’ve only been together a year so I’m happy. This would probably be the most challenging ring he’s been in, so I had to ride what I had a little bit, but I was very, very pleased with him. The scoring has been really tough, so I obviously came here hoping for a better mark because he’s a really talented horse, but there’s plenty to do still and he did a lot of great things in there.”

Though Mikki has certainly seen atmosphere before – he finished third at Kentucky on his five-star debut this spring, and so logged plenty of time in that venue’s sprawling stadium – Aachen, Liz explains, has a very different feel.

“I think it’s very tight. It’s very closed in – they feel really like the whole stand is on top of them. But he was actually fabulous, and he didn’t really react to it that much,” she says.

Mikki’s a horse that’s firmly on the Paris pathway, and every outing gives Liz a chance to revisit his educational checklist and work on the marginal gains that’ll help him peak at the perfect moment.

“I think he still just needs more strength,” she says. “He offers a lot and when he gets a little tired in the ring he gets a little strong on me, so I have to just keep working away and training him. I need about another six months and then we’ll really have it where we need it, but but he’s got a lot to come still. We have a lot more of a partnership now and I definitely know him better, and I’ve changed what I’m doing as a result: I’ve got him back in a snaffle because I just wanted to try and go there. So we’re kind of working through that a little bit, but everything is so much more solidified than it was – and there’s still another level to come, which is actually exciting. I believe he’s capable of doing a sub-20s test – he’s a gorgeous horse, and I’ve just got to keep plugging away.”

Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In 2021, they rose to the top spot here and became the first-ever American winners of CHIO Aachen – and this year, Will Coleman and Off The Record are back, another year older and wiser, for their third consecutive visit to this German crown jewel. And the great news? They’re only getting better. They sit seventh going into showjumping on a smart score of 28.1, which continues a trajectory of improvement from the 29.7 they posted in the year that they won, and the 28.5 they put on the board last year, which helped them to an eventual sixth place.

The German team, currently sitting in bronze position on the podium, is helped along enormously by the efforts of 2022 Blenheim CCI4*-L champions Malin Hansen-Hotopp and the expressive Carlitos Quidditch K, who sit eighth on 28.9, while the day’s pathfinders, young Warendorf trainees and German individuals Libussa Lübbeke and Caramia 34, hold onto ninth on 29.5. Tenth place is held by Australia’s Kevin McNab on his relatively new ride, the former Caroline Harris mount Miss Pepperpot, who earned a 30.2 with a sweet, workmanlike effort in the ring.

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Phillip Dutton sits 24th at the end of the first phase, having posted a 32.8 with his experienced Olympic mount, Z.

“I was hoping for better score,” he admits, “but I was really pleased with the way the way Z went — he went in the ring and was very workmanlike, which is rewarding.”

Despite their long partnership and extraordinary wealth of shared experience, Phillip explains that scenarios such as Aachen, with its combination of atmosphere and team pressure, can still throw challenges, curveballs, and chances to learn and improve in the pair’s direction.

“You’re constantly trying to improve and understand what he’s going through, and how to get him there and to be at his best, and so it’s always a balance of making sure he’s not going to be too fresh and too on edge, but then still having plenty of pizzazz and plenty of activity and sparkle in the test,” he says. “I thought I got it about right, but when you go a bit early [in the day], you’re trying to figure out what the judges are actually looking for as well. So maybe I should have gone for a little bit more and made it a little bit more expressive.”

Though his first-phase score might feel a touch disappointing, as a hugely decorated stalwart of the sport, Phillip is all too aware that the competition doesn’t end in this stadium – and both phases yet to come pose significant challenges, beginning with tonight’s showjumping in the 40,000 capacity stadium.

“Jumping in that main arena is a little bit different for us, because it’s such a big, expansive arena,” he says. “So we have to be on our game there, and then cross country is an interesting track. There are galloping patches, but then there’s quite intense patches where the time is going to be very influential. At a lot of the events you just try to stay on your minute markers, whereas here, some parts you’re going to be way up on your minute markers, but some minutes you’re going to be way down. It’s going to be interesting, and you’ll need a horse that’s really adjustable, but fast and obviously brave. The challenges keep going right through to the end.”

Dan Krietl and Carmango. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

US individual competitor Dan Krietl is having one heck of a summer: the CCI4*-L National Champion hadn’t competed in Europe – nor, in fact, even visited – before this year, but now, he’s practically an honorary resident after having flown over a couple of weeks ahead of Luhmühlen with Carmango. First, they logged some valuable training with their hosts, Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and her husband, Germany’s Kai-Steffen Meier, at their home base, Arville; then, they moseyed on over to Germany to tackle the CCI4*-S at Luhmühlen, which is one of the toughest and most hotly-contested events of the level on the continent. That didn’t quite go to plan – a battle of wills against a seriously influential double of angled hedges in the arena led to the hard decision to retire – but if education is the name of the game this year, then he’s collecting a wealth of the stuff, all of which he hopes will pay off in the long run as he continues to develop his talented young horse.

“I was so disappointed out in Luhmühlen, because I’ve never had a stop with him in his whole career,” says Dan. “He’s just gotten a little spookier and sharper over here – partly, I think, because I switched his feed and didn’t realise it’s, like, jet fuel for horses!”

That, he explains, created a bit of a perfect storm when the horse met the busy arena, its two angled hedges, and, crucially, the water trays beneath them: “He’s a little spooky with liverpools, and that jump scenario will be hard to recreate. But I also I think I’ll plan to ride a little ‘be ready’ here, and if he wants to look or spook, I’ll say, ‘Boy, you can get in there and do it.’ Normally,  he actually loves the job. If you point him he’s going to jump, no matter what, and so maybe I took it for granted a little too much. I’ve just got to be ready to give him a good ride.”

That lesson isn’t the only valuable intel Dan’s picked up since coming over – he’s also been refining this first phase, and though today’s score of 34.8, which puts him 31st after dressage, doesn’t necessarily reflect a huge change on paper since Luhmühlen, Dan can feel the gains being made.

