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Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

 

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I’m still shoulders-deep in writing all sorts of fascinating Pratoni content for you all from my dreamy trip to Italy, but I wanted to make the time, and the space, to highlight one story in particular that stood out to me — that of 62-year-old Beat Sax who, after over forty years of eventing, finally got to make his team debut for Switzerland in the Nations Cup competition, riding his only horse, Secret IV. That the Swiss ultimately won the competition is the cherry on top of the cake — I don’t think I saw anyone happier to realise a dream this week than Beat, who was also a galvanising force in the team’s cohesive spirit, too. There’s a forty year age gap between him and his teammate Nadja Minder, and that, to me, is one of the things that makes eventing truly brilliant.

National Holiday: It’s National Mimosa Day. I celebrate this daily, but okay.

US Weekend Action:

Tryon International Spring Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, Nc.): [Website] [Results]

Galway Downs Spring H.T. (Temecula, Ca.): [Website] [Results]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, Vt.): [Website] [Results]

Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T. (Ocala, Fl.): [Website] [Results]

Spokane Sport Horse Spring H.T. (Spokane, Wa.): [Website] [Results]

Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. (Tyler, Tx.): [Website] [Results]

Unionville May H.T. (Unionvilla, Pa.): [Website] [Results]

WindRidge Farm Spring H.T. (Mooresboro, Nc.): [Website] [Results]

Winona H.T. (Hanoverton, Oh.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Action:

Chatsworth International: [Results]

Floors Castle International: [Results]

Aston-le-Walls (2): [Results]

Firle: [Results]

Llanymynech: [Results]

Mendip Plains: [Results]

Global Eventing Coverage:

FEI Nations Cup CCIO4*-S/WEG Test Event (Pratoni del Vivaro, Italy): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Your Monday Reading List:

So much of modern-day horse care and conditioning feels like it comes down to arbitrary barometers passed along over generations. In a bid to bring science and subjectivity into the equation, though, researchers in Australia are working on developing a microchip that charts body temperature, helping caregivers better manage the critical cool down period after strenuous exercise. [Is it getting hot in here?]

The use of CBD products has skyrocketed around the world. But can it help your horse, or is it just another snake oil fad? [Pass us the sticky icky icky]

Ever wondered what it might be like to abandon your normal life in the US and hurl yourself headlong into UK eventing culture? The answer is ‘wet, mostly’, if you ask me, but rider and writer Lindsey Colburn has much more interesting insights for you in her latest blog. [It’s been a rollercoaster]

 

The FutureTrack Follow:

If you’re a fan of eventing art, you’ll be as enchanted by Daniel Crane’s work as I am — particularly his atmospheric paintings of the Badminton trot-up and stables. Bliss.

Morning Viewing:

Want to cling on to Pratoni’s sunshine and good vibes a little longer? Yeah, me too. Crack open a Peroni and rewatch all the test event action here:

Switzerland Sweeps the Board in Pratoni Test Event Finale

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH secure their first four-star victory at Pratoni. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Every part of this week’s World Championships test event at Pratoni del Vivaro has been a fact-finding mission, and today’s showjumping was certainly no different: this is an eventing course design debut for Uliano Vezziani, whose remit is ordinarily CSI5* showjumping, and who designs courses for the Global Champions league and World Cups among his accomplishments. He is, perhaps, perfectly suited for this role, though: he’s pushed for the re-introduction of grass arenas at major Italian showjumping venues, which allowed him to take a considered, clever approach to his job today, which he will reprise in September.

Of the 46 starters, just 16 produced clear rounds in the final phase, and 14 of those finished inside the 93 seconds allowed — a mere 30.4% of the entire field. This is actually a touch higher than Pratoni’s usual rate of attrition at this level, but certainly proved that the showjumping here can be plenty influential. This is in part because of the clever decision not to use one of the surfaced arenas for the final phase but rather, to make use of a spacious and gently undulating grass arena next to the dressage arena. Surrounded on two sides by grandstands and with plentiful viewing space on the hill on the arena’s far side, it made for an exciting spot for spectators — and also challenged riders to make savvy decisions with the plentiful space and fluctuations in their approaches.

Robin Godel proves his class once again with his biggest career win so far. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ultimately, it would be cross-country leaders Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH who triumphed, delivering an impeccable clear just over half a second over the time allowed to secure the win — and to tip the balance in the team competition, too, which hung on a knife’s edge throughout the afternoon’s final rounds.

“It’s very wonderful for us — it’s a good beginning of the season, and it’s a place that’s been great for us as a team,” says Robin. “To have Andrew Nicholson has really helped us — we really see the difference with him. Today I didn’t feel a lot of pressure; of course, I was very focused, but not a lot of pressure. It was good pressure.”

Ingrid Klimke‘s Equistros Siena Just Do It had dropped out of the lead into overnight third yesterday, but a fault-free round today pushed them back up into second and showed a real progression for the ten-year-old Westfalian, whose talent had previously often been overshadowed by tempestuous exuberance. Her much-improved 22.7 on the flat, which beat out stablemate SAP Hale Bob OLD in the first phase, her 5.2 time penalties yesterday, and her faultless round today make her a very exciting prospect for Ingrid’s championship aims.

Tim Price and Falco take fourth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

France’s Nicolas Touzaint, who became the European Champion here in 2007, made the most of his knowledge and positive experience of the venue to finish third with Absolut Gold HDC, who climbed from first-phase twelfth place, adding just 0.8 time penalties to his dressage score of 28.6 and producing a foot-perfect round today. Last year’s Pau victors Tim Price and Falco took fourth after finishing less than half a second over the allowed time, while 22-year-old Swiss rider Nadja Minder continued to make an enormously positive impression, taking fifth on team horse Toblerone.

Mélody Johner and Toubleu du Rueire take a spot in the top ten with one of two faultless double-clears. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just two horse-and-rider pairs finished on their dressage scores: Switzerland’s Mélody Johner and Toubleu du Rueire took eighth place on 35.4, while Swedish pathfinders Malin Josefsson and Golden Midnight ended up twelfth on 37.9.

The individual top ten in Pratoni’s CCIO4*-S test event.

The Swiss team returns for a second victory in Pratoni. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The team competition came down to the wire, largely because of the final phase’s order of go: individual representatives went first, followed by team riders in reverse order of merit. While France had led by just a tenth of a penalty after yesterday’s cross-country, second-placed Switzerland’s margin to catch them up widened after Beat Sax and Secret IV knocked three rails, putting them into the drop score spot. While that didn’t give France, who’d added four penalty’s in Christopher Six‘s round with Totem de Brecey, a rail in hand, Nadja Minder‘s knocked pole at fence eight with Toblerone gave them another 3.4 penalties to play with — and with just one French rider, and one Swiss rider, left to go, the tension in the stands was palpable.

But Maxime Livio‘s surprise two rails with his European Championships ride Api du Libaire put Switzerland into the top spot, and after Robin Godel pulled off the goods, they secured the team win — as well as the individual — by more than a rail over France. It’s an excellent start to the Nations Cup series for the Swiss, but more importantly, it’s an interesting exercise in comparison: Switzerland won the Nations Cup here in 2019, but did so in a much different style. There, they played it safe, delivering slow, steady rounds and allowing other teams to knock themselves out of contention on cross-country day with mistakes on course. This time, though, they were prepared to take calculated, educated risks and ride much more aggressively, which resulted in four out of four Swiss team riders, plus one individual, coming home clear inside the time over yesterday’s cross-country course.

This can be attributed in large part to the help of Andrew Nicholson, who began helping the Swiss team with their cross-country training and performances in the lead-up to the 2019 European Championships, but he’s quick — and rightly so — to point out that the riders have always had the ability.

“They’re nice people to work with, because they try very, very hard and they listen to everything you say — which makes it a little bit more pressure when you see them leave the startbox, because you know they’re going to ride the lines you’ve told them,” says Andrew with a laugh. “You have to really hope that that works, and trust that they’ll do it. I was very proud of them yesterday, and to see them in the jumping today, I think they’re unbelievable.”

No man is an island, not even Andrew Nicholson: his role in the Swiss camp is as part of a bigger machine that’s become more cohesive over the past couple of years, and he’s also encouraged his riders to work together and learn from each other’s successes and mistakes to fast-track their journey to serious competitive results.

“We’ve got a very good crew — the dressage coach and the jumping coaches. We don’t have a lot of people on the edges, but the ones we have are tops. When you can train them, and there’s groups of riders together, you can encourage them to watch each other and feed off each other. Then, when they get to the big competitions, like this team competition, they can remember what the other riders did wrong in training that could help them on the day — you can say one simple thing that they’ve been told in training, and it can really help. It’s that sort of team that you want to make a difference with, and at the end of the day, what makes a good team result is three good individual results.”

Aminda Ingulfson and Joystick are best of the Swedish team in eleventh. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The French continue to look very strong ahead of September’s World Championships, while Sweden’s ongoing quest to build team mileage and move from consistent Nations Cup performers to world-stage contenders continues on apace: the three team riders whose scores were counted finished in eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth, with team debutant Aminda Ingulfson best of the bunch on Joystick. Swedish riders also delivered the two fastest clears of the day, with Malin Josefsson and Golden Midnight the fastest and Aminda and Joystick the second fastest — but their third place saw them slightly off the pace on the score board with a margin of 14.5 penalties between them and France.

“In the dressage we didn’t get the points that we wanted because we didn’t deserve more, basically, but I think that we made it happen,” says Swedish chef d’equipe Fred Bergendorff. “We started too far behind from the beginning, but even so, they’re working well. I’d like to get better than where we are at the moment; we’re too far behind, and when you have the very best horses in the world here in September, everything will be a little bit sharper and to climb like we did today might not happen in the same way. We have to start in a better point.”

Now that we find ourselves on the back end of the pandemic, though, and with travel restrictions lifted, Fred and his team — who are based across the UK, Sweden, and Germany, are finding it slightly easier to gain that sort of cohesion that’s been helping the Swiss so much. Their lack of proximity, though, remains one of their primary challenges to overcome en route to domination on the world stage, but Fred is optimistic: “We have a bit of a limited budget, so we can’t travel around [for training] that much with the riders, but as a coaching team we want to be better, and as riders they want to be better. Sometimes you have horses that are a bit more difficult in the dressage, and sometimes you have riders that find it a bit harder than the cross-country, and that’s sort of how it goes at the moment, but it is on the way up, I do know that. We’ve got exciting young horses and exciting riders, too — like Sofia Sjoborg, who we had as an individual at the Europeans and who went to Badminton last week [before coming here], and Aminda Ingulfson, who hasn’t been at this level very long. She’s a real fighter, and we have a few of these riders for whom just being on the team isn’t good enough. That’s exactly how I want it.”

The final team standings in Pratoni’s test event and Nations Cup.

Susanna Bordone becomes Italy’s National Champion with Imperial van de Holtakkers. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Both the Italian National Championships and the Italian Armed Forces National Championships also took place throughout this week’s CCIO4*-S, though there was significant crossover between the entrants — whose sporting efforts are funded, in large part, by their participation in the Forces — and the eventual winner of both was the same: Susanna Bordone and Imperial van de Holtakkers knocked one rail  after having climbed from eighth place in the first phase to second place after cross-country, ultimately usurping two-phase leaders Pietro Grandis and Scuderia 1918 Future when the latter tipped three rails, slipping to third place.

Emiliano Portale’s old-fashioned galloping machine Aracne dell’Esercito Italiano impresses in the jumping phases for second place in the Italian National Championship. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Second place — and the only clear in this line-up — went to Emiliano Portale and the impressive young stallion Aracne dell’Esercito Italiano, who was ninth at the start of the competition after a mercurial dressage performance earned them a 35.9. They climbed to fourth place yesterday, picking up 7.6 time penalties despite the horse’s exceptional gallop, and their clear inside the time today allowed them to finish in fine style.

Stay tuned for plenty more from Pratoni’s test event, including analysis, the secrets of the hills as told by designer Giuseppe della Chiesa, chats with chef d’equipes and North American representatives, and plenty more. Go Eventing.

The final leaderboard in the Italian National Championship.

Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Live StreamEntries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Pratoni Cross-Country Gallery and Update: Swiss Impress in Nations Cup; France Takes Over Leading Spot

Switzerland’s Robin Godel leads overnight with Grandeur de Lully CH after an excellent day for the Swiss team. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though we’re on site at Pratoni with September at the forefront of our minds, today’s cross-country competition does also serve as an important leg in the 2022 Nations Cup series — and one in which Germany, who held the lead after dressage, now find themselves at the bottom of the pack after a tough day that saw team member Anna Siemer unseated from FRH Butts Avondale and Ingrid Klimke retire on course with SAP Hale Bob OLD. That allowed France, who had been sitting second after dressage, to move up to the top spot with three out of their four riders coming home clear and close to the optimum time. The Swiss team, who have been on an extraordinary upswing since the appointment of Andrew Nicholson as their cross-country coach and advisor, step up from third to second with all four of their team riders romping home clear and inside the time. Sweden, who are at their best in Nations Cups and are the reigning series champions, made a big leap from eighth to third, with all four riders home clear and pathfinder Malin Josefsson delivering the first clear inside the time of the day with Golden Midnight. She was one of just two non-Swiss riders to come home inside the time all day: the other was New Zealand’s rising star Amanda Pottinger with Good Timing, while 22-year-old Nadja Minder managed the feat on both her horses, contributing to an excellent day all round for the Swiss front.

The team standings after cross-country.

Switzerland sits top of the charts in the individual standings, after Robin Godel‘s masterful clear inside the time with European Championships ride Grandeur de Lully CH allowed him to stay on his first-phase score of 26 and climb from fifth place, benefitting from a small number of time faults and on-course issues for several of those ahead of him, including overnight leaders Ingrid Klimke and Equistros Siena Just Do It, who slipped to third place overnight after adding 5.2 time penalties. Just ahead of them is France’s Maxime Livio with his own Europeans mount, the leggy grey Api du Libaire, who moved up a placing after adding just two time penalties to his first-phase score of 25.4. Nadja Minder sits fourth, having climbed ten places with her team mount Toblerone after a penalty-free round, and also moved up 21 places to eighth with her individual ride, Aquila B, who also added nothing. France’s Nicolas Touzaint, who became European Champion here in 2007, rounds out the top five with Absolut Gold HDC.

The individual top ten after cross-country day at Pratoni.

The Italian National Championships leaderboard also saw a shake-up, with just nine of the 14 starters completing, and five doing so sans jumping penalties. Pietro Grandis, who has recently set up his own yard after several years as second rider for Michael Jung, remains atop the leaderboard after adding 3.2 time penalties with Scuderia 1918 Future, while Susanna Bordone was fastest of the Italians, moving up from eighth to second after coming home just two seconds over the optimum time with the experienced Imperial van de HoltakkersPietro Sandei and his stalwart Rubis du Prere step up from 12th to third with an efficient clear, and Emiliano Portale overcame a tempestuous dressage test with Aracne dell’Esercito Italiano, whose extraordinary gallop made him one of the most fun horses to watch over the hilly track and helped him climb from ninth to fourth. Rounding out the top five is Federico Sacchetti, who piloted the nine-year-old GRC Shiraz to just 1.2 time penalties and a big climb from fourteenth place.

The overnight leaderboard in the Italian national championships.

Want a closer look at how the course rode, and what that might mean for this September’s World Championships? We’ve taken a closer look — with the help of Irish Olympian Sam Watson — in our end-of-day analysis, and we’ll be bringing you plenty of insight from designer Giuseppe della Chiesa tomorrow. Just here to look at horses jumping fences? We’ve got you sorted there, too. Go Eventing.

“He’s Kept a Few Things Up His Sleeve”: Takeaways from Pratoni’s Test Event Cross-Country

Italy’s Pietro Grandis jumps the single oxer at 9 with Scuderia 1918 Future. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While this week’s CCIO4*-S at Italy’s Pratoni del Vivaro is an important competition in its own right as an early leg of 2022’s FEI Nations Cup series (and, not insignificantly, the Italian National Championships), many of those on the ground are on site with another mission in mind: to suss out the venue, and its unique challenges and assetts, ahead of this September’s World Eventing Championships. That’s certainly been our modus operandi this week, and though today’s 6:14 cross-country challenge was rather a different story to the circa-10 minute track we can expect to see in September, it gave us a great insight into course designer Giuseppe della Chiesa‘s philosophies, what we can expect from his championship track, and the kind of horse who might excel over such a course.

Being able to balance the gallop, and moderate energy use, down hills is crucial for an economic round at Pratoni. Emiliano Portale heads down to fence 8 with Aracne della’Esercita Italiano. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After popping fence 8, the downhill slope continues…

…and once again, Emiliano demonstrates an excellent gallop for negotiating the question asked by the terrain here.

The first, and most significant, takeaway here is that Pratoni has terrain that’s not really comparable to any other major event. Its rolling hills provide almost constant undulations, with both long pulls uphill and testing downhill runs alongside small mounds and dips that offer interesting opportunities to maximise the challenge of a question through clever fence placement. And certainly, Guiseppe has been clever: the coffin complex at 10 and 11ABC featured a dip down to the ditch and a rise up out of it, which rode well through today but was generously spaced. Likewise, the water complex had a number of mounds and declines that mean that set stride patterns become irrelevant, and riders have to ride what’s underneath them, whether it’s a bounding leap down a slope or a shuffling, conservative step.

But while he’s maximised the terrain, he’s also been thoughtful about its effect on horses, and from fence 22 to the final jump at 28, every question was set on flat ground. They still exerted influence: his used of angled brushes at the penultimate fence saw a few glance out to the side, as did the corner-to-skinny table line at 23 and 24, but the overall effect wasn’t one that looked to punish a horse who’d begun to fatigue.

The ground absolutely helps in this effort. Pratoni was, many eons ago, a volcanic area, and so the footing feels almost custom-made for eventing: it’s a mix of volcanic sand and ash, and while it looks hard and dry on screen because of the dust it kicks up, it’s actually rather peat-y underfoot, which makes for quick going that tends to be fairly easy on horses.

Pratoni, which has been the host of eventing at the 1960 Olympics, the 1995 and 2007 European Championships, and the 1998 World Equestrian Games, isn’t actually an enormous venue, as you can see from the aerial view on the course map:

The course map for this week’s test event cross-country.

At 3350 meters, this week’s short-format track already uses up a fair amount of the available land, but Giuseppe has some interesting areas available for development ahead of the World Championships, which is set at a minimum distance of 5600m up to a maximum 5800m — shorter still than most CCI4*-L courses, but built at a technicality and dimensions that sit somewhere between four- and five-star. At the back end of the course, shown on the top right of the map, there’s plenty of room to add an extra loop utilising further, reasonably flat ground behind the water complex, and we’ll also see the inclusion of the ‘Pratoni slide’, a steep, ramped downhill slope that is situated just left of where the start box was today. The slide has been used regularly throughout Pratoni’s rich history, and its inclusion in this September’s World Championships opens up another loop of useful ground to play with early on in the course.

Though the courses will differ in length and, no doubt, technical difficulty, it’s still a useful exercise to analyse how today’s track worked, because it served as a chance for Giuseppe to see what works as much as it was a chance for national federations and riders to get a sense of the venue. We saw 63 starters leave the box, with 37 producing clear rounds — a 58.7% clear rate. 13 didn’t complete the course, giving us a 79.3% completion rate, suggesting that the influence was much more heavily weighted towards run-outs than falls. Seven partnerships delivered clear rounds inside the optimum time of 6:14 (and five of those were Swiss, in a real coup for Switzerland’s cross-country coach, Andrew Nicholson), and many of the penalties picked up on course were well spread among the combinations.

One question did exert considerable influence: the first combination, a double of brushes at the top of a hill and under cover of the trees at 7ABC caused 15 refusals, 13 of which came as horses skimmed by the second element, two rider falls, and two subsequent retirements. This came after six straightforward ‘flyer’ fences, most of which were on an uphill pull, and though the skinny wishing well on a turn up the hill at 6 walked as though it might require some significant set-up, which would likely have helped the navigation through the tricky combination, it actually largely rode very similarly to the simple fences before it.

The influential first combination at 7AB.

After an uphill pull to 7ABC, there was a downhill run to a sizeable rolltop at 8, which saw just one refusal through the day and tested riders’ ability to rebalance the stride length after having opened it up the hills and adjusted for the combination. The coffin complex at 10 and 11AB, which consisted of an upright rail at 10, a sharp slope down to the small ditch at 11A, and an uphill run to the wedge at 11B rode very well through the day, with just one rider fall and a refusal at the ditch. This was the first time we saw Giuseppe ask riders to ride the stride pattern that they found on landing, a question we saw return in the clever undulations at the water complex, in which horses might shuffle or bound down declines, nullifying any strict adherence to riding a certain number of strides. The emphasis, instead, became commitment to the line and to riding the rhythm as it presented itself, supporting the horse as needed to give them the balance and the power to clear each element.

Tim Price and Falco jump fence 14AB, a skinny in the water complex’s first loop. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The first loop through the water complex caused a small handful of issues: no horses faulted at 13, a rolltop on dry land, and just one glanced off the skinny in the water at 14AB, while four horses ran into problems at 14C, a wide brush corner in the water, and one was deemed to have missed a flag here. None, though, picked up penalties in the second loop through the water, which asked them to run downhill to a rolltop on dry land, travel down a short, steep slope into the water, splash through and then jump a skinny on an island within the complex.

When fences are followed by a sudden dip or rise in terrain on the approach to the next element, some horses will bound through the line, as Mélody Johner’s Toubleu du Rueire demonstrates at the second loop through the water…

…while others tackle it in a shorter, more conservative stride pattern, like Sara Algotsson-Ostholt’s Chicuelo. Photos by Tilly Berendt.

After that, very little went awry on course: two horses picked up penalties at the capacious open ditch at 15, one faulted at 26, the second of two open oxers on a related distance, and one ran out at 27A, the first of two angled brush fences at the final combination.

