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“You Think You’re Past It, And Then…” Pippa Funnell Takes Fourth Bramham CCI4*-L Win Across Four Decades

Pippa Funnell: victorious again at a very happy hunting ground. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I can’t tell you how special winning a big one is when you get to this stage,” says Pippa Funnell, who jumped a faultless round to retain her lead and secure the win in the 2023 Bramham CCI4*-L with MCS Maverick. “You think you’re past it — oh, god, I’m going to blub! — and then to do it…”

This marks Pippa’s fourth win in this class — she’s previously taken the title in 1992, 2002, and 2010, although this win, she says, “makes me a feel a little bit of a fraud, the way I’ve come in here saying ‘oh, I don’t know how he’s going to be’, but I genuinely didn’t know! I think this is the first rosette I’ve won on him!”

Pippa Funnell steps onto the podium after a decisive victory. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

CCI4*-L debutant MCS Maverick is a new ride for 2023 for Pippa, who inherited him from her Billy Stud stable jockey and fellow five-star rider Helen Wilson. Even having been previously impressed by the look of the horse, though, Pippa had her reservations about taking the ride on herself: “He’s very, very hot, and I thought, ‘do I really want to put all that time and work in?” But once she did commit to giving him a go, “I really wanted to bring him here because I wanted to find out if it was worth putting the time in at my age. And at the moment, it’s definitely been worth it!”

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The time she does have to put in isn’t inconsiderable, though, and it begins with an early arrival time to maximise the ten-year-old’s settling-in period.

“At every event, what I’m trying to do is go a day early. I knew my dressage was going to be on the Friday, and I came on the Tuesday anyway, because you can’t tire him out, and I don’t want to tire him out,” Pippa says. “The last thing you want to do is put loads of wear and tear on a nice horse, so instead, it’s about the mind games — it’s getting them out, then putting them away, then getting them out, then putting them away… just keeping him relaxed and getting him to slow his brain down. That really showed, I think, in the showjumping — he was so relaxed, although that might be because he ran all the way round yesterday!”

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The reward of the slow approach was evident in the first phase, too, where the pair earned a 29.3 to sit second going into cross-country.

“I think all the time, it’s been going in the right direction, but when I went to Bicton CCI4*-S, it had been a long time since he ran at Burnham Market CCI4*-S, but I really thought we were getting there,” she says. “In the trot work, he got 7s and 8s — but in the walk work, it was 1s and 2s. He didn’t take one step of walk through all those movements, but then in the canter he was good. That was the same test as here, but I thought, ‘I’m not going to get stressed about it; I’m going to make sure I give him time’.”

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick clear the last. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This morning, after the final horse inspection, and after the efforts of yesterday’s speedy clear across the cross-country, Pippa also carved out pure, unadulterated time for the horse to just settle within himself before the competition’s climax.

“After the horse inspection, I took him up beyond the stable field, and I didn’t want to jump him this morning, but I did want to do some pole work and stretch him,” she says. “He’s got a very big stride, so I just did some canter poles and got him to close himself up, but in a relaxed way. He’ll sleep well after this — he’s running on adrenaline, but I’m really chuffed because you often question whether you’re doing it the right way when you have a horse that wants to go faster than you want to go. I’m chuffed that it worked, and delighted for his owner, Sarah Ross — it’s just sad she wasn’t here!”

She had reason enough not to be: it’s Sarah’s birthday this weekend, and as Bramham was never necessarily a sure thing in Maverick’s calendar for the year, her family organised to spirit her away for a celebration, but she’s been cheering her horse and rider on from afar while making sure that Pippa, like Maverick, is totally unpressured.

“She sent me a text saying ‘absolutely brilliant yesterday — but there’s absolutely no pressure for today’,” says Pippa. “Of course, there’s that bit of me that wanted to stay ahead of Piggy, but actually I came in looking at it as a way to find out more about the horse.”

Of course, ultimately she managed both: she learned that the horse, and the system, were both even better than expected, and she stayed ahead of her great friend, too.

“I said to her yesterday, ‘god, you’re an annoying cow, aren’t you?'” she laughs. “Gemma Stevens was messaging me, and because Piggy had been right on her tail last week, I said, ‘as much as I love Piglet, she’s bloody annoying, the way she’s right there waiting!'”

Piggy March and Brookfield Cavalier Cruise. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And waiting in close quarters, she certainly was. Just four competitors finished on their dressage score in this week’s CCI4*-L competition, and the highest-placed of those was runner-up Piggy March, who secured the goods with her Thoresby CCI4*-S winner and CCI4*-L debutant Brookfield Cavalier Cruise, just 0.3 penalties behind Pippa. But while she and the Brookfield team came in with reasonable expectations for their first-timer, it also wasn’t really a surprise to anyone when he pulled three exceptional phases out of the bag: “He felt very careful and good and easy to do today — it didn’t take anything out of him, so it’s really exciting. He’s kind of gone as well as I hoped he would, but until you do it, you don’t know. And it’s so tough out there — the cross-country’s as tough as it gets for a four-star, so to deal with it well and come out and jump nicely is really exciting.”

So far, 2023 has represented a very promising start for Piggy and the ten-year-old, who she previously rode as a young Intermediate before suggesting that he go the way of fellow Brookfield rider Tom McEwen, “because I thought he’d be better for him at five-star, and Tom might be braver about going a bit quicker!” But when Piggy’s top horse, Brookfield Inocent, sustained an injury last year that has sidelined him since, the decision was made to rearrange the situation again so that each rider could have a Brookfield horse at the upper end of their strings.

“Brookfield tries to share the horses around a bit, and he’s a horse who’s won with every rider — he’s an easy, charming horse — so I’m just the very lucky one in that it’s worked out at this stage of his career that he’s with me,” says Piggy. “It’s a testament to the horse — he’s a very straightforward, level character, and ever since he was a five-year-old, he hasn’t needed to run much. He’s got a very old head on young shoulders, and that’s the beauty of him, and why he’s progressed quickly.”

Jesse Campbell and Gambesie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based Kiwi Jesse Campbell delivered a clear to secure the third place he’d held overnight with the former Jonty Evans ride Gambesie – despite “a few butterflies!” at the final horse inspection this morning, where he was asked to trot the horse a second time, but then quickly accepted.

Jesse came into the final phase with something of a secret weapon on his side: Irish showjumper Shane Breen, who gave the pair a final training session on the Monday of the event. Training with the Hickstead Derby winner has been transformative, even if, as Jesse explains, it began as something of a time-filler during the pandemic: “It’s a bit of a Covid development,” he says. “We sort of were scratching our heads with Team New Zealand on sort of things that we could do during 2020, and we made some calls and explored some options, and that was one of them. He’s based at Hickstead, which isn’t far from where I am now, and so I’ve been really lucky to be under his tutelage. He’s a true horseman, so he just understands horses on a whole ‘nother level that I wouldn’t have even explored before. Mostly he’s changed things for us by telling me, ‘just use your legs more!'”

When Jesse found himself sitting in third after cross-country with the level debutant Gambesie, he sent a text to the Irishman — “he texted me back saying ‘relax, and remember how to be a showjumper.’ And then the horse did it for me. It was magic.”

In just about every way, the twelve-year-old gelding has exceeded expectations this week: Jesse and his team have focused on short format events with him exclusively since the Seven-Year-Old World Championships in 2018, largely due to ongoing issues with the horse’s hooves, which they now hope they’ve conclusively solved.

“It was all a bit of an unknown as to what he could do this week,” says Jesse, “but we’re lucky in that we’re able to train on the South Downs, and because we’ve had such a wet spring, we’ve got perfect ground. He’s had a really long, slow build-up to this, and I really hoped that that bank of fitness work would come through for us, especially as he doesn’t really have a catalogue of long-format experience to fall back on. He’s come through it amazingly well, and I found him so rideable. I loved riding the track; it was just really cool.”

If Jesse stumbled upon any surprises out on Ian Stark’s tough track, it was simply the pleasant shock of discovering that his short-format horse might actually be the perfect contender for the toughest, longest of tracks.

“He was just so easy — like, I was continually surprised just how easily he travelled,” he says. “I kept thinking, ‘oh, we’re five seconds up!’ and it was coming easier than it had on my other horse, who’s the one I think of as the fast one. He just kept on jumping and galloping.”

Tom McEwen and Luna Mist. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom McEwen‘s smart, sharp ten-year-old Luna Mist, who was a winner at Blair CCI4*-L last summer, stepped up two places into a final fourth place on the strength of her clear round. That was enough to earn her the competition’s best-placed mare prize, edging out Harry Meade‘s Cavalier Crystal, who finished fifth just 0.6 penalties behind. Fresh off the back of her biggest career win yet at Chatsworth CCI4*-S, and in her first year out of the under-25 class, Lizzie Baugh finished on her dressage score of 35.8 with B Exclusive to take sixth place in just her second-ever CCI4*-L, while Aaron Millar and KEC Deakon put a pin in a successful Badminton reroute to take seventh.

Harry Mutch and HD Bronze. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Winner Pippa had another reason to celebrate today: Harry Mutch finished his inaugural Bramham senior CCI4*-L competition in eighth place, tipping a solitary rail with his seventeen-year-old top-level campaigner HD Bronze. Harry has recently come through the all-round training programme offered by the Wesko Equestrian Foundation, of which Pippa is the primary trainer; at the tail end of his tenure with the programme, he temporarily relocated from his northern home base to ride full time with Pippa at the Billy Stud, and the results of their combined efforts have been writ large across the 26-year-old’s recent performances. At Bramham particularly, it’s a significant uptick: he’s previously contested the under-25 class three times with HD Bronze — once at Bicton, when the class was relocated there during Covid — and has never previously completed cross-country. This time, though? His 30.2 saw him sit fifth after dressage; adding just 3.2 time penalties yesterday kept him in the same slot; and while that singular rail today will be a touch disappointing to any elite athlete, that competitive trajectory over the course of the last year can’t be sniffed at.

Grace Taylor and Game Changer. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There was just one competitor for the US across any of Bramham’s classes this year, but Grace Taylor made sure to represent the Stars and Stripes well: she and the eleven-year-old Game Changer overcame a tense start to the week, when they were held at the first horse inspection, to stay well in touch with the business end of the leaderboard throughout the competition. Their 35.5 put them in the mix on day one, and while they didn’t feature in the top ten at the close of dressage, a barnstorming round with just 3.6 time penalties across the country yesterday nudged them closer. When they delivered a classy clear today, the daughter of British team selector Nigel Taylor and US Olympian Ann (neé Sutton) and her relatively inexperienced mount were able to make the final leap and take a final ninth place. The top ten is rounded out by Gubby Leech, who finished on his dressage score of 39.7 with Royal Harvest to close the book on an impressive week-long climb.

And so the crazy train rolls on into another five-star week — one that both EN and Pippa Funnell will be heading full speed towards tomorrow. We’ll see you there — and we’ll be back soon with a final report from Bramham’s CCI4*-S class — but until then, and as always, Go Eventing.

The final top ten in Bramham’s 2023 CCI4*-L.

Bramham International Horse Trials: [Website] [Schedule][Volunteer] [Ride Times/Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [Live Stream]

A ‘Magic’ Week: Bubby Upton Becomes British Under-25 Champion at Bramham

Bubby Upton once again becomes the British under-25 national champion after a sterling week with Magic Roundabout IV. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Under-25 CCI4*-L had scarcely started, and then it was all over — and there was little in the way of surprise when Bubby Upton took the win with Magic Roundabout IV, having led from the front on a score that would have earned her the lead in the main CCI4*-L on any of the days of competition. While her rail down today stopped her from nailing down the leading score of the whole competition, she still wound up finishing on the exact same score that won the main class — a particularly impressive feat when this under-25 section sees a much higher rate of attrition across the board.

“He jumped fantastically, but being the competitive person I am, I was annoyed to have had a rail,” says Bubby with a grin. But, she concedes, “I didn’t particularly feel like we could have done much differently — it was just one of those things, and he jumped fantastically around the rest of the course and tried so hard.”

Bubby came into the competition with significantly more experience at the top levels than her peers: she’s been a top ten finisher with different horses at Pau and Badminton, and though this was her own and Magic Roundabout’s first trip to Bramham, she always knew it would suit him well as a stepping stone en route to a five-star debut.

“I’m absolutely thrilled with him, and to be honest, I can’t fault him — he’s given me his all this whole week. And yeah, to win is obviously fantastic, but more importantly, the feeling he gave me in preparation for Burghley at the end of the year is really exciting for us all. There’s no better set-up for that than here,” says Bubby.

Bubby Upton and Magic Roundabout IV. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This isn’t the first time the University of Edinburgh graduate has won the British under-25 title — she did so two years ago, when the competition was temporarily relocated during the pandemic, with her longtime partner Cannavaro. This week’s circumstances, though, feel very different to that week — not least because she’d earned herself an extraordinary margin of over 13 penalties coming into the final phase.

“It was a funny one, because I’ve obviously always known the under-25s class to be at Bramham, and then that year, it was at Bicton,” says Bubby. “But I think back then it was such a big win for me because it was my first at that level, and it was on a horse that I never thought would ever win a class like that. I never thought he’d even get to that level, so that victory was probably the most special of my career.”

Here, though, “there was quite a bit of chat about, you know, ‘Magic should win’, and this and that, and I heard the commentary when I went in to the dressage saying that everyone’s got their money on Magic winning. I did feel a bit of pressure then. Maybe, then, people kind of expected it as opposed to it being a shock, which it was back in 2021. But of course, it’s still unbelievably sweet to win any class, especially because the horse deserved it so much. The way he performed all week — he did the best test of his life; cross country yesterday was just the biggest buzz; and the feeling around this track was pretty special, too, so I was just pleased to be able to get the job done for him.”

Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme also had a significant margin in hand as they came into the final phase, but they didn’t use any of the 13.2 penalties of wiggle room they’d been afforded. Despite the gelding’s record in this phase, which would have the 13-year-old down as arguably the most statistically unreliable jumper in the field, the pair rallied to deliver the goods and take second place in this prestigious class.

“He was just super — he’s a big horse, and he struggles a bit showjumping, particularly on the third day, but I just came in feeling calm. I thought this might be the day it all came together,” beams 21-year-old Tom, who splits his time between producing competition horses and assisting with his parents’ livery yard and riding school in Warwickshire.

Not only did the pair pull off a good enough performance to secure second place in the class, they also delivered the only fault-free round of the division. This marks their first clear round at a four-star — and, in fact, only their second-ever FEI showjumping clear. Their last came in a Junior CCI2*-L in 2019, and in this class last year, they toppled five rails and picked up a further 6.8 time penalties. Though an FOD result eluded them, it wasn’t by much: yesterday, they’d zoomed up the rankings from seventh to second after adding just 0.8 time penalties.

“He just ate it up,” says Tom. “I mean, Bramham’s massive, and it never feels easy, but he just he just cruised around and was so on his lines.”

Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That quick clear across the country is also a major improvement on last year, where they picked up 20 penalties and added 7.6 time penalties, too — but the sea change, Tom explains, is in learning from where they went wrong in their preparation last spring.

“In hindsight, he wasn’t quite fit enough last year, so I knew I needed him fitter. He just feels a completely different horse this year; he finished really well and then came out and jumped  the round of his life today. I’m over the moon, and absolutely delighted with him.”

That improved fitness comes through “lots of interval training” on the hills around Tom’s yard, and has been helped along this year by a trip to Ballindenisk in Ireland to run in the four-star in April, which gave him rather more match practice than many of his peers in this tough spring.