“We’ve worked a lot on his dressage and just improving the basics — that throughness, and kind of putting a few pieces back together. I feel like the horse is going better here this weekend,” he says. “I was really proud of him; he tried so hard. I messed up the first flying change, so I’m disappointed about that, but the rest of it, we didn’t really have mistakes, and so I was really happy with that. I think we’re improving from  Luhmuhlen — our score wasn’t much better, but the coach and everybody thought we’re moving in the right direction, and for a ten-year-old and in the atmosphere, I was really happy.”

Dan’s been trying a unique tactic to get ready for this evening’s second phase, which takes place in the unique and enormous main stadium: “I’ve been walking the 1.60m jumping courses,” he laughs, “because then, I’m hoping ours might look small!”

The individual top ten after the first phase of competition.

Their extraordinary first-phase efforts put the British team in the lead going into jumping, though they’ve not quite got a rail in hand: with their aggregate score of 78.8, they’re 3.5 points ahead of second placed team USA on 82.3, who themselves are just 2.1 penalties ahead of third-placed Germany on 84.4. From there, the margins get a bit wider – fourth placed New Zealand is 5.9 penalties behind Germany, which puts them 11.5 penalties – or two rails and just over eight seconds – off the lead.

Now, with the first phase behind us, we meet one of CHIO Aachen’s great anomalies: we’re not done for the day, because there’s showjumping yet to come tonight in the extraordinary main stadium here. That’ll begin at 17.45 local time (that’s 16.45 BST/11.45 a.m. EST), and will run in the same order as this morning – that is, individuals first, and then in rotations through the team draw. You can find the order of go here, and to tune in to watch the action live, click here. We’ll be bringing you further news on all the movers and shakers later on this evening, plus plenty of photos of our stars of the sport in action. Until then: Go Eventing!

The team standings after the first phase.

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Form Guide] [EN’s Coverage]

A Battle of the Nations: One Pair Held at CHIO Aachen First Horse Inspection

2021 Aachen champions Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There are certain competitions that we find ourselves counting down to each year, and CHIO Aachen — northern Germany’s ‘World Equestrian Festival’ — is absolutely one of them. This brilliant, buzzy celebration of horse sport – and the people who love to watch it – feels a bit like Disneyland for the horse-obsessed, and we really can’t get enough of it, nor of the serious battle of the titans it puts on for us eventing folk.

So what’s the big deal with Aachen, anyway? Simply put, it’s the closest approximation to a major championship that we get in this sport, without actually being a major championship. There’s tonnes of atmosphere, a huge amount of buzz, and a Nations Cup-style team competition (though it’s not, crucially, a part of the FEI Nations Cup series, so any successes earned here won’t count towards the efforts being made by unqualified countries to earn a spot at Paris next year). Plus, now that the World Equestrian Games of old no longer exists, it’s also the only show in which the very best of all the FEI disciplines is showcased in one venue, which lends it a uniquely special feeling, if you’re into the idea of, say, grabbing a coffee next to Steve Guerdat or following Jessica von Bredow-Werndl into a spinny door, which we very much are. More pertinently, though, all these factors combine to create a great, pressurised litmus test for horses and riders who may go on to fight for medals at the real deal championships, and so each invited country’s selectors tend to put forward their creme-de-la-creme, and we get the chance to see, for example, the likes of fischerChipmunk go head to head with Banzai du Loir. It’s a seriously cool teaser – and performance indicator – ahead of this summer’s European Championships, and it’s also a great way to see which horses are being developed on the Paris pipeline with a year to go.

World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This week’s ground jury is made up of Judy Hancock of Great Britain, President Christian Steiner of Austria, and Edith Schless-Störtenbecker of Germany, who’ll pick up a gamut of vital roles: most immediately, they’ll be our judges for tomorrow’s dressage, which begins at the bright and early hour of 8.30 a.m. local time (that’s 7.30 a.m. BST or – prepare yourself, folks – 2.30 a.m. EST time). Then, it’s on to showjumping in the capacious, floodlight main arena with its 40,000 seats for the showjumping tomorrow evening, starting at 17.45 local time (16.45 BST/11.45 a.m. EST) – and that’ll set us up nicely for Saturday morning’s cross-country from 10.00 (9.00 a.m. BST/4.00 a.m. EST), which that busy ground jury will have signed off and approved earlier in the week, and in which we’ll crown our Aachen SAP Cup Champions of 2023.

But all of that is still yet to come: today, our ground jury had another, very important matter at hand — that of the first horse inspection, in which 44 horses were presented for ten assembled nations, plus a further six for Saturday night’s Jump & Drive relay competition, which pits teams of eventers, show jumpers, and carriage drivers against one another under the lights of the main arena.

Arthur Marx and Church’Ile. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though all the presented horses were accepted into the competition — eventually — there were two tense moments: firstly when Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier was asked to immediately re-present Ducati d’Arville, and secondly, when France’s Arthur Marx was asked the same while trotting up his Church’Ile. Though the former was then accepted into the competition, the latter was sent to the holding box; after a closer inspection by the resident vet, and a further re-presentation, he was then given the go-ahead.

The day will begin with a batch of twelve individual riders, before moving onto the eight teams. The first rider in the ring will be young German rising star Libussa Lübbeke, who rides Caramia 34, while US individuals Dan Krietl and Carmango will be seventh to go at 9.12 (8.12 a.m. BST/3.12 a.m. EST).

Ireland is first in that team draw, and their pathfinder will be a seriously reliable combo in Cathal Daniels and Rioghan Rua, who come down the centreline at 10.09 a.m. (9.09 a.m. BST/4.09 a.m. EST). They’ll be followed by a seriously competitive German team, and then by the on-form young Swiss team, before it’s the turn of the USA and their own pathfinders, Phillip Dutton and Z, who start at 10.30 (9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST). Our last pair in the ring will be Kiwi anchors Tim Price and Falco, who start at 14.19 (13.19 p.m. BST/8.19 a.m. EST). The US is seriously well-represented this week: as well as individual Dan and pathfinder Phillip, we’ve also got Liz Halliday-Sharp and Ocala Horse Properties and Debbie Palmer’s Miks Master C, who were third at Kentucky this spring; Tamie Smith and the Ahearn family’s Mai Baum, who were victorious there, and 2021 Aachen champions Will Coleman and Off The Record. Plus, there’s a more-than-honorary American on the Aussie squad: Cali girl Rebecca Braitling steps up for the team with Caravaggio. You can meet all the teams and their riders in our comprehensive form guide, and check out the full times for tomorrow here.