“I think the horses that people trusted to see out the distance went out of the start box good and sharp, and they didn’t waste time — and then they could just about hold it and get home inside the time,” says Irish Olympian Sam Watson, who was one of several riders to attend the event unmounted. “You probably had to be really working and chasing it a bit in the middle, where it was a little bit more intense, but that’s partly due to the short format; the obstacles per meter are not going to be as intense over a long-format track. But I think Giuseppe will design it similarly: he’ll give you a bit of a run to get going, and a bit of a run to get home, but it’ll probably be quite intense in the middle again like this course. What it did show is that if you had a horse that set off a little bit slowly, they were only going to lose time in the middle. That was good to see, because we want the cross-country to be impactful.”

Spain’s Antonio Cejudo Caro pops the first element of the coffin complex with Duque HSM…

…the ditch at 11AB…

…and the skinny element at 11C. Photos by Tilly Berendt.

Though the influence of the first combination was attributed to a number of factors — interplay of light and shadow, and perceived lack of a preparatory fence among them — Sam’s estimation of the course as a whole is that it was roundly a success.

“His first combination did catch people. I think he showed with his spreading of the penalties and his ability to catch out a couple of the decent [horse and rider] combinations that he’s a clever course designer. He’s thinking about what he’s doing, and he knows where to place a fence, and yet I think what’s important for a championship is that it looked nice and it flowed well. They travelled well on the ground — you can see the volcanic dust kicking up off it, which means that there’s just a bit of give going on there. The horses like travelling on it.”

The bulk of the course’s intensity came from the first combination at 7ABC down to the corner to table question at 23 and 24: in the section of course between those two points, there were plenty of hills and undulations to deal with, plus the coffin complex, two loops through the water, single questions cleverly situated on cambers or rolling ground that required a change in approach, and a large semicircle that encompassed the open ditch, a big stick pile, and an airy trakehner before another pull up hill. As a result, many riders looked to second guess their ride through the second of the water questions, in which they tackled that sharp downhill slope.

“The last water was such a nice fence in that you’re saying ‘roll on’ — but the amount of people who went to their hand a little bit makes you wonder if, having gone through the intense bit and the rollercoaster of the first water and then coming back up the hill, the horse just needs a bit of reassurance,” Sam says. “Those are the things that you always have to have such an open mind about when you’re riding a course — you need to keep your instincts sharp. There’ll be fences you’re prepared to sit up for, but when you’re riding that piece of ground, you know that the horse has seen it early, he knows where he’s going and what he’s being asked to do, and you don’t need to take back — you can keep on coming. He’s in a good balance and he’s seen it, whereas at other fences you might think you need to keep them together a little bit more.”

Maxime Livio and Api du Libaire navigate the steady pull up to fence 18. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Today’s ratio of time-catchers — seven of the 63 starters, or 11.1% — is probably a strong indicator of what we can expect come September, by Sam’s reckoning: “When going to ten minutes, the intensity reduces — which does make it easier to get the time. But he’s going to throw in a significant hill, and then you’ll have the fitness aspect. You’d hope that championship horses aren’t going to get tired over good ground at ten minutes; the top horses shouldn’t. I think the time we’ve seen today will be quite reflective of what we see on the day, and that’s not dissimilar to Tokyo: it’s very gettable, but a couple of the French combinations picked up a few seconds, and a couple of the Kiwis, and while they weren’t maybe going all out, they weren’t hanging about either. It hangs on the edge — ‘super easy’ or ‘super gettable’ isn’t a fair assessment, but I do think it’ll be the type of championships in which we’ll see ten or slightly more will be getting the time. Some people only want to see two or three, but the problem with designing for that is that you’ll see horses struggling to get home.”

Overall, there was a positive overall feeling about the day’s sport, and Sam agrees: “I still think Giuseppe’s kept a few things up his sleeve, but I don’t think he’ll have seen anything today that’ll make him think ‘I was too easy’, or ‘I was too tough’. I think he’s got it spot-on, and I think he’ll feel like he’s done a good day’s work today.”

Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Live StreamEntries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

“Pratoni in a Word? It’s Like a Magic Carpet”: Catching Up With Ground Jury President Peter Gray

Italy’s Marco Cappai produces his test in front of the ground jury. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the curiosities of this week’s test event at Pratoni is its ground jury appointments: though almost all the officials who’ll run the show when the World Championships rolls around in September are the being put through their paces this week, the ground jury for this test event will differ from the final line-up come WEG week. This is down to a procedural change that was enacted during last year’s Olympic cycle — now, the announced trio can’t be employed in full at an event in the lead-up to the championship.

But there is one man who will cross over between the two events: Canada’s Peter Gray, who helms this week’s team as president of the ground jury. This weekend, he’s joined by Mariana Sciocchetti Campello (ITA) as well as Laure Eslan (FRA). In September, we’ll see him return as a member of the ground jury once again, where he’ll be joined by president Christina Klingspor (SWE) and fellow member Christian Steiner (AUT). EN caught up with him to find out what his role as a ground jury member comprises, how he’s contributing to the development of this year’s World Championships, and what we might expect in September.

This is a return visit to Pratoni for Peter, who was part of the FEI Risk Management Committee years previously — a key milestone in one of his many roles in eventing, which has included acting as Canada’s National Safety Officer. Now, three years after earning his five-star judging licence, he returns in a different role, but one that arguably has just as much influence on the shape the final competition takes. The honour of being selected from the large list of qualified ground jury members certainly isn’t lost on him.

“I come to the role in a unique situation, in that I was an international competitor first, and then I became and international coach and trainer, and now I’m an international dressage rider — so that keeps me sharp for this phase,” Peter explains. “But I’ve also been on organising committees for competitions, so I kind of tick a lot of boxes, but I wonder how I got selected! I’m one of 150 who could be chosen, so I’m very honoured and very excited to be here.”

There’s no nomination process for being selected to judge at a championship — rather, it’s a call-up, as Peter explains: “They look at your track record, and probably ask around and check results from where you’ve been judging, and make sure you know what you’re doing. Every three or four years you’re meant to do a course, and when I was promoted to the five-star three years ago, at that time they said I was the sort of person they want to promote — I don’t know what they say, but I was happy to fit that, and here I am!”

Sara Algotsson-Ostholt rides Chicuelo as part of the Swedish team at Pratoni’s test event. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The role of the ground jury is vast: not only are they the judges for the first phase, they also have the final call on whether horses are accepted into the competition and passed into the final phase, and they have to sign off the cross-country course as fit for purpose, too — though this part, Peter explains, has become less pressurised as the standard of design has continued on an upswing, replete with continued improvements where safety measures are concerned.

“In the past, the role of ground jury was more important for walking the cross country, because it has to be approved by us and we have to, as horsemen, give our stamp of approval of whether the course designer has been fair with the questions he’s asked or if he’s overdone anything,” says Peter. “Sometimes it’s a good check for the course designers, but with the top ones — and we have one of the top ones here — it’s just a formality. They do such a great job.”

Arguably the most intense part of the job is judging the dressage phase, particularly as the standard of performances in this phase continues to rise at a remarkable rate. For Peter, it’s crucial to engage in ‘blind’ judging — disregarding the renown of the rider in front of him and focusing instead on what they present on the day. Because he doesn’t judge in Europe as often as many other ground jury representatives, he’s able to make the best use of a degree of separation from those riders who put in world-beating performances day in and day out — and from those who are just starting to put their names on the map.

“I think I may have raised a few eyebrows yesterday because I judged what I saw,” he explains. “I’m not influenced by their results, or what they’ve done in the past. I don’t judge them a lot, and I think that’s a good thing because I can try to judge what I see with fresh eyes every time.”

It’s just as important to Peter to judge a rider such as Ingrid Klimke with the same exact parameters as one of the younger, less well-known riders he’s seen in the dressage ring this week, because even the slightest bias or lapse in concentration can make an enormous impact on the final results.

“Every phase is so influential now, and the dressage is no longer as influential as it perhaps has been, but these days everything is so competitive — a flying change in the first phase or a time penalty in showjumping can make the difference between winning and losing. I would say I’m one of those people who takes my judging as a real challenge; every time I’m in the box I’m trying to do the very best I can for every rider that comes down the centerline — this morning, I said to my scribe, ‘this could be the winner’, and I was just thinking out loud, but every time someone comes down, I’ve got to be ready in case it is.”

Though he’ll return in September as a member of the ground jury, this week we’re seeing him sitting at C as the president — but what, if anything, is the difference between the roles?

“Well, you have to really remember your test, because you’re the one to ring the bell if they go wrong,” he says with a laugh. “So you have to pay attention. But honestly, it’s really the captain of the team — it’s not a person who has more influence than the others, because we all act as a team, even though the president does have the deciding vote on anything, be it course approval, horses in the horse inspection, and so on. That all ultimately comes down to the presidential vote.”

France’s Nicolas Touzaint, who became the European champion at Pratoni in 2007, returns with Absolute Gold HDC. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Because of the collaborative nature of the role, Peter has sought out opportunities to touch base with his September cohorts.

“I’ve worked with Kiki [Christina Klingspor, president of September’s ground jury] quite a bit in America, and I introduced myself to Christian Steiner, who was in Kentucky at the five-star. I was president of the four-star, so we had dinner. It’s nice to have met him and formed that working relationship,” he says. He’ll get another chance to work with Kiki prior to the World Championships: the pair will both be in situ on the ground jury at Aachen in July, which will act as an important selection trial for many federations. Because of his unique crossover between the test event and the World Championships, though, he’s a major conduit for feedback that will help make this September’s competition the best it possibly can be: “Certainly, it’s all very much in my mind about what’s going to happen in September, and I’m making notes on small things that could be improved, but the list really is small. It’s just hard to imagine how the infrastructure will expand as we go to many more horses and many more people — it’ll be five times as big.”

So far, though, so good: Peter is full of praise for Pratoni as a venue, a common feeling in the ranks on site here in Italy.

“Certainly I’m appreciating the integral parts of the competition that the horses are going through, and I think one thing that stands out is for horses and owners and riders, it’s a very friendly place to be. I think the horses have a really nice feel here; they all seem to be in a good place to be mentally — and how could they not? It seems like a very peaceful part of the world,” he says. “I’m particularly impressed with the course designer, Giuseppe della Chiesa. I haven’t seen any of his courses before, but he’s used the long routes in a very horse-friendly way. Instead of spinning them around in circles and making the long route actually exhausting for a potentially tired horse, he’s done a really good job of making them time-consuming but keeping a lovely flow and making it a very positive experience for the horses. I’m very impressed with that. For those that think it might have a little bit of a straightforward look, I think the terrain at the beginning and some of the questions have challenges that aren’t apparent right away. I think he’s got it bang on, I really do.”

Though this week’s competition is held at CCI4*-S, and thus employs a shorter route than September’s long-format Championships, it’s also a great opportunity for everyone on site to familiarise themselves with Pratoni’s uniquely rolling hills, which create a terrain and stamina challenge that’s above and beyond most events on the FEI calendar.

“I suspect the hills are going to be a real factor come September, though that may not be so apparent this weekend,” says Peter. “I think where some of the more warmblood horses will get away with it this weekend, come September, you’ll want to have your galloper with good endurance. I think also, related to that, something that won’t be completely fatigued on the final day for the jumping. You need a horse that can make the time but still come out fresh the next day. It’ll be a challenge for the selection.”

But while descriptions of the hills and reports of long patches of prolonged sunshine might make Pratoni sound like an event that’ll be hard on horses, it’s also blessed by its location: the ground here remains consistent regardless of how dry or wet the weather is, because it’s composed of volcanic sand – and on a molecular level, it doesn’t clump, become boggy, or harden. The footing feels surprisingly springy underfoot, though Peter puts this better than we can.

“Let me give you a word to describe the ground here: it’s like a magic carpet,” he says with a smile. Roll on Pratoni 2.0, then.

Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Live StreamEntries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Saturday Video from SmartPak: Watch Along with Pratoni’s Test Event Cross-Country

Though today’s CCI4*-S track will be a very different length and test to this September’s World Championships course, the test event and Nations Cup at Pratoni offers riders, chef d’equipes and spectators alike a valuable opportunity to get a taste of the Italian venue — and its unique terrain — before the main event rolls around later on this year. We’re delighted to see the FEI offering the entirety of the competition’s live-stream for free via their YouTube channel, and with some of the best in the world heading out of the start box today — including Ingrid Klimke, who sits first and second after dressage, both of the Prices, and Olympic bronze medallist Andrew Hoy — it promises to be a fascinating, and truly exciting, day of sport. Pour yourself an Aperol Spritz and tune in: the action begins at 10.30 a.m. local time/9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST.

Go Eventing!

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Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Live StreamEntries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Reporter’s Notebook: With Badminton in the Rearview, What Can We Learn?

The three-year wait for another crack at Badminton Horse Trials felt like it took about a decade — but on the other hand, driving back into those hallowed grounds and stepping into its stone stableyard felt so like a homecoming that it was almost as though we’d never left. And what a week it gave us: a hugely popular win, some extraordinary displays of horsemanship and classic cross-country riding, and a packed-out Saturday that proved that eventing certainly isn’t breathing its last just yet.

So much of the week felt like an enormous success, but it would be remiss of us not to treat any major event as an opportunity for reflection and refinement for the future — and to that end, here are some of the things I’ve been ruminating on in the days since. Much of this is opinion, and wholly subjective, but as always, we’d like to keep the dialogue an open one here at EN, and welcome further discussion in the comments.

Laura Collett realises a dream — and cements herself as the sport’s poster girl — at Badminton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A pony novel victory proves it doesn’t happen by magic

Badminton, like the Grand National in jumps racing, always seems to deliver a fairytale result: in its last few iterations alone, we’ve had a Grand Slam winner in Michael Jung, a win on the 37th attempt for post-injury Andrew Nicholson, and first five-star victories aboard unconventional, incredibly gutsy little mares for Jonelle Price and Piggy March. This year, Laura Collett went into the event as the statistical favourite, but that doesn’t make her pillar-to-post victory any less of a pony novel come to life.

I’m always cautious about leading a story with details of a rider’s previous injuries, because our sport’s emphasis on toughness has ramifications: when we value toughness as a quality above all others, there’s a very real risk that equestrians will feel pressurised to swallow down their pain and battle through it stoically, and whether that’s physical pain or mental health issues, avoiding the hard truth for fear of looking weak does circle back around eventually.

For this reason, I chose to focus my attentions in my final report on Laura’s faith and tenacity in producing a horse who, by dint of his exceptional talent, had to make all his necessary green errors in the spotlight. But Laura’s journey back from a horrific accident in 2013 does warrant inclusion in our coverage of her, not least because she’s been so open in explaining how she had to take steps back and work sensibly through her recovery.

Though her fall in a one-day at Tweseldown left her with a laundry list of injuries, including a punctured lung, a lacerated liver, kidney damage, broken ribs, and necessitated several resuscitations and an emergency tracheotomy, it was the loss of vision in her right eye, which came about after a tiny fragment of her shoulder bone travelled through her bloodstream and damaged her optic nerve, which would have taken the largest toll on her return to the top of the sport. In the aftermath of her recovery, she spent plenty of time jumping just those horses she could most rely on, practicing the basics and learning how to see a stride all over again without the benefit of depth perception.

For Laura, leaving the start box with the knowledge of Nicola Wilson’s fall earlier in the day would have been an enormous exercise in compartmentalisation, because the worst thing anyone can do is ride afraid: defensive riding so often becomes backwards riding, which saps momentum and can lead to catastrophic mistakes. Laura, like all the rest of us, will undoubtedly have been hugely concerned for her compatriot, who she’s ridden alongside at events for years and who is such a cherished part of our community for her easy smile and ready kindness.

But when Laura left the start box, it was a masterclass in focus; she looked at every point as though the only thing on her mind was the next stride, the next fence, and the next minute marker. That focus — and the effort she’s put in in the gym and riding racehorses — paid dividends when London 52 hung a leg jumping into the Quarry at fence 4A, twisting dramatically in the air and looking, for one aching moment, as though he might come down. A moment like that, particularly early on in the course, is a test of resolve as much as it is of riding skill, and Laura never faltered: her eyes were up, her attention was wholly on her line and the next fence, and as a result, her horse was able to regain his balance without Laura losing hers, which saved the day.

That Laura has become an expert in shutting out the noise and focusing on her job is no surprise, when you consider what she’s overcome on her path to the top. Not only did she have to battle through the aftermath of her fall, she also made her first forays into Senior competition off the back of a hugely successful career in the youth divisions, which comes with the weight of public expectation. She then had the same sort of pressure in a slightly different way when the prodigal London 52 made such a strong start to his four-star career, then had a summer full of learning experiences while the eventing world looked on.

But beyond that, she’s also had to face horrific public scrutiny when her connection to the racing world meant that the Gold Cup winner Kauto Star joined her string in his ‘retirement’. Racing’s viewers are largely very different from those who follow eventing, and they’re louder in their pushback, too — you only have to hop on Twitter after a reasonably big race to spot thousands of tweets haranguing jockeys and trainers, often paired with threats and extraordinary personal remarks. Throughout her partnership with Kauto Star, who she was training for the dressage ring, Laura was on the receiving end of this kind of negativity, and when the gelding died at the age of 15 following an accident in the field, the pushback quadrupled and expanded into death threats and a rumour mill that worked overtime, crafting false stories about the circumstances of the horse’s passing.

It would be enough to make most people want to delete social media forever, step away from horses, and go find another way to fill one’s time, but Laura pushed through what must have been one of the hardest periods in her life and has come out the other side a bastion of mental strength. No one should have to go through what she has, but it makes every good thing that happens to her feel that much more deserved, and she’s continued to be hugely generous with the public, using her social media to let fans get closer to her, her horses, and the work she does to be as good as she is.

She may have spent her youth dreaming of being Pippa Funnell winning at Badminton, but now, she’s the person that young riders watching on will dream of being. Six years to the day after London 52 arrived on her yard, she became the Badminton champion, wearing the same back number that Lucinda Green wore when she won her first Badminton. It feels a bit like kismet, and we’re lucky to have her as a role model for the next generation.

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Every event is an opportunity for improvement

I think we all felt a little rusty in our various roles at Badminton, even with two years of other events behind us -– I certainly felt like I’d picked up a frustrating amount of time faults through the week, and at 11pm in the media centre each night, I wondered how on earth I’d finished by 7 and still had time for a quick outfit change before the cocktail party in previous years. But there were a couple of notable incidents on Saturday that really brought to light how finely tuned our systems need to be to ensure that judgment calls are quick, fair, and made with the welfare of the horse at the forefront.

The first, and most obvious, of those is the visually horrifying fall that France’s Maxime Livio took at the final fence, in front of a grandstand packed with people. I don’t think there was a soul among us who didn’t think we’d just watched a horse die as Vitorio du Montet crumpled on landing, made a fitful attempt to rise, and then lay still on the ground. The cheer when he finally rose, a good fifteen minutes later, was among the loudest of the day, and he was escorted from the arena with his tearful groom lavishing him with kisses, while Maxime -– a very good horseman in his own right -– followed on, looking stricken by what could have been.

I hadn’t seen the pair’s previous fences, nor their entry into the arena, so was relying on the word of others to patch the situation together until I could rewatch the available footage later on. When I did, I saw a rider trying to nurse his tired horse the last number of meters home. Was this the right call? In hindsight, no –- but a rider’s brain works very differently when riding across the country at this level than it does in a less pressurised situation, and when the end is so close, it’s easy to see why a rider might take their foot off the gas and just try to get there. We’ve seen it happen previously without a horse fall, and so without any negative press, but it’s a stark reminder of our own responsibilities when it goes wrong.

I’d like to see stewards and fence judges who are prepared to make the call themselves, from a non-adrenalised place, and stick to their resolve. While it’s not at all an easy job, it is a very important one to get right — and though making the decision isn’t as objective as, say, spotting blood and penalising it, it would be worthwhile to ensure that there’s a set of standards that those important folks on the ground can adhere to when analysing whether to make a call. This, perhaps, could include creating an ‘evaluation point’, perhaps at the final or penultimate minute marker, or the nearest available stopping point, wherein they can decide whether the horse looks capable of completing the course safely, or whether it appears to be on the brink of exhaustion. It’ll never be an easy call, and no doubt any such decision will be met with pushback, but if it stops us from seeing another similar and avoidable incident — and eases the risk on even just one horse — it’ll be worthwhile.

Earlier in the day, there was some confusion regarding scoring, which was no doubt hindered in part by the crashing fall of Nicola Wilson, which rightly deployed most of the stewards, technical delegates, and resources to the scene in order to ensure she was appropriately removed from harm and stabilised. Furthermore, they needed to make the call to remove the fence that had caused the fall, which isn’t an easy call to make and requires some fairly extensive deliberation.

All this, though, meant that Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs were held on course for half an hour without any word as to their scoring at fence 4C, the brush element of the Quarry, where they’d had a very near miss and certainly looked to have flouted the contentious flag rule. They were ultimately restarted, allowed to finish the course, and subsequently eliminated –- though this, as it transpired, was an elimination for a perceived horse fall, not for falling foul of the flags. Upon an appeal, the decision was swiftly reversed: the horse’s shoulders hadn’t touched the ground, and the flag situation was deemed acceptable, but if it hadn’t been, it would have been a really tricky situation: allowing a horse to continue on over a course of this intensity for effectively no functional reason is a welfare concern.

Further to that, the incident proved that even with its most recent rewrites, the flag rule is still causing confusion: Oliver’s horse demonstrably passed through the flag with both shoulders, but the hind end scrambled along the side of the fence after having taken a great leap about a stride out and putting back down before reaching the jump itself. The flag rule currently works in favour of a horse whose hind end has cleared the height of the solid part of the fence, which Swallow Springs absolutely did, but perhaps further clarity in the wording is required so that the hind end effort has to happen over, or alongside, the fence itself, rather than a stride or half-stride outside in the actual jumpable realm of the fence.