In any case, it’s a career-affirming result for the young professional and a horse that was never bought with lofty expectations in mind: “We’ve had him since I was 17.  He was my first horse when I came out of ponies, and we bought him see if he could go Novice to teach me the ropes coming onto a horse,” says Tom with a smile. “He might not be your typical event horse to look at, but he just keeps proving himself and I can’t thank him enough for everything he’s done.”

That gratitude extends in many directions: Tom rattles off a laundry list of names who have helped him pull off this result, including Chris Bartle — “it’s not always gone our way, but he’s stuck with us through thick and thin” — dressage trainer Pammy Hutton, and his home team, helmed by head girl Daisy.

Sasha Hargreaves and Woodlands Be Daring. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Third place went the way of Sasha Hargreaves, who remained in that spot despite tipping two rails with Woodlands Be Daring, thanks to the significant 13.5 penalty margin afforded to her when previously fourth-placed Felicity Collins and Shadow Minnie Moon took three rails to slip to fifth, and Richard Coney and Poetry In Motion II, who stepped up one slot to fourth, had one fence down too.

For the young professional, who runs a string of young horses alongside this, her sole top horse, it’s a heartening result — and an educational one, too, as she learned how her partner copes with a test of this intensity, particularly on the final day.

“I think the hills yesterday took it out oh him a bit today,” she says of her partner of six years, who she describes as ‘one that’s been ticking along in the background’. “It’s always interesting — I know him really well, but not at long format. He was a bit flatter than he normally would be, but he tried his absolute hardest for me and I couldn’t have asked anything more from this result.”

While their first-phase result, a 34.2, put them a touch off the pace, their clear round with 10.8 time penalties yesterday propelled them up the leaderboard into podium position — but Sasha didn’t necessarily relish the idea of getting out onto the tough Ian Stark track yesterday until it was actually done.

“Cross-country day was quite terrifying,” laughs Sasha. “Like everyone, I haven’t had the best preparation this spring, so I was very nervous, but he was unbelievable out there.”

This is just the pair’s second CCI4*-L — they completed Blenheim last autumn, though as Sasha explains, “it didn’t quite go to plan – so it was nice to put those demons to bed this week.”

Just as Tom ahead of them had learned plenty from his tricky Bramham run last year, though, Sasha took that Blenheim and used it to reshape how she rides and supports her horse in bigger ticket competitions.

“We had a couple of runouts at Blenheim that were green mistakes on my part, and it was the first time he’d seen crowds, so he just went a bit green. I wasn’t there to support him, and so it meant that when I walked the course here, I did so knowing that I’d need to help him out a bit more than normal. He’s normally a complete and utter cross-country machine, but when they haven’t seen crowds this big or courses this long, you have to do a bit more than you’re used to. That’s been the main thing this week: I’ve just held his hand more than I usually would. We worked together for it.”

The final standings in Bramham’s 2023 under-25 CCI4*-L.

Bramham International Horse Trials: [Website] [Schedule][Volunteer] [Ride Times/Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [Live Stream]

Top-Five Contender Eliminated in Bramham’s Final Horse Inspection

CCI4*-L leaders Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The final horse inspection at Bramham is always a bit of a tense ordeal: Saturday’s CCI4*-L cross-country challenge is arguably the toughest of its level, and with intense terrain across the course, too, horsemanship must be at the fore in the aftermath. Sometimes, though, there’s only so much that icing can do – and after much deliberation from the ground jury and holding box vet, it was decided that Max Warburton‘s Monbeg Exclusive, fifth overnight in the under-25 CCI4*-L, would not be accepted to continue the competition.

Max Warburton and Monbeg Exclusive are the sole eliminations of the morning. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though no one was ultimately eliminated in the main CCI4*-L class, two were held: Harry Meade‘s Red Kite, who stepped up to fourth place overnight after delivering one of the five clears inside the time yesterday. Day one leaders Izzy Taylor and Happy Days, 27th overnight, were also sent to the holding box.

Harry Meade and Red Kite. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Both were subsequently accepted upon representation, as were Jesse Campbell‘s Gambesie, third overnight, and Jack Pinkney‘s Rehy Revelation, 32nd, who were each asked to trot again but not sent to the holding box for further examination. We do find ourselves down by one in this class, though: Abi Boulton and the former Ludwig Svennerstal mount Balham Mist, 16th overnight, withdrew before the final horse inspection, leaving us with 32 to showjump today.

Here’s a look at how the leaderboard looks now in the under-25 class, which sees Bubby Upton and Magic Roundabout IV lead with an enormous margin on 13.3 penalties, or three rails and three seconds:

And the top ten in the main CCI4*-L, which has a much smaller margin for error for overnight leader Pippa Funnell, who doesn’t even have a time penalty in hand:

The under-25 CCI4*-L will be the first class to jump today, with the six remaining competitors taking to the ring from 11.00 a.m. The main CCI4*-L will follow on after the first class’s prize giving, with jumping commencing from 12.15 p.m. Though there’s no live-streaming today, we’ll be bringing you full reports from each class through the day as we crown our new Bramham champions. Until then: Go Eventing!

Bramham International Horse Trials: [Website] [Schedule][Volunteer] [Ride Times/Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [Live Stream]

Cross-Country Day at Bramham: Pippa Funnell Steps Into First; Bubby Upton Is Untouchable

Bramham: the biggest, boldest of four-stars. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though cross country day at Bramham started out inauspiciously – the first four competitors out of the start box came home clear and with negligible or no time penalties — it quickly gained in intensity, with problems presenting themselves far and wide throughout the 5,885m CCI4*-L track. Of the 45 starters, 33 would go on to complete — a fair completion rate of 73%. 27 of those completing did so sans jumping penalties; five did so without jumping or time penalties. These are, all things considered, very good numbers for a competition that’s widely considered the world’s toughest four-star; in comparison, 2019 saw a clear rate of just 33% – nearly half today’s 60% – and considerably more safety device activations in that iteration, too. Just one device was activated in today’s senior CCI4*-L: Aimee Penny and PSH Encore triggered a MIMclip at fence 8ABC, the rail-ditch-rail combination.

Part of that positive upward trend towards completions may well be attributed to a change in qualifications enacted by the FEI at the tail end of last season. Now, athlete categorisations are based on results over a four-year, rather than eight-year, period, though each grade has also had its required number of qualifying results lessened in tandem with this change. Also newly brought in is a rule regarding horses returning to competition after time off: those who haven’t contested an FEI competition in 13 months or more must log a qualifying result at the preceding level. All this serves to tidy up the entry lists at the top end competitions this spring, though they’re not changes that have been met with universal praise.

Whatever the case, though, Ian Stark’s typically big, bold tracks here still exerted plenty of influence, even with this more positive spin on the numbers. Never was that felt more than when firm favourite — and first-phase leaders — Ros Canter and Izilot DHI took to the course late in the day. With wins at two-, three-, and four-star level to his name already, smart-but-sharp ‘Isaac’ was hotly tipped coming into this event, but the ten-year-old quite quickly made it plainly evident that even the most talented of athletes is still far from a machine when he nipped out the side door at fence 3b, a relatively straightforward left-handed log-to-skinny question.

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick take over the top spot at Bramham. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That opened the door for a number of potential pretenders to the throne — and although the previous two days’ relentlessly tough judging had been frustrating for everyone at the time, it did mean that much of the field was closely bunched, and so a few seconds in either direction could make a huge impact. Ultimately, though, it would be Pippa Funnell, second-placed after dressage, who would step into the top spot with the ten-year-old CCI4*-L debutant MCS Maverick, who added just 1.2 time penalties and never looked to come off the boil on course despite being held for several minutes just before fence 14.

“If ever I’ve had one that gives you the feeling that it’s going to run around Burghley or Badminton, he’s one, and that’s why probably I quietly took him on, but he is a project,” says Pippa. “He’s not there yet, and he’s got a lot of sort of maturing and strengthening to do.”

So far, he’s ticked all the boxes in the two phases he’s completed — but the first phase, Pippa explains, is where he can be particularly tough, and so as she’s gotten to know him, she’s devised a way to keep him in a positive mental place.

“I was absolutely delighted with the dressage, but it is proper, proper mind games, because he’s not strong enough in his body just to say, ‘I’m going to do so much work that I’m going to wear him out’, because you won’t wear the horse out. He’s got that much blood you won’t wear him out physically, and I was really aware with the dressage that I couldn’t make him body sore, so he did lots of hacking, lots of cantering off his back, loose lunging, just stuff that really relaxes his brain. Tomorrow, too, will be all about learning.”

This is just Pippa’s third international on the gelding, who she took on from fellow five-star rider and Billy Stud stable jockey Helen Wilson.

“Helen, who rides for us, has ridden the horse and Sarah Ross, the owner, always had the horse at home. She bought the horse as a three or four year old, and Helen’s always ridden the horse,” says Pippa. “I saw it, actually, as a young horse — I think it was either four or five — the first time they ever took it cross country schooling and I said then, ‘Gosh, what a lovely quality horse’. And so I always followed it, because Helen was in the area, and then Helen was working for us and things, and so I did sit on him for the first time a couple of years ago for Helen, just out of interest. I really liked him, but he’s just quite hot.”

It was Helen who eventually suggested that owner Sarah place the horse with Pippa: “Helen had a good run at Houghton last year and and then, you know, had ups and downs and found it, I think, fairly difficult because the horse was kept at the owner’s and so she couldn’t ride it really regularly. Between them, they mutually decided to see if I would just give it a go. I made it very clear I would, but if I was not happy with him jumping and cross country wise, then I wasn’t prepared to put in the work. But Helen always said he was a machine in the way he galloped, and she’s right about that.”

Piggy March and Brookfield Cavalier Cruise. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Piggy March now finds herself in second place overnight after delivering the first clear round inside the time as just the second out of the startbox with another ten-year-old in Brookfield Cavalier Cruise. Though this is the gelding’s first CCI4*-L, he came to Bramham off the back of a win in Thoresby’s secondary CCI4*-S section, and a fourteenth-place finish at the same level at Bicton last month. Now, the former ride of Tom McEwen and Harry Meade, who Piggy describes as “a horse who’s won with every rider”, stands on the precipice of potential victory once again — he’s just 0.3 penalties behind the overnight leader, giving Pippa and MCS Maverick nothing in hand going into tomorrow’s showjumping.

Jesse Campbell and Gambesie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though his two time penalties allowed Piggy to squeeze in ahead, New Zealand’s Jesse Campbell retained his third-placed spot on the leaderboard with the twelve-year-old Dutch-bred debutant Gambesie, a former mount of Irish Olympian Jonty Evans. After battling some recurrent hoof issues, Jesse and his team have clearly hit upon a winning formula for the talented gelding, who rose to the occasion at the tail end of the class.

Harry Meade and Red Kite sail through the final element of the Roundhouse complex. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade enjoyed a very good day in the office indeed: both his horses now sit in the top ten going into showjumping, with Red Kite stepping into fourth after adding neither time nor jumping penalties — and stepping into a space vacated by day one leaders Izzy Taylor and Happy Days, who picked up jumping penalties at the B element of fence 19, a skinny on a downhill approach — and the exciting Cavalier Crystal moving to seventh with a scant 1.2 time penalties.

Harry Mutch and HD Bronze at the Roundhouse. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Much as at Thoresby earlier this year, that double of good results sees him in close quarters with Harry Mutch, who piloted his longtime partner HD Bronze to an enormously classy clear with just 3.2 time penalties in the rider’s first year out of the under-25s. They retain their post-dressage fifth-place spot.

Tom McEwen and Luna Mist. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Less than a rail covers the entirety of the top five as we go into tomorrow’s finale, and Pippa will have just a rail and a time penalty in hand over sixth-placed Tom McEwen and Luna Mist.

The top ten going into tomorrow’s final horse inspection and showjumping in the Bramham CCI4*-L.

The under-25 CCI4*-L ran over the same course, and with the same 10:20 optimum time, but as is often the case, the relative inexperience of its small field of entries meant that the rate of attrition was considerably higher in this class. Just seven of our original 11 competitors will go on to tomorrow morning’s final horse inspection; pathfinder Richard Coney was the first to go by the wayside when he fell with third-placed Mermus R Diamonds at the main water complex at 18ABCDE. He wasn’t the only rider to take a tumble: overnight leaders Morgane Euriat and Baccarat d’Argonne, who were cross-country leaders here last year, also ended their weekend early when Morgane fell at fence six, the Roundhouse complex, which was made up of a trakehner, a skinny, and an angled ditch and brush, and Imo Brook, too, had a horse fall at the Womble Bond Dickinson Pond at 18ABCDE, necessitating a hold on course.

Bubby Upton and Magic Roundabout IV jump into the first water at Bramham. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There was no such trouble, though, for Bubby Upton, who had led the first phase on a 26.5 — a score so impressive that it would have led any of the three classes in this week’s competition. She and Magic Roundabout IV, who she sourced through Piggy March, added nothing to it with their decisive, mature round — a marker, undoubtedly, of the considerable experience Bubby has picked up around top-level courses — to retain their lead.

“It was a big ask for him — people think he’s a lot more experienced than he is, but he’s only ran twice since May last year,” says Bubby, who won the under-25 title two years ago with Cannavaro, when this class was temporarily rerouted to Devon’s Bicton under Covid measures. “So with the spring we’ve had he really lacked prep runs, so I had a lot of confidence in him, but obviously at the same time I was kind of a little bit uncertain of how he’d cope round this track.”

She needn’t have worried. Though neither horse nor rider has ever tackled the tough Yorkshire track before, Bubby took the ride on Magic Roundabout with Piggy’s assurance that he was a horse best suited for Bramham and Burghley types of courses — big, bold, galloping, and stacked with terrain. And though a freak field accident last year put off his debut, he’s more than stepped up now that he’s here. Once again, the pair would easily be in the lead had they been taking part in the senior CCI4*-L.

“He was just phenomenal,” says Bubby. “He ate up the track and made it feel like a lot of fun, to be honest. It was a real joy to ride; it was going really great, but I had to keep just like, regaining my focus because he was making it feel so smooth, I had to just keep putting myself in check almost before the combinations coming up, but he just kept responding. There wasn’t a single moment really where he gave me anything to worry about. He just responded to everything I asked for and was full of running.”

Because of Magic Roundabout’s easy rhythm, Bubby found herself bang on her first and second minute markers, and then up on the clock thereafter — which meant that when she got to the tops of the venue’s famous hills, “I could give him five, six strides to breathe because the time was no pressure,” she explains. “And then the bounce into the water and the coffin, I just really took my time to make sure I didn’t make a stupid mistake.”

Part of the key to Bubby’s success today was a last-minute change of plan in her route at the first water at 11AB.

“I didn’t change anything in my plan as a result of watching, but I did change my plan in that first water after walking it with [trainer] Caroline Moore,” she says. “She told me to stay a lot more left jumping into that log actually into the water; I was aiming more right of centre, and thank God I did [what she recommended] because then it gave me that really nice curve to the corner. If you jumped the corner heading even slightly left you were then in real trouble for the last corner. So that was the only slight change I made. And I watched [CCI4*-L pathefinder] Aaron Millar go through that and he was pure class, so I watched that and I thought, that’s enough. You can overwatch, so you have to be so careful of who you watch in relation to what your horse is like versus their horse, and my horse has got an enormous stride. so I knew that he can make that distance as long as I didn’t jump in too big into the water and I landed in control.”

Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bubby now leads this class by an extraordinary margin: she’ll go into the final day of competition with 13.3 penalties — or three rails and three second — in hand over second-placed Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme, who climbed from seventh after dressage to the podium after delivering the first clear of this class.

Sasha Hargreaves and Woodlands Be Daring. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sasha Hargreaves, too, delivered an early clear — albeit with 10.8 time penalties — to move from outside the top five to overnight third with Woodlands Be Daring. She has 5.2 penalties in hand over fourth-placed Felicity Collins and Shadow Minnie Moon, who also added 10.8 time penalties.

Tomorrow sees the final horse inspections take place in front of Bramham House from 9.00 a.m., followed by the under-25 CCI4*-L showjumping from 11.00 a.m. and the main CCI4*-L showjumping from 12.15 p.m. Though there’s no more live-streaming tomorrow, keep it locked on to EN, and we’ll bring you reports from both the inspections and the exciting finale of these two important classes. Plus, stay tuned for a full report from the finale of the packed CCI4*-S, too!

 

The leaderboard as it stands going into the final day of the under-25 CCI4*-L.

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Ros Canter Aims for Second Bramham Victory with Izilot DHI

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI take the first-phase lead in Bramham’s feature CCI4*-L. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was all change across the arenas in Bramham’s roster of four-star classes today, and the newly crowned leader of the feature CCI4*-L is a familiar pairing: Ros Canter and Izilot DHI now hold onto the top spot on a score of 29, a year after taking the win in the CCI4*-S class here. Like this year’s CCI4*-S mount, MHS Seventeen, though, ‘Isaac’ is something of a spooky character, which required some careful management in the busy main arena, which closely abuts the hospitality tent.

“He really didn’t like the boards at A,” says Ros. “I don’t think it was the members’ area particularly, it was the boards at A — my other horse was a bit the same yesterday. I don’t know what it is — it’s funny because in our warm-up area they have the same boards, but when they get in there, they seem to react differently, which is frustrating. It makes him a little difficult to ride. We know the quality of his work, though — it’s just about pulling it off on the day.”

Even with that sharpness, though, Ros recognised a marked improvement in the impressive ten-year-old’s ride ability in the ring.

“I suppose even though he was very spooky, in other times when he’d been that spooky, he’d have struggled to do a test. Today he actually did the test, which was good, and the quality of work there is really exciting. There’s more to come; we’ve just got to keep exposing him to this environment. We know he’s capable, and we also know he’s a sharp and spooky horse, so these things are good for him.”

So far, his career trajectory has been very impressive, with wins at two-star short and long, three-star long, and four-star short – and as such, he came into this week’s competition as the firm favourite, even though this will only be his second run at CCI4*-L.

“We always wanted to bring him back here,” says Ros. “It’s a really good stamina test. He’s done one long-four now at Boekelo, but he needs some good hills, and a long course, and a big course to know what we’ve got underneath us.”

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pippa Funnell snuck into second place overnight with ten-year-old British-bred MCS Maverick, who posted a 29.3 to nail down a significant personal best and just his second-ever sub-30 in an FEI competition, and his first at the level. That came largely as the result of much improved walk work, a pace that the gelding has always found tricky. This is just his third international with Pippa in the irons, after steady clears at both Bicton and Burnham Market’s CCI4*-S classes: previously, he’s been produced and competed by The Billy Stud’s stable jockey, five-star competitor Helen Wilson.

Jesse Campbell and Gambesie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Jesse Campbell moves into overnight third with the former Jonty Evans ride Gambesie, with whom he competed for the Kiwi squad at Aachen last year. They posted a 29.4 – just a touch down from their 2022 Bramham CCI4*-S score of 28.6 – to put themselves into an enviable position, and just half a penalty ahead of day one leaders Izzy Taylor and Happy Days, going into cross-country.

“He’s got a little bit of personality and a good sense of humour, that one,” says Jesse with a grin, moments after disembarking from a merrily spinning Gambesie — known at home as ‘Kevin’ — at the in-gate. “But he’s super trainable, and to be fair, he has been to Aachen and stuff, so he’s seen a bit of atmosphere. He’s cool, he’s fun!”

This will be the twelve-year-old’s first CCI4*-L after some promising runs at the short format of the level, and Jesse was delighted to begin the week with a score that fell right within the wheelhouse of what he’d expected from the Dutch-bred gelding.

“I think all riders would say, if you can get 75% of the work you can do at home in the ring, that’s great — and I was pretty close to that, so there’s no complaints from me. It was really good,” he says. “He’s got a really beautiful walk, and we’d like the judges to highlight that a little bit more. It makes that test really easy to ride, because there’s a lot of walk, and you can really ride him.”

Part of Gambesie’s relatively steady progress up the levels has been due to the careful management required to keep him at his best: “He’s just had some soundness troubles, which has been a really hard road to manage — but so far, so good. He’s had all last year back and we thought, Bramham is such a great place to come, so we’ll take our chances in the long and see what we’ve got. He’s just got bad feet, so he’s on lots of hoof supplements. He used to be turned out at night, because I really believe in turnout, but he now stays in at night, because he obviously does a lot of walking out in the field and he’d just bust his feet up. That’s been quite a help.”

Yesterday’s leaders, Izzy Taylor and Happy Days, now sit fourth going into cross-country on their score of 29.9, while Wesko Equestrian Federation graduates Harry Mutch and HD Bronze round out the top five on 30.2.

The top ten after dressage in the CCI4*-L at Bramham.

Bubby Upton and Magic Roundabout IV. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s a new leader, too, in the under-25 CCI4*-L — and Bubby Upton‘s exceptional 26.5, earned with the British-bred Magic Roundabout IV, isn’t just the best in this class, it’s also the leading score of the entire competition by a not insignificant margin. That’s a start that’s making a long wait worthwhile: Bubby’s been trying to make her Bramham debut for three years running, and is making the best of it now she’s here.

“I was meant to come here two years ago for the under-25 Championships, but it was moved to Bicton that year,” says Bubby, who won that relocated edition with five-star mount Cannavaro. “And then last year, Magic Roundabout was meant to come here for the under-25 Championships, but then he had a freak accident in the field, so that put him out for the year, which was gutting. He came from Piggy’s yard and she’s always said to me, this is a Bramham and Burghley horse, so I’ve always had that in my head. He’s super blood — he really gallops, and he really jumps, so I guess that’s why I’ve always aimed for here. Really, the big goal for him is Burghley, and I guess this is probably the best preparation you can have for Burghley, so that’s why we’ve come here.”

Certainly, all of Magic Roundabout’s best qualities will be put to the test over tomorrow’s course, which Bubby says is “everything that you ever hear about Bramham — very big, very technical, very intense, and hilly, but I’m so excited to get out there on him and give it a crack because at the end of it, you know what horse you’ve got.”

What makes this an even more rewarding starting point for Bubby is the fact that even though her horse has plenty of winning attributes, the first phase would ordinarily actually be his weakest.

“He doesn’t like dressage at all,” explains Bubby. “He finds it so difficult, and he’s not made for it in his conformation whatsoever — he’s really long in the back. But he just tried so hard in there. In the past, in big atmospheres, he’s got really worried, but he only worries because he’s trying so hard. And then when he can’t do something, or he knows it’s not quite good enough, he just panics — and when he panics, he’s really difficult to ride. I just really took my time when I walked in, walked quite a few circles just so he relaxed, and I cantered round the outside and I couldn’t believe how good he felt. He was amazing in there.”

Yesterday’s leaders, France’s Morgane Euriat and Baccarat d’Argonne, now go into cross-country in second place, 3.2 penalties — or eight seconds — behind the leaders, while class pathfinders Richard Coney and Mermus R Diamonds are third on 31.3.

The top five in the under-25 CCI4*-L.

Tom McEwen and MHS Brown Jack. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

Tom McEwen now holds the first-phase lead in the CCI4*-S class after kicking today’s competition off with nine-year-old MHS Brown Jack, who scored a 28.7 and goes into tomorrow’s jumping phases as the only sub-30 scorer in this class. But even though he’s topped the bill in this phase, Tom, like many other riders, was critical of the very high trend we’ve seen in the judging at Bramham this year, which has seen just seven competitors from 129 across the classes go sub-30.

“It’s weird and it’s boring and it just makes the whole thing a bit dull,” says Tom. “But, that aside, he was brilliant. He did a really good test at Bicton and he’s just improved on it again this morning, so I’m delighted with him. Everything was smooth. It was what you could call definitely a clear round, with bits that could still be improved on. But now, we’ve really got a good warm-up plan and routine with him, and so he came in in a really great, relaxed mood.”

This will be MHS Brown Jack’s second trip around the CCI4*-S course here: he finished eighth last year on his debut at the level, and has spent the year since consolidating at the short format.

“He actually did a really good test here when he came — I think it was about the same mark, but they’re marking pretty differently today,” says Tom. “He missed a few things; it was a babyish, green test, but lovely. And then today, we tried to improve on it and he just got a bit tight and tense. He’s a big boy and it’s just been hard to put it all together, so it’s taken a bit of time to juggle that and work out how how’s best, really. Being a big horse, he’s still doing four-shorts, because I just don’t feel that he’s ready to go around a course like the long here and be able to be good enough in the show jumping the next day.”

Though having course form with a horse is always a positive confidence boost, resting on one’s laurels at Bramham would be a fool’s errand — even in this short-format competition.

“I think the influential combinations are bigger than normal, if I’m honest — especially the far water; I think you’d be really silly to underestimate that,” says Tom. “Maybe dimensionally it’s not the biggest track we’ve ever seen here — Ian’s concentrated a lot on low and wide oxers, which I think’s really clever. Like always, he’s got these positive distances, but you’ve got to ride what’s underneath you. Having been round a similar flow of course last year, it’s quite useful for me, as I roughly know where they’re going to be blowing a bit, and where you can get a little bit back.”

Australia’s Bill Levett moved into second place with the ten-year-old Sligo Candy Cane, with whom he scored a 32.4.

“[Dressage trainer] Ian [Woodhead]’s saying they’re four or five or six marks higher than what they normally would be, so if you put that into it, he’s on a 27 or something, so that would be a personal best, which is pleasing,” says Bill, who explains that this week is a stepping stone — to next month’s team competition at CHIO Aachen in the short term, and then, he hopes, to the Paris Olympics. “I’m thrilled with him. I’m hoping to get selected for Aachen after this weekend, if I can have a good run here. That’s been the goal all year — to try and get selected for Aachen and then get him into some bigger competitions, basically. Here, you’ve got a big grass arena, and it’s always a strong cross country, so I thought, if you’re going to want to go to Aachen, you might as well get him in the groove a bit by bringing him here.”

Though this is only the gelding’s third season of international competition, he’s already picked up some promising results: he was fifth in his CCI4*-L debut at Millstreet, Ireland last year, seventh in Blenheim’s prestigious eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S last autumn, and third in an early-season CCI3*-S at Montelibretti, Italy, this year.

“I bought him off Sarah Ennis as a young horse. He’d won a lot in Ireland, in the sense of early on in his career — he’d run his first few Novices at that point, and I saw a video of him and thought, ‘Wow! Sarah’s got another lovely horse. Where does she find them?!’,” laughs Bill of the gelding, who he describes as ‘probably the best show jumping event horse I’ve ever ridden’. “My owner [Elizabeth Murdoch] said, ‘Look, if you want a good horse, I’ll support you.’ It took a bit of convincing but eventually, Sarah agreed to sell him — and that’s been the journey from there, really. I’ve taken him slowly, but the goal was Paris because I’ve never been to an Olympics. I’m a bit outside the favourites, but it”’ be a lot of fun trying with this horse to stake my claim over the next eight months or so.”

Yesterday’s leaders, Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen, now hold third place going into tomorrow morning’s showjumping, which will be followed by the cross-country finale in the afternoon. They’re on a score of 32.6, which is closely followed by Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Loire, who’ve rerouted from Badminton and are fourth overnight on a 33.

Mollie Summerland and Flow 7. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The top five in this class is rounded out by 2021 Luhmühlen winner Mollie Summerland and her fledgling four-star mount, Flow 7. Though leggy, elegant Flow has only been eventing for two years – and is still learning how to use his excess of height and power, which is still frequently evidenced in the work-in-progress flying changes — the nine-year-old Oldenburg stepped up to the plate in the busy atmosphere of the arena today to earn a 33.1 and put himself in a very competitive position in what will be just his second four-star cross-country run. His first, at Bicton last month, saw him earn a very respectable tenth place.

“I’m really happy with his brain — he stayed really relaxed, and he’s never been in an atmosphere like that,” says Mollie. “I probably could have had a little bit more spur on — I have dummy spurs on, because I thought he’d be really hot in there. I think that’s why I didn’t get the first change — actually, my right to left ones are normally the good ones, so it was good that I got the not so good one! They’re just still a work in progress at home and he’s still young. We hopefully want to take him to Boekelo, and that’s why we brought him here, so I’m not expecting a world-beating result — it’s just mileage for him to see the crowds.”

Bicton’s tough terrain gave Mollie plenty of new intel on the young horse’s stamina, which will serve the pair well as they tackle the steep inclines and undulations of Bramham’s parkland tomorrow: “I think Bicton was good practice with the hills, and that gives me confidence coming here,” she says. “He’s still so green. He’s nine, but he didn’t start eventing ’til he was seven. He’s stepped up the levels really quickly and I’m not expecting anything from him — he’s just here to learn about life, and then hopefully next year will be really exciting for him. But this year is just about educating him on everything, really. “

Tomorrow takes us into a seriously packed day of cross-country and jumping action: the CCI4*-S will start the day off, with showjumping commencing in the main arena from 8.30 a.m. Cross-country will begin with the main CCI4*-L class, starting at 9.00 a.m. (4.00 a.m. EST), and the under-25 class will follow on after a twenty minute break with a scheduled start time of 12.04 p.m. (7.04 a.m. EST). Finally, the CCI4*-S class will take to the course from 13.10 p.m. (8.10 a.m. EST) and is scheduled to continue on until approximately 17.00 p.m. (12.00 p.m. EST), holds notwithstanding. Horse & Country TV will be broadcasting the entirety of the cross-country – head over to their website to confirm your subscription and tune in for all the action as it happens, check out the courses in full with designer Ian Stark here, and keep it locked on EN for a full report and a debrief with the frontrunners across the classes (and the CCI4*-S podium placers, too!) at the end of the day.

The top five going into tomorrow’s jumping phases in the CCI4*-S.

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“As Happy as His Name Would Suggest”: Reigning Bramham Champ Izzy Taylor Takes Early Lead With Happy Days

In eventing, we’re so often beholden to a cliché, and “it’s not going to be a dressage competition”, particularly, is one that we hear time and time again at these big, bold cross-country focused events such as Bramham. But more than ever before, that’s true this week — and not just because Ian Stark has built one of the beefiest Bramham tracks of his tenure this week. Instead, it’s because the judges are being kind of, well, mean.

Okay, maybe that’s overegging the pudding a bit: after all, it’s the judges’ job to set the standard, and as long as they remain consistent in their stringency, there’s no harm done. But across the three classes that took to the dressage ring today — the CCI4*-L, which saw its first 23 competitors; the under-25 CCI4*-L, which saw five, and the CCI4*-S, which put forth its initial 35 competitors — we saw just two competitors go sub-30.

