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Congratulations to the 2019 T.I.P. Eventing Champions!

Beginner Novice Junior 14 and Under Championship T.I.P. Champion Chambery with Sierra Thomas and Reserve Champion Inanewyorkminute with Catherine Frank.

Here’s a fun fact: Of the 949 starters in the 2019 American Eventing Championships, 218 were Thoroughbreds, making up 23% of the competition and outnumbering an other breed by far. With so many top Thoroughbred eventers of all levels gathered up in one place — and that place being the heart of Thoroughbred country — the AEC went hand-in-hand with the Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) Championship, also taking place at the Kentucky Horse Park that weekend.

The third annual T.I.P. Championship Horse Show was held Sept. 7-8 in conjunction with the New Vocations All-Thoroughbred Charity Show. Two-hundred forty-eight Thoroughbreds competed in a total of 26 divisions comprising English Pleasure, Western Pleasure, Dressage, Western Dressage, Hunters, and Jumper, with more than $30,000 in cash and prizes awarded.

All proceeds from the New Vocations show will support Thoroughbred aftercare. Between the two shows, a total of 450 Thoroughbreds from 26 states competed.

“I am thrilled with the growth of the T.I.P. Championships since its inception in 2017 and the enthusiasm of all participants toward showcasing off-the-track Thoroughbreds,” said Kristin Werner, senior counsel for The Jockey Club and the administrator of T.I.P. “This weekend showcases the versatility of Thoroughbreds in a wide range of disciplines, and we hope that Thoroughbred-centric competitions will encourage horse owners to consider riding and competing with former racehorses.”

“We are proud to work with T.I.P. to organize a weekend of horse shows that display the ability of Thoroughbreds to excel in careers beyond the racetrack,” said Sarah Coleman, New Vocations’ Director of Public & Community Relations. “We at New Vocations believe that Thoroughbreds have unlimited potential and love seeing this potential turn into results in the show ring.”

The eventing winners and reserve champions for the T.I.P. Championships are as follows (Jockey Club registered names are in parentheses):

$60,000 Adequan USEA Advanced Final
Champion: Cecelia (Constock) & Daniela Moguel
Reserve Champion: Creative Dreamer & Caitlin Henderson

Open Intermediate Championship
Champion: Military Mind & Whitney Mahloch
Reserve Champion: Shakedown Street (Sound the Bell) & Melanie Smith

Preliminary Amateur Championship
Champion: Mr. Barron & Wisti Nelson
Reserve Champion: Prince of Power & Katherine Nolan

Preliminary Horse Championship
Champion: Stoneman DF (Stoneman) & Jennifer McFall
Reserve Champion: Ermintrude (Miss Dude)& Daisy Trayford

Preliminary Junior/Young Rider Championship
Champion: Dandy Longlegs & Kelsey Ann Quinn

Preliminary Rider Championship
Champion: Fairway King & Lauren Turner
Reserve Champion: Flying Again & Lauren Turner

Open Modified/Training
Champion: All of Indy & Tawn Edwards
Reserve Champion: One Sly Fox (Double No) & Kirsten Schuitema

Training Amateur Championship
Champion: Snowflake Lane & Rebecca Hunt
Reserve Champion: Toga (Ticket to Saratoga) & Sheri Thornley

Training Horse Championship
Champion: Point Nemo & Ryan Keefe
Reserve Champion: Milo Diamond & Daisy Trayford

Training Junior Championship
Champion: Woodstock’s Little Nev (Rommel) & Abigail Mazzatta
Reserve Champion: Born Ready (Luther’sintown) & Cassie Sanger

Training Rider Championship
Champion: Sir Rockstar (Sir Rock) & Erin Jarboe
Reserve Champion: Say So Slew (Say So) & Lisa Davidson

Novice Amateur Championship
Champion: KD Mac & Shannon Allen
Reserve Champion: Magic Mike (Club Soda) & Paige Thompson

Novice Horse Championship
Champion: Perpetual Optimism & Nuno Santos
Reserve Champion: SS Palantir (Palantir) & Jennifer Coleman

Novice Junior 15 and Under Championship
Champion: Limited Access & Reagan McIntosh
Reserve Champion: Dee Ron & Gracelyn Mogelnicki

Novice Junior Championship
Champion: Silver Bop & Kate Thresher
Reserve Champion: Codename Toby (Go Señor Go) & Stephanie Cordell

Novice Master Amateur Championships
Champion: Holloway (Cement Head) & Cindi Moravec
Reserve Champion: Land of Jewels & Melissa McNally

Novice Rider Championship
Champion: B. E. Isabella & Elena Perea
Reserve Champion: Ventry & Liz Schroeder

Beginner Novice Amateur Championship
Champion: Whatinsamhill & Kirsten LaVassar
Reserve Champion: Weight of the World (Scorpion One) & Jessica Wymbs

Beginner Novice Horse Championship
Champion: Sock Monkey (Candy Van Can) & Katarzyna Jachymczyk
Reserve Champion: Perfect Acquisition (Nite Gaze R F) & Hannah Warner

Beginner Novice Junior 14 and Under Championship
Champion: Chambery & Sierra Thomas
Reserve Champion: Inanewyorkminute & Catherine Frank

Beginner Novice Junior Championship
Champion: Tekkenistic & Payton Myers
Reserve Champion: Oliver Twist (Odds On (BRZ)) & Aine O’Rourke

Beginner Novice Master Amateur Championships
Champion: Look Cody Look & Letha Calvin
Reserve Champion: Julie Cayer and Great Moments

Beginner Novice Rider Championship
Champion: Remastered & Beth Allen
Reserve Champion: Concatulations & Cathrine Wunderlich

In 2019, more than 1,300 sponsored horse shows are offering awards for Thoroughbreds in 42 states and six Canadian provinces and in virtually every imaginable discipline. To qualify for the Championships, a T.I.P.-eligible Thoroughbred must participate in a show offering T.I.P. high point awards, classes, or divisions in the applicable discipline beginning Aug .1 of the prior year through July 31 of the Championships year or participate in the T.I.P. Performance Awards in the applicable discipline. Horses shown at a horse trial or combined test can also qualify for the championships through the show jumping phase. To be eligible for T.I.P. shows, a Thoroughbred is defined as any horse that has been registered with The Jockey Club or a foreign Thoroughbred stud book recognized by The Jockey Club.

Learn more about the T.I.P. program, view participating horse shows, and apply for a T.I.P. number at the website here.

Go Thoroughbreds. Go Eventing!

Thursday Video from Ecovet: Watch Dom Schramm & Bolytair B’s Brilliant Burghley Round

Dom Schramm and Bolytair B notch up a near-clear at Burghley. Photo by William Carey.

We couldn’t be more proud of Aussie/honorary American Dom Schramm after his absolute class performance at Burghley last week. He and Bolytair B, a 13-year-old Dutch gelding (Polytair x Nobelle, by Glennridge) owned by the Naked Horse Eventing Syndicate, pieced their way through Captain Mark Phillips’ epic gauntlet with bravery and tact in equal measure, delivering one of the most positive, rhythmical rounds we saw all day despite it only being their second five-star outing.

The pair found the finish line with 11 jumping and 37.2 time penalties, no thanks to one unlucky (if not downright annoying) pin at the Trout Hatchery — and only the one side down, to add insult to injury. Boly barely tapped it but such is life, and such was life for several competitors as the rail fell like a show jump all day.

The Burghley live stream didn’t show near enough of Dom and Boly, who finished 28th overall and won the admiration of an international audience in the process. But, lucky for us, our friends at Australian eventing news outlet An Eventful Life have shared a video showing his entire round. Enjoy, and take notes!