I have, of course, the utmost respect for the officials on the ground at these big events, who have a multifaceted, intense, and often enormously subjective job on their hands, and ultimately, I know we’re all on the same page where emphasising welfare — and those all-important optics — are concerned. With Badminton behind us, though, I wonder if it’s time to tighten the parameters of judging. There’ll never be total objectivity, but when it pertains to safety, we need to minimise subjectivity as much as possible.

It’s all about the horses, at the end of the day. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

And relax…

One of the most fascinating takeaways of the week was how many elite-level riders have made a conscious decision to back off their horses’ schooling regime. Laura Collett told us that she didn’t school at all at Badminton ahead of her dressage test, choosing instead to focus on hacking, lunging, and pole work, which kept her horse relaxed and happy ahead of his impressive test.

Ros Canter, too, has scaled back the workload of her World Champion, Allstar B, who now spends most of his time out hacking and will only school during those hacking sessions. Ros told us she’d found out an enormous amount about her longtime partner through this regime change, and the difference showed in how he worked, too –- he’s come out this season looking fresh and obviously relishing his work at the ripe age of seventeen. This emphasis on doing a bit less was repeated in different ways by a number of riders through the week, and I’ve heard it from several of the riders I’ve chatted to at Pratoni this week, too.

It feels, in a way, like a natural progression of the pandemic: for two years, the ‘goal’ events have been limited, and so there’s been so much time to work on the marginal gains in the ring at home, particularly in 2020. The line between putting in the hours required and overtraining is very fine, though, and horses can suffer burnout just as people can. We’ve come to a bit of a universal reckoning with ourselves in terms of how much we pile on our own plates, and often, it feels like the ‘boss babe’ burnout culture is on its way out, well beyond the scope of the equestrian industry. It’s interesting — and heartening — to see it reach our little world, too, and I think all of us could learn a lot from the riders who are brave enough to trust in the foundations they’ve laid and take a major step back. At the end of the day, a horse-first approach can never go too far wrong.

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Striking the balance in course design

Captain Mark Phillips made a salient point in his column in Horse&Hound this week: one of the great wonders of eventing,’ he wrote, ‘is that its courses are so different.’ Badminton and Burghley are often roundly praised for being the most ‘proper’ of the seven five-star events in the world, though it’s not a designation I’m wholly in agreement with.

Each event has its own flavour, and its own challenge: Burghley is dimensionally enormous, with tough terrain that suits a blood horse with endless gallop; Luhmühlen is smaller — though it wasn’t always — but delivers an optical challenge through its winding forested lanes that makes it immensely difficult to find the right rhythm and catch the time. Pau, with its twisty track and achingly skinny narrow fences, is a real test of line and control, while Kentucky plays with technicality in a clever way, interspersing fiddly lines with long gallops that dare you to let your horse switch his brain off. Maryland, as a new event, is still finding its identity and Adelaide, which is a city event with an often relatively inexperienced field, serves rather a different purpose, but each is its own unique entity.

Badminton sits in a sweet spot that veers towards the Burghley trend in some ways, though historically it hasn’t been a site blessed with much terrain. This year, Eric veered away from the colt pond –- or ‘Guiseppe’s pond’ –- area of the course and worked on further developing the Vicarage ditch line, finding sneaky little mounds and hills that he could site his fences on to up the ante around the course. That Vicarage ditch area, which effectively stretched from the broken bridge at 13 to the solar panels at 24ABCD, walked and rode quite similarly to Pierre Michelet’s Pau tracks: you needed to come into the heart of the questions already up on the clock, because those middle minutes would be slow ones, punctuated by an almost constant set-up and without any chance to simply run and jump and cover the ground at upwards of 700mpm. Elsewhere on course, Eric allowed for those kinds of questions, using max-dimension fences to get horses well up in the air.

One thing I heard and saw repeated often through the week was delight, largely from social media commentors, that Eric hadn’t relied on skinnies and a glut of accuracy questions to add influence to his course. This is hardly a new line of conversation: every time I publish course previews, I see a handful of people – or more – in the comments, despairing at what they perceive as the overuse of these fences and the loss of ‘real’ cross-country courses.

But herein lies the course designer’s conundrum. Use skinnies and technical lines and you’re accused of creating a go-kart track that tricks horses; use big fences and natural terrain and you’re more likely to see very tired horses at the end of the course. Following Badminton’s cross-country, many commenters complained that they had seen too many horse falls and not enough of the ‘right’ kind of penalties — that is, run-outs, refusals, and harmless rider falls. Indeed, Badminton’s 62.5% clear rate and 74% completion rate was significantly higher than in previous years, while its horse fall rate — 9% — was on a par with tough 2014 and 2017.

We saw a lot of horses on the floor on Saturday –- more than you, I, or Eric Winter would have liked –- and whether that’s a result of a lack of preparation, a course that overwrought tired or horses, or simply bad luck or rider error, is by the by. The crux of the matter is this: skinnies largely exert influence through run-outs, and big, straightforward fences exert influence through falls, at worst, or through time lost in the set-up, at best. Of course, that’s an enormous oversimplification –- course design, particularly at the top levels, is far more technical and complex than simply sticking some fences in a field and deliberating over whether to shave a few feet off their width -– and credit must be given to Eric for a track that hit the mark in a lot of ways.

But following any major competition, we all must learn something useful that helps to hone the themes for next time, though I suspect Eric will be scratching his head trying to find something more technically complex to do with the Vicarage ditch area of the course. The answer, insofar as I can see it, is to look at those fences that caused horse falls — almost all of which came at the tail end of the course — and replace them with questions such as shoulder brushes, which will open the door for safe influence. The leaderboard can still be changed dramatically on cross-country day by a late 20 penalties — we don’t need to see a potentially catastrophic fall for that to happen, and I hope we see a ratio shift between run-outs and refusals vs horse falls next year.

Bubby Upton pilots Cola III around Thoresby’s new spring CCI4*-S fixture. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Is it time to beef up our spring events?

Let’s talk about preparedness for a moment, because this year’s Badminton was unique in that respect. Though we have had plenty of good eventing throughout the pandemic, helped along by the heroic efforts of ‘pop-up’ fixtures such as Bicton’s Bramham and Burghley replacements, we haven’t really seen anything quite like this since Burghley in 2019. The five-stars that have run have been a very different kind -– dimensionally smaller, more technical, or simply not as intense, while our championships are run at least half a level below five-star anyway. That meant that the jumps at Badminton really did look colossal, and it meant that horses and riders alike had to work jolly hard to get their eye in to jump them.

To that end, we really need to take a closer look at our spring season of prep events in the UK. The last time Badminton ran we still had the CCI4*-S fixture at Belton, which was traditionally the season opener for the level and neatly interspersed good galloping stretches with big, wide jumps and just the right amount of technical questions. A good run there often meant that riders could nurse their horses through the rest of their lead-up, without feeling like they’d be forced to get in a late run at Burnham Market, where the tricky Norfolk ground can really drill horses’ legs in a dry spring.

This year’s inaugural replacement fixture at Thoresby Park brought many things to like to the table: it was quite technical from early on in the course, which was a useful exercise for many fresh horses, and its atmosphere, layout, and rather exciting country manor made it a wonderful spot for spectators. It’s slightly more limited on space than Belton, and so it’s important that we all keep our expectations realistic, but I do hope we see it return next year with a slightly new-look course that takes into account how much horses and riders need to knock the rust off over some really dimensionally imposing jumps. Otherwise, Badminton starts to look like very hard work indeed, and I’m not sure that’s the straight path to safety.

We also need to be conscious of the difference between being qualified and being ready for the step up to five-star, though I was continually impressed by the efforts of debutants through the week: 20-year-old Alice Casburn, who stepped up to five-star at Pau last year, looked a picture all week, and I thought Libby Seed did a superb job piloting her first-timer, Heartbreaker Star Quality, around a tough track for a move-up. Ros Canter delivered a masterclass in piloting a first-time five-star horse with second-placed Lordships Graffalo, and we all fell a little bit in love with Ugo Provasi’s tiny, gutsy Shadd’OC, whose little legs found very French forward distances through all the lines.

But that doesn’t negate the need for a sensible look at the events riders use for qualifications. The more seasoned top-level riders know that they need to target bigger four-star tracks, such as Bramham or last year’s pop-up CCI4*-L at Bicton, in order to adequately prepare for this level, but it’s all too easy to fall into an easy qualification route — and a rider who qualified at, say, Burnham Market’s pop-up CCI4*-L in 2020 would have been in for a shock when tackling a subsequent move-up. In my head, I’ve begun to classify four-stars as ‘A-grade’ — the Bramhams, for example, which are top-end four-stars that would be a great assessment of ability ahead of a five-star — and ‘B-grade’, which are slightly softer and ideal for early, educational runs. I wonder if the time has come for such a system to be considered on the qualification pathway.

The mixed zone in action. Photo courtesy of Catherine Austen.

The magic of the mixed zone

I’ve never felt competitive as a journalist, perhaps to my own detriment — I’m always very keen to improve upon my own previous work, and I try to make every day a learning opportunity in some capacity, but I’ve never felt that being a successful equestrian journalist means bumping off the competition in any way. There’s room for everyone at the table, and I hope that anyone who has any interest in equestrian media feels they’re welcome to come and join our little family — whether they’re a journalist, a photographer, a podcaster, a broadcaster, or however they choose to document the sport, we can only benefit from further exposure and, most crucially, different perspectives.

A lot of the time, equestrian journalism is an oddly solitary activity: most events don’t have a mixed zone area, wherein riders are ferried to chat to journalists en masse after their rides, so we’re usually left to our own devices to grab them after they dismount, or track them down in the lorry park (my own personal hell, for what it’s worth, is when a rider texts me that their lorry is ‘the grey one’, and I then accidentally stumble into 35 grey lorries before finding the right one).

Through the pandemic, social distancing made mixed zones a relic of the past, and so returning to one at Badminton was a tonic — not just because it’s considerably easier for us all when the riders are brought to us, but because our work starts to feel collaborative in a unique way. We’re all part of the same conversation, and working with the same quotes, and one of my favourite parts of a big event like Badminton is taking the time on the Monday after to read, watch, and listen to, all the different angles that my colleagues have chosen to tell the same story. The creativity and breadth of knowledge and experience is always inspiring, and there’s nothing that beats the laughs we have while crammed together in a tent, providing our own commentary for what we see on screen and swapping facts and intel about horses and riders. I think it’s been hard for us all to relight our fire after a couple of tricky years, but I’ve come out of Badminton a bit battered, a bit bruised, but newly reinvigorated for getting to work alongside the people I admire so much each day. So thanks for that, chaps.

Badminton Links: WebsiteEN’s Ultimate Guide, The Form GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

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Previewing Pratoni: Your First Look at the Dressage Set-Up

New Zealand’s Tim Price and Falco, winners of last year’s Pau CCI5*, deliver their first-phase performance. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s tricky, sometimes, to remember that this week isn’t just about scoping out the facilities and set-up for this September’s World Championships in Pratoni, south-east of Rome — it’s also a busy Nations Cup CCIO4*-S. Today, the nine teams came forward to produce their dressage tests, giving us all a chance to see the first of the week’s competition locations in action.

Though many of the officials this week are the same ones who’ll fill those roles come September, including Technical Delegate Marcin Konarski, Chief Steward Nicki Kelly, cross-country course designer Guiseppe della Chiesa and showjumping designer Uliano Vezzani, as well as a full roster of assistant stewards, there’s one pertinent difference in the line-up: the ground jury. This week, we’ve got a ground jury that’s made up of president Peter Gray (CAN) and members Marina Sciocchetti (ITA) and Laure Eslan (FRA), but in September, we’ll see Christina Klingspor (SWE) step into the president role at C, joined by Peter Gray (CAN) and Christian Steiner (AUT). That’s part and parcel of a reasonably new FEI ruling: in order to avoid other events bringing in the championship ground jury as a draw for competitors, thus limiting the available workload for other ground jury representatives, a championship ground jury cannot work together in the period between their selection and the championship itself.

That is, of course, far from the only difference between the two events: this week’s competition is a CCI4*-S, though will feature the showjumping on the final day as in a long-format competition. That means that the dressage test is different — this week, we’re using CCI4* B, while September’s competition will use the CCI5* B test that we saw at both Kentucky and Badminton — as are both the cross-country and showjumping challenges. We’ll be taking a closer look at this week’s course — and finding out from designer Giuseppe what we can expect to change this September, wherein the course will be significantly longer and at championship level, which is effectively a ‘four and a half star’ track — and we’ll be looking at a bigger showjumping course on grass at the World Championships, too.

But first of all, let’s focus on the dressage: while it may not be the same test, nor the same full ground jury, today’s Nations Cup face-off has been a great opportunity to test out the 100x62m surfaced main arena, called the Merano arena. Situated in a beautiful sun trap and surrounded by the Roman hills so characteristic of Pratoni, it’s already a stunning spot to watch a day’s sport unfold — even without the extensive grandstands, VIP spectator area, and arena fencing we can expect to see when we return. It’s also a super chance for the nine assembled teams to practice some team tactics, particularly as there’s no rule to say that a horse that’s done the test event is ineligible for the World Championships. Perhaps unsurprisingly, that’s meant that the German team pathfinder and reigning Pratoni CCI4*-S champion, Ingrid Klimke, has taken an easy day one lead on 24.8 with her superb SAP Hale Bob OLD, a horse we could well see repeat the feat in September.

Though world-beaters Great Britain are conspicuous in their absence, as is the USA, we’re seeing many other nations bring forward some serious heavy-hitters – Germany, who currently lead the way after the culmination of the team tests, is filled with names who will certainly be aiming for the WEG, with Andreas Dibowski and FRH CorridaAnna Siemer and FRH Butts Avondale, and Boekelo winners Sophie Leube and J’Adore Moi joining Ingrid on the team. With three of the four team riders sitting in the top ten after this first phase, it looks like the country is well on track to aim for a return to former glories come September, particularly as Olympic gold medallist Julia Krajewski and Michael Jung aren’t here this week.

Here’s a look at how the leaderboards stand after the first, team-oriented day of dressage:

The individual leaderboard at the end of day one.

The Nations Cup team standings after the first phase of dressage.

So what have we learned so far? Mostly that even in its semi-constructed state, there’s plenty for fit, sharp competition horses to spook at — and even with a different ground jury, the standards here are high. The dressage arena is well-placed in close proximity to the stabling, and the ten-minute ring and warm-up arena sit opposite the competition arena, which can make for quite a busy environment if you happen to be sitting on an unfocused horse, as it’ll be able to see other horses working in and team representatives bustling around. This will be helped somewhat by the construction of an arena fence — this week, the arena is simply roped — and as I write, a number of other sand schooling arenas are being built further away from the main arena, which will help to reduce horse traffic in the championship itself. There’ll also be a large grandstand along one long side of this main arena, while the grass showjumping arena next to it will be hemmed in on three sides by grandstands.

For now, here’s a visual look at the action in the Merano arena — we’ll be back with plenty more info from the ground here at Pratoni, including visitor guides, advice on ticketing, a look at the final layout for the site in September, and much, much more. Until then: vai a fare eventi!

Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Live Stream, Entries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

 

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Yep, We’re Still Obsessing Over Badminton

Okay, okay, I might be at Pratoni and well into the throes of the WEG test event (and all its uniformed eye candy), but I left a little part of my heart behind in Gloucestershire, and I know I’m not the only one. Reliving all the emotions of the final day has certainly been made easier with this super round-up video from Horse&Hound, helmed by the excellent Lucy Elder. Yes, I’ve cried all over again watching Laura Collett’s shaky-voiced interview just after her round and no, I’m not at all embarrassed to admit that on the internet. Just 51 weeks ’til the next one!

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A Peek at Pratoni: Go Behind the Scenes at the First Horse Inspection

Austria’s Harald Ambros dons his finest lederhosen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Talk about the whirlwind of the eventing season: after the last two weeks of five-star double-headers at Kentucky and Badminton, we’ve nipped straight down to Italy for the test event for the Pratoni World Championships this September. Though the Championships will be a long-format competition as usual, with CCI5* dressage and showjumping and a ‘four-and-a-half star’ cross-country, this week’s test event is a CCIO4*-S, and is being used to fine-tune the infrastructure, the course, and the set-up ahead of the real deal in a few months. With 12 nations competing, plus further national representatives here on the ground, it’s certainly being taken very seriously, and it’s offering us all a unique opportunity to get to know this beautiful, hilly venue.

I’m not going to be covering this week’s competition in quite the same in-depth manner you’re used to, though rest assured, there’ll be plenty of updates from the event itself, which is also a Nations Cup leg and the Italian National Championships. Instead, my aim on the ground here in Italy is to get a sense of what we can all expect come September: the terrain, the theme of the course design, the measures in place to deal with the (considerable) heat, how different nations are preparing, and how you can make the most of your trip as a spectator. I’ll also be chatting to some up-and-coming riders from a variety of nations so we can follow along with their own respective journeys to — hopefully — their big WEG call-up in a few months’ time. But despite that, I couldn’t resist going to this afternoon’s horse inspection, which is held in a bit of a basin between the schooling arenas and the main arena. The verdict so far? It’s very, very hot, and there are a lot of seriously fresh horses here — but they’ll need to be, because this venue is all about the hills.

Here’s a little peak at what went down in that first horse inspection, which saw all competitors accepted into the competition and just one pair — Sweden’s Malin Josefsson and Golden Midnight — held. You can check out the full entry list here. You’ll also be able to take a closer look at the venue on our Instagram, where we’re storying the experience here all week — and we’d love to know your burning questions about Pratoni, too.

Pratoni 2022 Test Event: Website, Live Scoring, Entries, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds

 

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I feel like I’ve just about recovered from Badminton, wherein a tight-knit group of us slightly bonkers equestrian media folks kept the press centre security chaps in business until the wee hours of the morning most nights. (It’s good timing, too, as I’m just packing up my cameras to catch a flight to Rome in a couple of hours, from where I’ll be going on to the WEG test event in Pratoni!) There have been little glimpses of normality over the past couple of years — last year’s European Championships felt very nearly there, as did Pau and Le Lion with the return of their enthusiastic crowds. But nothing’s felt quite as in-your-face real as Badminton did, with its sell-out crowds, its sea of hugs and tears, and with the elbow-to-elbow scrum of the mixed zone for media and athletes. I hugged just about everyone I encountered, for good measure — social distancing be damned. It’s time to get back to swapping our germs merrily and generously.

Events Opening Today: Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T.Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. IStable View Summer H.T.Midsouth Pony Club H.T.Inavale Farm HTValinor Farm H.T.

Events Closing Today: Spring Coconino H.T.Flora Lea Spring H.T.Willow Draw Charity ShowMystic Valley Hunt Club H.T.The Spring Event at WoodsideMay-Daze at the Park H.T.Equestrians’ Institute H.T.VHT International & H.T.Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trial

News & Notes from Around the World:

“One of the wonders of eventing is the different character of the cross-country courses around the world.” Captain Mark Phillips’s latest column for H&H dives into the differences between the two, recaps a dramatic renewal of Badminton, and recounts what riders got right — and what they got wrong — at the event. [He just has a lot of feelings, okay]

Ever wondered what it’s like to train with the pros in the heart of Ocala’s horse country? Writer Justine Griffin headed to the sunshine state to find out for herself. [Here’s what she learned]

There wasn’t just drama on the cross-country course at Badminton — it all kicked off in the trade-stands, too. Someone has stolen a hare statue worth £19,000, in what must be the most complicated horse show robbery since that time someone nicked a gold toilet from Blenheim. [Is that a rabbit in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?]

In a rather more grim bit of news, it turns out that the donkey skin trade is doing roaring business. A new report has revealed an extensive organised crime network devoted to trafficking the skins globally, and apparently, nearly 5 million donkeys are falling victim to the trade every year. [This isn’t nice reading, but it’s important reading]

Listen to This: One of Badminton’s great success stories was that of Tamie Smith, who overcame a tough Kentucky to deliver three impeccable phases with Mai Baum, including arguably the most stylish showjumping round of the day on Sunday. Get to know her a little bit better in this episode of the Eventing Podcast.

Video Break:

Meet Fiona Kashel, who made her Badminton debut last week with Creevagh Silver de Haar:

“I Thought I’d Wake Up and It Would All Have Been a Dream”: Laura Collett Sets Record Badminton Victory

A childhood dream come true: Laura Collett wins Badminton. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I literally didn’t sleep last night because I thought I’d wake up and it would all have been a dream — and now I don’t want to sleep for a week,” laughs a breathless Laura Collett, just moments after cantering out of the arena on the wave of tumultuous cheers that followed her foot-perfect clear round with London 52. Though the rider had entered the arena with a healthy buffer of five penalties in hand over her closest competitor, she never looked close to needing them, and the pair ultimately added just 0.4 time to finish on 21.4 — the lowest-ever finishing score at Badminton.

But although their round looked wholly polished and — dare we say it? — easy to the outside eye, Laura was quick to give all the credit to the thirteen-year-old Holsteiner (Landos x Quinar Z), who easily hunted through the distances when Laura couldn’t spot them.

“I could not see anything and he just went higher and higher and higher,” she says. “Piggy said to me earlier in the stables, ‘look, you wouldn’t swap your horse for any other horse in the field, would you?’ and I said ‘no, but I’d swap the rider!'”