Izzy Taylor and Happy Days take the early lead at Bramham. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The first to do so is now our overnight leader in the feature CCI4*-L class: Izzy Taylor, who won this class last year with Monkeying Around, posted a 29.9 late in the day with eleven-year-old Happy Days, taking over Piggy March‘s long-time lead with Brookfield Cavalier Cruise.

Though this is a rerouted plan for Izzy and Happy Days, who were eliminated on the cross-country at Badminton, the reigning title holder is excited to return with another great chance.

“He’s a very cool horse, and he just stayed with me all the time,” she says, explaining that developing his self-assurance has been key to producing him. “He’s taken a while to come around, which is probably not really fair to say, as he’s still quite young, but he’s grown in confidence. Usually he’s actually quite an introvert, and this week, he’s been full of himself so far, so that’s a good sign for him. He’s as happy as his name would suggest!”

Izzy Taylor and Happy Days. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Happy Days scored almost the same as he had at Badminton, where he put a 29.6 on the board — but this arena, Izzy explains, is actually tougher in many ways.

“Bramham is very different to, say, Badminton — it’s much closer, the crowd. We seem to be very close to the members’ marquee this year, which I believe is causing a little trouble. So it’s much more of a close-feeling atmosphere, so I’m really pleased that he didn’t get overexcited by that.”

As a slightly introverted soul, Happy Days has sometimes previously leant into going a bit too quiet in the ring. Today, though, his newfound self-belief gave him the confidence to really show himself to the ground jury.

“He’s very laid back — like, super laid back,” laughs Izzy. “But everyone expresses their worries differently — he’s super laid back, and then he gets worried and he goes too laid back. But now he’s beginning to realise that actually he’s alright, so he might show a few people a few things. But he’s very cool, very low maintenance in terms of, he likes to be loved and fed — food is the key to Happy’s life.”

Though Piggy March couldn’t quite hold onto the lead with her CCI4*-L debutant, Brookfield Cavalier Cruise, she sits less than a point behind Izzy on 30.8 and will hold second place going into tomorrow’s competition. She was one of many riders, though, who was disappointed not to see a number on the board that reflected the quality of the horse’s work in the ring.

“He’s a really smart horse and it was a clear round — we didn’t make any mistakes. There’s still more to come from him, just his development, strength, cadence, that sort of thing. But, it was pretty solid, and there wasn’t a mistake there, so I was pretty pleased,” she says. “He went how I expected, but I was a little bit disappointed with his mark. That’s the worst mark he’s had by quite a long way, and I would have understood that with mistakes, but he didn’t really make mistakes. There’s still tiny little bits to look like a very established horse still to come, but I thought there wasn’t really enough to knock him down, and 30 is usually a mark where there are a couple of mistakes in a test, and he didn’t have any. But they’ve continued with that — I haven’t watched any more dressage, but they’re obviously just on the slightly more negative theme, which if they stay that way, that’s fine.”

Brookfield Cavalier Cruise comes here having won a CCI4*-S section at Thoresby earlier this spring — a first international outing for the new-old partnership.

“He’s just recently back to me this year =- I had six months or so with him as a six-, coming seven-year-old, and I did his first intermediates,” says Piggy of the now ten-year-old, who was previously piloted by Tom McEwen and prior to that, Harry Meade.. “He’s a beautiful horse and I’m very lucky to have him. He’s a horse that’s won with every rider, at every level. He’s had a few riders through change of circumstances, or whatever it might be, and we do change around sometimes [in the Brookfield team] — we work on numbers sometimes, if one of us has more than than the other we swap around and we do work together as a team. I was the lucky one that got asked to take him. He obviously won very well with Tommy [McEwen] last year, and has looked very impressive with everyone, but I think with Brookfield Inocent being off and the top horses not being there, they decided to swap around to try and keep it even. I’m lucky to have him.”

Now, with that newer partnership in mind, Piggy hopes to use the week ahead as something of a fact-finding mission with the exciting young horse.

“This is his first time here, and his first time at this level for a Long. He’s a lovely big horse with a lot of potential, but this week will be very interesting. I’m not overly confident, but I’m not also worried — I’m interested and ready to give it a go.”

Mike Winter and El Mundo take overnight fourth. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Badminton re-routers Aaron Millar and KEC Deakon sit third after delivering a smart test for 32.4 — not quite the very competitive 28.8 they put on the board at the spring five-star, but still enough to put them well in the hunt here. They’re followed closely behind by Canada’s Mike Winter and El Mundo, who hold fourth place on 33.3, and who also rerouted from Badminton, where Mike opted not to run the gelding cross-country. Now, they make their Bramham debut with high hopes for the weekend to come.

“I didn’t run cross country at Badminton, because I just felt some fast horses — and I’m maybe not the fastest cross country rider anymore — they were sort of knocking on 30 time penalties and more,” explains Mike. “I really wanted to get my Paris MER, and he’s the one horse I have, so I made the decision to reroute and Jonathan Nelson, his half owner, is from up here, so this was always his choice over Badminton.”

The 14-year-old gelding shone in the busy, buzzy main arena — a testament, Mike says, to the amount of exposure European and British-based horses get to atmosphere from a young age: “He’s really good, and he doesn’t mind it at all. I think that’s good about actually moving from North America — to produce a horse in this country is way easier, if it’s a championship horse, because they do this since, like, Osberton, or even some of the events like Wellington. They just have a lot of opportunities for them to grow up.”

For Mike himself, having a horse with the innate ability of El Mundo, who originally came to his yard as a young sales horse but, after a long rehab period from an injury, became part of the family, is also transformative.

“I grew up riding thoroughbreds that you couldn’t push and that like, you always had to work to keep them up. He wants to be uphill. He’s easy and has a good temperament, and so I’ve just got to let his engine work. Sometimes I’m happy with something that’s what I call sub-powered; just like, a nice test. Matt Ryan said to me at Badminton last year, ‘I think you almost got time penalties!’ Fair enough — dressage is not naturally my thing. But to have a nice horse teaches you, doesn’t it?”

The top five is rounded out by Sarah Bullimore, who sits equal with Mike on a 33.3 after a smart test with the nine-year-old Evita AP.

The top five overnight in the feature CCI4*-L.

France’s Morgane Euriat and Baccarat d’Argonne lead the under-25 CCI4*-L overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Britain’s toughest, most terrain-heavy four-stars are always the ones that draw the most significant field of French entries, and Bramham is no exception. France holds the crown in the prestigious under-25 CCI4*-L, but in the absence of last year’s winners, Heloïse Le Guern and her French team mount Canakine du Sudre, one of her compatriots is making a great effort to keep the trophy in situ across the Channel.

Morgane Euriat certainly isn’t coming here unprepared, either — she finished sixth in this class last year with the smart and swift Baccarat d’Argonne, romping home just one second over the optimum time in a typical open, French style. Now, a year later, she feels like she has an even better chance with the twelve-year-old Anglo Arab, who sits in first place overnight on 29.7 — the best score of the day across all the classes.

“Two months before we came last year, she had a cancer in her ovary, and now she has one ovary less,” explains Morgane. “Now, she’s been able to have more preparation to come to Bramham.”

Though the pair had led after cross-country last year, it was the showjumping that was to be their downfall: they pulled four rails on the final day. This year, though, Morgane has every intention of putting those demons to bed.

“We’ve tried a lot to do the show jumping on the grass, because in France, we are never show jumping on the grass and last year she was not too good about that,” she says. “I really want to come back here for a win and be good on the show jumping.”

Richard Coney and Mermus R Diamonds. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Under-25 pathfinder Richard Coney holds onto second place overnight with the first of his two rides, 13-year-old Mermus R Diamonds, who posted a 31.3 to sit nearly eight points clear of third-placed Tom Bird and Rebel Rhyme (39).

This is Richard’s long-awaited return to this class after a fourth-place with Kananaskis in 2019, and in the meantime, he’s amassed some fairly significant experience: he was seventh in the Young Rider European Championships that summer, made his five-star debut at Pau in 2020 with two horses, finishing ninth with Mermus R Diamonds, and then, after focusing solely on national level competition through 2021 and the first half of 2022, returned with a bang to international competition last year, jumping clear around Blenheim and Boekelo.

“I feel a slight bit more experienced [than last time I was here], but I’ve not done too much,” says Richard. “I’ve been quite quiet over the past couple years; I’ve not done like, loads and loads. I had one horse last season at four-star, and he went to Boekelo and that’s sort of got me back into it a little bit.”

The top five overnight in the CCI4*-L for under-25s.

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Also running alongside the two showpiece CCI4*-L classes is the CCI4*-S, which boasts 77 competitors and provides its own unique preparatory challenge. Ros Canter leads this overnight after delivering an exciting late-in-the-day performance from relatively new ride MHS Seventeen, who posted a 32.6 to edge out Steven Heal and Quidam de Lux, who had led for much of the day on a 33.1.

“I took him over just under a year ago from Nicola Wilson, who’d actually only had him for about six months herself, which is why he’s not that well known,” says Ros of the ten-year-old Irish gelding. “We’ve just been bumbling along, really. He won the three-star at Osberton, the long format, last year — that was only my third event on him — but we’re still getting to know each other.”

Though Ros explains that this class was always the aim for him, the tough British spring has meant that she’s been able to give him less of a robust preparatory lead-up than she’d have liked, and as a result, “we’ve come here very inexperienced,” she says. “He’s done one Advanced at Cirencester, which is when they didn’t have a water in because it was flooded, so, at the level, he’s very inexperienced. He did the dressage at Chatsworth, but that was it, so this is a feeling-out weekend.”

Part of the experience for the smart up-and-comer is gaining his first experience of a significant atmosphere – something that he dealt with admirably today, bar an expensive spook at the A end of the arena, which sits in close proximity to the busy hospitality tent.

“He went quite spooky in the top corner, but Chris [Bartle] was saying that lots of horses have done that today,” says Ros. “He changed at the end of his extended canter, which was a shame because that’s something he doesn’t normally do. The rest of it was just a bit green, and I’m surprised I’m in the lead at the end of the day with with a test that was a bit green, but on the other hand, his way of going in the last week has changed. It’s starting to feel proper where he was a bit pony-like before.”

Ros will be expecting to be kept plenty busy managing the gelding through the rest of the weekend, which will see them showjump in the hugely atmospheric main arena on Saturday morning before heading out onto a challenging cross-country track set by Ian Stark.

“He’s a lovely model of a horse; he’s a beautiful horse, and he’s a very careful jumper, but he would be spooky,” says Ros. “He could have a look at a filler; he’d be that kind of spooky. So I’m going to have to be on my guard a little bit round here. He did an intermediate last weekend actually, as we’ve been so short of runs, and he ran out at the third last, which was a white house painted with black stripes, having absolutely bombed round the rest of it. It’s been a really good wake up call for me — I’ve got to be on it right ’til the last fence. But he is really cool — he’s good fun, and he’s the right size for me!”

Tomorrow takes us into dressage day two, which will see another full day of CCI4*-S competition commencing from 9.45 a.m. and finishing at roughly 5.00 p.m., while the remainder of the CCI4*-L competitors will take to the ring from 10.30 a.m. to 3.08 p.m. The final six riders in the under-25 CCI4*-L will come forward from 4.00 p.m. to 4.45 p.m. Join us at the end of the day for a full report on the state of play, plus plenty more on Ian Stark’s bold, tough courses. Until then: Go Eventing!

The top five at the end of day one in the CCI4*-S.

Bramham International Horse Trials: [Website] [Schedule][Volunteer] [Ride Times/Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [Live Stream]

Thursday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: An Inner Look at the RDA

While top-level eventing is the lifeblood of what we do, it’s far from the only — or most important — thing a horse can do. Just as (if not more!) noble are the denizens of equine-assisted therapy programmes, who can be found changing lives in some seriously brilliant yards around the world.

Calvert Stables, based in England’s scenic Peak District, is one such place: as a Riding for the Disabled stables, it provides subsidised riding and carriage driving experiences to people with a wide range of differing abilities, allowing them to experience the joys of horses and the great outdoors regardless of any limitations they may face. Their hard work is aided by the sterling performances of the ponies in their care, such as sweet Mischief, diminutive Blu Boi, and fluffy forelocked Haggis – all of whom are available to be sponsored, if you’d like to contribute to Calvert’s mission.

Go Calvert, go RDA, and Go Riding.

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

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In honor of our 25th anniversary we’ve released a limited-edition sticker that gives you a chance to win all year long! Click here to find out more.

Four Held But All Accepted in Bramham’s First Horse Inspection

Bramham’s spectacular forecourt plays host to the first horse inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The 2023 Bramham International Horse Trials got off to an auspicious start with a rather eventful first horse inspection, held in front of the palatial seventeenth-century home at the heart of one of North Yorkshire’s busiest estates. Though none were ultimately eliminated or withdrawn, four horses presented for the feature CCI4*-L class were sent to the holding box or asked to re-present: Angus Smales’s ESI Phoenix, Lauren Lillywhite’s Hacien, both competing for Great Britain, James Avery’s MBF Connection, representing New Zealand, and Grace Taylor’s Game Changer, the lone US combination in the field.

James Avery and MBF Connection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Both the senior CCI4*-L and the under-25 CCI4*-L, which are undertaken as totally separate sections, are presided over the same ground jury: Great Britain’s Sue Baxter, who will be President of the ground jury this week, assisted by Sweden’s Christina Klingspor and the USA’s Robert Stevenson.

Though we never see entry lists here to rival the likes of, say, Blenheim with its much more straightforward terrain and rather more introductory course, Bramham’s long-format line-ups have been further reduced this year by tougher qualification requirements brought in for the 2023 season by the FEI. That means that even without any eliminations today, we go into the competition proper with just 46 combinations in the feature CCI4*-L and a scant — though arguably very experienced — eleven competitors in the CCI4*-L for under-25s. This class, which decides the under-25 national title, tends towards a high rate of attrition, often because relatively unseasoned younger riders make it a goal event early on in their four-star careers; this year, though, several of the under-25s come in with five-star experience under their belts already, and several, including France’s Morgane Euriat, who finished sixth here last year with Baccarat d’Argonne, have mileage over this course, too.

Ros Canter and Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The senior CCI4*-L is peppered with exciting horses and riders, arguably helmed by the on-form Ros Canter and ten-year-old Izilot DHI, with whom the Badminton champion picked up two CCI4*-S wins last season — including one at Bramham — and then finished sixth in ‘Isaac’s’ CCI4*-L debut at Boekelo. He’s previously been a winner at CCI2*-L (Burnham, 2020) and twice at CCI3*-L (Houghton and Blair in 2021), and will be well on track to add another victory to his collection.

Astier Nicolas and Diese Cot Chat. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

They’ll have strong competition on their heels, though, from exciting entrants including Ireland’s Susie Berry, who reroutes from Badminton with Ringwood LB, Astier Nicolas and the CCI4*-L debutant Diese Cot Chat, who has historically been very swift across the country, and Piggy March and her own debutant Brookfield Cavalier Cruise, who was a winner in the CCI4*-S at Thoresby at the start of the season.

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The CCI4*-S boasts a comparatively large field, with 77 combinations entered. Tomorrow sees the dressage commence from 9.30 a.m., while the CCI4*-L will kick off from 10.30 a.m. with Aaron Millar and KEC Deakon. That’ll continue on until roughly 3.03 p.m., and will be followed by the first half of the under-25 class from 4.00 p.m. until approximately 4.38 p.m. Though there isn’t any live streaming available for the first and final phases, all of Saturday’s cross-country across all three classes will be viewable via Horse&Country TV — and we’ll be bringing you full reports every day right here on EN, too, so stay tuned for all the news and stories you need from this showpiece British competition.