 

My entire round from Burghley! The best I’ve ever ridden! So lucky to be sitting on a horse like Bolytair B!

Posted by Dominic Schramm on Thursday, September 12, 2019

 

“I’m happy to be home in one piece,” he told EN after his round. “I was surprised how backed off he was by the crowds at the beginning, and I couldn’t really get his head down. But what a horse! I came here for redemption – I rode like an idiot at Kentucky. It’s amazing what an outstanding horse can make an average rider look like!”

Editor’s note: NOT average.

“It’s unbelievable, and it kind of feels like I’ve paid my bit back to all the people who support me,” said Dom, who was astonished by the scale and difficulty of the challenge set. “I kept looking at my watch and thinking, ‘how the hell does anyone make the time here?!’ Mark Phillips is a genius course designer, and it’s a privilege to ride around here.”

Cheers, Dom.

Relive all of EN’s 2019 Land Rover Burghley coverage here. Go Eventing.

 

Ecovet fly spray creates a vapor barrier around your horse that confuses and overwhelms an insect’s normal directional ability. Thanks to this Ecovet barrier, the insect is unable to locate your horse as its next victim. Watch Ecovet in action: http://bit.ly/ecovetvideo

Volunteer Nation: 7 Events That Need Your Help This Weekend

It’s often said that volunteers are the backbone of our sport — because it’s true! Thanks to the USEA’s creation of eventingvolunteers.com, it’s easier than ever before to connect volunteers with organizers. A smartphone app, available for both iOS and Android devices, is available as well.

Prospective volunteers can use eventingvolunteers.com to sign up for open shifts and duties, check in with organizers and track their hours for the Volunteer Incentive Program (VIP). After a simple sign-up process, volunteers can select a specific event and easily see which assignments and shifts are the most needed and which are already filled.

Organizers can use the website to track the status of filled or open volunteer positions with at-a-glance visualization of which assignments still need to be filled. They will be able to tell very quickly if they are short a dressage scribe for the day, or perhaps three more fence judges are needed. They can also more easily get in touch with a specific group of volunteers, rather than sorting through individual emails.

We’re exited to team up with eventingvolunteers.com each week to spotlight volunteer opportunities still available (at time of publication) for the upcoming weekend. For more details, click on the event name to be taken to that event’s eventingvolunteers.com portal.

Here are seven USEA events that need your help this weekend!

Capture
Event: Poplar Place Farm September H.T.
Date(s) volunteers needed: Saturday, Sept. 14
Address: 8191 US Hwy 27E, Hamilton, GA, 31811
Positions available: XC Finish Timer, XC Jump Judge, XC Starter, SJ Warm Up


Event: CDCTA Fall Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Saturday, Sept. 14 – Sunday, Sept. 15
Address: 927 Kimble Road, Berryville, VA, 22611
Positions available: Event Prep – Dressage, Event Prep – General, Stabling Check-In & Trailer Parking, XC Jump Judge, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Scribe, SJ Timer

Event: GMHA September Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Thursday, Sept. 12 – Sunday, Sept. 15
Address: P.O. Box 8, S. Woodstock, VT 05071
Positions available: Event Prep – General, Dressage Steward, Hospitality Helper, SJ Jump Crew

Event: The Event at Skyline
Date(s) volunteers needed: Friday, Sept. 13 – Sunday, Sept. 15
Address: 995 W 1000 S, Mount Pleasant , UT, 84647
Positions available: Dressage Announcer, Dressage Bit Check, Dressage In Gate Steward, Dressage Score Runner, Dressage Scribe, Dressage Warm Up, Office Help, XC Score Runner, XC Starter, Competitor / Volunteer Dinner Set Up, Event Takedown – SJ, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Score Runner, SJ Scribe, SJ Timer


Event: Flying Cross Farm Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Friday, Sept. 13 – Sunday, Sept. 15
Address: E5847 1170th Ave, Wheeler, WI, 54772
Positions available: Dressage Score Runner, Dressage Bit Check, Office Help, SJ In Gate, SJ Jump Crew, SJ Scribe, SJ Warm Up, Competitor / Volunteer Dinner Set Up, Volunteer Lead, SJ Jump Crew, XC Jump Judge, XC Score Runner, General Help, Secretary – Awards


Event: Stone Gate Farm Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Thursday, Sept. 12 – Sunday, Sept. 15
Address:  31407 Schneider Rd, Hanoverton, OH, 44423
Positions available: Event Prep – General, XC Decorator, Greeter, General Help, SJ Jump Crew, XC Jump Judge, XC Score Runner

Event: Equestrians Institute Horse Trials
Date(s) volunteers needed: Saturday, Sept. 14
Address: 
1202 Douglas Munro Blvd, Cle Elum, WA, 98922
Positions available:
Work Party – Event Prep

Visit eventingvolunteers.com for information on upcoming USEA recognized as well as unrecognized events that could use a hand.

Go Volunteer. Go Eventing!

Last Day to Submit 2019 Horse & Hound Award Nominations

Mark Phillips receives the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2018
H&H Awards. Credit: Peter Nixon/Horse & Hound

Horse & Hound is our go-to source for all things British eventing — we link to them nearly every day in News & Notes. Today is the final day to submit nominations for the Horse & Hound Awards 2019, in partnership with NAF, and we want to encourage our readers to get involved!

The annual ceremony, now in its fourth year, will take place on Dec. 4 at Cheltenham Racecourse, where the shortlisted candidates will celebrate alongside the horse world’s A-list at a glittering evening attended by more than 250 people. Previous H&H Award winners include Rio Olympic individual showjumping gold medallist Nick Skelton, who won the first Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016, eventing world champion Ros Canter and double Olympic dressage gold medallist Charlotte Dujardin.

H&H editor-in-chief Sarah Jenkins says, “The H&H Awards have grown every year and it’s wonderful to welcome NAF as our headline partner this year. Their support will allow us to make the awards even more special.

“We were overwhelmed by the number of nominations and votes we received last year and how strongly people feel about their heroes, whether they are winning gold medals or giving up their time so others can compete.”

“We look forward to receiving nominations this year and sharing some wonderful stories with our readers at voting time,” NAF advertising and PR manager Melissa Newman adds. “NAF is delighted to be the headline partner at the 2019 H&H Awards, because we believe that these are the awards that really matter within the industry. We are extremely proud to partner with Horse & Hound to celebrate the views of real people who love horses and love our sport. Here at NAF we have always championed rewarding the incredible horses and humans who bring so much to the equestrian landscape, and who better to celebrate with than the voice of the equestrian industry?”

This year Horse & Hound invites nominations in 11 award categories before the deadline of 11:59 p.m. UK time (6:59 p.m. ET) Wednesday, Sept. 11. Nominations can be made at horseandhound.co.uk/awards. The shortlisted candidates in each category will be announced in Horse & Hound’s Oct. 17 issue, revealing their stories and welcoming readers to vote for their winners online by the closing date of Oct. 24.

The Horse & Hound Awards 2019 categories are:
Horse & Hound Lifetime Achievement Award
• Ceris Burns Equestrian Professional Rider of the Year
• Horseware Horse of the Year
• Balanced Horse Feeds Pony of the Year
• Horserail Moment of the Year
• Absorbine Inspiration of the Year
• NAF Five Star Groom of the Year
• Pikeur Amateur Rider of the Year
• Saracen Young Rider of the Year
• Prime Stables Volunteer of the Year
• Horse Dialog Club of the Year

Submit your nominations here. Go Eventing.