Course designer Kelvin Bywater had built a course for today’s finale that many riders dubbed the toughest they’d seen at this event: though it didn’t have a treble combination, it did feature a back-to-back double of doubles at 6AB and 7AB, and a number of very big, very square oxers that felt much closer to the maximum dimensions than previous fences on Badminton’s final day ever have. It certainly caused its fair share of issues, too: just six riders delivered clears in this morning’s session, which was made up of the 36 competitors outside of the top twenty, and just one — Felicity Collins with RSH Contend OR — did so without adding time penalties. Even more nerve-wrackingly, many recorded faults at the first fence, which came up fast out of the corner and didn’t inspire many particularly elegant efforts. By the time we’d reached the thick of the top twenty, wherein just seven pairs jumped clear, Laura was rather hoping for a bit more than a five-penalty buffer.

“I was thinking I would actually rather Ros had a fence down so I’d have two fences in hand, but that’s just greedy,” she laughs. “It’s not often you get to go into the lead at Badminton with a fence in hand, and at the end of the day, the horse is phenomenal. He just jumped better and better and better, and so I remember that I was sat on an unbelievable jumper. He showed that today.”

 

London 52 produces the goods in his characteristic consistency to lead from pillar to post with Laura Collett. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

 

Laura and Dan, who led this week from start to finish, have felt almost unconquerable over the last couple of years: they won Boekelo in 2019, followed it up with a first five-star victory at Pau in 2020, and then helped the British team to gold at Tokyo last year, to say nothing of the four-star shorts they’ve left quaking in their dust along the way. But it wasn’t all that long ago at all that London 52 had no shortage of detractors, who felt that after green wobbles at Bramham, followed by a run-out while leading at Aachen and a fall in the final water at the European Champs, all in 2019, the horse may not truly be up to the job after all. For Laura, it was an uphill battle to combat the extraordinary pressure of expectation — expectation that she’d get him to come right, but also plenty of expectation that it might never happen at all — but she never lost her faith in the gelding, who had only begun his eventing career just a couple of years prior.

The turning point came, quite pertinently, at Boekelo in 2019, where the pair won the CCIO4*-L in front of one of eventing’s most notoriously boisterous crowds. Laura knew she needed to find a way to end the gelding’s tricky season on a confidence-boosting high, and remembered how much he’d enjoyed his experience there the year prior, when he finished second on his CCI4*-L debut. Returning to the loud, crowded, and jolly venue he’d felt so comfortable at, and a course he knew he could eat up, felt like the magic button — and it was. After his win there, he returned to England a changed man, arriving for his 2020 season with a healthy dose of arrogance that allowed him the self-belief to begin fighting for the tough stuff. Since then, it’s been up, up, and up some more — and this week’s sell-out crowds helped to set the perfect stage to pick him up and let him believe he’s the very best horse in the world. For Laura, that’s always been a given.

“He is just exceptional, and he’s truly shown the world everything that I’ve always believed of him. It’s a long distant memory, all those ups and downs in 2019, but it’s all been worth it,” she says. “I’ve had a whirlwind eighteen months, from him winning my first five-star in 2020 to him going to Tokyo and winning an Olympic gold medal to coming here and winning my first Badminton. There are no words; he’s the horse of a lifetime.”

There’s no doubt at all that tough, gutsy Laura, with her ineffable dedication to her horse and her triumphs against adversity, is the pony novel hero a million young riders have been dreaming of — and she knows all too well how looking up to those icons of the sport can fuel the adventure of a lifetime.

“It’s 100% a childhood dream — I remember coming here on my auntie’s shoulders to watch cross-country,” she says. “I remember dreaming of being Pippa Funnell winning at Badminton — and I can’t believe I’m now me winning at Badminton.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo begin their pathway to a championship debut that feels inevitable. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Though her first jumping round of the afternoon with her World Champion Allstar B didn’t go quite to plan, Ros Canter put her three rails behind her to return to the ring fresh and focused with the rising ten-year-old Lordships Graffalo, who was jumping for a chance at a podium placing after Oliver Townend knocked a rail while jumping out of order with Ballaghmor Class. And in today’s challenge, he did what he’s done throughout his five-star debut this week: he looked around, sized up the occasion, and rose to it. His clear round ensured the pair would finish on their dressage score of 26, earning them second place and confirming the young horse’s position as one of Great Britain’s most exciting Paris prospects.

“He’s an amazing horse, and I’ve always thought that of him, but at the start of the week I wondered if it was the right decision to even bring him here,” says Ros, who moved the gelding up to four-star at the tail end of 2020 and recorded wins in CCI4*-S classes at Aston-le-Walls and Blair Castle, plus second place finishes in CCI4*-L classes at Bicton and Blenheim within the last year. Still, the rider initially felt that this enormous step up — and ‘Walter’s’ first introduction to significant crowds — might all overface him.

“On Tuesday I went for a hack and his eyes were everywhere; he’d never seen anything like this before, but he settled into it and I really think he’s had a wonderful week. He’s very laid-back and he’s enjoyed every part of it, including the prizegiving. I think he’s really rather pleased with himself!”

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs take third place. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I keep knocking at the door — this is the third time at Badminton on the bounce that we’ve had two in the top six,” says Oliver Townend, who finished third with Swallow Springs and fifth with Kentucky and Burghley winner Ballaghmor Class after taking a rail with each. “The consistency is there, so I’ll just keep turning up and hopefully I’ll get a turn again soon. The horses are very professional, special horses.”

This makes a seventh five-star run for Ballaghmor Class, who has never finished below fifth place at the level and very nearly won in 2019, ultimately losing by one time penalty in the final phase that year — but it was the turn of his new stablemate, the former Andrew Nicholson ride Swallow Springs, to take the spotlight out of Oliver’s line-up. Their podium placing came after a tricky cross-country round yesterday, in which they very nearly fell at the C element of the Quarry early on course, were held for half an hour, and then completed inside the time before being retroactively eliminated for the near-miss. An appeal saw the decision quickly reversed and their placing reinstated, and the gelding looked no worse for wear in today’s horse inspection or final phase.

“Andrew’s obviously done a great job producing the horse,” says Oliver, “but when you ride Andrew Nicolson’s horses, sometimes they make you look like Andrew Nicholson! Especially after coming out of the Quarry — I’m now the new Mr Stickability! But he’s a good horse and a professional, and I’ve been riding on and off for Andrew for twenty years now — I used to ride Mr Smiffy at home. We’ve known each other a long time, and he’s done an amazing job producing this horse.”

Piggy March finds another level of depth to Vanir Kamira’s extraordinary well of try in her return to Badminton. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Though one rail fell in her round, you might have thought Piggy March had won Badminton for the second time in a row with 2019 champion Vanir Kamira, purely based on the buoyant joy that radiated off her as she crossed the finish.

“It’s probably the best she’s ever jumped, even though there was a pole,” she says. “I’m just over the moon; I felt like I left quite a lot out there yesterday. I was down on the clock for three minutes and I felt like I rode very hard for the majority of the course, and she left her heart out there — she gave everything. So I was just a little bit worried today, and I don’t want to expect things of her, because of what she’s done for me and her age.”

Though many riders might have been disheartened by feeling their horse flop over a small warm-up fence, which Vanir Kamira did while preparing for today’s round, the stumbling effort actually proved a great sharpener ahead of their performance in the ring.

“It was the best thing that she did,” says Piggy, “but then she went in there and [jumped like that]. That’s sort of been her character — just when you think there’s absolutely no way, she just has something in her that tells me to do one straightaway, and says ‘I’m here, mum, I’m here with you.’ It’s just brilliant, and it’s just so nice to come away from the week with such a special buzz.”

The pair finished fourth, adding their rail today and just 0.4 time yesterday to their first-phase score of 25.7 to finish a steady climb that saw them move up a spot with each phase. Even with the finale of a five-star to contend with, Piggy’s thoughts were never far from her great friend Nicola Wilson, who is reportedly in stable condition and conscious after a crashing fall on yesterday’s course: “She’s a great girl, a great competitor, a great friend, and we just want her back as soon as possible. Our thoughts are with her.”

David Doel earns a much-deserved moment in the spotlight with Galileo Nieuwmoed. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

When we walked the Badminton course a number of weeks ago with designer Eric Winter, he told EN that his aim had been to build a track that would make it worthwhile to tack up for cross-country even if you were still, say, way down the leaderboard in 60th position after dressage. It certainly seems that showjumping designer Kelvin Bywater was reading from the same hymnbook, because the influence of today’s track allowed three riders who were well down in the mid- to bottom-half of the pack after dressage to continue their climb into the top ten by the end of the week.

Topmost of those was Great Britain’s David Doel, a rider who has often flown under the radar despite an impressive track record of positive production at the top level over the last couple of years. In 2021, he campaigned a quite extraordinary five horses at the level: three went to Luhmühlen, where he was an excellent pathfinder, and then brought forward two different ones at Bicton’s pop-up CCI5*, before finishing the year with two horses at CCI5*. We’re a bit spoiled in this country with our glut of high-profile riders with expansive strings, but for an up-and-coming rider to build a line-up of that sort of depth truly is a feat of some magnitude.

One of those 2021 five-star runners is the eleven-year-old Galileo Nieuwmoed, who debuted at Bicton but rerouted to Pau after an unlucky stumble in the water there. At Pau, they fared considerably better, finishing fifteenth after a sparkling clear round inside the time, but missing their chance at a top-ten finish after toppling two rails on the final day. Here, though, they finally settled the score for the better, and their clear round today — plus just 1.2 time penalties yesterday — allowed them to climb from 32nd after dressage to a final sixth place. That this was his first-ever Badminton makes the moment that much the sweeter.

“He’s been fantastic, and the help and support we’ve had all week has been unreal,” says David, who also won the Laurence Rook Trophy for being the best British first-timer. “It’s a hell of a buzz — we made a couple of mistakes at Pau last year, but we came out here and rectified it in the showjumping this week, so it’s an absolute proper buzz.”

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats confirm their place in the top ten with a clear and time penalties. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Kitty King matched her best-ever Badminton result — a seventh place finish here in 2005 with Five Boys — after jumping clear with 1.2 time penalties aboard Vendredi Biats, who looks much matured since his prior run here in 2019. That year, he failed to complete after depositing his rider at the bottom of the Normandy Bank; this year, he’s so wholly committed to seeking out fences that he nearly locked onto the ropes in addition to the actual jumps on course.

Today, he didn’t look much less fresh than he had yesterday, but his scope and power ensured the big, square fences remained firmly in their cups.

“He jumped really well, but he was a little bit spooky on some of the landings — he kept hearing the cameras and kind of jinked away from me a few times,” says Kitty. “I probably didn’t give him the easiest ride around; I got a little bit add-y, but he didn’t give me the easiest ride yesterday, so I’d say we’re even!”

The 80 seconds of allowed time proved tight throughout the day, with five riders in the top ten alone picking up time penalties, but although Kitty’s 1.2 time penalties didn’t lose her any ground on the leaderboard, she was frustrated to have had them at all: “I’m just a bit annoyed with myself, because I rode a little bit backward down some of the lines and that’s where I got time faults from, which is annoying because he didn’t deserve them.”

Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue make themselves a very attractive prospect for a follow-up appearance on the Irish team. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Austin O’Connor proved he’s sitting on a real hot commodity for the Irish squad, finishing eighth with the Jaguar Mail gelding Colorado Blue after adding just 0.4 time penalties today to their first-phase score of 36.3. Their two fast, confident, and tidy jumping phases allowed them to make an extraordinary climb from 58th through the weekend. Their performances served as confirmation that their Tokyo result, where they finished 13th and best of the Irish after getting a last-minute call-up from the reserve position.

“I think I thought I was coming down to the Vicarage Vee at fence four but other than that, I think it was pretty good,” he says with a laugh. “He’s a jumper, and he’s improving, and as we saw yesterday, all the good horses get their jockeys out of trouble now and then, and we owe them a lot.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum are textbook over Badminton’s beefiest showjumping track. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Best of the exciting US front was Tamie Smith, who delivered the goods across the phases with Mai Baum: they sat in fifth place after dressage on their 25.3, then dipped down to fifteenth yesterday after an exceptionally stylish round nevertheless saw them add 11.2 time penalties. Her proclivity for preserving her horse over the tough track, where she opted to stick to her planned stride patterns so as not to overdraw from her horse’s energy and effort banks, paid dividends today, though — the sixteen-year-old gelding looked as though he’d come out fresh at a jumper show, and gave onlookers perhaps their only stress-free viewing experience of the day with his perfect, easy form. That was enough to put the pressure on all those who followed, and as round after round racked up faults, Tamie steadily made her way back into the top ten to ultimately take ninth place.

“He’s always on springs, and while you never know what they’re going to do after a big track like yesterday’s, he definitely was today,” she says. “The crowd just lifted him and boinged him up over those jumps.”

The result wasn’t just further evidence that the pair are leading the charge in the US’s global offence — it was also a much-needed triumph over the dark cloud that had dogged her since last week’s five-star fixture, where her ride, Fleeceworks Royal, pulled up on course with a significant injury.

“I came from a Kentucky that was quite emotional — having Fleeceworks Royal start out having an unbelievable round and then just feeling her not right and pulling up,” she says. “I’ve had her since she was three and have produced her myself, and as everyone in this sport knows, it takes a lifetime to get them there. And so I was feeling very deflated and I just felt so bad for her owner, her breeders, and all the people around her — and then you’ve just got to put that all behind you to come here, not knowing what to expect but knowing he’s capable of performing unbelievably.”

Have the pair booked their ticket to Pratoni? Only time will tell, but it’s hard to imagine how they could possibly be overlooked at this stage. For now, though, Tamie’s living in the moment — and it’s one she’s dreamed of for a very long time.

“It was just more magical than I can explain,” she says. “My best friend texted me before the dressage and I was quite emotional, because we grew up watching VHS tapes of Badminton, so to finally get here and have that kind of performance is a dream come true.”

Richard Jones celebrates an exuberant clear with Alfies Clover. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Richard Jones rounded out the top ten after a tidy clear with his stalwart Alfies Clover, who has been a seriously useful partner for him over the years: they’ve previously finished seventh at both Bramham and Burghley, and their 2.8 time penalties yesterday and 0.8 today allowed them a weekend climb from 58th to tenth place.

“He jumped fantastic — we haven’t done a lot of shows in the spring, so I think a big occasion like that, suddenly he was jumping out of his skin,” he says.

Here’s a closer look at those climbs and score breakdowns in our final leaderboard, and you can check out the results in full here. Until next time: Go Eventing.

The final top ten at Badminton 2022.

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Three Horses Held, Five Withdrawn at Badminton Final Horse Inspection

Two-phase leaders Laura Collett and London 52 at the final horse inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

An influential track and a spike in ambient temperatures yesterday made for tense scenes at this morning’s final horse inspection at Badminton Horse Trials, where 54 of yesterday’s 59 finishers came forward to present in front of the ground jury of Christian Landolt (SUI), Anne-Marie Taylor (GBR), and Seppo Laine (FIN).

The foreshortening of the Badminton field began in the early hours of this morning, with a spate of withdrawals: three of these came from Ireland, with Joseph Murphy and Cesar V, who recorded an early, slow round after picking up 20 penalties at the Quarry, Esib Power and Soladoun, who had climbed into the top twenty, and Clare Abbott and Jewelent, who sat sixteenth after two phases, all opting not to present today. Sweden’s sole representative Sofia Sjoborg, who piloted her DHI Mighty Dwight to a clear on her birthday yesterday, also withdrew, as did Australia’s Bill Levett and Lassban Diamond Lift, who were sitting in nineteenth place.

Hector Payne and Dynasty are one of three pairs held, and subsequently accepted, at the trot-up. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There were further threats to the line-up when three horses and riders were sent to the holding box: Hector Payne and DynastyJames Rushbrooke and Milchem Eclipse, and Susie Berry and John the Bull were each sent to the box for further assessment by the holding box vet, and all three were subsequently accepted to continue to today’s showjumping.

Lilly Kirchheim wins the groom’s award for her exceptional care of Carjatan S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Each year, a prize is awarded to the groom who is deemed to have provided a superior level of care for their charge throughout the week, and this week’s winner was Lilly Kirchheim, longtime groom for Germany’s Christoph Wahler and his excellent Carjatan S. Her horse-and-rider charge sit in 14th place overnight after a stylish round yesterday saw them add just 3.6 time penalties.

“It’s really good for her to have won this, because it means the work she does gets acknowledged — which is good because she really puts a huge effort in,” says Christoph. “She’s always 100% for Carjatan. She really loves this horse — no matter how early she needs to get up or how late she needs to be in the stables, she’s happy to do it for him.”

Carjatan has spent a significant majority of his international career under Lilly’s care: she joined Christoph’s team five years ago, when the gelding was an eight-year-old, and so she’s been an integral part of all his major accomplishments so far — including two European Championships, a second-place finish at Luhmühlen CCI5*, and now this Badminton debut.

We’ll see 54 horses tackle the final phase, which commences at 11.30 a.m. BST/6.30 a.m. EST with the first 34 horses, followed by a parade of athletes. The top twenty will jump from 3.30 p.m. BST/10.30 a.m. EST. Here’s how the top ten is looking at the moment, with Laura Collett leading with way with 4.7 penalties in hand:

The top ten going into showjumping.

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Laura Collett’s Reign Continues on Dramatic Badminton Cross-Country Day

Laura Collett and London 52 prove their class over a tough Badminton track. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Few were under any illusion that it would be a difficult day: today’s course was, without a doubt, the toughest, most ‘proper’ five-star track we’ve seen since Burghley 2019, and many riders expressed some healthy trepidation about whether they, and their horses, were ready to tackle such a challenge again. And from the word go, it certainly felt like it was going to be a very long day indeed – though pathfinder Kirsty Chabert made tidy work of the first two-thirds of the course, she was ultimately eliminated with Classic VI for accumulated refusals at the second of the open timber corners at 19AB. Second out, Ireland’s Padraig McCarthy and Fallulah, proved it was jumpable with their steady clear, but third starter Joseph Murphy set a surprising trend for run-outs at the seemingly innocuous Quarry with Cesar V and, in arguably the most shocking twist of the day’s competition, fourth competitor and hot favourite Tom McEwen didn’t even complete with his double Olympic medallist Toledo de Kerser after the pair fell at the bounce at 24ABCD after coming in at too high a velocity and missing their distance. Just minutes later, European Champions Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin would also fall on course, necessitating a half-hour hold on course while the rider was stabilised and transferred to nearby Southmead Hospital for trauma scans.

When two high-profile falls happen in such quick succession, it can give the impression of a particularly brutal day of cross-country, but with its 72.5% completion rate and 62.5% clear rate, Badminton’s influence on paper was much the same as it’s always been, and by the end of the day, a rather generous six horse-and-rider combinations had come home clear and inside the time. Many frustrating but ultimately harmless paradigm shifts were made across the leaderboard throughout proceedings: Pippa Funnell retired on course with Billy Walk On, sixteenth after dressage, after refusals at the drop into the MARS Equestrian Sustainability Bay, as did Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden, who had been lying fourth after the first phase. Matt Flynn and Wizzerd of the USA also met a similar fate at this question. Pippa’s second ride, the 2019 Burghley winner MGH Grafton Street, didn’t fare much better — they fell at fence five, a straightforward log while sitting in eleventh place provisionally, and Kylie Roddy, who had been in twentieth place with SRS Kan Do, put her hand up halfway around after the horse lost its front shoes.

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

By the time overnight leader Laura Collett and her Tokyo partner London 52 left the start box, though, several riders had proven that although it was inarguably tough — and absolutely heaving with sharp left-handed turns — it was jumpable. By that point, though, she’d given up on trying to glean any inspiration from the screens in the riders’ tent: “I did start watching, but I walked away after a while, I’m not going to lie,” she says. “I was a bit gutted that I didn’t see Piggy’s round, because she just goes out and does her thing, but I’d walked away by that point because I thought, we’re not watching rubbish riders — we’re watching the very best in the world, and it’s not happening. So in a funny way, in my head I took a deep breath and thought, ‘well, if I mess it up, I’m not going to be the only one today that does.'”

It was going to be an enormous and hugely important test for the Pau winner, who hasn’t yet had the opportunity to test his mettle over a course of this magnitude — and when he left a leg jumping into the Quarry at 4A, many onlookers wondered if this, perhaps, was a step beyond his scope.

It was, quite categorically, not.

“I rode very badly into that and then got my arse in gear,” laughs Laura, who sailed home inside the time to hold a 4.7 penalty lead going into the final phase. “I never knew how deep he would dig for me, and he just kept on digging. It was relentless out there in the Vicarage area, and the Vicarage Vee was the only time where he I think questioned my sanity as to what on earth I was asking him to do. But he just said, ‘okay — if you say we go, we go!’ and luckily, he’s super scopy.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Laura was held on course just after finishing the intensive back section, of the track, which zig-zags through the Vicarage ditch line and over a number of tight, twisty technical combinations — but though it may have come as some relief to have the bulk of the track behind her, it was a lengthy wait to restart with several influential fences still to come.

“The thing that amazed me as well is that he’s never been held on course before, and to be held at that point — you’re so close, and yet so far,” she says. “There’d been quite a few tumbles later on, and I didn’t know how he’d cope, but he just came back on the bridle and it was like riding a fresh horse. He said ‘right, off we go again — mum’s gone a bit mental and we’re doing two cross-country rounds in one day, but okay!'”

After helping the British team to gold at the Olympics in front of a nearly empty stadium, coming back into the arena to uproarious cheers from the packed stands gave Laura and her horse an enormous buzz.

“Crossing the finish line at Tokyo was just unbelievable but with the crowds here, and it being Badminton — I’m not going to say it tops Tokyo, but it is on a par,” she says. “That horse is a show-off; he’s hated not having crowds. He rises to the occasion, and his best rounds have been at Boekelo with people screaming and crowds, and this tops any crowd anywhere in the world. He just loved it.”