Until then: Go Eventing!

Bramham International Horse Trials: [Website] [Schedule][Volunteer] [Ride Times/Live Scoring] [EN’s Coverage] [Live Stream]

Self-Care Tip of the Day: Treat Yo’Self with Maryland 5* Payment Plans

Doug Payne slices and dices with Quantum Leap at Maryland. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In the limited time off that I scrape together between events, I’m very, very into going to festivals and gigs. (Punk and its derivatives are my jam, if you’re wondering, but honestly, I’ll listen to just about anything if you put a cold pint in my paws.) One thing that’s made my love for live music considerably easier to feed is the introduction of payment plans, which mean I can spread the big ticket items over the better part of a year AND upgrade to VIP for some of those all-dayers. Believe me, when I flew to Vegas last year for a day festival in the blazing heat, that was a godsend, and definitely not one I’d have been able to consider without the option of spreading the purchase out.

What’s this got to do with anything? Well, our friends at the MARS Maryland 5 Star have just introduced the same concept for big ticket purchases, allowing you to craft the eventing getaway of your dreams without breaking the bank. Here’s everything you need to know, according to the Maryland booking office:

  1. Easy and Flexible Payments: With our payment plan, you can divide your total ticket purchase of $500 or more into manageable monthly installments.
  2. Secure Your VIP Tickets Immediately: No need to wait! By opting for our payment plan, you can secure your tickets right away while paying over time. Enjoy peace of mind knowing that your spot at the MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill is reserved.
  3. No Hidden Fees: We believe in transparency, which is why our payment plan comes with no hidden fees or additional charges. The total amount you see during checkout is what you’ll pay over the duration of your payment plan.
  4. Simple Enrollment Process: Enrolling in our payment plan is quick and hassle-free. During the checkout process on our website, simply select the payment plan option and follow the prompts. It’s that easy!

I, for one, am sold — I was lucky enough to get my hands on a VIP pass at last year’s event, and let me tell you, between the catering, the open bar, and the views of the arena, it’s a seriously nice vibe. There’s three different hospitality options available: Tier 1 VIP, the Tier 2 Club, and the Sawmill Club, all of which can be purchased with this payment plan.

To purchase your tickets or apply for a payment plan, click here. I’ll see you at the bar.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

One of the many events to run over the weekend was Little Downham Horse Trials in Cambridgeshire, England – and we love this tribute they put together to their army of volunteers. Truly, no event could run without a seriously strong volunteer crew, and if you’ve not yet joined in and become part of the cogs that bring an event to life, we absolutely recommend it. It’s bonkers, tiring fun — generally with cake involved, especially if you head to Little Downham!

Events Opening Today: Applewood Farm YEH & Mini EventHorse Park of New Jersey Horse TrialCourse Brook Farm Summer H.T.Silverwood Farm Summer H.T.The Event at Rebecca Farm

Events Closing Today: Woodloch Stable Young Event Horse QualifierValinor Farm H.T.Bucks County Horse Park H.T.Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T.Round Top H.T.Stable View Summer H.T.Midsouth Pony Club H.T.Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T.

News & Notes from Around the World:

One of the trickiest training conundrums is knowing when to persevere and when to step back. Sometimes, the best thing you can do for your horse is positive repetition until they ‘get’ it; other times, you’ll be much more successful in the long run if you shelve that exercise for another day so as not to frustrate them. Cathy Wieschhoff explains how she makes that call in this interesting Q&A.

When it comes to colic, how prepared are you? A recent survey of British horse owners showed that most only have experience of mild colics, and as such, a startlingly small percentage didn’t think they had any need for a robust emergency plan of action. Read more about the findings and what vets think here.

Start your day in the driver’s seat: Horse Sport has collated some of their favourite between-the-ears hatcam videos, through which you’ll be able to ride around Kentucky, breeze a racehorse, and much, much more. Just try not to get seasick.

Sponsor Corner: Do you have a horse with metabolic issues? New research has shown that just 10 minutes of exercise 5 times a week for 6 weeks increased insulin sensitivity. Get the full details on these early studies from Kentucky Performance Products!

Watch This:

#relatable.

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

This week in high-profile eventing nuptials, say congratulations to Jacob Fletcher and Cornelia Dorr Fletcher, who tied the knot in a very glamorous ceremony in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, over the weekend. We’re desperate to know how Cornelia avoided farmer’s tan lines all spring to prepare for a short-sleeved gown. Share your secrets, Mrs Dorr Fletcher!

U.S. Weekend Action:

Carriage House Farm Combined Test (Hugo, MN) [Website] [Entries]

Essex H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Results]

Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club Spring H.T. (Geneseo, NY) [Website] [Results]

GMHA June H.T. (South Woodstock, VT) [Website] [Results]

IEA Horse Trials (Edinburgh, IA) [Website] [Results]

MCTA H.T. at Shawan Downs (Cockeysville, MD) [Website] [Results]

Ocala Summer H.T. I (Ocala, FL) [Website] [Results]

Poplar Place June H.T. (Hamilton, GA) [Website] [Results]

The Spring Event at Archer (Cheyenne, WY) [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Little Downham (Ely, Cambs.): [Results]

Ascott Under Wychwood (Ascott Under Wychwood, Oxon.): [Results]

Stafford (Stafford, Staffs.): [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Trigger warning on this one, folks: a rapist has been sent to prison for crimes committed back in the 80s. This is brilliant news, as sexual assault is extraordinarily difficult to seek justice for even within a much shorter time frame, and the imprisonment of James Armour, formerly part of the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery, who attacked three women at an equestrian centre, must set a new precedent. I’m once again begging Britain to bring in its own Safe Sport, so we can start taking out the trash in our sport. [Have a nice time in jail, loser]

Lesley Grant-Law recently attended a clinic with a well-known showjumper. While she was there, she marvelled at his classic, poetic way of imparting information – and was struck by how bored some of the other attendees looked. In this op-ed, she reflects on the extraordinary rise in the cost of keeping horses, and wonders what that might mean for the future of the sport, if the plucky, lower-income riders who love to learn it all are pushed out of the industry they’ve built. [Read her thoughts here]

How do you actually spot upper-level potential in a youngster? Being able to pick a diamond in the rough is a seriously useful skill to have, especially if you’re working on a budget and need to try to find something decent that might not be the most obvious of champions. This new piece in USEA’s young horse series is essential reading, then — it explains how some leading producers pick their winners, and what’s most valued in the highly competitive young horse classes. [Get savvy on conformation]

Are you a gross horse person? I know I am — I’ve shared more snacks with my horses than I can even count, and I’ve definitely never thought twice about it. Also, who actually has time to wash their hands between mucking out and making coffee? Come on, now. If you can outgross me (and I do believe in you, I really do), fill out this survey to become part of a beautiful, grimy museum of horse-person grossness.

The FutureTrack Follow:

Love a high-flying, low-scoring, seriously cool OTTB? Then follow Australia’s Shenae Lowings, who helped the Aussie team to an Olympic qualification at Millstreet over the weekend, to fangirl over her exceptionally cool Bold Venture, who won the CCIO3*-L class from start to finish on a very cool 24.9. Go on, just try to tell us Thoroughbreds can’t do dressage!

Morning Viewing:

Give work obligations a miss and instead, re-watch yesterday’s CCIO4*-S cross-country from Millstreet in full. You know you want to!

Zazie Gardeau in “Stable Condition”; Mount Daiquiri Euthanised After Bicton Fall

 

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We’re saddened to report that the nine-year-old mare Daiquiri has been euthanised following a horse fall at fence seven on Bicton’s CCI3*-L course last Saturday, 27 May. Her rider, 21-year-old Zazie Gardeau, was transported by air ambulance to Derriford Hospital, where her condition is currently reported to be “stable”.

A statement by the French Equestrian Federation confirms that Zazie, who became the Young Rider European Champion last season, is being well looked after, with the English medical team at the hospital working in collaboration with French doctors.

Zazie is currently at the tail end of a six-month stint based in the UK, where she’s been training with Andrew Nicholson while also undergoing a semester of study at the University of Bath, studying biological engineering.

Our thoughts are with Zazie, her family, and her connections at this time. We will bring you further updates on her recovery in due course.

“A Model in Terms of Equine Welfare”: The French Government’s 46 Suggestions to Paris 2024

The Chateau des Versailles. Photo: Panoramas/flickr/CC.

A study group from the French National Assembly, part of the French parliamentary system, has released a 72 page report outlining 46 recommendations to the Paris Olympics organising committee on how to improve equine welfare standards at next year’s Olympic Games.

The report, it states, “is the result of 18 hearings carried out from October 2021 to January 2022”, among a significant number of equine professionals, including veterinarians, lawyers, representatives from governing bodies, riders, trainers, and more.

Thank you to Australia’s Horses and People for their efforts in translating the report to English. Their full translation can be read here.

“The equestrian events of the Tokyo Olympics saw incidents in several disciplines,” begins the report. “These incidents triggered some very strong reactions from the media and spectators, with a section of the population asking for a ban of all equestrian competitions from the Olympic Games, considering them to be practices harmful to the well-being of horses. It therefore seems essential to us to think about possible improvements, for the horses on the one hand, but also to ensure a serene future for these equestrian sports. The equestrian events of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, which will take place in Versailles, must be a model in terms of equine welfare.”

The report begins with Part One, a round-up of the three major issues of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics: the euthanasia of Robin Godel’s Jet Set, who sustained a serious soft tissue injury on cross-country; the highly publicised incident in the Modern Pentathlon competition in which Germany’s Annika Schleu and trainer Kim Raisner both appeared to use excessive force upon the horse Saint Boy, which has ultimately led to the removal of the riding phase from Modern Pentathlon; and the significant nosebleed of Cian O’Connor’s Kilkenny in the showjumping competition. It then goes on to round up both the media response and the public reaction to these incidents, including an open letter, sent to all members of the International Olympic Committee, penned by equestrian journalist Julie Taylor and titled “I Can’t Watch Anymore: The Case for Dropping Equestrian Sport from the Olympic Games”. Finally, it goes on to report on the official response to each incident, in order to establish the importance of avoiding similar issues at next year’s Paris Games.

Part Two commences the 46 suggestions for the improvement of welfare, beginning with the facilities provided for horses. It recommends sufficient relaxation areas, including lunging areas, exercise areas, and grazing areas, all of which are currently provided at FEI competitions, but also advises the addition of small paddocks, allowing horses free movement while also respecting biosecurity measures.

It also highlights the need for attentive officials on the ground who are prepared, and willing, to step in when a welfare transgression is taking place.

“In an interview with the magazine “L’Éperon” on January 20, 2022, Jean-Maurice Bonneau, ex-trainer of ‘Bleus’, explains that the major authorities must question themselves following the incidents in Tokyo as well as the recent scandal following the leak of video footage from the stable of Ludger Beerbaum rapping horses or using jump poles covered with nails,” the report states. “He admits that he himself has not always respected the rules of good treatment and that this concerns everyone in equestrian sport. He adds that ‘sometimes, some stewards in the arenas do not set clear boundaries and I have already gone to see such and such a rider to point out his bad behavior… We have to regain credibility and for that, we need new rules…’Professionals also point out that ‘at the high level, event stewards do not dare report abuse, for fear of reprisals from the sports stars who threaten them when they try to intervene to protect the horses.”

In order to counteract these issues, the report suggests that the IOC establish a “‘Welfare Committee’, made up of independent experts authorised to move freely throughout the Olympic site of the equestrian events, as part of a special ‘Equine Welfare at the Olympic Games’ mission.”

It also recommends 24/7 video surveillance, observed by veterinarians and stewards, with footage delivered by a completely independent company.

A significant segment of the report focuses its attention on tack, with overtightened nosebands at the forefront. Recommendation #7 suggest: “Improve the controls against the excessive tightening of nosebands and curb chains: Provide a more calibrated check, preformed randomly during training sessions and systematically when entering or leaving each event, using a 1.5 cm ISES taper gauge placed on the nasal bones (which allow one adult finger to slide between the noseband strap and the hard nasal bone) and apply a penalty in the event of an infringement.”

The report also recommends prohibiting the use of elevator or gag bits on cross-country, particularly when used in conjunction with flash or grackle nosebands, and recommends scrapping the use of combination bits and bits with twisted or double mouthpieces across the board.

The use of hind tendon boots on jumpers is also questioned by the report, which recommends using video to record a “tabletop check of the tack” before each competition. As concerns spurs, the report advises allowing riders to opt out of wearing them, and to ban the use of bellybands, which can hide the ill effects of overuse. Where the whip is concerned, it suggests limiting whip use to once per event and twice per warm-up.

Doping is also covered in the report, as well as neurectomy — better know as de-nerving. This means of artificially masking limb pain cannot necessarily be reliably tested for — “It should be noted, however,” says the report, “that the FEI has taken this problem into account: for the first time, the horses of the AlUla endurance race in Saudi Arabia on January 29 were the subject of sensitivity tests carried out by veterinary doctor Morgane Schambourg, who has been working for a long time on the development of a neurectomy detection system. It would therefore require a veterinary certificate to certify that these horses have not undergone this intervention, or take the risk that they do not respond to sensitivity tests which would lead to disqualification.

“Mainly used in endurance for the moment, the hyposensitivity test consists of screening horses which have undergone treatment intended to reduce their sensitivity to pain in their limbs by truncal anaesthesia (either definitive by surgical section or temporary with anaesthetic blocks of nerve trunks) so that horses do not stop or slow down due to being in pain.

“Thermography is also a valuable tool, as it allows assessment of the differences in surface temperatures of the horse’s skin, by highlighting hot and cold thermal signatures on body areas. Thermal variations as well as asymmetries are all clues that will help identify possible pathologies or traumas. Cold signatures may be related to possible vascularization defects related to the presence of oedema, hematoma, or abscess (existing or in formation). The hot thermal signatures specify areas of inflammation (e.g. back pain, tendinitis, etc.). They also allows the detection of fraudulent use of rubefacient products.”

Where ‘traditional’ doping is concerned, it recommends a more robust approach to recording any medications that enter the facility, limiting doses of allowable substances — for example, joint injections — to no sooner than two weeks prior to the event, and maintaining an FEI Medication Logbook for each horse. In light of the recent equine herpesvirus outbreaks at major competition centres, it also recommends mandating the rhinopneumonitis vaccine.

One of the bolder suggestions made by in the report is that of recommendation #27, which suggests that organisers “remove from competition any horses with a medical history that is not compatible with an optimal state of health (e.g. a history of bone, ligament or muscle injury resulting in long periods of inactivity), which is necessary for participation in the Olympic Games. This optimal state of health will have to be verified in advance by the FEI Veterinarians.”

It also suggests that any sign of blood – regardless of where it appears on the body, and why – should result in horse and rider being immediately stopped, in order to avoid another incident such as the Kilkenny one.

Each discipline also features in its own section: the dressage section focuses largely on the recurring issue of hyperflexion, while showjumping’s section cites riders’ pleas for a return to the four-per-team format used prior to Tokyo as indicative of a wider welfare issue. In the eventing section, it advises that the use of safety devices must be the topmost priority, and recommends that 100% of the obstacles on course be deformable. It also makes recommendations for scientific tests of ground suitability.

The FEI has confirmed that many of the suggestions are already covered within its own rulebook, and national governing bodies, too, have been reviewing the contents of the report to see if there are any positive changes that can be pulled from it.