This report was edited from a press release. 

[Horse & Hound Awards 2019: Celebrating the stars of equestrianism in partnership with NAF]

 

TIEC’s Inaugural Blue Ridge Mountain H.T. to Utilize White Oak Cross Country Course

Photo courtesy of John Michael Durr.

If you’ll recall from the 2018 World Equestrian Games at Tryon International Equestrian Center (TIEC), cross country took place a short hack away at the White Oak property. Formerly a golf course, White Oak was praised for its excellent footing and varying terrain. Now, riders of all levels can follow in the hoof-prints of WEG competitors as a new permanent fixture on the fall eventing calendar, Blue Ridge Mountain Horse Trials, will feature cross country on the same course that hosted the Games.

The inaugural Blue Ridge Mountain H.T. will take place Sept. 14-15 at TIEC in Mill Creek, North Carolina. The venue has hosted events — The Fork, Pony Club Championships East, and the 2017 American Eventing Championships — but this will be the first time cross country has been held at White Oak other than WEG.

The event offers USEA Beginner Novice through Advanced levels, including Modified, as well as Intermediate and Advanced combined tests (riders can choose the FEI or USEF test of choice). Show jumping will take place under the lights on Saturday night, followed by cross country on Sunday.

2018 WEG course designer Captain Mark Phillips has been preparing the courses in collaboration with Eric Bull’s ETB Equine Construction. “We’ve got all the divisions down on the golf course, which is what the lower divisions have wanted for a long time. That means it’s very busy down there, with lots of fences, but the footing is fantastic and the fences are good, so the riders should have a good experience,” he said while overseeing fence placement.

Photo courtesy of John Michael Durr.

The White Oak Course offers something for every level of rider, despite its history of hosting and challenging some of the world’s best. Phillips explains, “I think high-performance riders want to run over good courses on good footing, especially when going a lot faster on those horses, and so good footing is paramount. And then we’ve got a lot of good fences, particularly after the World Equestrian Games. Lower-level riders want to have a good run and good experiences for their horses with nice surroundings, and again over nice courses.”

The former golf course boasts meticulously-manicured footing tended by a team led by TIEC’s full-time agronomist, Daniel Fradley, and incorporates scientific management to produce the best experiences for horse and rider alike.

Organizer Shelley Page took this video today — talk about irrigation! If you’ve ever fantasized about galloping headlong across an emerald green (former) golf course, this is your chance:

“Tryon is Tryon,” Phillips says. “We’re lucky enough to be able to run cross country on fantastic, [former] golf course footing, where we can control the moisture content in the ground. We find here that if you have 25-26% moisture content, the footing is nigh-on perfect. With the irrigation system at TIEC, we’re able to replicate that all the time. So, we’ve got the ability to control that and give riders and horses the best possible experience. Plus, they have fantastic stabling here, and dressage and show jumping is done on all-weather footing. It’s top-quality footing.”

From obstacles highlighting iconic Carolinas geography and wildlife to greenways and varied terrain, the White Oak Course is shaping up to provide an abbreviated version of what WEG competitors experienced just a year ago – sans the long, uphill gallop to the finish. (Of interest to combined test competitors, use of this irrigated, manicured gallop, up to three times, is available for $75.

“WEG was a long-format, single course at White Oak, and the [Blue Ridge Mountain Horse Trials at TIEC] has seven divisions on a smaller, shorter footprint. In the long format, riders came up the hill and finished in the [International Stadium], but now for this, everything happens down on the [former] golf course,” Phillips explained.

The White Oak Course will also provide an atmosphere that Phillips believes can help both riders and their horses at lower levels improve and advance: “I think we have a lot of lower-level competitions at nice farms, but it’s not the kind of atmosphere or the facilities at Tryon. And, I think once in a while, to be able to come and experience top-quality facilities is a nice thing to be able to do.”

“I think from a course designer perspective, Beginner Novice through Intermediate is an educational process, with each level being a rung of the ladder to educate the horse and, to a lesser degree, the rider,” Phillips continues. “It’s a process to go through before you really start answering questions at the Advanced level. I think here [at TIEC] we’ve got the rungs of those ladders in the right place for that.”

Entries are open through September 13, and stalls are discounted by $100 for all competitors of the inaugural event. View the USEA calendar listing here. Registration is available online at www.EventEntries.com.

Blue Ridge Mountain H.T.: Website, Entry Status

[From Burghley to Blue Ridge Mountain Horse Trials at TIEC: Captain Mark Phillips Prepares White Oak Course at TIEC]

 

 

Fab Freebie: Share your Equestrian Wardrobe Malfunction to Win an Unbelts Twin Pack!

Photos courtesy of Unbelts.

The last thing anybody needs while riding is a wardrobe malfunction. Or even a wardrobe inconvenience — and our friends at Unbelts agree. That’s why they’re revolutionizing the belt market with pants keeper-uppers that are as comfy as they are smart (think: machine washable, airport security friendly, ethically made and made to last).

Here’s what the good folks at Unbelts have to say about why their product is a super fit, literally, for equestrians:


Keepin’ it snug.
“Hiking up loose pants is drag; hiking up stretchy breeches while riding a moving, 1000-pound animal seems REAL ill-advised. Your pants need to be snug. And guess what? We kiiiiind of keep pants up as, like, it’s our full-time jobs.”

Flexibility is everything.
“We saw the red marks riders get in their hips and tummies from stiff, bulky belts that don’t move with your body: not cool, people. To that we say NO MORE. Unbelts are made from stretchy, flexible elastic that hugs every shape.”

A sleek look.
“Riding is a good-lookin’ sport, but most belt buckles add bulk where you really want to be smooth like buttah. Enter Unbelts’ 1/8-inch buckle, perfectly invisible under show jackets (and approved by English equestrian officials across all disciplines).”

Real talk — breeches get dirty.
“We know what’s involved in grooming and riding. We suspected a belt that was machine-washable in the belt loops could be pretty darn handy, and our riders enthusiastically agreed. (There might have been cheering.)”

Plus, they’re available in a gazillion colors — perfect for our matchy-matchy eventer needs. For a deeper dive into the Unbelt in action, check out EN’s product review, “Sisterhood of the Traveling Unbelts.”

Exciting news! For this week’s Fab Freebie, we’ve teamed up with Unbelts to give away two two-packs of Unbelts! The winner will receive a Hybrid Two Pack (1 Intrepid + 1 Classic belt, retail value: $99 USD), and the runner-up will receive a Classic Two Pack (2 Classic belts, retail value: $75 USD).

L: Unbelts Hybrid Twin-Pack, R: Unbelts Classic Twin-Pack. Photos courtesy of Unbelts.

All you have to do is share your best equestrian wardrobe malfunction, in words or a picture or both! Post it to the Facebook comments of this post or email it straight to us at [email protected].

Best breeches snafu? Lemme get the ball rolling on this one: I was at Carolina International doing my first Intermediate in a hot minute and feeling more than a little nervous. In a fit of panic before cross country, I bought some sticky spray at the tack trailer and thoroughly drenched my saddle with it, which proved to be a lethal combination with my trusty Kerrits Sit Tight breeches. I knew I was in trouble went I went to post the trot in warmup and every time my bum came up, my breeches stayed glued to the seat of the saddle. Honestly, I couldn’t have fallen off my horse if I tried — of if I did, I would have had to fall out of my breeches as well. It wasn’t long before the seat of my pants ripped wide open (see also: this UK Olympic bobsled outfit malfunction), and I only lasted a third of the way into the course before calling it a day. To all the jump judges, my sincere apologies.