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Even the rounds marked as clear weren’t without their fair share of drama: Oliver Townend and the former Andrew Nicholson ride Swallow Springs had a contentious jump through the Quarry when a disagreement on the stride pattern saw them twist outside the remit of the flags at the C element. While those of us in the mixed zone frantically tried to refresh the live scoring to work out if he’d simply earned a 15 or if he’d be eliminated for being considered as not having cleared the fence, he continued on at pace and jumped several more fences before being pulled up for the long hold after Nicola’s fall. Half an hour later, they were restarted, continued on, and finished inside the time — and then, shortly after the conclusion of their round, they were eliminated for not having re-presented to the fence they’d skidded over earlier. After lodging an appeal, they were un-eliminated and escaped without flag penalties, either, which sees them sit second going into tomorrow’s competition.

“He’s athletic, isn’t he? I’m still sure it’s four coming up out of the Quarry, but Andrew Nicholson obviously didn’t think so,” says Oliver. “It was four when I jumped over the wall and I thought, ‘perfect, nice and deep to the hedge’, and he really picked up on it early. I thought there was plenty of room for a little stride, but Andrew’s produced the horse to go through the flags and he definitely did that. Thankfully, I stayed on him.”

Oliver’s hold came reasonably early on in the course, just before the eggboxes at 12AB that lead into the tough middle section of the track. After restarting, though, Oliver found it harder to regain the gelding’s previous rhythm.

“The rest of them will think it’s a huge advantage to have had a hold there, because then you have only got seven minutes to go, but I thought he was travelling far better once we got going before the hold,” he says. “After the hold, I [jumped] too big at the egg box because I was restarting my watch, so we stood off a long way there. It takes the breath out of you a little bit, having a big jump like that, and then you’ve got the ski jump after that so you’re in the air for another three seconds, and then I flung him over the big corners — so there’s no real rest. For me, it would have been better to have kept him going, rather than having the break, but the result’s a good one and he’s finished very happy within himself.”

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class find their rhythm after a tricky start to move into third. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Oliver also sits third on his Burghley and Kentucky winner Ballaghmor Class, who delivered a clear round inside the time to move up from eighth after dressage and stay on his score of 25.9 overnight. But the enormously consistent five-star horse, who has never finished outside the top five at the level, took longer than anticipated to settle — and Oliver had to employ some creative thinking to get his horse back in the right headspace before his round.

“He actually worried me slightly in the warm-up,” he says. “He went to boil over a little bit, and then he found two hunt horses — he’s never been hunting, but they were both grey and I walked him around them and he literally switched off from being off his tree. He’d found his two friends, his comfort blanket, and so I walked a five meter circle around these two hunters for twelve minutes or so and he smiled and breathed. I said to the riders, ‘come and meet me in the start box,’ and they did, so he settled again in the start box and then left it like he’d been shot up the backside. I thought, ‘here we go again!'”

Though the first section of the course was necessarily devoted to getting him back to the task at hand, he settled into his typical rhythm by the key central section.

“He’s a funny, quirky old horse but he’s a phenomenon, and one that I don’t think I’ll ever have again,” says Oliver. “He was quite cocky early on, and a little bit away with me. We ended up adding in a couple of places where I’d planned to go one less, and he was a bit tricky to steer in Huntsman’s, but then he got halfway round and said ‘oh, I remember where I am — this is hard work!’ The minute he settles down he lets me ride him, and he tells me when I need to lean forward and give him a dig, and he responds beautifully. He’s just a very good friend, and I feel that you could set out a six- or seven-star and I’d still come home on him. He’s very, very special.”

Ros Canter pilots the youngest horse in the field to an exceptional finish. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Ros Canter also sits in the top ten with both of her rides, though it’s the debutant Lordships Graffalo who tops her two rides after producing a clear inside the time that belied his relative inexperience.

“He really is unbelievable,” says Ros of the rising ten-year-old. “He did his first four-star this time last year, and he just finds the job easy — he finds running easy, he finds balancing easy, and he finds going easy. I think he thoroughly enjoyed himself out there today. I adore Allstar B to bits, but this horse is in a class of his own in terms of the way he goes cross-country. He’s got such a long stride but then has the ability to shorten and add a stride without ever really taking offence to it, which does make my life easier.”

Ros Canter and Allstar B are reinvigorated after a tricky 2021. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Ros’s World Champion Allstar B added just 1.2 time penalties to take overnight sixth place, and looked much improved from the European Championships last year, where he made two uncharacteristic mistakes on course while struggling with what looked to be a touch of burnout from a fractured summer season fittening up for, travelling to, and ultimately not competing in Tokyo, where he was the British reserve. A long winter of hacking and unwinding has done wonders, and the seventeen-year-old made the course feel ‘rather like a Pony Club track’, according to Ros.

“He’s an absolute legend, and he’s made for tracks like this,” she says. “It’s tough out there, and the amount of people out there is mind-blowing — the crowds are so thick that you can’t always see where your next jump is. In places, it rides like a short format, which doesn’t always suit him because he’s a big horse and not very easy to manoeuvre, but if I get him to the point of take-off, he gives it a good go.”

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira are back with a bang after their 2019 victory. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Piggy March has been waiting for two achingly long years to give her reigning Badminton champion Vanir Kamira a crack at one of the ‘Big Bs’, which is where the unconventional little mare comes into her own – and her round proved that the wait had been well worth it. Though she didn’t quite catch the time — and we suspect she’ll be ruing her one second over — she sits in fifth place going into the final day after a jolly skip around Eric’s colossal track. Even aboard one of the very best five-star horses in the world, Piggy found the course a real test of her skills.

“It felt like hard work all the way to the end — it was very intense, not that it’s ever not at Badminton,” she says.

Contributing to that feeling of intensity was the mental challenge of an early draw, knowing that her friends and peers had already had so many problems out on course: “You’ve got your great mates out there that have been having problems — really good mates not coming home having fallen and all the rest of it. It does make you think for a second; you’re always on your A-game anyway, but you know what to look out for more, and so it’s like picking yourself up.”

The lengthy hold after Nicola’s fall didn’t just test riders’ mental strength in the warm-up area — it also wreaked havoc on their finely-honed timings.

“She’d been out here a long time. She’s never out here longer than twenty minutes before she starts, and even though I was off her, she did switch off and it’s not what we’re used to,” Piggy explains. “I felt that she just ran a little bit like that to start with. She’s a bit older now, so I do respect that, but she just didn’t travel very well to Huntsman’s. She caught her knee at the first part of Huntsman’s quite badly, and the rail is actually quite low — I know we don’t get very high on a regular basis, but that’s low! She gave it a good twist, and she was never off her line or anything, but I gave her a little reminder, a tap-tap and ‘come on, Tillybean, we’re off to the races today; we’re not just training.’ By the time we got to the lake and all the crowds, she picked up and I felt we got into gear, but I was down on those seconds, and I didn’t feel that there was anywhere in the middle that we could have made it up. So we were hammer and tongs the whole way.”

Still, though, she was delighted to have recorded another excellent round in the hallowed grounds that housed her first five-star victory three years ago, and aboard the gutsy, slightly odd little mare that had partnered her then.

“She’s an amazing little horse and she’s given me the best days of my life competing. She’s one of those horses that if you ever rode her at home, you wouldn’t give her another thought — but she’s one of those horses that’s so special in her heart, and what she does when she knows what the occasion is. Today was one of those days; she looks a picture, she’s finished well, and I’m just so proud of her. It’s such a credit to the little horse’s mind and heart and guts that she’s still there to say ‘come on now, I’m still here’. It gives everyone a bit of sport.”

Jonelle Price and Classic Moet are at their best in the horse’s nineteenth year. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It certainly wasn’t a bad day to be aboard a tough, game older mare with a boatload of experience, and 2018 Burghley winners Jonelle Price and Classic Moet were at their speedy best, zooming home inside the time to move up from 27th place to seventh.

“She comes in with such a phenomenal track record that it’s sort of my job to defend it. But she certainly did today,” says Jonelle, whose extraordinarily consistent little mare came to this event as one of two nineteen-year-old horses in the field — not that you’d know it to watch her.

I was maybe five seconds down at the ninth minute, and then I really feel the pressure, because if I have a time fault on this horse, I look stupid! So I really put my foot down and said ‘right, we’re going to gallop along here’, and at the next minute I was seven seconds up. There’s not many horses that from the ninth minute to the tenth you can put your foot on the gas and make that change. There are some fences she slithers over a little bit, and I was a little bit backwards to the Vicarage Vee, but she feels spot-on, and I’m very honoured to have a round like that at Badminton.”

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats drop into the lake. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The last time Kitty King came to Badminton with the excellent Selle Français gelding Vendredi Biats, she left the start box in a competitive position after dressage and then fell on course at the Normandy Bank but this time, she says with a laugh, “I fell off my bike last night instead, so I got it out of the way!”

Though the pair lived a little dangerously with a tricky stride at the lake, they came home clear with a respectable eight time penalties. Though that dropped them from third after dressage to eighth, it was rock-solid proof that the gelding, who’s occasionally had some focusing issues in this phase, has truly turned a corner over the last two years.

“When I knew the track was going left rein, I knew it wasn’t going to be easy for him because from a young horse, he’s always struggled with turning left,” she explains. “All the approaches to the tricky combinations were off a tight left turn — the Quarry, Huntsman’s, the water — and he likes to on the right lead, so he comes around on the right lead falling in, and you don’t get the shot you want, which makes it hard work. So we were a bit slow because I just had to, in the end, just calm down and think about what we’re doing. Although we were getting through them, we were making it heavy weather and harder than it should be, so I had to just kind of take a pull and say ‘let’s just sort this out and get around’. He was fabulous and helped me all the way, and we worked as a partnership, but it definitely wasn’t the smoothest round we’ve ever had.”

William Fox-Pitt enjoys a double-hander in the top ten with Little Fire leading his charge in ninth. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I’m feeling quite emotional — it was quite exciting,” says William Fox-Pitt after his first round with the thirteen-year-old Oratorio, who added just two time penalties to sit tenth after this phase. “I was dreading it, of course; in my old age I was thinking ‘what the hell am I doing? Do I really want to be here today on Saturday morning? I’d quite like to be at home in bed!’ But then there’s lots of us doing it, and it was okay.”

Oratorio’s excellent round put tricky weeks at Kentucky and Pau last year well behind him, and he climbed an impressive seventeen places from his first-phase position in 27th.

“He’s a lovely, classy horse and he’s experienced now — he’s done Badminton last time it ran and many horses haven’t,” says William. “I’ve had a couple of other runs around five-stars that were good mileage runs; I fell off him at Kentucky and had a run-out at Pau, but they were stupid, avoidable things and he actually took a lot home from that. He came here as a bit more of a man.”

The two time faults the pair added weren’t due to any natural lack of speed on the horse’s part, but rather, his tendency to pull. That requires a significant amount of set-up for each effort which, over a nearly 12 minute track, can prove enormously costly.

“He’s quite busy to ride. I like a much more peaceful ride, but he’s quite opinionated, so it wasn’t very relaxing. It wasn’t stressful, it was just busy. Every time I thought I could gallop, I thought ‘oh, no, I’ll have to slow down again’, because he takes so long to slow down and so I waste a lot of time. He should gallop around inside the time, really — I’ve always said he’s a Burghley horse through and through, and here I am getting time faults at Badminton! I need to learn to pull less and later.”

By the end of the day, he was probably rather wondering what all the initial fuss was about: he’s the third rider to have two rides feature in the top ten, with Little Fire also climbing from 15th to ninth with his six time penalties.

“He’s a seriously nice horse, so I’d hoped he’d go that well,” he says. “He always does get a bit tired at the end — I think breathing-wise, he’s working hard, and he’s not as fit as Oratorio. I think he over jumped a couple of jumps because he was slightly taking a breath.”

David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed prove they shouldn’t be under the radar anymore. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Though the top ten is full of heavy-hitting big names, a number of slightly lesser-known riders impressed with gutsy, exciting rounds that moved them well into contention. David Doel climbed from 32nd to eleventh place on 1.2 time penalties with the flashy Galileo Nieuwmoed after digging deep to survive a sticky moment at the LeMieux Leap coffin complex, while France’s Gireg le Coz powered the exquisite Aisprit de la Loge to twelfth place on a tidy 7.2 time penalties.

Germany’s Christoph Wahler delivers a classy round with Carjatan S to put himself on the Pratoni pipeline. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Ireland’s Austin O’Connor proved that his thirteenth place at Tokyo with Colorado Blue was no fluke as he moved into the same placing here, adding nothing to his first phase score and confidently climbing from 58th place, and Germany’s Christoph Wahler was a true stylist with the huge-striding Carjatan S to climb from 33rd to fourteenth with just 3.6 time penalties.

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum are stylists around the colossal track. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The USA’s Tamie Smith produced what was, perhaps, the neatest of rounds in a day of necessarily agricultural riding to sit fifteenth with Mai Baum. They added 11.2 time penalties, which pushed them out of their fifth place position after dressage, but proved that the German gelding truly is an asset to the US team’s ambitions on the world stage.

“He has a stigma about him that he’s not a great cross country horse, but he’s the best horse in the world. He’s un-frickin’-real; he’s like a magic carpet, and I couldn’t be more proud of him,” enthuses Tamie. “He was full of run and super rideable, but what’s really great about him is that he can overjump a bit in the showjumping, but on the cross-country, he just does exactly as much as he needs to. I even heard brush as his legs went through, which was really impressive!”

Tamie opted to prioritise giving her horse a productive, confident run rather than taking risks to catch the time:  “The lake jumped a bit bigger than I expected,” she says. “I almost got there in four, but I just swung out, because I didn’t want to start leaving strides out. I saw that that wasn’t a good plan, and the horse tends to want to leave strides out. But other than that, everything rode exactly to plan.”

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan prove their prowess once again. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan delivered another mature, balanced, exciting clear round in their fourth run at the level, climbing from 54th to 24th after adding just eight time penalties.

“I wanted to go as quickly as I could, but he got quite keyed up down in the warm-up,” she says. “He’s quite an exuberant horse anyway; he doesn’t have a whole lot of patience, and he knows what we’re doing today. So it was a little bit tricky having to wait down below, and he came up here and just gunned it out of the start box. I was like, ‘you know what? The only thing I have to do is find a rhythm with him.’ If he and I are in the same space and we’re connected, he’s great — and he was just like that the whole way around, and if little things weren’t quite perfect, he’s scopy and he’s brave and he’s got a great step, so I can make up for little mistakes.”

Both Ariel and ‘Simon’ found the colossal crowds a unique challenge, and relied on their solid partnership to find their way through the course.

“It’s a challenge [to tackle the crowds] — I’m very new to this; this is my first Badminton and he’s my first four- and five-star horse. We’ve come along together. So it was definitely a challenge to try and see where I was going next. If you look up, all you’re going to see is people, so I was just staring between his ears and trying to read the lines. It’s a little bit hard to gauge — when you’re walking, you feel like, ‘okay, that jump is over there, I’ll be there in thirty seconds’, but today, you can’t see ahead of you at all. There’s so many people, so you can’t see a thing. I just kept looking between his ears and just reminding myself that he and I need to stay connected and stay in the same place — and then he just picked up everything.”

Phillip Dutton and Z dig deep despite a lost shoe. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Phillip Dutton and Z picked up 10.8 time penalties on course, which allowed them to climb from 39th to 25th place, though an early loss of a shoe slowed them down along the way: “It was slippery and so it was hard for me to get back up on the time, because he lost a back shoe and was struggling a bit into the turns. But he’s a brave little horse and even when he slipped on the turn, he still had a crack at it. He’s a very good horse, I’ll tell you. Sometimes they’ve got to really fight for you, and he certainly did that.”

Will Faudree gives Mama’s Magic Way valuable mileage. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Will Faudree also recorded 10.8 time penalties and an impressive climb with Mama’s Magic Way, who stepped up from 74th to 35th place in what was Will’s first Badminton round since 2005.

“If I was 22 again, I probably would have kept hustling him at the last six, seven jumps to get as close to the time as I could, but what’s that saying? ‘With age comes wisdom’, and I was off the pace after the dressage, so I just wanted him to have a really confident round,” says Will. “He’s a horse for the future; he’s just eleven years old, and so I did take a bit of time, but he kept jumping right to the last few fences, and he finished full of running at the end.”

Dom Schramm and Bolytair B stick the landing from the broken bridge. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

US-based Aussie Dom Schramm posted a clear round with Bolytair B, moving from 75th to 54th. Their 44.4 time penalties, though, precluded a more significant climb and came as the result of a last-minute change of bit that didn’t quite pay off.

“He’s an incredible, scopy, powerful horse, and he’s always been a strong horse. The bit that I’ve been using in my last five-stars wasn’t really working very well, and I didn’t have another show to run, but I got a new bit and it was great for schooling,” says Dom. “I got through the Quarry, and then I got to the next jump, and every time I tried to make a half-halt he was getting faster, so I just thought ‘you know what, I’m not going to push him past where I can control him’. It’s unfortunate — I wish I could have been a bit more speedy, but it is what it is.”

Dom, who had been looking forward to jumping the iconic Vicarage Vee, certainly saw some airtime there: “I saw an absolute flyer, and I was like, ‘I’m going to be this dickhead guy that’s going to eat shit at the Vicarage Vee’. But he was great — he’s got so much scope that if I give him a little nudge he just goes about sixteen feet longer!”

Mike Winter’s El Mundo shows off his impressive scope around one of the world’s biggest courses. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Canada’s Mike Winter completed with a steady round after picking up 20 penalties in the back water at 17B, when the strong, keen El Mundo landed further out from the drop than anticipated and lost his line.

“He jumped past my line at the water at the top, and I tried to do my best not to cross my path, but in the heat of the moment all I could do was my best to salvage the situation,” Mike says. “Then he was great at the coffin where he added the third stride, which wouldn’t be his easiest thing, and at the open corners he just never locked on — but where he left from, he just reached across it and jumped his guts out, and never lost any confidence.”

Emily Hamel and Corvett pop 17B after picking up penalties on their first attempt. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Emily Hamel, too, came home with a 20 at the same fence and added time with Corvett, who otherwise looked exuberant and confident around the course and will have learned plenty in preparation for a crack at Burghley this autumn.

“It was unfortunate that we had a problem, but I probably didn’t give him a great ride and he still went. I had to pull out [of the line] because I nearly fell off, but I didn’t — I stayed on and I finished,” she says. “He’s kind of a freak, but he makes me feel really confident going to any jump, just because I know he can clear it.”

Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Canada’s Karl Slezak ended his day with Fernhill Wishes early, encountering trouble at both the Huntsmans Close as well as the KBIS Brush Village. “We had a very disappointing day today,” Karl told us. “Choc felt very good leaving the box and was in top form; unfortunately we fell fate to the Badminton atmosphere. The course I walked yesterday felt very different than the course I rode today. It all walked very doable yesterday, but this number of spectators and this atmosphere certainly changed the feel of it today.”

“I think the early horses went out very quickly and then some mistakes were made,” says course designer Eric Winter at the close of the day’s competition. “Then later on in the day, it almost seemed that they just look a little longer — just a second here, and a second there. When you’ve got nearly twelve minutes there’s a lot of gallop, and it’s not necessary to rush to things. As soon as you start to rush, mistakes happen. But it was a good day of sport: there was 100,000 people here, and stuff’s going to happen. You can’t have 100,000 people come and everyone jumps clear and it’s just, you know, a Pony Club track. It was an exciting day and the leaderboard’s been changed significantly.

59 horses and riders remain in the hunt ahead of tomorrow’s competition, which kicks off at 8.30 a.m. BST/3.30 a.m. EST with the final horse inspection. The showjumping will commence at 11.30 a.m./6.30 a.m. EST with the first batch of competitors, followed by the top twenty from 3.30 p.m./10.30 a.m. EST. We’ll be back with all the news you need to know throughout the day’s competition. Until then: Go Eventing!

The top ten after a slightly turbulent day of cross-country at Badminton Horse Trials.

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“It’s Like Going Back in Time”: Riders React to Eric Winter’s 2022 Badminton Track

We’re just half an hour away from the start of cross-country here at Badminton Horse Trials, and what feels like the first serious top-end cross-country challenge we’ve seen since before the pandemic. At eleven minutes, forty-four seconds, it’s a serious stamina track, and course designer Eric Winter has delivered a course filled with vintage inspiration and bold, galloping lines that’ll exert a serious bit of influence over our leaderboard as it stands. You can preview the track in its entirety with our in-depth guide – now, get to grips with how some of the competitors are feeling ahead of today’s enormous test.

Ros Canter (GBR) – 10th on 26 with Lordships Graffalo; 12th on 26.4 with Allstar B

“I didn’t know what I would think, bringing a first-timer — I’ve actually only ever jumped around Badminton and Burghley on Allstar B, so it’s a new experience for me. But I think if the horses enjoy jumping big jumps on nice distances, then hopefully they’ll have a great experience. If they suddenly start thinking it’s a bit big, though, there’s nowhere to get their confidence back. Hopefully if they’re up for the job, then it’s a lovely course to ride.”

“I have a fairly similar plan for both — it’s just that the younger horse goes through his right shoulder, so I’ve just got to always be aware of that. But they’re fairly similar; Lordships Graffalo would be a little bit faster away from a fence and comes back a bit better. The power steering and the braking is a little bit more fine-tuned than Allstar B’s has ever been, but then again, a course like this is where Allstar B comes into his own. Hopefully I can have a good ride on him and it’ll give me some experience for the next horse.”

“I think it’s looking tougher every time I walk it. The more I walk it, the more clever I think Eric has been, and the more complicated I think it is. When you start to think about meeting the markers and the knock-on effects of all those twists and turns at the bottom… I don’t think it’ll be easy.”

Nicola Wilson (GBR) – 13th on 26.5 with JL Dublin; =24th on 30.4 with Erano M

“I think he’s done an amazing job. It’s a massive course with so many questions from start to finish, and a beautiful, beautiful course. Yes, it’s going to take an awful lot of riding from the very first fence to the last fence, and I just hope that my two boys are ready for Saturday’s excitement, and that I ride well and do them justice.”