 

The Jewel in Ireland’s Crown: How to Follow Millstreet International From Afar

Laura Collett and Dacapo, winners of the 2022 Horse Sport Ireland CCI4*L at Millstreet International Horse Trials.

We’re heading into a very important event in the European calendar as Ireland’s Millstreet International kicks off this week, welcoming hundreds of

The event, which features Ireland’s highest-ever international entries for an event, boasts a plethora of classes, including the third leg of the FEI Nations Cup series, an Olympic qualifier for nations from Groups F & G (Oceania, Asia, and Africa, inclusive), a CCI3*-L, a CCI4*-L, CCI2*-L classes for Juniors and Seniors, a CCI3*-S, a CCI2*-S for six- and seven-year-olds, and a CCI1*, began today (May 31) and runs through Sunday, June 4.

Six teams will contest the crucial CCIO3*-L in hopes of securing the two Olympic berths up for grabs here: Australia, China, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa and Thailand are all in play with strong teams.

Just the CCIO4*-L, incorporating the Nations Cup, and the CCI3*-L classes will be live streamed: you can watch them either through your ClipMyHorse.TV membership, if you’re a subscriber, or both classes will be streamed in full for free viewing via the FEI’s YouTube channel.

The streaming schedules are as follows:

Thursday, June 1

CCI3*-L Dressage: 8.30 a.m. local time (3.30 a.m. EST)

CCIO4*-S Dressage: 2.30 p.m. local time (9.30 a.m. EST)*

First Horse Inspection for CCI4*-L and CCIO3*-L: 6.30 p.m. local time (1.30 p.m. EST)

Friday, June 2

CCIO3*-L Dressage: 2.00 p.m. local time (9.00 a.m. EST)*

CCIO4*-S Dressage: 3.30 p.m. local time (10.30 a.m. EST)*

Saturday, June 3

CCIO3*-L Cross-Country: 8.00 a.m. local time (3.00 a.m. EST)*

CCIO4*-S Jumping: 2.30 p.m. local time (9.30 a.m. EST)*

Sunday, June 4

CCIO4*-S Cross-Country: 11.o0 a.m. local time (6.00 a.m. EST)*

CCIO3*-L Jumping: 12.20 p.m. local time (7.20 a.m. EST)*

(* denotes that the streams will be available on both ClipMyHorse and FEI’s YouTube. Schedule entries without * will not be available to view on YouTube.)

Live scoring from across the classes can be found on Rechenstelle, while entries can be viewed here. We’ll be keeping you up to date on all the happenings, especially in the Nations Cup and Olympic qualifier classes, right here on EN.

Go Millstreet, and Go Eventing!

Millstreet Links: Website, Entries, Live Scoring, Live Stream – ClipMyHorse, Live Stream – YouTube

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Get to Know Badminton Champ Ros Canter

Ros Canter is every inch a champion: she has been, quite literally, since she took the World Champion title back in 2018 riding Allstar B, and she certainly is this spring as the new reigning Badminton winner, taking the crown a year after finishing second with the young talent Lordships Graffalo. But for all Ros’s achievements, she’s still something of an enigma; softly-spoken, and more given to working away behind the scenes than soaking up the spotlight, she’s not necessarily a rider you’ll be able to rattle off facts about. But this long-form interview will certainly give you an interesting insight into the rider, her programme, and the horses within it. Settle in and get to know Ros Canter – equestrian sport’s best-placed case of nominative determinism.

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages. Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

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

The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPusa.com

In honor of our 25th anniversary we’ve released a limited-edition sticker that gives you a chance to win all year long! Click here to find out more.

Tuesday News and Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

I love it when new eventing podcasts hit the airwaves, and this one’s already topping my list of favourites: Eventing Weekly is the brainchild of Kiwis abroad Mitch and Brayden, who are also, rather conveniently, five-star eventing husbands (Brayden is married to Samantha Lissington, while Mitch is the other half of Ginny Thompson). Now, they’re putting their heads together to cover the sport from their perspective with a series of brilliant interviews — and their second, with Badminton champ Laura Collett, is well worth tuning in for, particularly if you’re also keen on rugby. Subscribe here!

Events Opening Today: Larkin Hill H.T.Champagne Run at the Park H.T.The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm

Events Closing Today: Kent Horse Trials, Inc.Full Gallop Farm June H.T.Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T.Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. IHoney Run H.T.Silverwood Farm Spring H.T.Shepherd Ranch Pony Club H.T. IAspen Farm H.T

News & Notes from Around the World:

Way before women could join in with the Olympic disciplines, they were kicking ass in rodeos. But many of their names and stories have faded into obscurity, despite how progressive their participation was at a time when traditional gender roles still reigned supreme. Horse Nation is spotlighting them in this great round-up that’ll have you daydreaming of a ranch holiday to slot into your mid-summer eventing break.

Are you meticulous about things like cleaning your tack, but less meticulous about checking in with yourself? Long days, high expectations, and plenty of pressure put upon ourselves is fertile breeding ground for a mental health wobble, and so it’s vitally important that us horsey folks take the time to keep in touch with ourselves and how we’re feeling. Just like a regular clean and oil can avoid a broken rein in the ring, regular self-care will help you to avoid a big issue down the line. Read more here. 

It probably seems like a bit of a no-brainer, but research proves that we need to school both canter leads equally. That’s because canter, unlike trot, is an asymmetrical gait, and an increased focus on one side over the other will lead to uneven muscle gain and asymmetry, as well as differing levels of wear and tear and potentially unilateral stiffness. So even if your horse feels particularly one-sided, work through it on both reins.

Not ready to say goodbye to the Intercollegiate Champs just yet? We feel the same. Dive into this gallery from US Eventing and Lindsey Berreth to relive the weekend that was.

Sponsor Corner: Is your horse stiff during warm up and sore after riding? A Vitamin E deficiency could be to blame! Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E to horses like yours. Check it out! 

Watch This:

Go behind the scenes at the Royal Stables in the Netherlands:

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

One thing about Chinch is you just never know which party he’s going to invite himself to — and over the weekend, it was the Virginia Horse Center prizegivings that he picked as his perch of choice. We all know that a cuddle with a dirty rodent is really the greatest honour when you find yourself atop a podium, right?

U.S. Weekend Action:

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (Kenmore, WA) [Website] [Results]

Flora Lea Spring H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Results]

May-Daze at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Results]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Results]

Spring Coconino H.T. (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Results]

Tryon International Spring H.T. (including the USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship) (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Results]

USEA MDHT YEH Qualifier (Adamstown, MD) [Website]

Virginia Horse Center Eventing (Lexington, VA) [Website] [Results]

Willow Draw Charity Show (Weatherford, TX) [Website] [Results]

Woodside Spring H.T. (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Bicton Arena International (East Budleigh, Devon): Results

Bishop Burton (Beverley, East Yorks.): Results

Mendip Plains Ston Easton (Bath, Somerset): Results

Blindley Heath (Blindley Heath, Surrey): Results

Shelford Manor (Shelford, Notts.): Results

Your Monday Reading List:

This is a bittersweet one, but so inspiring: when Joanna Hare was told in early 2019 that she had just weeks to live, because her breast cancer had spread to her brain, she refused to lie back and wait for the inevitable. Instead, she and her friend began working through a seriously cool horsey bucket list, which included meeting Pippa Funnell, competing side-saddle in the Caledonian Showing Championships, riding on the beach, and much, much more. Sadly, she passed away last Monday, but her memory is inspiring numerous riders to chase down the experiences they’ve always quietly dreamed of – and we reckon you should do the same. [Be more Joanna]

USC Aiken might have had one of the smallest squads in attendance at the Intercollegiate Eventing Champs, but they smashed it. The small but mighty school took the win after a tight and tense showjumping finale, plus one of their own was responsible for the lowest finishing score in the entire competition. [Go Pacers!]

How are your collecting ring manners? There’s nothing more frustrating than a rider who doesn’t seem to get the left shoulder to left shoulder thing, or doesn’t know where the appropriate track is for walking. Brush up on the essentials with this handy primer and please, I beg you, for the love of god, send it to all your friends who compete, too. Together we can make the warm-up less of a death trap! Maybe! [Collecting ring etiquette for all disciplines]

The FutureTrack Follow:

 

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A post shared by ~MOLLIE~ (@molliesummerland)


If you’re not already following 2021 Luhmühlen 5* winner Mollie Summerland, where have you been?! She’s well worth a follow for the same reasons any high-flying rider is — but even more so because of her candid conversations about mental health, her regular Q&As about how to deal with the tough days, and her commitment to normalising these kinds of conversations. Life at the top isn’t always easy, and we commend Molls for her bravery in sharing her truth.

Morning Viewing:

Ever wondered what goes down at a Wesko Foundation training day? Join in on one helmed by Sir Mark Todd and find out:

 

Friday Video from SmartPak: All The News You Need from the Aussie OTTB Brigade

This great magazine show comes direct from Australia, and turns its focus to off-the-track Thoroughbreds: how the racing industry can support them in their second careers, how best to manage the transition, and much, much more. It features great advice from eventer Amanda Ross (plus a horse you’ll REALLY want to steal) and some behind-the-scenes insights that’ll give you plenty of food for thought. I found it particularly interesting to learn that there’s an International Federation For The Aftercare of Racehorses, and to hear about what they’ve been working on, and some of the topics they covered, at a recent Melbourne conference. Thoroughbreds are go, indeed!

Have you heard of the SmartPak SmartBarns service yet? SmartPak wants to make it easier for you to take great care of the horses and clients in your barn. The SmartBarn Services Team pairs you with your very own Barn Consultant, giving you access to exclusive benefits, including: Supplement advice & planning, Personalized account management, and Inside access to SmartPak Experts. Visit smartpak.com/SmartBarns to learn more.

Friday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

 

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A post shared by Jonelle Price (@jonelle_price)

It feels like a million years ago that I found myself chatting to Jonelle Price in the lorry park at Bicton, and she spilled the beans that she’d taken embryos from Classic Moet and paired them with semen from Tom Carlile’s exceptional Upsilon. The end goal, she hoped, was to get a horse with his movement and jump, and Molly’s heart and stamina — though, she conceded, breeding is rarely that easy. Now, though, we’re finally getting to see the fruits of their labour: one of the two offspring, Golly, looks very exciting indeed as a five-year-old! Hopefully we’ll get to see lots more of her this year and over the next few seasons — perhaps a trip to Le Lion, where he sire was so successful, could be on the cards for the youngster.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (Kenmore, WA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Flora Lea Spring H.T. (Medford, NJ) [Website] [Volunteer]

May-Daze at the Park H.T. (Lexington, KY) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Spring Coconino H.T. (Flagstaff, AZ) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

Tryon International Spring H.T. (including the USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship) (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

USEA MDHT YEH Qualifier (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Volunteer]

Virginia Horse Center Eventing (Lexington, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Willow Draw Charity Show (Weatherford, TX) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring][Volunteer]

Woodside Spring H.T. (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

News From Around the Globe:

Goodbye to the truly excellent Hidalgo d’Ile. The former five-star champion — who won Badminton with Nicolas Touzaint back in 2008; the only French win ever recorded at the event — has died at the ripe old age of 28. Poignantly, he took his last breath on cross-country day of this year’s event — 15 years to the day since his win. [Relive his career here]

If you aren’t following Mia Farley yet, you should be. The talented young up-and-comer, who rides as part of the O’Connor Event Team, is putting the miles on the clock in order to gain experience at the upper levels with her exciting string of horses, and we reckon it won’t be long at all before we see her representing the US in team competitions. [Meet her and her string]

We all like to sit on a reliable jumper — but is it actually for the best if a horse will jump, no matter what? Writer Ellie Woznika thinks not. [Read her thoughts on the matter]

Rider weight is a topic that gets a lot of airtime — but what about equine weight? Studies have found that a worrying number of horses and ponies in the UK are overweight, and that can come with serious consequences. [Start weight-watching]

Watch This:

Catch up on some Tryon two-star action with Elisa Wallace and Tullymurry Fifi!

Brilliant Bicton: Your Guide on How to Watch This Week’s International

Francis Whittington and DHI Purple Rain at Bicton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This weekend in the UK, it’s all about Bicton International Horse Trials in beautiful, beachy Devon, where some of the world’s best horses and riders — and no shortage of talented up-and-comers — have convened for four days of sport. The competition will host a CCI4*-S feature class, sponsored by TopSpec, and long-format classes at two- and three-star, including a CCI3*-L for Young Riders. Courses at each level have been designed by Helen West, assisted by Captain Mark Phillips — and you can preview them in their entirety via the CrossCountry App. We’ll be expecting plenty of Bicton’s signature terrain and some much overdue sunshine, too.

Tomorrow and Friday will see all classes take to the dressage arenas, while Saturday will be jam-packed with long-format cross-country. The CCI4*-S competitors — including the likes of Laura Collett and her Badminton champion London 52 and Mollie Summerland and her Luhmühlen winner Charly can ter Heiden — will showjump on Saturday with cross-country to follow on Sunday. ClipMyHorse.tv will be broadcasting all of the cross-country and the long-format showjumping action; you can watch along here.

While EN sadly won’t have boots on the ground at Bicton this week, we’ll be keeping you up-to-date on all the happenings from the weekend. Go Eventing!

Bicton International Links: Website, Live Scores, Live Stream, EN’s Coverage

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Create an Expressive Trot

Funnily enough, the trot is always the gait I’ve struggled with the most in the ring. Maybe that’s because I’ve mostly competed full or nearly full Thoroughbreds, all of which have had brilliant canters, which I’ve found it so easy to adjust and train within, only to move back down into the trot work and find the connection falls apart. My method of working through it has been to use the canter work to set up the balance and contact for the trot work, but dressage rider and trainer Amelia Newcomb has lots of other ideas for you to try (and frankly, I’d take her advice over mine!). Check out this great video and put her lessons to use in your schooling sessions this week to create a real ‘wow’ trot that doesn’t skimp on balance or suppleness.

Elevate®

Performance horses are susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage. Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, limits the damage caused by everyday oxidative stress. It maintains healthy muscle and nerve functions, and supports a strong immune system in horses of all ages. Elevate was developed to provide a highly bioavailable source of natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate) to horses.

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

The horse that matters to you matters to us®. KPPusa.com

In honor of our 25th anniversary we’ve released a limited-edition sticker that gives you a chance to win all year long! Click here to find out more.

A Bumper Fortnight for Eventing, Part One: Observations from the Ground at Badminton

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a season the 2023 one has been so far – in many respects, it feels like it’s scarcely started here in England; in others, I feel as though I’ve been on the road for months. With several long-haul flights, two five-stars, and a handful of short-formats behind me so far, I suppose I have.

In any case, it turns out that, no matter how many seasons I do this job, I continue to walk away from the big ones with a million thoughts and ideas zooming around my head — for better or for worse, where my energy levels are concernedAnd so this will be the first in a short series of faintly chaotic collections of musings spanning the last few weeks of top-level sport: its highs, its lows, its controversies, and what it might all mean for the future. First up: some thoughts in the aftermath of Badminton, where our 2018 World Champion Ros Canter took her first five-star title, the rain came down hard, and we all waded into the quagmire of public opinion – a quagmire we’ve not yet come out of.