What’s YOUR best equestrian wardrobe malfunction? We’ll announce the lucky winner and runner-up, to be decided by chinchilla committee, next Tuesday, Sept. 16! Many thanks to Unbelts for sponsoring this edition of “Fab Freebie” — learn more and shop at the Unbelts website here.

Go Eventing.

 

Catching Up With Kentucky Derby Runner-Up Commanding Curve

Madeline Cracknell and Commanding Curve in the Jr. Beginner Novice division at the 2019 American Eventing Championships. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

You remember Commanding Curve: the big bay gelding is popularly known for his fast-closing second to near-Triple Crown winner California Chrome in the 2014 Kentucky Derby. He was retired from racing a couple years later to pursue a second career as an eventer, with his first trainer being none other than Phillip Dutton himself — you can watch one of their earliest jump schools together in this EN post from July 2016.

Commanding Curve (Master Command – Mother, by Lion Hearted) was bred in Kentucky by Tom VanMeter. He was initially purchased by Bradley Thoroughbreds for $60,000 at the 2012 Fasig-Tipton October Yearling Sale, then bought by West Point Thoroughbreds for $75,000 at the 2013 OBS April 2-Year-Old in Training Sale. He earned $609,378 in 16 starts on the track, and came darn close to beating California Chrome in the Derby.

Commanding Curve (#17) on the heels of 2014 Kentucky Derby winner California Chrome as they cross the finish. Photo by Bill Brine/Creative Commons.

“He took his partners and our team on a great ride and gave us the thrill of a lifetime when he was rollin’ turning for home in the Derby,” said West Point president Terry Finley upon the horse’s retirement. “We haven’t been able to recreate the magic of Derby day on the racetrack, and owe it to him to retire sound with the ability to move on to a second career. His partners came from coast to coast with backgrounds ranging from investment bankers to school teachers, but for only a modest investment they all experienced the highest of racing’s highs together.”

Those partners didn’t stop following the career trajectory of Curve when he shifted from racing to eventing. After finding a fresh start with Phillip only to be derailed by an injury, the horse recovered and found a new home with 15-year-old Madeline Cracknell in Pennsylvania a couple years ago.

With Lillian Heard in the irons, Curve won his first USEA event in February this year. He earned an AEC qualification with Madeline in July, having won their Beginner Novice Rider division at Horse Park of New Jersey Horse Trials II.

To the Kentucky Horse Park they went, posting a double-clear cross country round to finish in 23rd place in a very competitive Jr. Beginner Novice division.

We caught up with Madeline after cross country. “He was really good,” she told us. “He was really feeling the course. He knew what day it was and he was going for it. He was very willing — even if I messed up in some spots he still went over everything perfectly. He’s such a good boy.”

Commanding Curve and his connections. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The pair had a big cheering section, including some of his former ownership partners who drove up from Florida to see their “horse of a lifetime” in his new life. Madeline also met his Derby hot walker and handler who drove from Louisville to see him, and one of the farriers on site was also Curve’s former farrier and paid his respects as well.

Madeline expressed gratitude for Commanding Curve’s racing connections and their support even years after he last stepped foot on a track: “It’s really awesome.”

Congrats to Commanding Curve and all the Thoroughbreds represented at the 2019 AEC. Go OTTBs. Go Eventing!

The Jockey Club awarded Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) prizes for all 2019 AEC divisions to include coolers, ribbons, and prize money for Champion and Reserve Champion Thoroughbred winners. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

 

Burghley Show Jumping Halftime Show: A Very Merry Interview

Eventing can sometimes feel like such a Very Serious Sport that it’s a breath of fresh air to see its human athletes being, well, human. In this video, cross country leader Pippa Funnell and third-positioned Oliver Townend are joined by Captain Mark Phillips for an interview that is as entertaining as it is illuminating, with good-natured ribbing and well-deserved respect in equal parts. It is, truly, well worth watching the whole way through.

The morning show jumping session has wrapped up, with the afternoon session to resume at 2:30 p.m. local/9:30 a.m. eastern. Follow along with the live stream and our live updates — it’s sure to be a thrilling finale!

Go Eventing.

#LRBHT19: WebsiteRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Friday Video from SmartPak: Three Americans in the Top 10! Dressage Recaps + U.S. XC Times

From L to R: Lauren Kieffer and Vermiculus (photo by Tim Wilkinson/Eventing Images); Hannah-Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot (photo by Nico Morgan Media); Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z (photo by Nico Morgan Media).

The U.S. had a heck of a day in the sandbox on day two of Land Rover Burghley dressage. Heading into cross country, we have three riders in the top 10: Lauren Kieffer and Vermiculus are 4th on 26.7; Hannah Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot are equal 5th on 26.9; and Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z are equal 7th on 28.4. Read Tilly’s morning recap, which includes Hannah and Liz, here, and her afternoon recap, which includes Lauren, here.

Beat Media caught up with our three leading ladies after their tests:

Here’s to a happy, safe cross country day for all tomorrow. View cross country times here; U.S. (and, for Dom, U.S.-ish) times and dressage placings listed below:

Will Coleman and Tight Lines (26th): 11:55 a.m. local time (6:55 a.m. ET)
Andrea Baxter and Indy 500 (46th): 12:11 p.m. local time (7:11 a.m. ET)
Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan (=48th): 12:31 p.m. local time (7:31 a.m. ET)
Dom Schramm and Bolytair B (53rd): 12:47 p.m. local time (7:47 a.m. ET)
Doug Payne and Vandiver (=21st): 1:07 p.m. local time (8:07 a.m. ET)
Liz Halliday-Sharp and Deniro Z (=7th): 1:35 p.m. local time (8:35 a.m. ET)
Chris Talley and Unmarked Bills (61st): 1:55 p.m. local time (8:55 a.m. ET)
Hannah Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot (=5th): 2:03 p.m. local time (9:03 a.m. ET)
Buck Davidson and Jak My Style (=34th): 2:19 p.m. local time (9:19 a.m. ET)
Lillian Heard and LCC Barnaby (=54th): 2:27 p.m. local time (9:27 a.m. ET)
Woodge Fulton and Captain Jack (65th): 3:03 p.m. local time (10:03 a.m. ET)
Lauren Kieffer and Vermiculus (4th): 3:07 p.m. local time (10:07 a.m. ET)

The multi-award winning Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials (September 5 – 8) has been established as a major international equestrian and social event in the Autumn Sporting Calendar for over 50 years. For more information visit burghley-horse.co.uk.

Go Eventing!

#LRBHT19: WebsiteRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Plenty to Do in the Pines: Aspen Farms Advanced Cross Country Preview

Fence #13: Pinnacle Table. Photo via CrossCountry App.

The Pacific Northwest is a majestic corner of our country, and Aspen Farms Horse Trials in Yelm, Washington, has made itself right at home within the region’s natural beauty. The event, which kicks off with dressage today, features Beginner Novice through Advanced divisions as well as hosting the Area VII Championships.

A walk around Tremaine Cooper’s Advanced cross country course reveals a showcase of rugged, outdoorsy themes …

Fence #4AB: Axe and Red Roof.

Fence #5: Elk Trap. Photo via CrossCountry App.

Fence #17: Jeep. Photo via CrossCountry App.

Fence #19A: Salmon. Photo via CrossCountry App.

… with a wide range of questions testing both bravery and obedience. The course features 24 numbered fences and 35 efforts across 3,781-meter track, with an optimum time of six minutes and thirty-eight seconds.