We’ll be bringing you full reports and galleries at the culmination of both phases tomorrow – plus lots of behind-the-scenes action and glimpses at the other world-class sport on show at this extraordinary show throughout the days to come, so keep it locked on EN to scratch all your Aachen itches. Plus, you can tune in to ClipMyHorse.TV to follow all the action – in eventing and elsewhere! – live. Go Eventing!

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Form Guide] [EN’s Coverage]

The Buzz and the Bright Lights: CHIO Aachen Hits Social Media

When it comes to a show of the size and scale of Germany’s CHIO Aachen – the World Equestrian Festival – it’s hard to know which way to look, which arena to prioritise, or which world-famous pair to follow en route to glory. That’s where social media becomes something of a godsend; while we can’t all be everywhere at once, witnessing all the incredible sporting moments as they happen, the collective horsey family is definitely not going to miss a moment, and we can all relive them together. With that in mind, here are some of the highlights from across the ‘Gram, starting with some clips from the Opening Ceremony, which took place on Tuesday night and celebrated the equestrian culture of Great Britain – this year’s chosen country – including show ponies, racing Shetlands, and the contributions of dynamos such as Princess Anne:

 

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Competition is in full swing already, with last night’s Turkish Airlines Prize of Europe CSIO5* going the way of Brazilian Yuri Manseur in an enormously emotional coup:

 

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Here are some of the other stars of horse sport, who’ve been living the dream here this week:

 

One of the nicest moments for a horse and rider who’ve travelled from far afield to compete here? The reunion, of course. Here’s some of our favourites:

 

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Schooling is in full swing here as our athletes get ready for one of the year’s biggest competitions. Here’s how it’s going…

 

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And finally, we’ll leave you with this – a seriously cool throwback from one Jonelle Price:

 

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Go Eventing, and Go Aachen!

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

CHIO Aachen: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Thursday News & Notes

 

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CHIO Aachen has officially begun – and every year, one of the things that I really enjoy about it is that it picks a country as its focal point, which sets the theme for the Opening Ceremony, the branding around the site, and a number of performances through the week. This year, the country of choice is Great Britain, and so we saw a very English display, including racing Shetlands, show ponies, double decker buses, and more in the opening ceremony. It’s all a bit of beautiful chaos, and a fitting opener for all the world class sport to come. We’ll be taking you on a walking tour of the show over on our Instagram, and bringing you lots of content from the eventing competition and beyond right here on EN – so stay tuned!

US Weekend Preview:

Twin Rivers Summer H.T. (Paso Robles, CA): Website, Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scoring

Inavale Farm H.T. (Philomath, OR): Website, Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scoring

Summer Coconico H.T. I (Flagstaff, AZ): Website, Entry Status/Ride Times, Live Scoring

Chattahoochee Hills + Area III Championships (Fairburn, GA): Website

News & Notes from Around the World:

I cannot tell you how much I adore the equestrian wonderland that is CHIO Aachen. Particularly now that the old WEG format has gone by the wayside, it’s the only place in equestrian sport where you can see the very best of each discipline, all in one place – and the whole thing is designed to celebrate not just the athletes and horses, but the loyal fans, too. It truly is our Mecca, and this piece from Aachen first-timer Lisa Slade of COTH sums up some of that magic beautifully.

Is AI on course to take all our jobs? Maybe – but probably not. In this op-ed from Captain Mark Phillips, he explains why the human touch is necessary for picking championship teams – and why the task of selection will, or at least should, never come down to simply pulling numbers from a database, particularly in a season such as 2023, which has seen extreme weather conditions and some external factors skew those numbers in a way that the human skill of context would be able to parse sensibly. Read it here.

Being a mother is no walk in the park. Now, new research suggests that that’s the same for horses, too, who have to deal with peaks in their stress levels while carrying, birthing, and raising their young. Check it out. 

 

Who Jumped It Best: Luhmühlen’s Longines Water

Who Jumped It Best?
The week or so after an event is always full of a special kind of chaos — the chaos that is unloading memory cards, which will have been filled to bursting throughout the competition but only skimmed each day for whichever shots are needed to illustrate that day’s reports. Those thousands of other photos, though, always deserve their chance to shine, too, and so I try to find a rare few hours of quiet time to sift through them all — especially because this year, I have an apprentice of sorts in my officially-non-horsey-but-already-addicted boyfriend, Alex, who’s decided to borrow one of my spare cameras and teach himself the fine art of lying on the ground to catch great angles of cross-country jumps. Repeat after me: one of us, one of us…

And so this is a special edition of WJIB, because it’s Alex’s first — and although I’d love to trick him into believing that part of the EN hazing rite of passage is having to wear a giant Chinch suit on showjumping day, in truth, it’s actually this: managing to nail the shot at a fence enough times that we can all sink our teeth into the greatest game of them all. I think we might keep this one around.

Anyway, on to the jump at hand. This one was part of Luhmühlen’s tough, tightly-timed CCI4*-S, which incorporated the German National Championships, and it was very near the end of the course at the final water complex, the Longines Waßer at 18ABC. The first element of the complex was a roll top with a downhill landing, which they jumped as they crossed from the bright light of an open field to the dappled shadow of the tree-covered complex; then, on landing, they cantered down into the water and over an offset boat. Finally, they cantered back out of the water and over another offset boat — and it’s this one that we’re judging today. Who do you think kept their balance and focus best at the tail end of this question — and who set their horse up best to then steam up the course’s most significant hill en route to the final fences? Take a look, and then scroll down to vote for your pick!

Wouter de Cleene and Quintera. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Anna Lena Schaaf and Fairytale 39. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Felix Etzel and TSF Polartanz. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Cathal Daniels and CDS Cairnview Romolu. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Calvin Böckmann and The Phantom of the Opera. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Imre Tóth and Zypresse 8. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Anna Siemer and Lillybelle EA. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

 

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

 

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I love it when people who knew a horse as a foal – or heck, bred it! – get the chance of a reunion once that horse is a global mega-star. We saw it happen at Luhmühlen earlier this month, where London 52’s breeder made a surprise appearance, and now we’re seeing it in action again, as Phillip Dutton’s Z got the chance to have a good snuggle with his breeder’s sister, who was present and helping at his birth, while en route to Aachen. How surreal it must be to see what a cool horse he’s become!