William Fox-Pitt (GBR) – 15th on 27.3 with Little Fire; =27th on 31.4 with Oratorio 

“It looks jumpable. I think it’s there to be attacked; there’s lots to jump, and it looks quite big. Eric loves his brush on the top of everything — every single solid fence seems to have a foot of brush on the top, which does make it quite big. But my horses have got jump and scope, and hopefully they’ll know by now that they can go through the brush a little bit. He’s even got brush going into the lake!”

Jonelle Price (NZL) – =27th on 31.4 with Classic Moet

“Obviously it’s big enough, but it’s all fairly straight in front of you, and it doesn’t leave you guessing in too many places. I was hoping for a bit more rain, to be honest, so if they could get out there with the watering tanks, that’d be great! To play to our strengths we could do with a bit of torrential rain.”

Joseph Murphy (IRL) – 29th on 31.5 with Cesar V

“It seems a little bit different than the last few times I was here. It gets the horses into it at the start, and it really seems like Eric wants to get the horses home as well, because the way he’s done the middle bit is a bit more intense. To me, the questions all look very clear for the horses, and that’s a nice sight for the riders when you go and walk for the first impressions. It definitely is big, and it’s a test of stamina, for sure. How many people are prepared for that is another question.”

Padraig McCarthy (IRL) – =30th on 31.7 with Fallulah; =80th on 41.4 with HHS Noble Call

“The start is a little bit friendlier, albeit a bit twistier, than usual up until the lake, which is also very obvious. They’re big jumps every one of them, but once you get down to the Broken Bridge (13), it really smacks you in the face that’s it’s a five-star, and then it stays like that until you get over the Lightsource BP combination (24ABCD) at the end of that section.”

Libby Seed (GBR) – 42nd on 33.4 with Heartbreaker Star Quality

“I’m actually really excited, which most Badminton first-timers probably don’t say, but I’m really excited to go have a crack with her. She’s an amazing jumper. It’s not really in my nature to go and not try to be competitive, but she’s a first-timer at this level and she’s eleven, so she’s hopefully got a long career ahead of her, so early on there might be a couple of places where I just take a bit of respect and take a moment to just think about it. But as soon as she gets into her stride and we start to enjoy ourselves, hopefully we can have a bit of fun.”

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Alex Bragg (GBR) – =43rd on 33.5 with King of the Mill

“It’s a long track and Eric has used all the indulations – I think he’s been chatting to [Pau course designer] Pierre Michelet, because it looks like he’s got some ideas from the tracks you see at Pau, so I’m glad that I’ve got some experience at that event. [Miller] is a galloper and I think he’ll enjoy this ground and the length of this track, and hopefully he’ll come into his element.”

“The far side of the course, the middle bit [from 13 to 24ABCD] is very intensive, both mentally and physically, so I think both horse and rider have to be on point. If you come out of there feeling good after jumping the sequence of enormous ditches and you’re still dry, you’ll be dead happy. Then you should be able to gallop on home.”

Hector Payne (GBR) – =45th on 33.8 with Dynasty

“Someone made a good comment that if you split it into two halves, you wouldn’t worry about anything, but when you add it all together… but there’s not one jump that you’d think, ‘oh God, I’d never jump that if it appeared on another track’. It’s definitely a long way around, though, and I think the most noticeable thing is the way he’s used the terrain. Every single jump seems to be on an up slope, and it will be interesting to see how that actually affects their fitness, because it’s not something we do a lot of, really. It starts from fence three right to the second-last fence.”

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Michael Winter (CAN) – 51st on 34.6 with El Mundo

“It’s probably what I was hoping for, but that doesn’t make it any less calming on the nerves! It probably suits him — it’s quite big and bold, and maybe I can take advantage of his big stride and his scope and use that to my advantage. That’s plan A, and if that goes to plan and I have the ability to manoeuvre him at pace, I think it’ll be a lot of fun. If I can keep him down the rein looking for his fences, he’s scopy when he gets there.”

Harry Meade (GBR) – =59th on 36.5 with Away Cruising

“There’s a lot of big fences, but I don’t think it’s as technically difficult as it sometimes has been. Often when it’s very big like this, everyone says ‘wow, it’s huge; it’s really difficult, it’s impossible.’ But horses tend to jump big, bold fences well. I think the hardest thing is having the mandatory yellow clips, because it would be a tragedy if the person who should have won Badminton loses because of that.”

“I think there’s a few fences at the end where you could have a good horse that’s travelling well but just leaves a knee. I don’t mean the last two fences, but there’s a few at the end where you’ve just got to make sure you have enough in the tank and you respect them enough. You don’t try to chase the clock; you ride sensibly. [The Joules Keepers Ditch at 30] is where you go under a pagoda, across what was a keepers’ ditch, which has been filled in, and then jump a little chicken coop, and on a tired horse, it’s not obvious where they’re going until they turn into it. It’s uphill, which will help them to jump better, but it’s a poxy little fence which doesn’t look like much but is quite tall and quite upright, and it’s got quite a sharp lip at the top. I don’t mean sharp in that it would cut the horses, but sharp in that it’s unforgiving. It’s not like a rolltop where they can roll over it and get their feet back down, so you could just get someone tipping up there. It’s not that fun jumping fences like that when you feel your horse has stopped reacting and the jump is disappearing because they’re fatiguing, but if you’ve got a fresh horse, it’s easy.”

“[In the Vicarage ditch area] it’s a bit like putting someone on a static bike and getting them to cycle at constantly changing speeds — sprint, slow, sprint, slow. That’s hard work for the horses, and at the same time, they’re having to do algebra the whole way through because there’s a lot for them to think about, so that will be draining. It’s important that you don’t use up any lives unnecessarily; you need to give your horse a good, confident, but quite conservative ride so you’re not accumulating credit losses unnecessarily.”

“I like the theme of it. I like the fact that it’s ditchy – ‘old-fashioned’ is sort of a disrespectful word to use, but it’s proper cross-country. It’s not an all-weather surface and portable fences; it’s proper crossing the country and jumping whatever’s in front of you. I think that instils the right ethos in horses and riders to ride forwards and attack. The biggest safety risk in cross-country is when people don’t commit and ride forwards, because horses read fences much more easily when they’re in front of them and they’re travelling in a forward line. Often, people think ‘I’m going to take an easier option here and add strides on a bending line’, but that makes it more difficult for horses as they tend not to travel as well. So I think this will be great for horses, great for riders, and it’ll set a good theme for the next patch of cross-country courses this season.”

Dom Schramm (AUS) – 75th on 39 with Bolytair B

“I’m really looking forward to it. That’s what we came for, right? He’s a big, powerful, strong horse and a good cross-country horse, and I’m actually really happy with the course for a couple of reasons. The main reason is that all the big jumps I wanted to be on the course are there — I didn’t want to come to Badminton and not jump the Vicarage Vee! The other think I like about it is that Eric has made it really straightforward what he wants. It’s hard lines, they’re big jumps, but there’s no tricky business; there’s no wondering what number of strides you’re going to get and half distances. So I think if you’ve got a big, brave horse and you execute well, it’s there to be jumped. I think it’s going to be awesome.”

Maxime Livio (FRA) – 79th on 40.5 with Vitorio du Montet

“It’s a really nice course and the ground is really good and quite fast, so I think we will have competitors inside the time. The beginning is quite fair for the horses, and we have time to make them confident for the hard part in the middle where there is a fence every 200 meters, and quite big fences. So this part will be quite tough, but it’s more par for the brave horses, and mine is so brave. So I’m quite happy with that!”

 

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Friday Afternoon at Badminton: The Hits Just Keep on Coming; Laura Collett Reigns Supreme

(We’re counting the guinea pig test.)

After two days of dressage at Badminton, there are certain overarching trends you start to pick up on. The first, and most obvious, is that the calibre of horses in this country has reached a zenith so extraordinary that it takes a performance nearly worthy of pure dressage to put yourself out in front – as first-phase leaders Laura Collett and London 52 proved when they danced their way to a nearly foot-perfect 21 in this morning’s session. The second is that when you’re that good, sometimes the best thing you can do is rejig your entire system to remove all the pressure from the horse. We’ve seen this approach come up a number of times over the two days we’ve been ringside: Laura herself has opted to skip all her usual pre-dressage schooling sessions this week, trusting instead in her system and the years of good training she’s put into her extraordinarily consistent Olympic partner and letting him unwind and enjoy his home for the week without asking any difficult questions of him until his turn in the ring. Notably, we also saw Ros Canter present a newly invigorated Allstar B yesterday, who looks mentally and physically fresher after cutting out ringwork at home and instead working through the basics out hacking. It’s not just Olympic gold medallists and World Champions who are taking this approach, either: France’s Gireg le Coz, 14th after dressage with Aisprit de le Loge, warmed his horse up with a low-key spin on the lunge, and plenty of other riders besides favoured pared-back approaches to getting the goods in this pivotal first phase.

Laura recounts her ride to the media. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

In some ways, it feels inevitable that the trend would shift this way. After two long years of pandemic eventing, horses and riders alike are all trained out: without the enormity of Badminton and Burghley on the horizon, most have had to aim for a cobbled-together couple of seasons of short-format competitions, the odd long-format opportunity, and a number of pop-up replacement fixtures, and that’s left plenty of time on the schedule to try to nail the infinitesimal details while riding at home. In many ways, this has served to raise the standards of flatwork significantly across the board; just as pertinently, though, it’s left plenty of athletes, both two- and four-legged, feeling just a bit burnt out. This paradigm shift towards horse-first production, towards prioritising a bit of a mental break and relying on long-established foundations, feels indicative of not just where the sport is at, but where the world is at. We’ve had our lockdown days of self-improvement — now it’s time to take a deep breath and go with the flow, for everyone’s sake.

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class dip slightly below expectations but still remain competitive on 25.9. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

This afternoon’s final session featured a number of major players, many of whom delivered tests that could arguably have been well in the hunt in previous, slightly less top-heavy fields of entry. Burghley winners Tim Price and Ringwood Sky Boy, for example, sit just inside the top twenty despite a pleasant test and a score of 29.1; closer to the business end, Olympic team gold medallists Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class, who were second here in 2019 and have won Burghley and Kentucky, find themselves uncharacteristically far down the board in equal eighth after dressage on their 25.9.

For Oliver, who’s used to finding himself at the top with the son of Courage II, with whom he briefly held the Badminton dressage record three years ago, it was a fierce disappointment: “For me he’s twice the horse dressage-wise as yesterday’s, and he ended up with the same mark in the dressage,” he says, referring back to yesterday’s ride with Swallow Springs, who sits equal sixth on 25.7. “But tomorrow isn’t about the opinions of three people sitting in garden sheds.”

In fact, there were just three tests in total that managed to squeak into the top ten as it was established yesterday: Laura’s leading ride this morning, of course, was the most significant, bumping first-day leaders Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser into second, Kitty King and Vendredi Biats into third, and Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden into fourth. US representative Tamie Smith takes fifth place with Mai Baum, while Oliver’s first ride, Swallow Springs, sits equal sixth with 2019 victors Piggy March and Vanir Kamira. You have to get to that Ballaghmor Class test, which is equal eighth with New Zealand’s Amanda Pottinger and Just Kidding, before you find another of today’s performances in the mix — and after that, there’s just one more in the top ten.

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo impress among the top end of a field populated with much more experienced animals. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“We really weren’t sure what to expect with him coming in today,” says Ros Canter, who enjoyed an excellent 2021 season with her debutant Lordships Graffalo, winning hot CCI4*-S classes at Aston-le-Walls and Blair. “He’s only a rising ten-year-old, so he’s a very green horse and really, he’s come up through the levels during Covid, so he’s seen very little of this sort of atmosphere.”

This is the first time the rider has piloted any horse other than yesterday’s mount, Allstar B, at Badminton, and so she approached her test today with some caution – caution that, in the end, proved to be unfounded. They earned a 26 that puts them in tenth place out of 83 at the culmination of this phase after delivering a solid clear-round test.

“I was busy trying to quieten everyone down after William [Fox-Pitt]’s test, and I don’t think he actually batted an eyelid, so I thought, ‘why did I bother?!’,” laughs Ros. “He was such a professional.”

‘Walter’ is yet another horse that, on first glance, doesn’t look like he should be 5’1 Ros’s type: like Allstar B before him, he stands over 17hh and is a long horse from nose to tail. But through his nine-year-old year, in which he performed consistently enough to be named as Ros’s direct reserve for the European Championships, he proved that his size is no impediment to his athleticism — nor his ability to make it happen when it counts.

“He’s a bit of a funny character: sometimes he can be very lazy, and sometimes he can be a bit hot, but actually, I don’t think it’s got anything to do with where he is [in the draw] — it’s just Walter’s way on the day. But I have to say, on the whole, that he pulls it out the bag on a big occasion, so that’s quite exciting.”

Burghley winner MGH Grafton Street reigns in a few days of tricky behaviour to produce a competitive first-phase result. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“Ten or fifteen years ago, that would have been the leading test,” says Pippa Funnell, whose 26.2 with her 2019 Burghley winner MGH Grafton Street put her in eleventh place at the end of the day. Excellent tests are nothing new for the gelding: it rather feels as though every British eventing season has a mainstay horse that’ll reliably top the first-phase leaderboard in CCI4*-S after CCI4*-S, and just a few short years ago, this horse occupied that spot. But for all his undeniable natural talent, he’s never been a straightforward horse – not even this week, as a seasoned fourteen year old and five-star winner.

“He was quite naughty this morning! But he was good [in the test] — I just feel, as with [yesterday’s ride Billy Walk On, equal 16th), that maybe I need a few more lessons. Carl [Hester] won’t be very impressed with me,” says Pippa ruefully. “I just didn’t have that jump after the first canter half-pass into that flying change, so he was a bit slow off the aids then and I had to ask him two or three times. Hopefully he’ll respond a bit quicker tomorrow!”

Part of the difficulty in preparing  ‘Squirrel’ for these very good performances is overcoming his conformation – but this is just another facet of the job in this discipline, as Pippa explains.

“At the end of the day, the thing about this sport is that [horses] come in all shapes and sizes, and you can’t turn him into a London 52 or something. He’s got a short little neck, and so it’s always about trying to get the neck longer, but I thought he was very good in his frame.”

The Burghley winner is perhaps best known for his unpredictability across the country: while that victory, over one of the toughest Burghley courses we’ve seen, proved he’s got all the ability, he’s also very prone to naughty run-outs and wobbles. We saw this in action at his final prep run at Burnham Market, at which he deposited his rider on course. Still, pragmatic Pippa knows that when it comes to this horse, it’s often better to just keep moving on and not fret too much about the niggles.

“It’s quite a known fact that Squirrel can throw all sorts of things at me, but I’ll go out and get stuck in. He was great at Burghley, and yet crap at Burnham Market – you just don’t know with the horse, and he isn’t that easy in his ride again because of his build and shape and the fact that he goes a little bit downhill, so it’s difficult to control the shoulders. But I’ll get stuck in and ride him with my head, and I’m going to try to be competitive on both horses – Iif I’m not having a nice time, I don’t need to get the experience!”

William Fox-Pitt and Little Fire’s 27.3 puts them into 15th place after the first phase. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

William Fox-Pitt managed to slip into the top fifteen at the tail end of the day with Little Fire, who was ninth here in 2019. They bested their score of that year by nearly two penalties, putting a 27.3 on the board despite a tricky warm-up and a wobble in the second halt that earned them 2s from the judges at H and B.

“He’s quite edgy today, so he did well to settle down, though he didn’t walk quite as well as he can,” says William. “His halt and reinback were rubbish, but the rest was good. He’s technically the better dressage horse [of my two rides] so Friday afternoon is better, but he wasn’t settling down, and so I was wishing I’d been on yesterday!”

Part of ‘Aidan’s’ heightened mood has been due to his long-awaited return to a proper, atmospheric three-day – and like many horses here, he’s wholly aware of what’s to come over the weekend.

“He’s just been very electric, because he knows where he is — he knows it’s not Thoresby or Tweseldown, so he’s on his toes. I’ve just had him out plenty, hoping that he was going to settle down — and I think hope is the main thing, because he is thirteen and you think ‘for God’s sake, surely he’ll settle down eventually!’ Luckily, when you put him to work, he does try — he’s not stressed by his work.”

And so the dressage at Badminton draws to a close — but the competition, and EN’s coverage, is far from over. We’ll be bringing you some in-depth insights on tomorrow’s course from the riders who are preparing to tackle it, and in the meantime, you can check it out in its entirety in our comprehensive preview here. Cross-country will begin tomorrow at 11.30 a.m. BST/6.30 a.m. EST, and ride times can be found here. Until next time: Go Eventing!

The top ten at the culmination of dressage at Badminton.

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Friday Morning at Badminton: Laura Collett Leaps to Lead as Only New Entrant to Top Ten

Laura Collett and London 52 deliver their best-ever five-star score to take the lead at Badminton. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

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“It’s not often you go into the arena at Badminton and have a lovely time, but that horse is just so nice to ride,” says Laura Collett, smiling through her tears after storming to the lead with her Tokyo partner London 52. Their score of 21 didn’t just eclipse yesterday’s leaders, Tokyo teammates Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser, by 2.4 points — it’s also Laura’s best-ever five-star score of her storied career.

Of course, it comes as little surprise to see excellence from this partnership, who have consistently delivered low-20s marks over the past number of seasons, winning Pau CCI5* in 2020 on a record-breaking finishing score of 21.3 and dipping as low as 20.3 at four-star. But the standard of this field means that even the very best need to bring their A game to stand a chance of moving into the top ten — and when they received their first 10, for their expressive, fluid, and powerful extended trot, it became very clear that that’s exactly what Laura and ‘Dan’ were en route to do.

“This is what we all dream of,” says the rider, who worked swiftly to overcome a slightly underpowered initial entry, which earned them a 6, 6.5 and 7: “H tried to stop at X instead of I, so was a little bit halfway. So there were little bits [that could have been better], but there’s always little bits until you get to [a score of] zero.”

Laura is another high-profile competitor to pare back their schooling regime ahead of this event with the intention of keeping their horses fresh and expressive in this phase.

“We’ve completely changed what we do. I hold my hands up — I messed up in Tokyo,” says Laura, who posted a slightly higher than expected 25.8 with the gelding at the Olympics. “But you can only learn from your mistakes, and I thought, I’m coming here to be brave and stick to my plan. I haven’t once gone into a dressage arena this week, and we’ve just done a lot of hacking and a lot of pole work, because he knows all the moves. It’s just about keeping him with me.”

Though we’ve seen so many horses back off in the atmospheric arena, showman Dan thrived on this busy second day: “It’s so quiet outside, and then you go in there and suddenly you feel it,” says Laura. “But he didn’t react to the crowds — I think he likes showing off! He’s a funny horse to ride at a one-day event now, because he just thinks it’s completely pointless and he bobbles around with his ears back feeling very grumpy about the whole thing. He’s always wondering where all the crowds are, and the nice arenas — so I think he’s pretty happy to be here, and for us, it’s great to be back at Badminton with the crowds.”

Laura Collett and London 52 dance to an exceptional 21. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Nobody else would venture into the top ten throughout the morning, though a couple of Badminton first-timers made excellent efforts to sit close at hand after the morning session. France’s Gireg le Coz and his five-star debutant Aisprit de la Loge moved into eleventh place on 26.7, just two-tenths of a penalty behind tenth-placed Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin, after delivering an elegant effort that lead the way for today’s considerable French effort.

“He’s been very tense the last few days, so I was a bit worried,” says the rider, whose Badminton ambitions began in 2014, when he based himself with Australia’s Sam Griffiths. Sam went on to win that year’s running of the event, and despite its famously tough conditions that year, the thrill of the place stuck with Gireg. Now, eight years on, he returned to Sam’s yard in Dorset for his final few weeks of preparation with the exciting Aisprit. And in his final preparations on the day itself? He opted to keep things as simple as possible.

“I decided just to lunge him before and not come up here, because he gets nervous. But then he was quite with me, and I think my warm-up was quite good,” he says. Though he’d worried about the buzzy environment in the main arena, he was pleasantly surprised to discover that the arena actually felt like something of an oasis of quiet.

“I was a bit worried about the applause for the rider before me, but actually, there wasn’t much, so that was okay — and because the arena is quite big, it doesn’t feel so close, anyway. So it was really just him and me.”

Susie Berry and John the Bull go sub-30 and sit 14th at the lunch break. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Irish five-star first-timer Susie Berry was teary-eyed with delight after a very grown-up effort from the eleven-year-old John The Bull earned them a 28.8 and put them into fourteenth place at the lunch break. The former stable jockey for 2019 champion Piggy March inherited the ride on the son of Luidam from fellow Irish rider Jonty Evans in 2018, and has delivered some excellent results, including third place in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L last autumn and sixth in a CCI4*-S class at Little Downham in 2020.

“He’s fabulous on the flat, but he’s been a little bit inconsistent since Blenheim last year, so I’m glad to come to a three-day and have the time to do him properly,” she says. Though their scores dipped slightly in three of the four flying changes, much of the work delivered was mature beyond their years.

Bubby Upton and Cola put themselves in a close spot to climb after the first phase. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

23-year-old Bubby Upton has come to her first Badminton with considerable hype behind her: the under-25 national titleholder was excellent in her debut at Pau last year with Cola, and has consistently proven herself amongst Britain’s fiercest competition. Perhaps more impressive is the fact that she’s done so, and built up a prolific and consistent string of horses, alongside attending Edinburgh University. That’s required late nights in lorry parks committing to exam revision while her fellow young riders unwind after a long day, and it’s also meant that she spends a considerable amount of time flying back and forth between university and the yard.

Though her first-phase mark of 30.4 might not be quite what she’d hoped for, it’s still enough to put her into 17th place for now, and fourth-best of the Friday morning competitors.