The Advanced division has just completed dressage — here are those standings:

Best of luck to all! Take a virtual tour of the course thanks to Tremaine and our friends at CrossCountry App below.

Keep up with show coverage on Aspen Farms Horse Trials’ Facebook page. P.S. The event could still use a few volunteers, especially on Sunday! Sign up here.

Aspen Farms H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Thursday Video from Ecovet: Tim Price, Zara Tindall and More Preview Burghley 2019

With day one of Land Rover Burghley dressage on the books, defending champion and current world no. 1 Tim Price already has two horses in the top 10 — Bango is tied for 2nd, and Xavier Faer is 8th — with his winning partner from 2019, Ringwood Sky Boy, the last up the centerline on Friday.

Looking ahead to tomorrow, Zara Tindall is always a hot ticket, and she’s making a bid this year with the inexperienced but exciting Class Affair. The Queen’s granddaughter last contested Burghley, the centerpiece of which is her father Captain Mark Phillips’ cross country course, in 2017.

These two riders and more preview Burghley 2019 in the video above, produced by the Beat Media Group with footage from the first horse inspection.

Tim, 40, says, “It’s been a fun year having the title of Burghley champion in my back pocket but it feel very real now that we’re back here trying to prove it all again. What a magic experience it was last year. Ringwood Sky Boy has been here a few times and had some good results, so to get it in the bag with him was really special. I want to win the title back but it’s not really my mental focus or setup at the moment. There are just so many jobs at a big event like this, just getting here, doing the trot up.”

Tim’s top ride on Thursday was Bango, who scored a 29.6.

“I feel like I’ve got a good chance on a few of these horses actually, so I just have to prove it. It’s a fun feeling being world no.1 as I’ve never been an out and out winner,” he says. “I’m not one that goes and hunts down every single prize there is on the circuit, so it feels like it’s a real show of consistency and that’s something I’ve done with a lot of different horses. It’s something I’m very proud of and it does bring an element of confidence. It’s a reflection that things are going well, so hopefully I turn up on Sunday with a healthy horse that’s good to jump.”

Zara, 38, is a Burghley veteran whose best finish came in her 2003 debut, when she enjoyed a second place result with her great partner Toytown. She returns this year with Class Affair, a 10-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding.

“Burghley is one of my favorite events of the whole year,” she says. “I guess I kind of started my four-star career here with Toytown — or certainly my successful results with Toytown.”

Of the always formidable course, Zara says, “I think you always get to Burghley and you always know if you’re at the top of your game and we’ve all been out and had a look at the cross country course. My father again has produced an incredible cross country and we’ve got to go out and attack it. I’m excited to be back and I’ve got a really nice horse. Hopefully we can go out and do the business on Saturday.

“It’s big, it’s a proper course with the hills and it always makes a huge difference to how much petrol you have in the tank. You have to try and reserve that petrol to be able to get to the end and make sure that every jump is as seamless as you can — I am excited to have a horse that loves that phase.”

Other riders featured on the video include Georgie Spence, who sits 6th after Thursday dressage with Wii Limbo; Ben Hobday, who is 9th with Harelaw Wizard; and Richard Jones, who competes tomorrow with Alfies Clover.

“It feels amazing to be back at Burghley, it’s one of the best events of the year and for him it’s his fifth attempt here so it’s great to be back with a special contender,” says Georgie, who has contested Burghley for 10 out of the past 12 years. “We’re hoping for a top 10 this year if we can put everything in place. He’s a very capable horse in all three disciplines and in previous years I’ve pulled a bit much in the cross country. I need to be a bit braver but it’s good to be back and have a horse that has competed five times is very special. The cross country has to be my favorite part though.”

Catch up on EN’s coverage of Burghley here.

The multi-award winning Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials (September 5-8) has been established as a major international equestrian and social event in the Autumn Sporting Calendar for over 50 years. For more information visit burghley-horse.co.uk.

#LRBHT19: WebsiteRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideCourse PreviewEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Ecovet fly spray creates a vapor barrier around your horse that confuses and overwhelms an insect’s normal directional ability. Thanks to this Ecovet barrier, the insect is unable to locate your horse as its next victim. Watch Ecovet in action: http://bit.ly/ecovetvideo

Foshay International Reader’s Choice Jog ‘Best Dressed’ Award

That’s a wrap for Foshay International 2.0! In its second year running, the New Brunswick event continues to garner rave reviews as being among the most competitor-friendly in North America.

The event’s centerpiece divisions are its CCI1* and CCI2*-L classes, and Abby will be along later with a full recap of the event. In the meantime, Joan Davis of Flatlandsfoto sent us photos from yesterday’s two-star second horse inspection (which was significantly less soggy than the first). We picked a few favorites to feature … vote for who you think was “Best Dressed” in the poll below!

Foshay International CCI [Website][Final Scores]

Sondra Shantz and Unique. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Katie Ruppel and Hannibal. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Siobhain O’Connor and Baker Street SE. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Kendal Lehari and Marvin. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Julie Clark and Heldor Tren. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Melissa Boutin and Obeah Dancer GS. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Rae Becke and Hold Your Hat. Photo by Joan Davis / Flatlandsfoto.

Sunday #AEC2019 Quotes From the Top: We 💙 Beginner Novice

No matter what place you end up in, American Eventing Championships has THE prettiest ribbons. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

If it wasn’t obvious from my Pulitzer Prize winning coverage of the Jr. Beginner Novice Rider 14 & Under, BN is my favorite AEC level. Junior, Rider, Horse, Amateur, Master Amateur … I do not even care which division. I love them all, equally, as my own children. Well, OK that’s a lie, I love 14 & Under the most. But on the large, BN=❤️💯.

Rolex Stadium played host to Beginner Novice action from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Check out final results from the six BN divisions:

The USEA staff, whom I hope has late flights home tomorrow so they can finally get a decent night’s sleep, capped off an incredible week of AEC coverage with one final wrap-up story of the Beginner Novice divisions (“Going Out on a High Note: Beginner Novice Champions Bring AEC to a Close“). Check it out, and hear the winners share their stories in their own words via these interviews and photos USEA posted to Instagram (@useventing).

BEGINNER NOVICE HORSE

Final top 5:

BEGINNER NOVICE JUNIOR

Final top 5: 

BEGINNER NOVICE MASTER AMATEUR

Final top 5:

BEGINNER NOVICE JUNIOR 14 & UNDER

Final top 5: 

BEGINNER NOVICE AMATEUR

Final top 5:

BEGINNER NOVICE RIDER

Final top 5:

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Saturday #AEC2019 Quotes From the Top: First to Rise, Last to Bed

Boyd Martin and Long Island T, Advanced champions: “He jumped fantastic. I was a little bit nervous; I have never jumped him under lights before. He has been a little bit suspect in the show jumping early on, so I was a bit traumatized from early days with him,” Martin explained. “But to his credit, he went in there and he jumped like a buck. He really went in there, tried, he wasn’t spooky. I couldn’t be happier with the horse; he was giving me everything he’s got this weekend.” Photo by Alison Green for Shannon Brinkman Photo. [US Equestrian]

It’s 11:07 p.m. on Saturday night, and the top three finishers of the $60,000 Adequan USEA Advanced Final — Boyd Martin, 1st with Long Island T; Leslie Law, 2nd with Voltaire de Tre; and Phillip Dutton, 3rd with Z — have just climbed onto the podium. Boyd uncorks the bubbly and it sprays everywhere, much to the displeasure of nearby horses who are now standing straight up on their hind legs, waggling their hooves in the air like stallions in a Disney movie. We should all be in bed, and yet here we are.