Speaking of Aachen, I’m so excited to once again be lead reporter and photographer for EN for all the festivities this week at, arguably, the world’s greatest horse show. We’ll have some great preview content coming your way over the next couple of days, plus jam-packed reports and galleries, and even some peaks at what else is going on at this celebration of top-end horse sport, so keep it locked on EN this week and let’s keep this big German June rolling!

Events Opening Today: Woodside Summer H.TFair Hill International Recognized H.T.Full Gallop Farm August HT-Pending USEF ApprovalWindRidge Farm Summer H.T.Otter Creek Summer H.T.GMHA Festival of Eventing August H.T.

Events Closing Today: The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy FarmChampagne Run at the Park H.T.Larkin Hill H.T.

News & Notes from Around the World:

The British Equestrian Federation and the FEI are working to improve concussion guidelines. This comes off the back of new research on the effect of a knock to the head, and is promising news for riders who may have otherwise continued on as normal after a fall, leaving themselves with nasty after effects down the line. Read more here.

Miks Master C heads to Aachen this week, after a super spring season that saw him finish third in his five-star debut at Kentucky. He’s arguably one of the most exciting horses in the US at the moment — but how much do you know about this cool character? Go behind the stall door and find out more.

Are you about to make your eventing debut, or returning to the sport after a break? You might benefit from a refresher on the rules of cross-country — and heck, even if you’re out competing most weekends, it never hurts to remind yourself of the nuances of our sport! USEA gives you the cliff notes here.

Sponsor Corner: Summer is in full swing! That leaves us with the question that comes around every summer: how hot is too hot to ride? This handy graphic from Kentucky Performance Products has a simple formula.

Watch This:

Get in the mood for Aachen with this hat cam video from last year’s cross country, courtesy of Andrew Hoy and Vassily de Lassos.

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

I’ve just spent a week working on the press team at Hickstead, where I’m always particularly excited to see eventers infiltrating the dark side. This year’s iconic Hickstead Derby saw a huge number of them lining up, in a class where we ordinarily see one or two, perhaps, every few years. From Germany, we had entries from 2014 eventing World Champ Sandra Auffarth and veteran five-star competitor Kai Rüder; from Britain, we had ex-five-star rider Paul Sims and, of course, the debut of Gemma Steven’s (neé Tattersall) on her brilliant catch ride, Dime Bar. Imagine being this talented in multiple disciplines. Nuts. 

National Holiday: It’s National Sarah Day! Take a moment to confuse a Sarah in your life with some hearty congratulations. I recommend Sarah Bullimore, Sarah Clark, or — and this still counts — Sara Kozumplik.

US Weekend Action:

Stable View Summer H.T. (Aiken, South Carolina): [Website] [Results]

Midsouth Pony Club H.T. (Lexington, Kentucky): [Website] [Results]

Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T. (Barrington Hills, Illinois): [Website] [Results]

Woodloch Stable Young Event Horse Qualifier (Hugo, Minnesota): [Website] [Results]

Loudon Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T. (Leesburg, Virginia): [Website] [Results]

Round Top H.T. (Castle Rock, Colorado): [Results]

Valinor Farm H.T. (Plymouth, Massachusetts): [Website] [Results]

Bucks County Horse Park H.T. (Revere, Pennsylvania): [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Speaking of eventers at Hickstead — one of those who had a major win on Saturday was 21-year-old discipline-hopper Ella Dalton, who took the hugely prestigious Speed Derby in her first-ever attempt, riding a freebie horse. It’s a great story, and she’s every bit as smiley and sweet as you’d imagine.

As an incurable Thoroughbred addict, I’m also well-versed in dodgy hooves. One of those old adages that holds true here is that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure (and, y’know, no foot, no horse, and all that) — and so everything I can do to make my horse’s hooves robust and healthy before we start wheeling in the big guns of, say, remedial farriery is always key to the whole equation. The starting point? A diet that promotes growth and strength. Here’s what you need to know.

“You just can’t find the staff these days” — that’s a very common moan in the horse world, but even if you DO find a brilliant employee, are you doing all you can as an employer to keep them? It’s less and less likely these days that a young rider will want to work every day of the week in exchange for the odd lesson and their horse’s board (and that’s a good thing, IMO), and so employers need to take a hard look at what they’re giving back before they bemoan ‘this generation’s’ work ethics. This is an interesting and salient piece.

Morning Viewing:

Join Ellie Fredericks, daughter of the legendary Lucinda, as she tackles her first-ever four-star:

How to Watch Strzegom’s Nations Cup Jumping Phases – For Free!

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk. Photo courtesy of LOTTO Strzegom Horse Trials.

Is June the most action-packed month of the season? It’s very possible – and certainly, here at EN HQ, we’re pretty sure the crazy train has never whizzed along quite so quickly. In Europe this week, hot off the back of last week’s Luhmühlen CCI4*-S and CCI5* – and ahead of next week’s CHIO Aachen – all eyes have turned to rural Poland, where the LOTTO Strzegom Horse Trials has attracted a host of serious competitors for classes from CCI1* through to CCI4*-L. Most notably, though, is the Nations Cup CCIO4*-S that’s happening this weekend – partly because it’s the latest leg to play host to the intense battle for series domination this year, which will earn one nation a coveted place at next year’s Paris Olympics, and partly because it’s also the site of the latest USEF development grant. The US has a strong team of four tackling this week’s competition, gaining experience and fighting for top placings, too.

Dressage has now concluded, and the small but perfectly-formed German team is in the lead, followed by our US European Development Grant-winning team in second. The Dutch team sits third, and best-placed of the nations who are fighting for that Olympic qualification at the end of the season. Individually, it’s even better news for the US: Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake are out in front going into tomorrow’s jumping phases on a score of 28.1, followed by Germany’s Johanna Marloh and Crazy Carlotta on 29.3 and the Netherlands’ Sanne de Jong and Enjoy on 29.4. You can check out the full scores so far here.