“I kind of anticipated him going in there and going a bit like, ‘wow!’ at the atmosphere, so I gave him five minutes extra than I normally would,” she explains. “And actually, he kind of went in there and thought it was the arena at home, which is great in so many ways, because it shows that whatever the atmosphere, he doesn’t care — but it just mean that then he went in and was a little bit hard work and a bit flat and not really flowing with me like he would have been if I’d done five minutes less.”

Consistently excellent marks through the first half of the test were slightly marred by lower ones for mistakes in the flying changes. Though Bubby’s an undeniable perfectionist – “I won’t be satisfied until I’m in first after dressage,” she says – she’s also trying to enjoy the enormity of what it actually means to be at Badminton as one of Britain’s brightest young stars.

“I kind of didn’t really take it all in until the end of the test — I went in and was really focused on my plan and what I had to do with him. But what a fantastic place! It’s just a privilege to be here, to be honest.”

We’ll be back this afternoon with a full report from today’s action and a catch-up with our North American contingent, plus plenty more live updates from Sally and much, much more besides. Keep it locked on EN and as always, Go Eventing!

The top ten is largely unchanged after the morning session on Friday – except, of course, for where it counts.

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Thursday Afternoon at Badminton: Tom’s Untouchable But Kitty King’s Closing In

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats offer up this afternoon’s closest challenge for the lead, ultimately finishing up in second at the end of the first day. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It doesn’t often happen that Badminton’s Thursday morning leader remains in the top spot through the rest of the day, but that’s exactly what happened in today’s competition: coming forward as just the fourth competitor of the day, Olympic medallists Tom McEwen and his eminently reliable Toledo de Kerser delivered a career-best five-star score of 23.4 that proved unsurpassable as the day wore on. There were plenty of admirable challengers for the throne, though, and as the day drew to a close, two of them had come very close indeed.

“He’s getting more and more reliable — he used to be a little bit more tricky, but he’s getting more and more on side as he’s getting older and he’s getting the strength there,” says Kitty King, who posted a 24.8 with Vendredi Biats (Winningmood x Liane Normande, by Camelia de Ruelles). While it’s hardly the Selle Français gelding’s first sub-25 – he’s managed the feat four times at four-star – it easily eclipsed his previous five-star score of 27.2, earned here in 2019. Like many French horses, we’ve seen him hit a peak, both in strength and in hard-earned maturity, as he’s entered his teens and today, his professionalism won out – despite some tricky schooling sessions in the previous days.

“He was quite tricky yesterday, and kept breaking in all his medium trots,” explains Kitty. “I was getting a bit stressed about it all, but he was much more with me when I rode him this morning. I got on him probably a bit too early up here and so, because he felt really focused and with me, I just ended up doing a lot of walk and practicing his halts [in the warm-up].”

That clearly paid off – the pair earned a 10 from judge Christian Landolt at C for their second halt, while the judges at H and B awarded them 9s for the same movement. But the audible reaction from today’s high-octane audience nearly cost them thereafter: “I’d done my halt and reinback and then went into canter, and I heard a gasp as I went into medium canter [when the halt score was revealed] – I thought, ‘am I not meant to be doing medium canter?! Where am I meant to be going?’ So then I didn’t ride my medium very well, because I thought ‘oh shit, I’ve gone wrong’ because of the gasp. I’m not used to getting 10s!”

Kitty and ‘Froggy’s’ trip to last year’s European Championships in Avenches proved an asset in their corner as they came face to face with packed grandstands in this afternoon’s session.

“It wasn’t like here, obviously, but there were some quite enthusiastic crowds [at Avenches], so it was good he got to see them,” she says. Her ride time, though, was directly after that of third-placed Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden, who had delivered an excellent test to a tumult of applause. “I waited for Mollie’s second clap and then went in thinking they’d be finished, and then they clapped as I went in. I thought ‘oh God!’, because that’s when he can go a bit short and have his eyes popping out of his head, but I gave him a little flexion left and right and did a little leg-yield, and he came straight back to me and really settled.”

From then on out, Kitty found she was able to be bold throughout her ride, giving the ground jury every excuse to reward her crisp transitions between and within the gaits.

“He just felt superb today when I was doing the test. It was the first time where it actually felt like I had so much time between each movement to prepare for the next, whereas normally we don’t have that kind of balance and that time. It all flowed nicely, and I could really ride him for every mark that he could give me at this point. I couldn’t be more thrilled with him.”

Mollie Summerland makes her Badminton debut an impressive one, delivering her best-ever five-star score with her Luhmühlen-winning partner, Charly van ter Heiden. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

While Kitty might have felt a touch of trepidation at vocal enthusiasm following Mollie Summerland‘s test with Charly van ter Heiden, Mollie herself felt an enormous wave of relief as she completed her test with the 13-year-old Hanoverian.

“I’ve found it quite tough since Luhmühlen,” she admits, referring to her fairytale win with the gelding in the German five-star last summer, where she led from pillar to post. “I’ve been feeling a lot of pressure, probably from myself, and a lot of expectation, and I’ve found it hard this year to get the balance right and enjoy the sport. I actually spoke to my sports psychologist this morning, because yesterday I was a very different person – I was probably a little bit introverted and quite emotional and worried. But today, my trainer Olivia Oakley has been here with me, holding my hand every step of the way.”

The 24-year-old’s Badminton debut is a very different kettle of fish to that Luhmühlen trip, which came during the height of continental travel restrictions and meant that she competed without Great Britain’s extensive team of support staff to hand, and none of her trainers or home team with her. This time, she has access to all of the above – but also carries the weight of knowing that this time around, the world knows her name.

That pressure reached its zenith ahead of her test, largely because of her notable prowess in this phase. Mollie also trains extensively with British dressage superstar Carl Hester, and freely admits that the first phase is her favourite – but meeting her own high standards can be a lofty challenge. Today, she rose to it, earning herself a 24.9 – her best-ever score at five-star, and good enough for third place at the end of the first day of competition here.

“I feel a bit shell-shocked – I really didn’t expect that, and I’ve never ridden in front of crowds like that,” she says, beaming through tears. “I’m just so proud of [Charly] — that horse deserves that score, and I’m just glad I didn’t let him down. I just couldn’t believe it; when I came out I kept asking my trainer if she was sure I hadn’t missed a change, because we actually couldn’t do any [in the warm-up], and he was excited in the atmosphere.”

Mollie’s excellent test today wasn’t just a triumph over the pressure she’s felt – it was also a welcome return to the top for Charly, who sat out the rest of 2021 after post-event scans revealed he’d picked up a soft tissue injury at Luhmühlen.

“To have him back — that horse means the world to me; I’ve had him since he was a five-year-old,” she says. “I feel quite emotional about it! He’s my best friend, and so to ride in that arena together was a privilege.”

World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar B bring a new outlook to their return to five-star. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum hold fourth place overnight, and best of today’s strong line-up of North American riders, with the very good 25.3 they earned in this morning’s session, while fellow pre-lunch competitors Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs and reigning champions Piggy March and Vanir Kamira sit in equal fifth on 25.7. New Zealand’s Amanda Pottinger and her ex-racehorse Just Kidding finish the day in seventh place on 25.9. (Missed it? You can catch up on the details of their rides in the lunch break report.)

That sizzling morning session does feel rather a long way away now, but let’s take a quick whiz back in time to revisit the superb efforts that filled much of the rest of the top ten in today’s competition.

Eighth overnight are our reigning World Champions Ros Canter and Allstar B, who delivered a clear round between the boards to post a 26.4. They return to competition for 2022 — and for their first test at this level since the World Equestrian Games in 2018 — with a reinvigorated approach after a tricky 2021 season.

“I’ve done things a bit differently with him this year, and have been schooling and practicing the dressage a lot less than I’ve done before,” she explains. “I was a little bit nervous this morning that I hadn’t practiced my tests enough, but as soon as you get in there he’s like, head down, ‘off we go, Ros!’, so he’s great.”

‘Alby’s’ 2021 season saw the pair head to Tokyo as travelling reserves for the British team, which required Ros to carefully build the seventeen-year-old gelding to peak fitness. When they weren’t subsequently required to run at the Olympics, she briefly let him back down, before building him up again in preparation for September’s European Championships in Avenches. But that long build-up led to a hugely uncharacteristic couple of run-outs – a frustrating turn of events that was ultimately a strange sort of blessing in disguise for the pair.

“As we do over the winter, I thought a lot about him, and about our relationship together,” she explains. “I think it goes back further than the Olympic year with us: I missed a year due to being pregnant, and then Covid hit and the ‘Big Bs’, which he adores and lives for, and that build-up to two big events a year, all disappeared. Suddenly, we had to build up every month for a short-format, and I think as a result of the pressure of having had a year off, I probably over-trained in that period — so I very much wanted to get back to him loving the job again. He’s older and wiser and more laid-back at home, and so we’ve gone hacking [instead of schooling]. I’ve learned so much about him out hacking, about his balance, about bringing him off his forehand on the flat. He doesn’t forget how to do a flying change or a half-pass, and so I’m fairly confident that what I’ve done this year has been the right thing for the horse.”

“It was terrible at the time that I had the run-outs and I lost an individual medal [at the Europeans], but thankfully we still won the team medal and in hindsight, if I’d won an individual gold medal I wouldn’t have changed my system, and I’d have had a different horse coming into Badminton. We’re always learning as riders, and I definitely learned a lot from last year’s experience.”

European Champions Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin take an early spot in the top ten. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The rider who did go on to win the individual gold in that European Championships was Nicola Wilson and her now eleven-year-old Holsteiner JL Dublin, who began his five-star debut just a tenth of a penalty behind Ros and Alby on 26.5. That’s enough to see him finish the first day in ninth place.

“It’s his first time at this level, and he coped really well with the atmosphere in the main arena — and I was thrilled with his test,” says Nicola. “He had a little wobble in the second shoulder-in, which was costly, but on the whole I was delighted with his rideability, how he went, and how he expressed himself.”

That the ‘little wobble’ in their shoulder-in only saw their marks drop down to a 6.5 at the lowest is a testament to how consistent this horse has been: he won Bicton’s CCI4*-L and Hartpury’s CCI4*-S last season before heading to Avenches, where he put an exceptional 20.9 on the board and subsequently finished on it.

This is the first of Nicola’s two debutant horses this week, and also the first time we’ve seen Badminton use the draw to decide the order of multiple-horse riders: previously, those with two entered could choose the order in which they went, but this year, it’s assigned at random. (The exception to the rule, of course, is those riders who enter more than two horses with the intention of withdrawing all but two, who are then given multiple spots at the start and finish of the list and can tactically withdraw in order to get the intended runners in their preferred order.) In Nicola’s case, given the choice, she’d have preferred to bring JL Dublin out for Friday’s session: “I probably would have ridden him second, but it really doesn’t matter — if you do a good test you’ll be marked well, hopefully!”

Pippa Funnell’s impressive Billy Walk On jointly rounds out the top ten. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Two further Brits round out the top ten in equal tenth place on 28.5, and between them, they represent a formidable cross-section of the country’s elite competitors: Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On line up for the living legends and experienced five-star horses of the sport, while Emily King and Valmy Biats represent the young guns and debutant horses.

It’s been a busy enough week for Pippa by anyone’s standards — after riding two horses to very good results at Kentucky, she hopped on the packed Sunday evening flight from Lexington back to England, where she dived headlong into the final preparations for Badminton with another two entrants. That meant fine-tuning the flatwork with her horses, who had been schooled in her absence by her stable staff.

“[Billy Walk On] is a very big horse, and I have a fantastic team at home of very little people — they’re all five foot, or five foot one maximum,” says Pippa. “Lily Wilson’s done the most incredible job with them, keeping them ticking over and hacking, but he’s big and gets quite strung out and that’s meant I’ve had to work quite hard in closing him up again, so I don’t think that being away necessarily helped in the preparation. But that’s more to do with the FEI and trying to persuade them to change calendars so we can have a week between the five-stars!”

Though we’ve seen Billy Walk On deliver low 20s scores at this level, his test today looked plenty polished in the circumstances, with just one frustrating moment in the second change when he dropped behind the leg and spooked through the movement, earning costly 4s and a 3.

Emily King and Valmy Biats join Pippa and Billy Walk On in equal tenth place after day one of dressage. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Emily King, too, had a wobble in the second flying change, which earned her two 5s and a 4 with Valmy Biats, and was the only real fault in an otherwise mature test for the first-time five-star horse.

“He’s come on so much in the dressage over the last couple of years,” says Emily, who campaigns the horse with the support of the Event Horse Owners Syndicate, a racing-inspired micro syndicate service that allows fans of the sport increased access to the sport via ‘their’ horse and rider. “I’ve only had him for two years, and when he came to me he couldn’t physically do flying changes, and now he’s coming in and doing all of them. Give him another year and I think he’ll be mega, so for where he’s at, I was seriously pleased.”

This was Valmy’s first time in a real pressure cooker of an atmosphere but this, too, posed little issue for the French gelding: “He coped very well — he’s quite a hot, tense sort of horse with a lot of power that quite easily goes straight out the front door, so it’s just about containing it in a relaxed way. I thought he went in there and felt like he did in the warm-up, which was lovely because I didn’t have to adapt too much.”

The second half of the field comes forward tomorrow to attempt to smash the incredibly high standard we’ve seen throughout today’s competition – and there’s plenty of heavy hitters in the line-up, including Olympic medallists Laura Collett and London 52Bubby Upton and ColaTim Price and Ringwood Sky BoyOliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class, and plenty more besides. We’ll also see another, smaller batch of our North American (and US-based) contingent, the first group of whom we caught up with earlier today. To check out the times in full, click here.

We’ll be back with plenty more from Badminton — until then, Go Eventing!

The top ten at the end of Thursday’s dressage at Badminton.

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Thursday Morning at Badminton: Tom McEwen Tops the Board in All-Star Session

Tom McEwen leaves nothing on the table in Toledo de Kerser’s canter work, which earns him an early lead. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

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Long gone are the days of easing into Badminton week with a batch of mid-30s marks on Thursday morning: today’s first batch of competitors was so flush with major names and heavy-hitters that the gauntlet was thrown down almost from the word go. We hadn’t yet seen ten o’clock before Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser B (Diamant de Semilly x Ariane du Prieure II), British individual silver and team gold medallists at last year’s Tokyo Olympics, delivered a very nearly flawless test to put a 23.4 on the scoreboard.

But while the ground jury presented a nearly unified front throughout many of the day’s subsequent tests, there was actually a fairly significant discrepancy in Tom’s marks, which precluded the 2019 Pau CCI5* victors from creeping even lower towards the 20 cusp. While Christian Landolt, judging from C, and Seppo Laine, in situ at H, both rewarded Tom and Toledo with a percentage score in the high 70s, Anne-Marie Taylor at B proved harder to impress: she gave them a 73.7, putting them lower in her estimations than several other combinations.

“I’m not sure where she’s coming from,” laughs Tom. “He was amazing. It’s a shame he didn’t do that test in Tokyo, because that would have made our life a lot easier!”

Tom earned the first 10 of the day after delivering an extended canter transition that was bold, balanced, and showed the full scope of the rangy Selle Français gelding’s stride. For the packed stands full of keen eventing fans, the performance will have come as little surprise; the pair come into this week’s competition as one of the odds-on favourites to take the win here. But even Olympic medallists have weak points, and Toledo’s has often been the walk. Today’s test, which is the same we saw in action last week at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, features a lengthy and influential walk section, throughout which the pair’s scores dipped to between 5.5 and 6.5.

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser set the standard for the days to come. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

There are a few things that you can generally count on with Tom and Toledo, though: first, that they’re reliably excellent in the other two gaits, which makes them consistently competitive on the flat, and second, that they’re not likely to be ruffled by the scores as they happen, whether they’re very high or trending lower.

“I couldn’t see the screen [during the extended canter], which was probably no bad thing,” he says. “I had no idea where [the marks] were going; I was just going through my process.”

That process has been influenced in large part by dressage supremo Ferdi Eilberg, with whom Tom has long trained: “Ferdi’s been brilliant with him this week, and so he’s super relaxed and super keen – and he’s got a bit fresh with all the people [around] again, so that’s been really lovely to see.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum go into second place after a small mistake early in their test. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

A number of the competitors in this week’s field are fresh — well, relatively speaking, anyway — off the plane from Kentucky last week, which can be both a blessing and a curse: those competitors have the undeniable advantage of having gotten their eye in over five-star fences already, but on the flip side, the hop from country to country means that those all-important final few rides have been completed with another rider aboard. California’s Tamie Smith is one such rider: she was able to keep Mai Baum (Loredano 2 x Ramira, by Rike) at Kentucky with her through last Wednesday, giving them a valuable chance to train together in a competition setting, but since he landed on UK soil, it’s been up to fellow US rider Avery Klunick to keep the 16-year-old gelding ticking over. That’s no small amount of pressure for either rider to contend with – both Tamie and Avery alike are achingly aware of the gelding’s ability to throw down a leading test in this field, and equally aware of how little it takes to tip the balance and put a chink the armour.

“That’s a little nerve-wracking for me, but luckily she did a great job and didn’t ruin him or anything,” jokes Tamie, who sits second at the lunch break on a respectable score of 25.3. “I actually think it’s good, because the pressure is kind of let off of them.”

Just one minor blip stopped them making a serious bid for the lead – ‘Lexus’ broke into a canter in the first trot half-pass, and though the mistake was infinitesimally brief, it was enough to see them earn 4s for that movement. Elsewhere, though, the black gelding delivered his characteristic flowing, correct work and Tamie, who spent her teenage years learning aboard Grand Prix dressage schoolmasters while riding with Martina Stimmel, left nothing to chance in the ring. For Lexus, whose only other test on grass was his Aachen test of last season, Badminton’s capacious turf arena provided an unfamiliar challenge in a phase that comes very naturally to him.

“On grass you don’t get the same kind of pushing power you’d get in the arena, and he wouldn’t be experienced with that,” Tamie says. “He’s never made me nervous going into dressage before, and I yesterday I was slightly like, ‘oooh — this isn’t what I’m used to!’ But he’s never been this fit and ready to go, and I was really pleased with everything. He could have maybe gone a little bit more forward, but when I went to ask for that he broke to canter, so I just played it a little bit safe there.”

His high level of fitness played a part in that — but equally influential was the huge, buzzy atmosphere in the arena, which is famously spooky when filled to capacity.

“He’s been on fire all week, and he was really with me; he did get a little bit overwhelmed by the crowd, but he held it together. It’s quite an atmosphere in there, even though it’s Thursday, which is normally a bit quieter,” she says. But that buzz is all part of the Badminton experience, which Tamie is relishing with her horse of a lifetime: “He did Kentucky last year and I feel like he’s the best horse in the world. He’s just an unbelievable creature, and I want to be at the best event in the world with him. It’s not every day you have a horse to take to Badminton and I feel like I do. I could have played it safe and gone to Kentucky, but neither one of us has thirty years ahead of us, so I feel like we’re ready!”

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Oliver Townend makes a positive impression with relatively new ride Swallow Springs to sit equal third at the lunch break. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It’s never a surprise to see World Number One Oliver Townend at the business end of the leaderboard here, but only the most committed of eventing fans will have recognised his first ride of the week, who sits equal third on 25.7 at this early stage. The fourteen-year-old Swallow Springs (Chillout x Kilila, by Cult Hero) was previously campaigned to this level by Oliver’s longtime friend Andrew Nicholson, who handed the reins to Oliver just before Blenheim in September before announcing his own retirement from upper-level competition. This is far from the first horse Oliver has inherited from the Kiwi, who won this event in 2017 with Nereo, but it’s arguably the most competitive — and the most experienced. That doesn’t always make for an easy transition from rider to rider, but in their short tenure together, Oliver and ‘Chill’ have finished tenth in their debut at Blenheim CCI4*-L and won on their Badminton prep run at Burnham Market CCI4*-S last month. Their joint debut in Badminton’s main arena belied the brevity of their partnership: their test was a true ‘clear round’, never dipping below a 6.5 (and even those were notable only by their scarcity).

“The boss is pleased; he said he couldn’t have done any better himself, so that was handy,” says Oliver with a laugh. “He’s a new horse, and we’re only just getting to know each other, but he’s an old professional. Sometimes it’s more difficult with the old professionals, but he went in and did his job. He’s basically a full Thoroughbred and not built for dressage, but he’s getting better and better.”

The gelding, who was fifth here in 2019 with Andrew aboard, has one particular quality that has ingratiated him to the Yorkshireman: his ineffable well of try. “He’s a professional, and he comes out and works every day, which I obviously love,” says Oliver. “I think that’s a trait that you get with most top horses — they know their job, and they come out and do their job for you, and it’s a pleasure working with professionals like that.”

Reigning champions Piggy March and Vanir Kamira return with a bang to defend their title. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

This week has been a long time coming for Piggy March and Vanir Kamira (Camiro de Haar Z x Fair Caledonian, by Dixi), who have held the Badminton title since their win here back in 2019. ‘Tillybean’ was just coming into her prime then as a fourteen-year-old, and now returns as a seasoned, though relatively low-mileage, seventeen-year-old. It certainly didn’t look as though she’d gathered any moss through that wait, though, when she delivered a tidy test for equal third and 25.7 this morning.

“I’ll definitely take it — I don’t want to go in and try again,” laughs Piggy, who was pleasantly surprised to find that her test had looked, perhaps, better than it felt.

“She’s been pretty lively since she’s been here, and I’ve been slightly panicking that she remembers 2019 too well! The last time I went in the main arena I milked it for all I could, and went around 20 million times in the lap of honour, yelling like a crazy thing. And we obviously haven’t been anywhere for two years that has this sort of buzz, but she’s a good old girl and she’s pretty professional. I do forget that, when I’m scratching around warm-ups thinking ‘this isn’t good enough’. She’s just hard, and there’s definitely a couple of wobbles — she shuffled at the beginning of her extended trot and had a little bit of a loss of rhythm, but I head a gunshot go off at the same time so I don’t know whether she was thinking about the same thing. But I think we were accurate enough — a swear word never entered my mind!”