Emily King heads to the start box with Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s no time like the present

When the going gets tough, the first thing that needs to go by the wayside is the idea of chasing the clock — and that was a widespread notion at Badminton, where several riders, including Harry Meade, opted to turn or take it off entirely before heading out on course, giving them one less distraction as they worked on feeling the horse beneath them. Those who did opt to ride with one largely did it just as a tool to track how long they’d been galloping — or, in the case of Francis Whittington, “to give me a bit of motivation — hearing the beep every minute just reminded me to keep going, and keep thinking forward.”

(As an aside, Francis’s cross-country round at Badminton was one of those moments where I love nothing better than to be proven wrong: of all the horses in the field who might have found themselves in Badminton’s tough conditions, his DHI Purple Rain certainly wasn’t one I’d have put forward. The extravagant gelding has huge, round movement — almost, at times, more akin to a carriage horse than a blood event horse — and I would have expected that that would get in his way, and cause him to lose energy more quickly than a more economical type. But this, DHI Purple Rain’s third five-star, was arguably his most impressive: he came home clear with 42.8 time penalties and looked better and better as he went. This, Francis explained, came down to a thorough rethink of the gelding’s fitness programme after retiring at Burghley last year: “There, he hit the door and didn’t know how to open it — now, he’s been given the tools to open it and continue through it,” he explains, citing long, steady gallops with sprints at the end, which work the horse mentally as well as physically, as being the key.)

Time and time again, we saw riders slow down, check in with their horses, and make decisions that often sacrificed a potential leaderboard gain in favour of a sympathetic ride. The tough conditions on the cross country course meant that weariness was almost always something that we, as spectators in the media mixed zone, could see from its onset, and how riders chose to deal with that was insightful. Lithuania’s Aistis Vitkauskas, mounted on one of my favourite cross country competitors in Commander VG, felt his game and experienced horse begin to tire, thought about making the call to retire, and then opted to take each fence as it came and let his horse tell him when, and if, he was done – but as each fence appeared, the gelding pricked his ears, lifted his head, took the bit between his teeth, and sailed over it. The pair came home with a serious amount of time penalties, but Aistis’s willingness to immediately steady the pace and give his horse the chance to enjoy his job was heartening.

In a different vein, several people may have wondered why Caroline Powell decided to keep going after a couple of issues on course with the young talent Greenacres Special Cavalier, who had proved her chops with a placing in her five-star debut at Pau last year. But after those green wobbles, ‘Cavvy’ soon settled into a rhythm, began jumping much better, and very visibly learned as she went around. When Caroline came back to the mixed zone afterwards, her explanation was simple: she could have pulled the mare up and saved her for another day, because there was no chance to take home a placing now, but, she said, there was still value to be found in continuing on as long as the mare was happy to. By doing so, she would get the chance to learn the horse’s staying power over a very different course to Pau, and she’d learn, too, how she’d jump the day after a tough test like the one presented at Badminton. For a horse who’s been considered a Paris prospect since her Le Lion days, this is crucial intel: at ten minutes, and built at four-star dimensions and technicality, the Olympic challenge has nothing on Badminton, but knowing that a horse can handle considerably more is seriously useful for a competitor who will, some day soon, likely need to plumb the depths of her horses’s competitive zeal.

On the flip side, there were the riders who made the equally wise call to put their hands up. I often say there’s one undeniable truth in eventing, and that’s that nobody ever regrets withdrawing or retiring — and that, I’m confident, is absolutely true even for those riders who saw the door open for them to climb up the leaderboard on such a tough day of sport. At the forefront of that has to be Richard Jones, who is such a consummate cross-country phenom with his Alfies Clover that we all shut up and crowded around the screens in the mixed zone to see just how high they’d get on the leaderboard. It was a shock, and a touch deflating at first, to see him retire — but equally, it was absolutely the right call when he felt his horse just start to tire, and that level of horsemanship is more admirable even than a placing at Badminton. Likewise, I could have kissed Emily King for her decision-making: she and Valmy Biats were enjoying a barnstorming round up until the Lake, which they popped neatly into – and then, inexplicably to us all at the time, she aimed the gelding right past the corner in the water, calmly put her hand in the air, and pulled him up. For the next 24 hours, all of us were asking one another, ‘have you spoken to Emily?’ and ‘does anyone know what happened there?’, because they’d looked so fluid on course and there wasn’t a visible hint of tiredness to be seen. But when Emily finally emerged and cheerfully explained that she’d felt him get a bit tired and decided not to push him, she truly earned her brownie points: the mark of a great rider is one who listens to their horse first and foremost. That she’d been able to feel Valmy’s limit approaching well before anyone could see it, even through the red mist of competitive zeal, is something we should all be aspiring to. I promise not to kiss anyone who does that, if that’s any incentive.

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Could the FEI’s sanction system benefit from increased clarity?

Once again, we’ve sadly seen a great victory slightly overshadowed by drama surrounding another competitor, and whichever side of the pro- or anti-Townend debate you fall on in this instance, I think we’re all pretty well united in agreeing that it’s a great shame when eventing hits the mainstream because it’s being torn to shreds by a skeptical public.

But here’s the thing about eventing: no matter how much we love it, it really does just boil down to consumer entertainment. If the entire concept of eventing were to disappear overnight, there’s a relatively tiny swathe of people who’d be very sad about it, and an even smaller swathe who’d need to find new jobs, but the world at large wouldn’t change in any fundamental way, as it would if, say, the entire concept of brain surgery disappeared overnight. Being a professional event rider is very hard work, I certainly won’t dispute that – but it’s also an inessential role, which makes it a privilege, and one in which ego must be shelved, because ultimately, it’s not about the event rider. It’s about the audience. The world doesn’t need event riders, in the very same way that the world doesn’t need eventing journalists; as a result, even when I’m exhausted from working back-to-back five-stars an endless eighteen hour days, I sometimes need to pull myself out of what I’m doing for a second, give myself a shake, and thing, ‘is what I’m creating here actually serving the audience? Or am I phoning this in?’ The second I spot myself capitulating to my own ego — giving my audience less than what they deserve so I can go to the riders’ party, or to sleep, early, for example — I know I’m abusing the privilege of being in a role that doesn’t need to exist, even if it’s often a tough job. Likewise, the second a rider appears to consider themselves beyond the scope of the social license conversation, and looks puts their own desire to win or finish above serving the optics of the sport, even if that’s not necessarily the case behind the scenes, it will all begin to fall apart, because it is all inessential without audience approval. It’s that simple.

We all know, at this point, that horse riding generally, and eventing especially, aren’t viewed favourably by the general public. We are all sick of the social licence conversation, which feels like it comes up at least once a week — and roughly once per day, if you work in equestrian media. It’s an exhausting, constant reminder that eventing is still dithering at the dangerous crossroads it was at long before I ever made the move from grooming to writing. We are on our last lifeline; we don’t know if we’ll continue on as an Olympic sport past the next couple of cycles; though we know differently, to the average person, what we do probably looks roughly as senseless as, say, horse diving once did. You don’t see horse diving anymore, and that’s no bad thing — but there’s not an awful lot to stop us going the same route.

This means, though, that every single move we make as a singular unit has to be decisive. There is no wiggle room anymore when it comes to wishy-washiness on welfare. And subsequently, there needs to be total clarity on what constitutes a breach of horse welfare standards – and how that’s dealt with.

There was an interesting piece in The Irish Field this week, penned by writer Christa Dillon, which pointed out the worrying discrepancies in the number of sanctions handed out by discipline. Every discipline governed by FEI rules has a yellow carding process in place (except endurance, which… feels like another op-ed for another day, frankly), but looking at the ‘Big Three’, dressage got away most lightly: between early May 2022 and early May 2023, when the last update was made, dressage saw just three yellow cards handed to riders, and none for abuse of horse infractions. (And yes, I am very aware of dressage’s own issues.) Showjumping saw 38 yellow cards over the same period. Eventing saw 71. 55 of those were for abuse of horse infractions, which can include pressing a tired horse, overuse of the whip, visible blood, and so on.

There is often some amount of nuance to the situations in which a yellow card is handed out, but it’s important to note that whether a rider is handed a yellow card or a Recorded Warning, they all get the right to speak to the ground jury prior to the awarding of the sanction. In every case, riders can explain the circumstances from their perspective. There is a chance to fight the good fight if, as a rider, you feel your actions and intentions have been misunderstood. Often, though, receiving a sanction simply comes down to being, quite probably, a good horseman who made a slightly suboptimal decision.

One of the key issues, though, is the transparency of the sanctions process, which seems lenient at best – two Yellow Cards within 12 months leads to a two-month ban; three Recorded Warnings within 24 months will yield the same punishment – and lacks clarity to outsiders as to why an offence might earn one and not the other. ‘Pressing a tired horse’ can be a Recorded Warning offence, or it can be a Yellow Card offence, for example, but the threshold appears to be subjective and the information about how to differentiate isn’t made public. (And what to make of those verbal warnings, visible in the sanctions list, often citing an abuse of horse issue, but without any clarity on why they’re considered less severe?) Though there is, no doubt, plenty going on behind the scenes, I suspect it may be time to make these inner workings clearer to the public, if only to show that horse welfare is taken seriously in our sport.

I’ll be the first to admit that racing isn’t my field of expertise at all, and much of the limited knowledge I possess on its intricacies comes from being friends with several very good journalists who spend a lot of time in that world. What I do know, though, is that its disciplinary structures are much more robust than ours, and handled with an extraordinary amount of clarity. I’ve spent quite a bit of time this week diving into recent sanctions and appeals, which are all laid out clearly on the British Horseracing Authority website. And when I say laid out clearly, I mean it: every moment of the ride is analysed, every position on either side of the argument is presented with no shortage of detail, and even a horse racing illiterate like me can make sense of the situation at hand. There’s a surprising amount of human touch to the whole thing, too: when one young jockey was charged with overuse of the whip, after a lengthy examination of the circumstances, the Board made a point of clarifying that they saw no evidence that the overuse was performed maliciously, but rather as a result of overenthusiasm and inexperience. A punishment was still delivered in accordance with the misdemeanour, but that punishment also focused on education: the young jockey was made to serve one day of his suspension in a training course, and his reputation will have been preserved by the powers that be. It’s all done with a deft and educated touch, and more importantly, it’s easy to understand. Even a layperson can see that actions come with clear consequences. For a sport that’s living on the edge as ours is, this seems like a necessity.

I know what the counterarguments will be: eventing is already deemed expensive and impractical to our own powers that be, and adding in processes like this would cost manpower and money that we, an industry with considerably less fiscal capital than racing, simply do not possess. I understand that. But I wonder if we’re also now at the point where we have to stop making excuses and simply find a way to do it properly, or lose the sport altogether. I wonder if we’re finally at the point where we have no choice but to stop bickering and get it done.

For example, let’s take a look at the whip rule, and how contraventions of it are dealt with in British racing under rules:

  • The whip can be used a maximum of six times in a Flat race or seven times in a Jump race. Any more than this will prompt the stewards to review the ride
  • As well as the number of times the whip is used, The Whip Review Committee will look at the force with which it is used, whether it was used from above shoulder height, whether the horse has been given time to respond, the purpose for which the whip was used, whether the horse was in contention or clearly winning at the time it was used, and whether the whip has been used in the correct place (i.e. on the horse’s hindquarter rather than flanks)
  • Any rider found to have contravened the rules or guidance will face a period of suspension, and any rider picking up third suspension in a six-month period will be referred to the Judicial Panel for penalty
  • Should the whip be used four times or more above the permitted level, the horse and rider will be disqualified from the race

Suspensions work differently in racing than in eventing: jockeys and trainers will have races in their diary with a far greater frequency than eventers have events, and each race represents a much more significant earning potential than what we’d see in eventing. There’s no doubt that a two-month suspension for an event rider with repeat offences would have a hefty impact: in those two months they’d lose plenty of chances to secure MERs, particularly in a season plagued by cancellations, and may even lose owners, who don’t want to see their precious charges sidelined for a quarter of the season. It’s harsh stuff, but then, it needs to be: a rider who’s keen to keep their business on track will toe the party line for that reason, even if all others seem to be of secondary concern. In the midst of the busy bit of the season, a two-week ban could also be impactful – and perhaps it’s time that we see those brought into effect for abuse of horse sanctions. I doubt I’ll make many friends by saying it, but we’re in No Man’s Land now, and if we don’t make some tough decisions, I fear for the future of our sport.

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We deserve better than ‘#bekind’

I suspect I may have already lost a few readers with my crosshead, but hear me out. Social media can be both a blessing (it facilitates communication; it allows for free access to information and inspiration and all sorts of nice things; it lets us promote great stories and, we hope, get more people hooked on our world) and a curse (people can be really fucking mean. Also, there are child influencers telling other children that they need expensive stuff in order to be happy. Very dark! Very weird! Let’s turn it all off and go live in caves). The immediacy of social media means that people’s successes and their mistakes alike can be disseminated around the world in milliseconds, and the relative anonymity of it means that most people feel able to chip in on any given discussion with no holds barred emotional responses. A lot of the time, this stuff is just plain nasty — whenever there’s a young woman competing at a five-star, you can guarantee there’s a TikTok account somewhere dedicated solely to shredding her to pieces in real time, which is generally tantamount to schoolyard jealousy but can do real damage to a young person simply trying to focus under pressure. But oftentimes, we see a vocal response to a very real misjudgment on the part of an individual in the public eye that’s not wholly unjustified — it just requires more nuance.

Nuance is where the internet can fall short and — forgive me — where the horse world really tends to suffer. We often see big issues debated online as binaries: for example, when Mark Todd got into a spot of bother for using a branch to coerce a clinician’s horse into water, social media split like the Red Sea into two camps. You were either on Toddy’s side, and argued that he was the greatest horseman of our generation and absolutely justified in his actions, or you were convinced that he was the devil incarnate and surely doing much worse behind the scenes. Much rarer was the middle-ground, less emotionally charged, and arguably much more reasonable response: that Toddy is, indeed, a very, very good horseman, but one who, in this case, made an error of judgment. The thing with errors of judgment made by public figures is that even if they’re made without malice, they still have consequences. I worry we’ve entered an age of the Internet in which accountability is being summarily binned.

Looking outside the horse world, when Love Island graduate and influencer Molly-Mae Hague took on a tokenistic ‘Creative Director’ role at fast-fashion brand Pretty Little Thing, she quickly got herself in hot water when discussing the role on the Diary of a CEO podcast. There, she spoke about how she’d “worked her ass off” to get to where she was – despite not having the relevant experience or qualifications ordinarily required for a Creative Director role. Her assertion that ‘everyone has the same 24 hours in a day went like this:

“When I’ve spoken about that in the past, I have been slammed a little bit, with people saying, ‘It’s easy for you to say that, you’ve not grown in poverty, you’ve not grown up with major money struggles, so for you to sit there and say that we all have the same 24 hours in a day, it’s not correct. And I’m like, but technically what I’m saying is correct. We do. So I understand that we all have different backgrounds and we’re all raised in different ways and we do have different financial situations, but I do think if you want something enough, you can achieve it.”