Tomorrow is all about cross-country, and it’ll be starting at 13.00 local time (12.00 p.m. BST/7.00 a.m. EST). As part of the FEI Nations Cup series, it’s all free to watch live on the FEI’s YouTube channel, and you can also rewatch the action that’s happened so far. Here are tomorrow’s starting times, and you can rewatch day one’s dressage here:

And day two’s dressage here:

Here’s where you’ll be able to find tomorrow’s cross-country stream:

And finally, following Sunday morning’s horse inspection, you’ll also be able to tune in for the Nations Cup showjumping, from 14.30 local time (13.30 BST/8.30 a.m. EST), here:

Go Eventing!

Thursday Video: Eventers Do the Derby

Shane Breen and Can Ya Makan win the Hickstead Derby in 2022. Photo courtesy of the All-England Jumping Course at Hickstead.

This week plays host to one of the most iconic classes in equestrian sport: the Hickstead Derby, which has been running over an unchanged course since the 1960s, and features legendary obstacles that are steeped in history, including the Derby Bank, the Devil’s Dyke, and more. Every few years or so, we see an intrepid eventer or two taking on the challenge, and this year, we’ve got an extraordinary three of them riding throughout the week to gain qualification for the main event through the trial classes. Those are Gemma Stevens (neé Tattersall), who has a brilliant catch ride in Shirley Light’s Dime Bar, and German superstars Kai Rüder and Sandra Auffarth, the latter of which has picked up some serious mileage over the Hamburg Derby track, which was the inspiration for this class some sixty years ago. We’re buzzing to see how they all go — and bring you all the news of their rides, too — but in the meantime, get in the spirit of the thing with this collection of videos, showcasing the specific set of skills required for Derby success.

First up, here’s a video of Sandra’s round at the Hamburg Derby five years ago:

And another, showing how she schools her horses to prepare them for the challenge of that Derby Bank and vertical fence combo:

Here’s a clip of Gemma Stevens schooling over some frankly colossal fences in preparation for this weekend – that wall!

Here’s a cool throwback video of showjumper Nick Skelton and Apollo logging a clear round at Hickstead back in 1990:

And finally, some insights into riding the Bank and the Devil’s Dyke from reigning champ Shane Breen and his brother, former winner Trevor.

Go Eventing – or Showjumping – or whatever this mad class counts as!

“Our Hopes and Dreams For Her Were So High”: Tamie Smith’s Solaguayre California Euthanised After Freak Luhmühlen Injury

Tamie Smith and Solaguayre California. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’re devastated to report that Tamie Smith‘s Luhmühlen mount, Solaguayre California, has been euthanised following a freak injury to her knee while jumping through the first water complex at the German five-star, which was her debut at the level.

The pair jumped cleanly through the complex, which was one of the most influential questions of the day, though the twelve-year-old mare did hit her knee on the C element of the final fence while clearing it. After jumping the next fence, a table that came up very shortly after the water, Tamie felt that California was slightly off, and opted to pull the mare up. California was then transported off the course and to a local equine hospital as a precautionary measure to avoid any risk of infection to the cut over the joint. There, a fracture to the knee was discovered, though the prognosis was an optimistic one, and the mare, who is owned by David and Julianne Guariglia, was booked in for surgery to start the repair process. It was then that the injury was discovered to be a much more complex one, and the tough decision was made to euthanise California.

Tamie has shared a statement on her social media channels, which reads as follows:

“My heart is broken as I write this and say that Solaguayre California was humanely euthanized after a planned surgery to repair a slab fracture to her knee. As California jumped out of the C element of the water at the Luhmühlen CCI5*-L, I felt her hit the jump and what seemed to be just a sting and disappointing moment of having to pull her up to save for another day. Initially the assessment of her recovery was favorable as we stopped when we did and it seemed to be a simple fix. However it has turned out much more extensive and the damage was irreparable.

“This is devastating to our team, her owners and I cannot quite imagine life without our girl, however her tenacity and grit was the complete example of how we get through times like these.

“I find comfort knowing we were able to get her to the best surgeon with the best medical team. There were so many amazing people who helped facilitate this and no stone was unturned on trying to find a perfect plan to having her make a full recovery.

“California was a star in the making and showed the world, especially this season, how incredibly gifted she was. Our hopes and dreams for her were so high. Our hearts are broken. 💔

“As I sit here hugging the black stallion in a puddle of tears I have to reflect at the incredible honor it is to have these partnerships with our horses. How lucky are we to experience such a bond with these athletes.

“I know that living… means you take the good with the bad. Life’s uncertainty can’t disable your life because you are afraid of the risk of living, it isn’t easy, but it is better to have experienced the moments and memories and to live for every moment than to just sit and be safe.

“California was the epitome of ‘Carpe Diem’… so I take this meaning of living life to the fullest in her memory.  My brain is spinning, my heart is broken, but I know I have you all to keep me pushing on.”

The EN team sends its most heartfelt condolences to Tamie, the Guariglia family, and all the connections of Solaguayre California. We’ve loved enjoying the privilege of watching her climb through the levels – join us in looking back at some of our favourite moments of her career.

 

Thursday News & Notes

If the 2010s were the decade of Michael Jung and La Biosthetique Sam FBW’s total domination, the 2020s are swiftly becoming the domain of Laura Collett and London 52. This is an incredible accomplishment, rightly being celebrated by EquiRatings: the duo has delivered three of the top five finishing scores at five-star, ever. Incredible stuff, and made even more exciting because of that high-profile tricky year they had back in 2019, in which the hotly-tipped young horse had to learn his job at the upper levels with the whole world watching. Laura had to deal with some serious disappointments that year, but remained steadfast in her dedication to the horse — and look how it’s paid off. It’s a great comfort to all the rest of us mere mortals, who might be battling through our own 2019 right now but truly believe our horse has what it takes. Keep the faith alive, folks.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Stable View Summer H.T. (Aiken, South Carolina): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Midsouth Pony Club H.T. (Lexington, Kentucky): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T. (Barrington Hills, Illinois): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Woodloch Stable Young Event Horse Qualifier (Hugo, Minnesota): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Loudon Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T. (Leesburg, Virginia): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Round Top H.T. (Castle Rock, Colorado): [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Valinor Farm H.T. (Plymouth, Massachusetts): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Bucks County Horse Park H.T. (Revere, Pennsylvania): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

News From Around the Globe:

One of our favourite classes on the ‘dark side’ is the Hickstead Derby, which takes place this weekend. This iconic class, which has been running since the 1960s with an unchanged course and some of showjumping’s greatest feature fences — such as that bank — and it always draws a great field of entries and a huge crowd. This year, the eventers are well-represented with an entry from Gemma Stevens (neé Tattersall) and catch-ride Dime Bar, who she’s piloting for the Light family. But before we look forward to that ride on Sunday, let’s take a look back at some of the greatest moments that William Funnell, husband of Pippa, has experienced in his long tenure contesting the class. 