It’s been a long week …

Actual footage of the USEA staff rn

… but the heart of American eventing is still beating strong in Lexington, Kentucky. Saturday saw the show jumping finale of Advanced and Novice divisions, while Beginner Novice competitors tested their mettle on the cross country course.

Here are links to all 12 of the 23 total leaderboards that saw action on Saturday:

Once again the USEA media team was hard hustling to interview all the day’s division leaders. Check out the Advanced and Novice winner interviews and photos they posted to Instagram (@useventing).

ADVANCED

Final top 5: 

JUNIOR NOVICE

Final top 5:

NOVICE JUNIOR 15 & UNDER

Final top 5:

NOVICE AMATEUR

NOVICE MASTER AMATEUR

Final top 5: 

NOVICE RIDER

Final top 5:

NOVICE HORSE

Final top 5: 

For more “Quotes from the Top,” check out the USEA’s daily reports on each level — click here for the complete newsfeed.

Go Eventing.

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

‘Who Splashed It Best?’ AEC Jr. Beginner Novice 14 & Under Cross Country Recap

Cross country leaders Maren Hanson and In My Feelings splash their way across the Head of the Lake. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The Head of the Lake was, as it is on a certain Saturday in April, the best place for sightseeing today at the 2019 American Eventing Championships. This iconic complex, rumored by some to be filled with holy water, has anointed the hooves of countless eventing legends and traversing it was the thrill of a lifetime for hundreds of riders this week.

While the Lake did wreak a bit of havoc upon the higher levels, it caused only a few spots of trouble for the Beginner Novice set. It was the gateway to the course’s homestretch, positioned just five fences from the finish line and headed toward home. While it was a straightforward splash-though question, it got a big reaction from riders who whooped and hollered their way across.

Scroll down to the bottom of this post for a special video edition of “Who Jumped Splashed It Best? AEC Head of the Lake.” But first, your Junior Beginner Novice Rider 14 & Under cross country report!

‘Mighty’ Maren Hanson, age 12, added nothing to her dressage score of 28.3 to retain the lead overnight with In My Feelings. Yesterday Maren told us that she bought “Drake” out of a field a year ago as a Pony Club games prospect, not realizing until later that he was 24 years old. His past was a mystery but it seemed like he might have had some dressage and jump training, so Maren decided to give eventing a try. They qualified for the AEC in three outings and now here they are, leading a 36-strong field at the biggest event in the land.

“He was very, very good,” Maren said of their round today. “He was very positive with everything. I really liked the colorful jumps, those were really fun.”

Sydney Langley and Pocket Change are picture perfect over the Fiesta Table (also affectionately known as the “Skittles Table”), a staple of KHP BN/N courses. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Tessa Geven and Tullymor’s Houdini, a Connemara gelding owned by Werner, are still in 2nd on 28.9. This pair is one of our show jumping powerhouses — they haven’t had a penalty in their past 11 events, and we don’t expect them to sully that spotless record tomorrow.  Molly Hunt moved from 4th to 3rd with Falcons Grey Bar, her own paint mare, on 29.4.

The 14 & Under scoreboard saw 30 — count ’em, 30! — double-clear cross country rounds today. It didn’t do much to shake up the standings, but it did make for a whole lot of finish line smiles.

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Knees to nose 😍 #AEC2019

A post shared by U.S. Eventing Association (@useventing) on

Speaking of things that make us smile, how about Jr. Beginner Novice 14 & Under cross country fashion? #matchymatchgoals Also, and I know it’s a controversial subject, but it’s great to see helmet pompoms making a big comeback out there!

Maggie Shuman and Mr. Smarty Pants. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Macie Sykes and Delilah’s Boy. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Victoria Sudkamp and Gallagher. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Connor Stegeman and Zip’s Bangee. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Kloie Hicks and Sugar Rush. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Wait … what is that on Kloie’s saddle pad?

We are for it. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Even volunteers were getting in on the statement piece action.

Mind the duck! Spencer Millard, gentleman crossing guard extraordinaire, has been volunteering at the Kentucky Horse Park since 1999. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Alright, now for that special video edition of “Who Splashed It Best?” as advertised. The final five riders of the division exhibited a variety of strategies and lines, but they all displayed a positive, determined ride. Watch and decide who you think presented the best picture — or, heck, even just who had the best cross country outfit if you can’t decide — and vote in the poll below.

Did you hear? Beginner Novice show jumping will be live streamed tomorrow! Go watch from 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on the USEA website here.

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Top 20 heading into show jumping (view complete scoreboard here):

AEC Beginner Novice Cross Country Preview: Yellow Is the New Blue

3, 2, 1 … Beginner Novice cross country is underway at the 2019 American Eventing Championships! They don’t call this the Beginner Novice Olympics for nothin’, and Derek di Grazia’s beefy track does not disappoint. Riders will be tackling 18 yellow-numbered jumping efforts over a distance of 1,762 meters, running at a speed of 350 meters/minute — optimum time is 5 minutes and 3 seconds.

The course starts off with this inviting log, beautifully decorated with flowers by EN’s good friend Aidyn Degitz. Well-done, Aiden!

Photo courtesy of Krista Amos Degitz.

Fences #2 through #4 are nice galloping fences to get everybody in the mood to rock and roll. Fences #5-#6, Bannister to Fandango, and #7-#8, Brush to Brush, challenge riders to sit up and think about their lines and strides.

Photo via CrossCross App.

Horses will get their hooves wet at fence #9, a splash into the first water. Fence #10, Pallisdade Roll and the course’s halfway point, awaits on the other side. And then it’s on to #11 — the infamous Fiesta Table. It’s a rider-scarer with those bright colors, but don’t worry, it jumps really well!

Photo via CrossCross App.

Competitors are rewarded with a long galloping stretch to #12, The Bench, and then it’s on to this no-joke ditch. Eyes up, leg on, riders!

Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App.

Next stop: Head of the Lake! What a thrill.

Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App.

Onward and upward to another couplet of fences at #15, Red Top Cabin, and #16, Oxer. After that they’ll be on the homestretch, with just two fences to go: #17, Roll, and #18, Blue Top Barn.

The Beginner Novice Rider division is first out of the box at 8 a.m. followed by Amateur at 9:32 a.m., 14 & Under at 10:44 a.m., Master Amateur at 12:18 p.m., Junior at 1:36 p.m., and Horse at 3:52 p.m. Best of luck to all!

Many thanks to Ivy Johnson of Equestrian Events Inc. for the photos, and to CrossCountry App for sharing each and every course from the 2019 AEC!

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

 

Friday #AEC2019 Quotes From the Top: Here for the Party

Photo courtesy of Julie Pate.

The week-long party that is the 2019 American Eventing Championships continued to thrill and excite on Friday at the Kentucky Horse Park. The day kicked off with Advanced cross country, followed by Novice; Training took to Rolex Stadium for their show jumping finales; and Beginner Novice brought dressage to a close.

Here are links to all sixteen (16!!) of 23 total leaderboards that saw action today:

With the exception of a sprint out to cross country for Advanced (relive the action via our live blog, updated with quotes from the top three riders, here), I spent most of my day bumming around the Beginner Novice dressage rings — particularly my favorite division, Jr. Beginner Novice 14 & Under. I mean, not only are these kids are the future of our sport, they also have the best style AND the cutest ponies. Check out my recap here.

While I was chatting up the wunderkinds of American eventing, the USEA media team was hard hustling to interview all the day’s division leaders. Check out the Training winner interviews and photos they posted to Instagram (@useventing).