For a horse like this, the Big Bs — Badminton and Burghley — are the be-all and end-all, and waiting for them to return has been something of a prolonged heartbreak for Piggy. Now, though, it’s time to make up for all they’ve missed, and all that they’ve dealt with in the lead-up.

“We’ve been excited all year — it’s just good to be here. We’ve had a rubbish couple of weeks,” says Piggy, referring to her sister-in-law Caroline March’s recent accident at Burnham Market, and her own late withdrawal of Brookfield Inocent. “It’s felt like there’s lots of black clouds — that’s the sport; you’re up and down. It’s just felt like quite an emotional rollercoaster the last two weeks, and we sort of thought, ‘ugh, we need another month to regroup’. But the moment you drive in the gates, it’s just cool — it’s what we do it for. We’ve spent a lot of time at home regrouping and waiting for something to come along, and maybe sometimes you do just need the kick up the arse, like ‘come on then, you silly old cow’.”

Kiwi combination Amanda Pottinger and Just Kidding put up a great fight for the ex-racehorse contingent to sit fifth at the lunch break. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The top five is rounded out by New Zealander Amanda Pottinger, daughter of Olympian Tinks Pottinger, who delivered an excellent 25.9 with her ex-racehorse Just Kidding. The two-time New Zealand open Champions have made two previous starts at five-star, both at the Adelaide in Australia, where they’ve finished second and fourth. Their scores in Southern Hemisphere events have also been formidable, including a 21.2 in a CCI4*-L at Puhinui — but Badminton is a whole ‘nother stage and a serious challenge for a sharp horse. In that enviably relaxed Kiwi way, though, they settled right in in the main arena, delivering far and away their best-ever five-star test.

“That was way above my expectations,” says Amanda, who has previously scored in the mid-30s as this level. “I was hoping for a sub-30, but nowhere near 25! But I knew he had this test in him, and we’ve been working on it, and I’m just stoked to finally be able to pull it off. We knew it was there, and to get it on the first day at Badminton is unbelievable.”

Amanda, who’s been basing in Wiltshire, England in the lead-up to Badminton, picked the gelding up as a bargain-basement racehorse reject, but he didn’t start out that way: he was sold for $100,000 as a yearling, and is a son of the 2000 Kentucky Derby winner Fusaichi Pegasus. That means that Saturday’s tough track should work in his favour – and Amanda, who had mentally prepared herself for a climb up the leaderboard, puts herself in a brilliant position to try to retain a spot at the upper end of the leaderboard.

“These guys are bred for Saturday, and not really bred for this phase. He’s always been a beautiful looking horse and a beautiful moving horse for a Thoroughbred, and he really does want to please, so we’ve always known he had it in him — it’s just been about working out the best way to get him where he’s happy and can do his job,” she says.

We’ll be back this afternoon with a full report from today’s proceedings — until then, Go Eventing!

The top ten after the morning session at Badminton.

Badminton Links: WebsiteEntriesLive Stream, Live Scores, Ride TimesEN’s Ultimate Guide, The Form GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

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Beauty and the Badminton: The (Un)Official Trot-Up Style Awards

Some days, I think my role as a journalist in this sport is to chronicle its ups and downs, to chart its progress and its shortfalls, and to do my tiny little bit to help steer this party boat to safer harbours. Other days, I confront the truth of the matter: I’m here to make friends and then lose them again, quite rapidly, by taking the mick out of their carefully honed trot-up outfits. I’m not sure if anyone’s ever actually been blacklisted from horse inspections for repeated bad behaviour, but I’ve always been a pioneer in my field. Mostly because everyone else is very busy doing the important stuff.

The first horse inspection at Badminton Horse Trials tends to be something of a sedate affair as far as outfits are concerned — you get the odd outlier, sure, but for the most part, it’s a sea of ever-so-respectable tweeds, and somehow, everyone watching on is also in tweed, like we’re at some kind of odd woollens convention.

To those brave souls who buck the trend: I salute you. And now I’m going to be mean to you on the internet — but it’s all for a bit of fun and hey, there’s a new pair of Fairfax & Favor footwear on the line for the brave winner.

The Golden Chinch for WFH Chic

Hector Payne and Dynasty. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think what has happened here is clear: Hector Payne has clocked on for his mid-morning Teams meeting, still wearing what he went to sleep in, with biscuit crumbs on his lap and, I don’t know, probably a housecat nestled in his chest hair or something. And then his manager has chirpily announced that “actually folks, I thought it would be nice if we switched our cameras on for our catch-up today!” and in a moment of enormous panic, poor Hec has had to chuck the cat aside, sweep the debris off his desk, and throw on something that would suggest he’s been prepared and professional all along. It’s business up top, #naplife down below. A professional Pooh Bear, if you will, except he’s (probably wisely) dispensed with the idea of full nudity from the waist down.

The Golden Chinch for Offshore Shenanigans

Emily Hamel and Corvett. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Why is the rum always gone, Emily Hamel? There’s something very Captain Jack Sparrow about this coat, but also, somehow, something very ‘Brooding Romantic Lead in a Period Drama’, as though she’s on her way to tell some hapless young lady that she can’t possibly marry her, because her mother is too embarrassing. Actually, this sounds like a fantastic crossover idea for a movie, so I’ll be patiently awaiting my cheque from Hollywood.

The Golden Chinch for Representing Women in STEM

Susie Berry and John the Bull. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I remember the hazy days of the early nineties, when all the Barbies on the shop shelves were clad in tooth-achingly pink tulle and those silly little stilettos that needled their way into your soul if you stepped on them on a playroom floor. Now, though, we’re a much more enlightened culture (well, sort of), and little girls have all sorts of brainy beauties to look up to. Chief among them is head researcher Susie Berry, who serves us up a look here that’s very ‘when you’ve got a trot-up at five and need to go dissect a few mouse hearts at seven.’ Yes, she looks like a solid ten, but more importantly, I’m pretty sure she might be about to cure cancer. As Paris Hilton would say, ‘that’s hot.’

The Golden Chinch for Service with a Smile

Ben Hobday and Shadow Man. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Le garçon would like to know if the table by the window will suit madame? A soupçon of caviar for the lady? A little tinkle-winkle of the Chablis? Perhaps a cocktail sausage to nibble on? Ben Hobday‘s got what you need, and in his pursuit of five (Michelin) stars, he’s laser-focused.

The Golden Chinch for Going Full Goth For Trot-Up

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Emily’s at that very special age when a girl has only one thing on her mind.”

“Boys?”

“Homicide.”

Honestly, though, props to Emily for managing to meld equestrian chic with ‘about to marry Travis Barker’ vibes. I spend my life trying to do this and every day I’m appalled to discover that no one has yet bothered to make fun of me on the internet.

The Golden Chinch for Casual Reminders

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tamie Smith is a busy woman, and it’s only fair to expect that sometimes, in the madness of rushing from coast to coast and country to country, she sort of forgets where she’s going and what she’s doing. This very sharp dress is emblazoned with horsey paraphernalia, which is obviously serving as something of a visual aid for the Californian, who I suspect started filling her suitcase with shuttlecocks before one of her grooms stopped her in a panic and reminded her she was going to England to do the other kind of Badminton. Here, she helpfully shows the gathered media her horse, in case they forgot, too.

The Golden Chinch for Midlife Crisis Dressing

Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The actual, official Best Dressed Gentleman winner delivers an outfit here that says “I just spunked my retirement fund on an Alfa Romeo, have scored myself a 21-year-old girlfriend, and actually, I might go steal a yacht and become some sort of Palm Beach pirate, because the world is burning and why not, quite frankly?” There’s a part of me that suspects that he might disappear to, say, London before cross-country day and return with a front tooth entirely encrusted with diamonds, which would be incongruous and unexpected, but also somehow feels right, deep in my soul.

In the late 90s, men reached a certain age and went a little bit weird in a Kevin-Spacey-in-American-Beauty sort of way; this version, as demonstrated by Karl Slezak, feels like it’s on a mission to single-handedly revive the word #YOLO and also maybe ‘groovy’, which I think I can get on board with. My hopes are high for the second horse inspection: Karl, as you are a proud Canadian, please consider channeling Celine Dion, circa her Las Vegas residency. Here all week if you need any styling tips.

Das Ist Eine Gut Golden Chinch, Ja?

Katrin Khoddam-Hazrati and DSP Cosma. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One thing I love about Austria’s Katrin Khoddam-Hazrati is that she’s reliable. I just know, without any doubt in my mind, that every time I see her name on the running order I’ll also get to see a jolly good dirndl, and that means I’ll also get to smugly correct everyone around me who says “is she wearing lederhosen?” No, you silly, silly sausages; that’s what men wear, and they don’t wash those, so given the opportunity, it’s the women in their delightful Alps-y dirndls you want to be cavorting with.

Here’s a fun fact about dirndls: the fashion designer Vivienne Westwood was officially named an ambassador for them (yes, this is a thing, for some reason) after she said, and I quote: “I do not understand you Austrians. If every woman wore a dirndl, there would not be any more ugliness.” That sparked something of a dirndl renaissance in the country, and truly, as I write this in the middle of the night, I’m nearly teary-eyed with joy at the fact that there’s actually a use for this totally pointless information that’s been taking up room in my brain.

The Golden Chinch for Realising Mid-Jog That This is Her Circus and These Are Her Monkeys, Actually

Sofia Sjoborg and DHI Mighty Dwight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As Swedish rider Sofia Sjoborg appeared on the trot-up strip, the first reaction I had was to feel faintly soothed: “ahh,” I thought to myself, “if I stopped staying up until 1am writing kind of mean trot-up articles about people and just went to a therapist instead, this is what I imagine the sofa in their office would look like.” The downside of that line of thought is that by the time Sofia reached the turning point at the business end of the strip, I’d gone so far down the rabbit hole of pondering what I’d say to that therapist that I was actively coming to terms with the fact that my father never loved me, and then I forgot the really funny circus ringmaster joke I was going to make about this coat. Whoops.

The Golden Chinch Award for Hipster Restauranteuring

Like Ben Hobday before her, Bubby Upton also gives me the sense that I’m about to enjoy a jolly good dinner, except now I’m fairly certain I’m in the sort of restaurant that serves everything deconstructed and arranged piecemeal on anything but a plate. Like a slate, for example, or maybe a small shopping cart. There’s a soundtrack being piped in that’s nattily remixed Bossa nova classics with, say, Mumford and Sons. Being cool is very exhausting, I think.

And so I turn the hard work over to you, my dear readers. It’s an important vote you’re casting, to determine our winner, so think carefully and vote by Friday, May 6 at 5 p.m. BST. Whichever rider wins the popular vote will get a glorious pair of highly covetable Fairfax and Favor shoes, which is just about enough incentive to stop any of them from seeking me out for a little bout of fisticuffs, I think. (I hope.)

Badminton Links: WebsiteEntriesLive Stream, Ride TimesEN’s Ultimate Guide, The Form GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

The Ultimate Guide to the 2022 Badminton Horse Trials

EN’s coverage of the 2022 Badminton Horse Trials, presented by Mars Equestrian, is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products and its wide array of supplements available for your horse.

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Click any link below to jump to that section. We’ll be adding more to this Ultimate Guide, including sponsor promos and some contests, this week!

The Competition
What’s At Stake
The Line-Up
The Officials
Schedule of Events
How to Follow
Social & Links
Our Coverage
Sponsor Promos & Contests

THE COMPETITION:

We’ve waited since 2019, and Badminton Horse Trials is finally back. The iconic CCI5* competition, which began in 1949, is the second Rolex Grand Slam leg of 2022 — though the live leader, Michael Jung, isn’t entered — and arguably the sport’s most coveted prize. The dressage test will be FEI CCI5* B, the same used at Kentucky last week.

WHAT’S AT STAKE:

Most crucially? A shot at the highly-coveted Badminton trophy and a share of the £360,750 prize pot, which has been off-limits since 2019 due to the pandemic. But this is also a pivotal opportunity for riders to impress their respective selectors ahead of this September’s World Championships in Pratoni, Italy. Beyond that? There’s also a battle for FEI World Rankings points as the likes of the Price family and Pippa Funnell work to topple Oliver Townend from the number one slot.

THE LINE-UP: 

Twelve nations will come forward to fight for the coveted Badminton title and its new-look trophy, including bumper entries from the US and France, a Canadian double-header, single entries from Belgium, Sweden, Germany, Austria, and Italy, and a small but serious contingent for Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland. In total, we’ve got 86 entries across 77 riders, and you can meet them all in our jam-packed form guide, which is in drawn order for maximum ease of use.

THE OFFICIALS: 

There’s a truly top-notch cast of ground jury members on duty at Badminton. Switzerland’s Christian Landolt will serve as president of the ground jury, while Great Britain’s Anne-Marie Taylor and Finland’s Seppo Laine will work alongside him. The FEI Technical Delegate for the week is Poland’s Marcin Konarski, assisted by Simon Grundy of Great Britain. The cross-country course will be designed by Eric Winter, who has been in charge of Saturday’s action since 2017. On Sunday, the remaining field will tackle a tough course on grass, designed by Phillip Bywater.

[Times are listed in local time as well as EST]

Wednesday, 4 May:

  • 9.00 am – 4.15 pm (approx.) – Dubarry Burghley Young Event Horse Class – The Slaits
  • 4.30 p.m. (11.30 a.m. EST): First horse inspection – North front Badminton House

Thursday, 5 May:

  • 9.30 a.m. – 12.30 p.m. (4.30 a.m. – 7.30 a.m. EST): Morning dressage session
  • 12.30 p.m. (approx.) (7.30 a.m. EST): Dressage demo with Laura Tomlinson
  • 1.30 p.m. – 5.00 p.m. (8.30 a.m. – 12.00 p.m. EST): Afternoon dressage session

Friday, 6 May:

  • 9.30 a.m. – 12.30 p.m. (4.30 a.m. – 7.30 a.m. EST): Morning dressage session
  • 12.30 p.m. (approx.) (7.30 a.m. EST): Dressage demo with Laura Tomlinson
  • 1.30 p.m. – 5.00 p.m. (8.30 a.m. – 12.00 p.m. EST): Afternoon dressage session
  • 5.00 p.m. (12.00 p.m. EST): Stallion display

Saturday, 7 May:

  • 10.30 a.m. (5.30 a.m. EST): Shetland Pony Grand National
  • 11.30 a.m. – 5.00 p.m. (6.30 a.m. – 12.00 p.m. EST): Cross-country

Sunday, 8 May: 

  • 8.30 a.m. (3.30 a.m. EST): Final horse inspection – North front Badminton House
  • 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST): First showjumping session
  • 2.35 p.m. (9.35 a.m. EST): Parade of athletes
  • From 3.00 p.m. (10.00 a.m. EST): Final 20 to jump
  • 4.15 p.m. (11.15 a.m. EST): Prizegiving

HOW TO FOLLOW: 

For the first year, the BBC won’t be broadcasting Badminton — well, not in its entirety, anyway. You’ll be able to watch all the action, including trot-ups, by subscribing to Badminton TV for a one-off price of $20/£19.95. This gives you access to the livestream, wherever you are in the world, as well as nearly 100 hours of archive footage from prior events, peaks behind the scenes, course previews, and profiles. If you’re in Britain, you’ll need to turn to BBC2 to watch the final 10 competitors show jump live on Sunday afternoon.

If you’re following along at home (or heck, even if you are attending this year, you lucky duck, you can sign up for the free EN Daily Digest for Badminton here. We’ll start sending this newsletter out each evening in the U.S. beginning Tuesday, May 3. Inside you’ll find all of our coverage from each day + opportunities to win prizes, so you don’t want to miss out!

Hashtags:

#badmintonhorsetrials, #badmintonbound, #rolexgrandslam

Accounts: Badminton Horse TrialsCrossCountry App, Horse&Hound, FEI Eventing, and Equestrian Team GBR. Don’t forget to follow EN, toowe’ll be bringing you all the insanity in the middle you could possibly need! (And if you’d like to see the real behind-the-scenes life of an EN journo on tour, you certainly can. #shamelessplug) Want to know the juiciest stats throughout the competition? Make sure you follow EquiRatings.

Badminton: [Website] [Dressage Ride Times] [Live Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Ultimate Guide] [EN’s Instagram] [EN’s Twitter]

SUNDAY MAY 8
Sunday Badminton Daily Digest
“I Thought I’d Wake Up and It All Would Have Been a Dream”: Laura Collett Sets Record Badminton Victory
Nicola Wilson Stable at Southmead Hospital Following Badminton Cross Country Fall
Three Horses Held, Five Withdrawn at Final Badminton Horse Inspection

SATURDAY MAY 7
Saturday Badminton Daily Digest
Laura Collett Reigns Supreme on Dramatic Badminton Cross Country Day
A North American Rider Debrief after Badminton Cross Country
Badminton Social Recap: A Very Social Cross Country Day
The Big Bad Badminton Cross Country Live Update Thread
‘It’s Like Going Back in Time’: Riders React to Eric Winter’s Cross Country Course

FRIDAY MAY 6
Friday Badminton Daily Digest
Friday Afternoon at Badminton: Hits Just Keep On Coming; Laura Collett Reigns Supreme
Hear From Friday’s North American Riders at Badminton
Badminton Social Recap: Mostly Just Some Photos of That Broken Bridge…
Shannon’s Scenes from Friday at Badminton: Dogs, Dressage and Dreams of Cross Country
David Doel is a Man with a Plan at Badminton
Friday Morning at Badminton: Laura Collett Leaps to Lead as Only New Entrant to Top 10
Friday at Badminton: Dressage Day Two Live Updates

THURSDAY MAY 5
Thursday Badminton Daily Digest
Badminton Social Recap: One Dressage Day Down
Thursday Afternoon at Badminton: Tom’s Untouchable But Kitty King’s Closing In
Catching Up with the American Contingent after Badminton Day One
Thursday Morning at Badminton: Tom McEwen Tops the Board in All-Star Session
>Beauty and the Badminton: The (Un)Official Trot-Up Style Awards
Badminton Dressage Day One Live Updates: Party Pants On

WEDNESDAY MAY 4
Wednesday Badminton Daily Digest
Badminton Trot-up Gallery: The Big House Beckons

Badminton Social Recap: Arrivals and Trot-up Time

Previous Winner Held at Badminton First Horse Inspection, Canada Takes an Early Win

‘This Is Your Olympics’: Take a Stroll Around Badminton’s Grassroots Championships Courses

Team EN Makes Their Badminton Picks + We Want Yours, Too!

Badminton Social: Planes, Tr(aining)s, and Automobiles
Tuesday Badminton Daily Digest

THE ESSENTIALS:

Badminton At A Glance: Meet the Riders of the 2022 Event

Badminton’s Back! How to Watch Worldwide

Badminton At a Glance: Meet the Horses of the 2022 Event

The Event of a Lifetime: Your Juicy Great Big Guide to the Competitors in Badminton’s 2022 Revival

“It’s Worth Tacking Up for Cross-Country if You’re in 60th Place”: Walk the 2022 Badminton Track with Eric Winter

A Walk to Remember: Your Guide to Celebrity Coursewalks at Badminton

PRE-EVENT COVERAGE:

Badminton Entries Update: A Major Frontrunner Withdraws; France’s Numbers Grow

Badminton Draw Sees Harry Meade Take Trailblazer Role

Badminton Entries Update: Popular US Pair Withdraw; Sweden Gets The Nod

Badminton-Bound and Beaming: The Countdown Begins on the ‘Gram

Ultra-Spicy Badminton Entries Go Live with 91 Accepted and 33 Waitlisted

Badminton’s BACK, Baby, and the Box Office is Open for Business

MARS Equestrian Will Be Presenting Sponsor of 2022 Badminton Horse Trials

A Walk to Remember: Your Guide to Celebrity Coursewalks at Badminton

Badminton Links: WebsiteEntriesEN’s CoverageLive Stream, Course PreviewEN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

Play the Badminton Pick ‘Em & Win Contest, supported by FLAIR Equine Nasal Strips!

Enter to win a Haygain HG One High Temperature Steamer on site at the Haygain booth (218 Withybed Way at Badminton) or online here.

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Badminton Trot-Up Gallery: The Big House Beckons

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Trot-up time in England just hits a little different, doesn’t it? Whether it’s the fashion, the crowds, or the fact that Badminton House looms large nearly everywhere you go on site, it’s got a full-on traditional feel.

Our first phase is down and we’re getting set for dressage tomorrow — but first, we still have a Golden Chinch to give out! Stay tuned for our famous Golden Chinch Jog Awards coming your way later on. In the meantime, enjoy some shots from a beautiful May day.

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Badminton: Website, Entries, Live Stream, Dressage Start Times, EN’s Ultimate Guide, EN’s Entry Form Guide Course Preview, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

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Badminton Social Recap: Arrivals and Trot-Up Time

It was a lovely day for a trot-up, and despite the fact that the 85-strong Badminton field took quite a while to jog we found ourselves more appreciative that at long last we’ve finally got a Badminton to follow than anything else!

Let’s take a look around the socials from a busy first day on the grounds! To keep up with the rest of our Badminton coverage click here.

Badminton: Website, Entries, Live Stream, Dressage Start Times, EN’s Ultimate Guide, EN’s Entry Form Guide Course Preview, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

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Fernhill Wishes ACCEPTED into Badminton CCI*****L and looking very dapper!! #gochocygo #roadtobadminton #accepted

Posted by Karl Slezak Eventing on Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Badminton: Website, Entries, Live Stream, EN’s Ultimate Guide, EN’s Entry Form Guide Course Preview, EN’s Coverage, EN’s Twitter, EN’s Instagram

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