Speaking of historical, traditional shows, I found this throwback piece from COTH fascinating. It’s the sage recollections of the hunter-jumper world from the 1920s through the 1960s, as shared by 1936 Maclay champion, Ellie Wood Baxter. I’m particularly interested in her memories of Madison Square Garden, and the very different courses competitors had to tackle there. Check out her musings and memories here.

This is turning into a curiously jumper-themed edition of N&N, and I’m not sorry. In this piece, you’ll meet OTTB El Tormenta — or Eddie — who won the Woodbine Mile in 2019 and is now thriving in his second career, thanks in part to a great new Thoroughbred Jumper series. We love anything that helps promote these incredible athletes, and we love multitalented Eddie.

Last week, Tim Price opted to withdraw Happy Boy after the horse’s bloods were up upon arrival. This isn’t necessarily unusual: long-distance travel can bring on all sorts of little (and sometimes big) bugs and coughs, and it’s wise to monitor horses closely while they travel and upon arrival to ensure any travel sickness can be combatted. Now, researchers in Italy have revealed the findings on a study on the physical responses of travel, including the inflammatory response it brings on — and the stress response, too. It’s well worth reading if you ship your horse long-haul at any time.

 

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Check Out the Bramham BE80 Championships Course

We always shout from the rooftops about how great the courses, the atmosphere, and the educational opportunities are for BE90 (US Novice) and BE100 (US Training) riders are at the prestigious Voltaire Design Grassroots Championships at Badminton — but what about BE80 (Beginner Novice) competitors? For them, there’s something equally cool: they have the NAF Five Star BE80 Championships at beautiful Bramham International, and what a competition it is. Taking in some of Bramham’s famous terrain, it’s a true championship track for the level, and one that rewards horses and riders who ride positively and with gumption across its breadth. This year’s winner, lorry driver Emily Tamblyn, drove most of the length of the country from Cornwall to compete with her oversized Irish horse, Knockenpower Rory, and her efforts paid off with sweet, sweet victory. Now, thanks to our friends at An Eventful Life, you can check out their winning cross-country round in full — and get a glimpse of this very cool grassroots track.

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Check out this KPP article: Vitamin E and the Performance Horse – A Winning Combination.

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The Big German June Continues: Your First Look at CHIO Aachen Eventing Entries

Yasmin Ingham with Sue Davies and Janette Chinn’s Banzai du Loir. Photo by Shelby Allen.

We’ve finally gotten a look at the 43 horse and rider combinations representing 10 nations in next week’s CHIO Aachen CCIO4*-S – plus, the six horses and riders who’ll be taking part in the Jump & Drive relay class under lights, one of our favourite fast-paced novelty classes in the game, which pits six teams made up of a showjumper, an event rider, and a combined driver apiece, against one another in a bid for glory in front of a packed stadium.

But first, let’s have a look at the entries in the eventing proper, which takes the form of a team competition, but isn’t part of the FEI Nations Cup calendar — so success this week won’t count towards points tallied in that series, and as such, won’t help any nations gain Olympic qualification. (Not that any of these guys will need it: the full teams here are all already qualified for Paris.) We’ll see teams fielded by the USA, Switzerland, New Zealand, Great Britain, Germany, Ireland, Australia and France, while Sweden and Belgium will also appear with individual competitors in Frida Andersen and Box Leo, and Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville and Jarno Verwimp and Mahalia, respectively.

We always see seriously top-end line-ups for Aachen, which is an invitational competition and, as such, is always ridden competitively — you won’t see riders coming here with the aim of doing a schooling round or a slow prep run. Rüdiger Schwarz always builds a tough, technical, twisty track in which time is a big factor — similar, then, to the CCI4*-S we saw at Luhmühlen last week.

Sandra Auffarth and Viamant du Matz win Aachen 2022. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The home side has a serious team hunting for national glory: Michael Jung heads up proceedings with fischerChipmunk FRH, and is joined by reigning champion Sandra Auffarth and Viamant du Matz, plus Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S, who was also part of the gold medal-winning Pratoni team last year and was second at Luhmühlen CCI5* in 2021. The team of four is completed by last year’s Blenheim CCI4*-L winners, Malin Hansen-Hotopp and Carlitos Quidditch K. As the host nation, Germany also gets extra individual slots — and so we’ll see young up-and-comers Calvin BöckmannRebecca-Juana Gerken, and Libussa Lübekke competing too, as well as seasoned competitor Anna Siemer.

Think that sounds like a good team? Wait ’til you meet the British front: World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir lead the charge, ably assisted by Kirsty Chabert and Classic VI, who were second at Luhmühlen CCI5* last year, Tom McEwen and JL Dublin, runners-up at Boekelo last season and Kentucky this year, and Gemma Stevens (nee Tattersall) on the impressive young Flash Cooley. They’ll be joined by Hector Payne and Dynasty, who will compete as individuals.

Will Coleman and the ‘weird’ Off The Record get the job done to take Aachen’s coveted CCIO4*-S in 2021. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A bit of commotion for the US team, please: newly-minted Kentucky champions Tamie Smith and Mai Baum are joined by 2021 Aachen champions Will Coleman and Off The Record, who made history by becoming the first American winners of the competition when they took the trophy two years ago. They’re joined by Kentucky podium finishers Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C, plus the ultra-experienced Phillip Dutton and ZDan Krietl and Carmango will come forward as individual competitors, continuing their first summer competing abroad.

The Kiwis are bringing forward big guns, too; three of their four team members — Tim and Jonelle Price on Falco and McClaren, respectively, and Clarke Johnstone on Menlo Park — competed at the Pratoni World Championships last year, while Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier finished in the top ten at Pau on the mare’s CCI5* debut last year. Samantha Lissington and Ricker Ridge Sooty GNZ hold the individual spot.