EQUISTRO MODIFIED TRAINING 

Final top 5: 

TRAINING AMATEUR

Final top 5:

TRAINING JUNIOR

Final top 5:

TRAINING HORSE

Final top 5:

TRAINING RIDER

Final top 5: 

For more “Quotes from the Top,” check out the USEA’s daily reports on each level — click here for the complete newsfeed:

Training Riders Taste Victory at the AEC

Novice Riders Take on AEC Cross Country

Best For Last: Beginner Novice Brings AEC Dressage to a Close

Martin and Long Island T Tee Up for the Win at the AEC

Will tomorrow be any less insane than today? Nope! And we wouldn’t have it any other way. Red on right, white on left …

Go Eventing.

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

 

We Are All ‘In Our Feelings’ for AEC Jr. Beginner Novice Rider 14 & Under Dressage

Move over, Advanced, with your fancy dressage tailcoats and show-boaty jumps. For one glorious week each year, we shove the Big Name Riders out of the limelight and focus instead on the cutthroat ranks of … Jr. Beginner Novice 14 & Under.

This year 38 of the country’s most formidable junior riders are facing off over the toughest yellow numbered jumps in the land right here at the Kentucky Horse Park  for the 2019 American Eventing Championships. The field is wide open but this much is certain: The competition is fierce.

Maren Hanson and In My Feelings. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Maren Hanson and In My Feelings are our dressage leaders heading into cross country tomorrow on a score of 28.3. You might recognize “Mighty Maren” from EN’s 2028 Olympic Talent Watch series — we featured her back in 2017. Now at the ripe old age of 12, Maren and “Drake” — who at 24 is twice her age, although you wouldn’t know it from watching him strut his stuff in the sandbox — are making their debut on the national stage, well, in eventing at least! The pair is coming off a big 6th place overall finish at the U.S. Dressage Festival of Champions last weekend at Lamplight Equestrian Center in Wayne, Illinois, which coincidentally hosted the AEC from 2007 to 2009.

Today’s result was an emotional one for Maren, who rode with the late, great Ann Haller. Her mother, Christie, got a little teary-eyed when recalling, “I told her before her test to ride her best for Ann.” We think Ann would be proud, Maren.

Indeed, there were a lot of feels out there today. One of my favorite tests belonged to Connor Stegeman and Zip’s Bangee which, while it may not have topped the leaderboard board, was one that Connor will remember forever. It was their final dressage test together, as Connor has outgrown her 21-year-old Appaloosa Pony of Americas and will be moving on to a bigger horse after the AEC. Overwhelmed by love and appreciation for her beloved pony, Connor burst into tears after the final salute.

Connor Stegeman and Zip’s Bangee. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Bonus: braid check! Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Every combination in this division — in every division, really — has their own unique story they carry with them up the centerline. For instance: Riley Jones‘ pony Señor Santana was a rescue from a farm seizure situation wherein several horses of the 30 horses Santana lived with were already deceased. He’d been restarted as a western pony when Riley brought him into her life about five years ago, and she’s since shown him the ropes of eventing.

Riley Jones and Señor Santana. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Can we get a closer look at those sparkly blue braids? And we hear that there is much more where those came from on cross country … he even sports a unicorn horn! Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Riley kindly took the time to tell us about their test and their partnership.

For these young riders, their horses and ponies are much more than competition partners — they’re friends. Kloie Hicks describes her pony Sugar Rush as “fun, loving and caring.”

Kloie Hicks and Sugar Rush. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

It’s neat to see mounts of all shapes, sizes and colors out there — truly, any horse can Go Eventing! Among the less orthodox breeds represented: a Norwegian Fjord, an Andalusian/Appendix Quarter Horse cross, Haflinger, Nokota, Morgan, and a Canadian Sport Horse.

Isabella Craft and Marcato, a Leopard Appaloosa Hungarian Warmblood (Double Helix by Bold Pizazz) gelding. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Nothing wrong with a good-looking classic bay, though:

With the top 13 competitors in the division separated by less than a rail, the jumping phases are bound to be nail-biters. A few cross country machines and show jumping powerhouses to keep an eye out for:

Macie Sykes and Delilah’s Boy, her own Connemara gelding, have gone clear in both jumping phases in their past five events. They sit 7th after dressage, not quite replicating the winning score of 19.5 they posted at Pony Club Championships earlier this summer but certainly still in the mix! Love that smile, Macie.

Macie Sykes and Delilah’s Boy. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

More pairs with super jumping records to keep your eye on:

Marin Swyers and Bibbidy Bobbidy Boo. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Sierra Thomas and Chambery. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

A job well done to all these young riders!

Sydney Langley & Pocket Change. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Make no mistake — these kids are coming for us all, and we can’t wait to follow all the dramatic twists and turns of this year’s Jr. Beginner Novice 14 & Under showdown. And here’s some great news from the USEA!

Great to see our lower levels getting the royal treatment — they deserve it! Much more to come. Go Eventing.

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Junior Beginner Novice 14 & Under top 10 after dressage (view complete leaderboard here):

Friday Video from SmartPak: If Horses Were People – Fly Season, Part 2

SmartPak’s “If Horses Were People” series is back and more painfully true-to-life — and hysterically funny — than ever. The latest series imagines what it would be like if horses were people during fly season, with Sara and Sarah acting out all the summer dramz that are basically your life right now: ripped fly sheets, MIA fly masks, fly spray sagas … the dreaded SWATTING HORSE TAIL TO THE EYEBALL. And if you loved Part 1, strap in because this hot-off-the-presses part 2 is even more hilarious.

(Speaking of fly spray, SmartPak’s OutSmart® Fly Spray is THE BOMB. Not only is it free from nasty chemicals, it smells delightfully pepperminty and … drumroll … it really works! Go order yourself some right now; you can thank us later.)

Be sure to subscribe to SmartPak’s YouTube channel for all the latest videos. Go Eventing!

 

 

Thursday #AEC2019 Quotes From the Top: All We Do Is Win, Win, Win No Matter What

Julia Spatt & 5o1 Macintosh, winner of the Bates Preliminary Rider division. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The first batch of 2019 American Eventing Championship crowns have been distributed! Thursday saw the coronation of Intermediate and Preliminary divisions, as well as cross country for Training and dressage for Novice and Advanced. I’d say it’s a three-ring circus around here at the Kentucky Horse Park, but in fact many more rings than that are in action.

Once again we have the hardworking USEA press team to thank for chasing down the winners and leaders of each #AEC2019 division at day’s end to collect ride reflections and thoughts going forward. Scroll down to catch up with the final top three riders from …

… as well as the cross-country leaders from …

… and top-5 dressage leaderboards from …

… with six divisions of Beginner Novice still to kick off tomorrow!

#AEC2019: WebsiteScheduleRide TimesLive ScoringLive StreamEN’s CoverageUSEA’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Boyd Martin and Long Island T, leader of the Advanced Final. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

$60,000 ADEQUAN USEA ADVANCED FINAL

🏆1st: Boyd Martin & Long Island T

On their dressage test: “‘Ludwig’ was brilliant today in the dressage. He’s such a fantastic mover, and he’s always full of expression and he’s very well trained and experienced at this level now so he’s quite fun to ride. And he’s sort of got that mixture of good energy without getting too explosive. He’s very good, a couple little things we can always improve on, but overall it’s lovely to have a horse with this phenomenal talent for the dressage because you just have to sit there and everyone thinks you’re a good rider.”