Molly Mae, who grew up in relative wealth, probably didn’t mean to come across as completely tone-deaf. She probably didn’t even consider the unique hurdles that people in very low income households, who may have non-traditional dependents, or those with disabilities, for example, may face, and so I’m sure she wasn’t intentionally speaking down to them. She may not even have been aware of Pretty Little Thing’s habit of paying its garment makers a disgustingly low £3.50 an hour, making it one of the least ethical fashion companies around. But as a grown woman in her twenties, it was her responsibility to do her own research, and to think about what she said – and when she misspoke so publicly, it was absolutely right that she was held accountable for her error. The aftermath of the incident brought to light a lot of information about fast fashion houses that had been swept under the carpet for a long time, which had the knock-on effect of increasing the public’s ire about mistreatment in garment factories, which also springboarded high-profile boycotts of fast fashion — in short, all things that may actually have a long term positive impact on the industry and the individuals exploited by it. Plenty of people took to social media to try to silence the criticisms, citing the 2020 suicide of TV presenter Caroline Flack and urging people to ‘#bekind’. In the end, Molly Mae took some time and some PR guidance and released an apologetic statement, and is ultimately still absolutely fine, still working with Pretty Little Thing, and still very, very rich. She will, I hope, have learned something; maybe, one day, she’ll use her considerable platform to campaign for improved conditions and wages for the people she profits from. Even if she doesn’t, what they’re up against gained some much-needed public exposure from the whole thing.

My point? If, the very second public opinion turns against someone who’s made a mistake, we allow all criticism to be silenced while we make actually insane comparisons to the tragic death of a totally unrelated person, we do a few things: first of all, we completely negate the importance of accountability. People in the public eye are very much aware that they’re in the public eye. Being in that exalted position comes with responsibilities. In the case of our sport, those responsibilities focus largely on treating horses well. Anything outside of that is an issue. Secondly, the use of ‘#bekind’, and the casual implication of suicide risk, is actually reductive and harmful for those who genuinely are suffering from mental health issues. People very rarely commit suicide because someone has been unkind about them on Facebook. People who commit suicide generally do so because they are also suffering from a longer-term mental health problem that triggers suicidal ideation. I speak, in part, anecdotally: I have suffered from depression for twenty years, which has often manifested itself, quite inconveniently, as suicidal ideation. Getting help for this is extraordinarily, monstrously difficult. It is made all the more difficult as a result of the flippancy with which many people view mental health problems, and the fatigue that people can experience towards genuine mental health problems because of the boy-who-cried-wolf effect of so many people using vague insinuations of mental health as a weapon against criticism in this way. I saw somebody trawling through Townend-critical Facebook threads in the days after Badminton, and no matter what they were replying to, their comment was almost exactly the same: “if you criticise Oliver,” she wrote, “don’t you dare ever claim to support Riders Minds or #bekind.” The notion that being critical of a public-facing person’s wrongdoing equates with being against mental health initiatives — Riders Minds is an excellent mental health charity that had an on-site presence in the stables at Badminton this year — is absolutely baffling to me. Again, we’re lacking nuance here: you can be kind and also be critical. You can understand that every single human being on earth is a complex and multifaceted and difficult and confusing and probably deeply odd collection of contradictory thoughts and feelings and experiences and actions. You can call out the bullshit without being told you’re going to trigger a suicide, and you can also speak up about things you think are wrong without, say, doxing someone. We are capable of this! I believe in us! All of us — including the ones making those occasional mistakes — deserve something smarter than ‘#bekind’. We all deserve — and need — nuance.

Let me be clear: in no way am I advocating for some kind of social media free-for-all. Of course we should all be more conscious of the human beings on the receiving end of what we write online. We absolutely must be better, and, yes, kinder and more thoughtful — but in doing so, we cannot lose the skill of critical thinking. And when we reduce the complexities of the human experience to an epithet like ‘#bekind’, it becomes meaningless. Worse still, it becomes weaponised; it’s the swiftest silencer of meaningful discourse, because it immediately paints the person on the flip side of the debate as someone who simply doesn’t care whether the object of their criticism is wounded. It implies that the worst can happen to that object of criticism and the person will be unruffled. That’s so seldom the case, and such an unfair and lazy way of ending a conversation. We don’t make anyone kinder that way — we just make everyone slightly less proficient at communicating, bit by bit. But looking at eventing specifically, we no longer have the wiggle room to be able to avoid hard conversations. It’s time to grow a backbone. 

While we’re at it, let’s put the notion that it’s dangerous to be openly critical of ‘one of our own’ to bed. I’ve seen a few people arguing that we’re only drawing outside attention to the negative within our sport if we continue to post about it; this, I think, is patently untrue. The answer to fixing the social license issue isn’t to hide instances of horse welfare contraventions from the outside world, it’s to minimise their occurrences. We need to clean house, and it’s only those of us who are already in the sport that can do so in a way that allows us to blossom and grow — or, at least, to survive a little while longer.

Katherine Coleman and Monbeg Senna jump the long route at the contentious lake question. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It’s MIMs o’clock: let’s adjust accordingly

One of the biggest topics of conversation going into cross-country day at Badminton — bigger, even, than the weather, if you can believe it — was the set of MIMclips used on the timber rails going into the lake. The direct route saw horses and riders land directly in the water; the very slightly longer route gave them a dry landing that immediately set them forth into the lake. William Fox-Pitt, always an outspoken advocate for positive change for riders, was vocal in his dislike of this fence, pointing out that well-trained cross-country horses will use the drag of their hind legs to rejig their balance as they jump fences like this, which could result in the safety devices being triggered, either unfairly penalising horses and riders who’d done the right thing or encouraging the wrong kind of ride into the fence. Course designer Eric Winter, on the other hand, presented the compelling argument that our sport must go in the direction of safety in order to survive; that when there had been a large log fence into the lake previously, many riders had simply gunned around the corner and scrambled over it, some turning themselves over in the process.

Who was right, and who was wrong? Both, and neither, I suspect. There’s never been a quick-fix answer to the issue of eventing in safety, nor to the issue of public perception — if there was, we’d have used it. I’ve seldom found myself sitting on the fence on anything; ordinarily, even if it takes hours of private reflection, lots of research, and plenty of opinions canvassed on either side of a debate, I’ll come to a firm conclusion and feel quite ready to argue it any given point. But on this, I was — and remain — torn. Eric’s right: nobody wants to see horses on the floor (except, perhaps, whoever it is who keeps making those ‘Best falls and refusals’ YouTube compilations after every five-star). Nobody wants Badminton to make it to the mainstream media because of an avoidable accident. He’s also right that as a course designer, his role goes beyond creating an exciting competition — it helps to define how riders train at home, and if he was sick of watching them career into a log fence into water and wanted to encourage a more considered approach, he certainly used his influence as intended there. But William is also right: while there are some cross-country fences that can be ‘showjumped’, we have also always seen how horses used their stifles to slow their trajectory. It is, after all, why we grease the hind legs. Is it fair to punish that?

As it turned out, we didn’t get to see many tackle that route, either because they didn’t get that far, or because they followed William’s lead and avoided the straight route. But we did get to see a small handful, and actually, it largely didn’t cause issues. The first rider to go straight was Dan Jocelyn with Cooley One To Many, who did trigger the MIMS clips after the horse looked to back off on the approach. As a result, he took off from a deep spot, leant on the rails, and was, arguably, saved from a fall. The next to go straight was Pippa Funnell with Majas Hope, who had thought about taking the long route here but ultimately decided that “if I can’t do it on him, I’ve got no chance!” Though she gave the rails a tap behind, there was no doubt they’d stay up. Austin O’Connor, who delivered the fastest round of the day with Colorado Blue, was another to go straight and clear — a note in my phone simply marks his route here as ‘textbook’ — while winners Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo went long.

It’s a small sample pool to pull from, and ultimately, my view on safety devices remains the same as it ever was: we need them, if we want to survive — both as a sport and, unfortunately, quite literally on some occasions. We have to be seen to be doing everything we can to look after the people and the horses within the sport, and particularly the horses from a public perspective, because they cannot speak for themselves or make the decision about whether or not they pursue eventing as their career of choice. But all good decisions must come with a robust and reasonable action plan, lest we end up seeing pins and clips become the most influential part of our sport. Until the beginning of 2020, safety device penalties could be appealed: if a rider could argue, using the official footage as support, that their horse wouldn’t have fallen, they could see those penalties removed. The loss of the appeals process was felt most keenly at Tokyo in 2021, when Michael Jung was one of many riders to hit the corner at 14B. Footage shared on social media showed that the safety device didn’t activate until horse and rider were several strides away from the fence on departure, and the penalties added there cost them a gold medal — but by that point, that removal of the appeals process was well and truly embedded.

Look, I’m a realistic person, and I understand why the appeals were taken away in the first place: they require extra man power and man hours, and that’s something that costs both money (limited, at best, behind the scenes at most events) and experience (again, limited — we have relatively few people who are qualified to act as officials at the top levels). Appeals generally have to happen at the end of the day, which can delay the release of results, making the experience more confusing for spectators, as there may not be a clear winner until late in the evening. The appeals process will also always be at least a little bit subjective. And so it’s imperfect, but perhaps it’s better — if we could find the resources to appoint a small committee of people whose only role on cross-country day was to immediately review appeals ‘in-play’, so to speak, we might be able to hasten the process, and ensure that if another, more immediate and urgent incident, is keeping the rest of the team of officials busy, that progress can continue on in some respect. That, too, might avoid issues such as last year at Badminton, when Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs were held at length, allowed to continue, retroactively eliminated, and then reinstated into the competition. My argument for bringing this in isn’t necessarily because eventing will become less exciting for viewers if pins and clips begin to rule cross-country day — I’d argue that sitting lakeside with a Pimms in hand, placing bets over whether someone would go straight or not, or take the pin or not, is just as exciting as anything else, and much more fun than watching a horse go down — but because I can’t help but fear that younger competitors, who are raised to fear the penalty punishment of a knocked pin, will get in the habit of showjumping even the solid fences that aren’t pinned. That, to me, is a gateway to riding defensively and a little bit backwards; that, to me, is an even bigger risk to wellbeing.

Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory: the people’s heroes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What goes up must come down: there are different ways to be a hero

Without making this all about me (she says, while knees-deep in an opinion piece), in doing the job I do, you get to know a lot of people quite well. Back in 2018, I met Tom Crisp, his wife Sophie, and their brilliant, bonkers family when they offered a lift down to Pau for my close friend and US rider Hallie Coon for her first five-star. We all bundled in to one lorry together, with two horses and too many people to count, and had one of the best weeks of my life, hands down. That week, Tom and the excellent Liberty and Glory finished in the top ten, marking Tom’s first time at the business end of the leaderboard at five-star, and over the following years, the Crisps dealt with niggling injuries, balancing family and eventing, and, of course, that pesky pandemic, to which the homebred ‘Lori’ lost some of her best years. All this is to say that every time they leave the start box now, I jump every fence with them, because I know how much has gone into getting there, and how much it means to every person in that family — and how much they all deserve it. On Badminton’s tough cross-country day, I thought for sure that Tom and Lori would be one of the heroes of the day, climbing and climbing after dressage to crack the top ten, as they had at Burghley last year. And boy, did they look like they were going to: up until the Lake, they were delivering one of the rounds of the day, which tiny Lori skimming over the top of the heavy going, pinging her way through all the toughest questions, and looking every inch the kind of five-star horse we all dream of sitting on. (For what it’s worth, I have sat on her, and she hated every minute of it.)

But then it all unravelled in the blink of an eye: after a beautiful jump into the Lake, Lori ballooned the corner in the water, cleverly twisting her ribcage to retain her balance in the air. Tom, who was riding with a hernia that’s due an operation this month, found himself jolted out of the tack, and without his usual core strength to help him regain centrality, he went for a serious swim. And then? He made himself a star. As spicy Lori cantered around grinning at all the applause from the huge lakeside crowds, Tom unstuck his face from the mud, gave everything a quick wiggle to make sure it all still worked, and then struck off in a comedy crawl that Michael Phelps would have been proud of. Finally, he stood up and took a bow, delighting absolutely everybody.

I can only imagine his frustration, and his disappointment, and the number of times he must have replayed those few strides in his mind, wondering what he could have done differently to sit that jump out and find a different kind of glory at the end of the day. But in some ways, this is his moment: Tom has always been a huge talent, as has the tricky, quirky little mare Lori, but we exist in a sport that’s overloaded with talent, and those moments in the sun are so rare, and so short, as a result. But if you can epitomise sportsmanship? If you can make people laugh on a day where an awful lot of what we saw looked like quite hard work? If you can remind people of the ‘good old days’ of Thrills & Spills VHS tapes and the fun of a dunking, rather than the constant fear and worry we often feel about the state of the sport at the moment? You’re a hero that people will remember long after the competition ends and everyone goes back to their normal lives. I hope Tom gets lots of money and opportunities thrown his way now that people have seen why all of us who are in his wider circles of friends adore him, but even if the only perk is public perception, then he’s really nailed that one. Bravo, Tom.

Author’s note: the original version of this article had some confusing wording regarding the athlete’s right to appeal an FEI sanction. This ‘right to be heard’ is only applicable prior to the awarding of the sanction, after the incident has occurred, and the wording has been changed to clarify this. Thanks to Clare Chamberlayne for her eagle eyes!

 

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

 

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Hurray for Poland! They earned themselves a ticket to the Paris Olympics in the Group C qualifier at Baboròwko International over the weekend, and we love how Jan Kaminski, who competed at Tokyo, celebrated the success. Krok pierwszy: Francja, krok drugi: dominacja nad światem!

Events Opening Today: Summer Coconino HT and Western Underground, Inc. TR,N,BN 3 Day EventMasterson Equestrian Trust YEH/NEH QualifierRedefined Equestrian Horse TrialsGenesee Valley Hunt H.T.Huntington Farm H.T.Chattahoochee Hills H.T.The Maryland International + Horse Trials

Events Closing Today: River Glen June H.T.Queeny Park H.T.Middleburg H.T.Cobblestone Farms H.T. I, Unionville H.T.Golden Spike H.T.Apple Knoll Farm H.T.

News & Notes from Around the World:

Okay, so we all know that we probably don’t want our horses to go behind the vertical. But are you au fait with why? The results of a recent study, which observed horses’ airways while working with various degrees of flexion, will go some way to showing why an open, forward throat latch angle is a seriously useful tool to have on your side while riding. [Check out what they discovered]

Nicola Wilson is adding another string to her bow as part of a brand new elite coaching training programme. She’s already a prolific coach — and has opened the doors of her Northallerton yard to up-and-coming riders, including US eventer Kimmy Cecere — and now, she’ll have the opportunity to work alongside top level coaches across the disciplines. This is all part of a new initiative from UK Sport, which bodes very well for continuing education in Great Britain. [Nicola’s on a new adventure]

The FEI has responded to an open letter from the Event Riders Association, which expressed frustration at the refusal to approve an additional CCI2*-S at Bicton next week. The last-minute class addition was intended to make up for runs at this level lost at Chatsworth and Rockingham — but fell well after the FEI’s ruling on when a schedule can be approved for an event. [Read the reply here]

Ever cancelled a lesson at the last minute? If your trainer’s lucky — and smart — they’ll have put a cancellation policy in place that means they don’t suffer a financial loss, but even if they do have that, trainers are bemoaning what appears to be a worsening trend. [Commit to those lessons, folks]

And finally: do you suffer from nerves on competition days that affect your ability to perform? Then it’s worthwhile to take the time to create a ‘safe haven’ for yourself on those busy days, finding a little time and space to recenter yourself and get your feet back on terra firma. I personally like to listen to T Pain’s classic ‘Church’ to really find myself on eventing days, but you do you, boo. [Make competing fun again]

Sponsor Corner:

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Watch This:

Before you can deliver that clear cross-country round inside the time, you need to leave the start box – and there’s definitely a right and a wrong way to do so. Check out David Doel’s tips for starting your round in style:

 

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