Switzerland brings forward very nearly the same team with which they won the Pratoni test event and Nations Cup leg last year: Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CHMélody Johner and Toubleu de RueirePatrick Rüegg and Fifty Fiftyand Nadja Minder and Toblerone also took part in the World Championships, earning themselves a spot at Paris in the process.

Ireland’s team is helmed by Cathal Daniels and the super-fast, super-experienced Rioghan Rua. He’s joined by a team of slightly less experienced horses but hugely experienced riders in Susie Berry and Kilcandra Capitol, and Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M, as well as the five-star combo of Joseph Murphy and Calmaro.

France’s team can never be underestimated at Aachen, either. This year, they bring forward experienced five-star competitors Gireg le Coz and Aisprit de la LogeBenjamin Massie and Edition Fonroy, Kentucky competitors Maxime Livio and Carouzo Bois Marotin, and Luc Chateau and Cocorico de l’Ebat, with Badminton competitors Arthur Marx and Church’Ile as individuals.

Finally, Australia delivers us a team of up-and-coming horses gaining international experience. Kevin McNab will ride the former Caroline Harris mount, Miss Pepperpot, and Bill Levett will ride the ten-year-old Sligo Candy Cane, who led after the first two phases in Bramham’s CCI4*-S this summer. California-based Rebecca Braitling has also made the journey with her longtime partner Caravaggio — and we’ll be catching up with her on site to find out how her European excursion has been treating her this summer.

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 compete in the Jump & Drive class at Aachen in 2022. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Now let’s take a look at the Jump & Drive: while we don’t yet know who they’ll all be teamed up with for this brilliant late-night class, we do know that we’ll have six fantastic eventers taking part: for Australia, it’ll be Andrew Hoy, riding Cadet de Beliard; for Belgium, it’ll be Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Pumpkin de la Liniere; for the Brits, we’ll see the hotly-anticipated return to the world stage of Gemma Stevens‘s Santiago Bay; for Germany, it’ll be a double-header in Calvin Böckmann and Crunchip P and Anna Siemer and Pirate Smile; and for Ireland, it’s Joseph Murphy and Belline Fighting Spirit.

Take a look at the entries in full here, and keep it locked on EN for all the coverage you could possibly desire from this showcase event, starting from next Thursday, June 29. Go Eventing!

EN’s Coverage of CHIO Aachen is brought to you with support from Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

Luhmühlen CCI4*-S: Julia Krajewski Takes German Championship (Again!)

Julia Krajewski takes to the arena to try to beat herself with Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As Olympic individual gold medallist Julia Krajewski entered the arena as the final competitor of the day in Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S, the writing was already on the wall: she was the newly minted German Champion, no matter what happened. This curious bit of kismet happened because Julia’s duo of inexperienced nine-year-olds had performed so extraordinarily well yesterday — and the course had caused so many issues — that she’d been able to move up to overnight second, from fifth, with the French-bred Ero de Cantraie, and from second to first with the German Nickel 21. And so, when she was made to jump out of order on second-placed Ero to ensure she’d have time to prepare her second ride, and when she subsequently went clear with 0.4 time faults, she secured herself the title either way — it was just to be a question of which horse would take the top honours.

In the end, it was Ero — a horse who Julia told us earlier in the week rather reminds her of her Luhmühlen CCI5* winner, Samurai du Thot — who stepped into the top spot after overnight leader Nickel 21 tipped two rails and dropped down to third.

“I knew I was German Champion one horse or the other, and then I came in again and had two unlucky rails with Nickel and I was not in the lead anymore with him, but I was still German Champion, so that was a funny situation,” she says. “Both horses were really nice. With Nickel, I lost a bit of the contact before the double and he didn’t really take the bit going through the double and then I had to push him a bit. That was a bit unusual — but he’s usually a good jumper and I think being third here is everything to be proud of.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie take the German National Championship. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Quick-brained, occasionally mercurial Ero has been stepping up to the plate for Julia since they began solidifying their year-long partnership in the latter part of last season, and while he hasn’t had the same exposure to atmosphere as stablemate Nickel, who’s competed in arena eventing and ride and drive competitions, he still overcame some initial apprehension about the crowd with remarkable ease.

“We had to go in quite early, and then Ero jumped a clear round — I’m super delighted with how he went all week,” says Julia. “[He] came in today, got slightly nervous with the crowd and then really focused and jumped a very easy, nice clear round .I’m delighted; it’s only his second four-star.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Easing his worries and giving him confidence was the name of the game, and Julia’s priority for the day, even if that meant sacrificing the win.

“Bringing up young horses, I’m just trying to give them security in what they’re doing, that they feel safe, that I guide them and they learn to trust me,” she says. “Often enough, it’s doing a little bit less than you would want to do, knowing that in the long-term, it’s better to do a step less than step too many, and maybe doing it for quite some years now, being more experienced than most of the horses I ride has been quite helpful!”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For previous two-time German National Champion Julie — she won in 2018 and 2019 with Samourai du Thot — it’s all been a bit of a weird day, in the nicest of ways.

“It was somehow surreal, to know that I’d won the title so early on,” she laughs. “I could only have beat myself to it. All in all, I’m overjoyed with the way the week went and incredibly proud of my young horses. I really didn’t expect to be on the podium with both horses at the end of the week. Ero’s development in the last 12 months is absolutely amazing, and Nickel was a bit unlucky today. He, too, would have deserved the win today.”

Christoph Wähler and D’Accord 70. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This time last year, locally-based rider Christoph Wahler, who was part of the German gold medal-winning team at Pratoni last year, came to this event with new ride D’Accord 70 and very nearly medalled in this class — but for the two rails on the final day, which cost them several places on the leaderboard and left them in eighth place. Today, they put that behind them, producing one of just five clear rounds inside the time to become one of just two combinations to finish on their dressage score, proving that the son of Diarado is well on his way to becoming Mr Consistency.

“We weren’t very happy with the dressage [a 34.4 for first phase 24th], because the horse can do a better test, and I can ride a better test, but in the end we didn’t bring it into the arena,” says Christoph, who runs his family’s high-end dressage breeding stud at the Klosterhof Medingen around his eventing obligations. “Whereas Saturday was an absolute pleasure riding him across country, because he’s a naturally quick horse with a huge gallop, and he’s got a huge jump on him. Every round I ride him he gets a little bit safer, and a little bit more comfortable with going that fast.”

Christoph Wahler and D’Accord 70. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This year, coming from behind suited the pair, and an unruffled Christoph quietly observed the competition play out before cantering into the ring and making his own bid for a top placing.

“We’d already moved up a couple of ranks and then today I knew that the show jumping is usually quite difficult in Luhmuhlen, and the fact if we managed to jump a clear round we could be right up there, and we did,” he says.

Anna Lena Schaaf and Fairytale 39. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After delivering a clear round, with just 0.8 time faults, Anna Lena Schaaf found herself in an enviable position: the hard work was done, and now it was down to everyone else in the class to try to match her effort — or slip below her trying. Ultimately, so few in this class were able to keep a clean slate that she found herself climbing all the way from eighth to a final fourth place.

“This horse just leaves me speechless,” says 21-year-old Anna Lena, struggling to speak through tears of joy and the enormous emotions of the moment. “She means so much to me. The show-jumping was very challenging today and I’m so glad that we stayed clear.”

Anna Lena, who rides as part of the Warendorf training program for young riders, is already a seriously focussed and committed athlete, despite her young age: she’s previously won both the Six- and Seven-Year-Old World Championships aboard Lagona OLD, and with 16-year-old Fairytale 39, she’s truly climbed through the ranks: the mare was bred by her grandfather and was born when Anna Lena was just five years old. They’ve grown up together: Fairytale was Anna Lena’s first ride in FEI horse classes when she came off of Ponies, and that followed their even more formative start together in 80cm jumping classes. From there, they’ve made their way to two Junior and one Young Rider European Championships, winning individual gold at the Junior level in 2019 and individual silver at Young Riders in 2021. Now, a year and a half after winning on their four-star debut, they’re the bronze medallists in the German National Championships.

Anna Lena Schaaf and Fairytale 39. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That focus and drive means that she’s also highly critical of her own performances, though: “I was unhappy with my dressage, because I, myself, had two stupid mistakes, and on cross country, I was unhappy with my own riding because I didn’t find a good rhythm, but then the horse took over,” says Anna Lena. But today? She’s making up for it all by being extra happy, because “she doesn’t jump clear so often!”

Coach and fellow competitor Julia Krajewski stepped in to help an emotional Anna Lena out, and to put into words some of the abundance of feelings that come into play in a moment like this: “In my opinion, the bond between a horse and its rider can be even stronger than interpersonal relationships,” she says. “We do everything for our horses — so it’s incredibly touching when they trust us and go above and beyond.”

Nadine Marzahl and Valentine FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nadine Marzahl had begun her week as the day one dressage leader with Victoria 108, the first of her fiery daughters of the stallion Valentino, but by the time she went into cross-country, in fourth place with Victoria and eighth with Valentine FRH, the tables had started to turn for the two mares: the first, and better-placed of the two, picked up expensive time and jumping penalties at the first combination on course, while the latter nipped home, leaving a stride or two behind along the way and picking up 3.6 time penalties. That dropped Victoria down to 27th and Valentine up to fifth — and a single rail for each mare today saw them both move up a placing in the final order, with Valentine securing an impressive fourth place finish in this prestigious class.

Calvin Böckmann and The Phantom of the Opera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

22-year-old Calvin Böckmann had been one of the standout heroes of yesterday’s cross-country day: the young talent and former Pony European Champion, who rides as part of the Warendorf system for up-and-coming riders in Germany, had come to Luhmühlen last year to watch and learn from the top talents in the game on foot with his compatriots at the training base, and had dreamed then of one day, perhaps, getting the opportunity to compete in this event. And this week, he made good on that, not just showing up on the starting order with the former Sandra Auffarth ride, The Phantom of the Opera, but delivering the second fastest clear of the day yesterday, too, helping him climb from 12th to third going into the final phase.

But a medal wasn’t to be — not today, anyway, though it’s hard to imagine Calvin staying away from the top spot for too long. He and the twelve-year-old Holsteiner tipped the second fence and the seventh, dropping them two places on the leaderboard, but adding to an impressive resume that’s seen them finish outside of the top ten just twice in nine FEI runs (and then, just barely: their lowest international placing is a fourteenth!).

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Hermione d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier has been on triple duty this week: she’s not only had two horses in this class to focus on, but also her two young children, who she and husband Kai, the team trainer for Belgium and a top-level rider in his own right for Germany, have been ferrying to and fro en masse on their bikes in increasingly creative ways through the week. And, of course, she’s been occupying a supporting role: she’s had American friends to stay at Arville, the stunning base she and Kai live and work out of in Belgium, for two weeks before Luhmühlen, and could be spotting ringside cheering on Sydney Elliott in the CCI5* and, before his retirement on cross-country yesterday, Dan Krietl in the CCI4*-S.

But business seems to suit Lara, and she and her two ten-year-old homebred mares, Hermione d’Arville and Hooney d’Arville, the latter of whom is out of her former Young Rider and World Championship partner, Nooney Blue, were thoroughly impressive throughout the week. They began in 11th and 24th place, respectively, after dressage; a speedy clear for Hermione and a slightly steadier one for Hooney saw them move up to sixth and sixteenth; and then, today, a rail for Hermione and a classy clear for Hooney secured them seventh and tenth place and closed the book on a banner week for the experienced competitor.

Young British-based Swede Sofia Sjoborg once again demonstrated the consistency of her Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z, with whom she delivered a clear inside the time across the country and tipped a rail today to complete an extraordinary climb from 43rd to eighth place, while Italy’s Emiliano Portale and the expressive galloping machine Aracne dell’Esercito Italiano (no, seriously, watch it gallop sometime if you can; it’s actually remarkable) also completed a big leap up the board, adding one rail to their 3.6 time penalties yesterday to move from initial 31st to a final ninth place.

And so we well and truly come to the end of another edition of the Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials, and five-day celebration of the love of the horse. Stay tuned for more highlights and images from this fantastic event, and in the meantime, Go Eventing.

The top ten in the Meßmer Trophy CCI4*-S, incorporating the German National Championships.

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