On the cross country course: “I think unfortunately Derek di Grazia is practicing for building Burghley. He’s coming out here and he’s gotten all excited because he’s got the Burghley job — it looks huge to me. If you break it down and you really look at it, it’s a great course — great footing, obviously it’s a nice open galloping course. So my plan, I mean obviously there’s a bit of prize money on the line so I’d love to have a bit of a crack, but this is also Ludwig’s first Advanced in a while so I’ve just got to ride a little bit smart and make sure I don’t go wild and crazy and go for broke too much. He can get quite strong and hard to turn especially towards the end of the course so my plan would be to keep him open and fast but keep him settled and keep his mind the whole way around.”

On putting the AEC on his schedule: “Kentucky is obviously one of the greatest equestrian venues in the world. It’s a huge honor and thrill to ride here in April, and I jumped at the opportunity to bring horses here for the AEC. It’s just a great event. I think the biggest thing is the cross country course design at all levels is big, bold and flowing with every question that needs to be asked for every horse. It’s a really good education for every horse at every level. And to do dressage and show jumping in this stadium is a great opportunity to get mileage on these horses that are coming through.”

🏅2nd: Mara Depuy & Congo Brazzaville C

On their dressage test: “Congo is getting better and better. I’m thrilled with the fact that he was rideable, which he has not been in atmosphere this spring. [They did the test ride at GMI in preparation for the AEC, to practice in a bigger atmosphere without the pressure.]”

Looking ahead to cross country: “I think the course looks great. I think it looks like the reason we all came here: for fantastic footing and a great, challenging course. I’m excited about it. I think it will suit Congo — the bigger the better — I just have to ride it well and stay sharp.”

🏅3rd: Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore

On their dressage test: “Parts of it were good. The flying changes were still not great, but he’s such a quality horse that the judges want to score him because he looks the part. He’s coming along.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “It’s a strong course. It starts right from the beginning, there’s a lot to do. It’s as strong as you’d see at a four-star.”

Top 3 after dressage (view full scoreboard here): 

INTERMEDIATE

🏆1st: Tamie Smith & En Vogue

On their show jumping round: “I got on her [this morning] and I went so fast yesterday that I wasn’t certain how she’d feel fitness-wise, but she was shaking her head and almost gave me a little buck so I knew she was feeling really good. She really rose to the occasion. She’s taken some time to trust me and I feel like today the rail I had was my rail, which I’m really happy about, because she has been tricky in the show jumping. The rail I had was more because of how she’s been in the past and I rode her instead of the way she feels now. I’m ecstatic.

“I just feel now that this weekend we really are on the same page. I wasn’t sure what she’d feel like in the show jumping, that would probably be the biggest track that she’s done and she’s really spooky … that’s part of why I had the rail, because I rode too forward in and I almost should have put five in the first line instead of six. That’s what I love about mares – as soon as they start to trust you then they give you 110 percent. I feel like she’s really doing that.”

🏅2nd: Tamie Smith & Danito

On their partnership: “He and I have been together longer and you can see that we have a good partnership now. He really trusts me now and he was really relaxed. I love that horse, he’s so my ride and he’s little but really mighty and strong.”

On their show jumping round: “He tried super hard. He’s a funny horse because when he’s bored he doesn’t try quite as hard. At the last event he jumped clean but it was a little by braille so I wasn’t sure what to expect, but the jumps are impressive here so he actually gave it some effort and jumped really beautiful.”

On the AEC atmosphere: “I think the best top horses rise to the occasion for something like this. They might not to the normal horse trials, but you want a horse that when it gets in this kind of atmosphere, because this is a championship atmosphere like the Olympics Games or WEG or the Pan Ams, you want them to rise to the occasion. You learn whether your horse can do this and it was really helpful because I know those two both can.”

🏅3rd: Hallie Coon & Cooley Sos

On her mount: “He’s quite a small horse but with a gigantic ego. It gets to be a struggle sometime in the dressage – he thinks he’s a little bit too important to be doing what he’s doing. But he has the most incredible stride and jump on the cross-country and in the show jumping, he just eats it up. I mean, [he has] twice the stride of any of my other horses and he’s by far the smallest. So that can be challenging in itself, knowing where I am, but he tried his heart out yesterday.”

On recovering from cross country: “He did get quite tired out on course yesterday because I pushed him quite a bit – he left strides out everywhere, as he always does – so I was curious to see how he was this morning. But, usually after a big effort like that he comes out and he jumps even better than usual and he stayed true today. I’m really thrilled with him.”

The take-away: “I didn’t come here to be competitive, honestly. I came here to test the waters and I think he told me that he’s ready.”

Final top 5 (view complete results here): 

BATES PRELIMINARY HORSE

🏆1st: Bobby Meyerhoff & Lumumba

On their show jumping round: “She was great. She came out a little fresh, and I worked her quite a bit on the flat, getting her nice and loose and she started right off the bat jumping super. [After putting the pedal to the metal yesterday] it was interesting to me to see how she’d be and she came out the best she’s ever come out. It was really cool.”

What’s next: “She’s ready to step up to the next level, so thinking about going to Plantation and doing the three-star short, and we’ll go from there. The last two shows now I’ve really put the pressure on her to win, so I’d like to go cruise around.”

Her pre-AEC preparation: “The coolest thing about her is that I know she’ll go to places like this with all this atmosphere and she’ll perform, and I can tell she wants it. So I don’t have to do a ton of outside preparation other than working at home and keeping her fit. And with her blood she gets pretty fit pretty fast, so I don’t overdue it because it comes pretty natural to her.”

On her Arabian blood: “It’s nice that she has that and she has the endurance and then at the same time she has the mind to contain it in the cool personality of being calm and being able to take the pressure. A lot of times it looks like she’s being really nice and calm and presentable but I can feel the tension and the anxiety a little, but she hides it really well so that works to her advantage.”

The value of the AEC experience: “My goal is to jump around a five-star here with her, so to able to jump in the stadium with her here and to go around the cross country as many times between now and then, it’s going to make her feel at home. So the first time they come here isn’t in the five-star and it’s all that pressure. It’s nice to be able to come here and do that in this type of competition in preparation for the big five-star.”

🏅2nd: Kyle Carter and Galliard’s Lancer

On riding ‘the best horse I’ve ever sat on’: “He made the time well, and he’s been nothing but fantastic in show jumping for me. This horse has just been Mr. Reliability in there — you can be a bit wrong and he finds his way out of it. This horse in the Prelim is the best horse I’ve ever sat on in my life. Maybe not all my horses were the top horses in the world, but I’ve had enough good ones, and this one in all three phases is close to the top in all of them but he shows nothing but what you need for that level. When he finished cross country, he blew out immediately; this morning I got on him and he was full of himself and fresh.

“Everything about him screams that he could be here and pull this off in a much bigger environment. His trot is really really good, he’s a very good canter, but he has the best canter and as you know the higher you go the canter becomes more of a priority so I expect him to be able to tip into the under-25 marks.”

🏅3rd: Boyd Martin and Fernhill Prezley

On his mount: “Heidi White produced the horse and has done an amazing job. He’s a spectacular animal. I took over the ride a couple months ago and was very impressed with him. He did very well at Bromont and now here, and I think he’s a horse for the future. He’s a proper jumper. He’s French bred, even though he has an Irish prefix, and he’s just a big, scopey, careful jumper.

“He has a bit of a long canter so I’ve been working hard to try to keep him together and balanced, and I was very pleased that he came out and jumped well today. Same in the cross country, he’s a big galloper and a bit hard to adjust, and same with the dressage, he has great big paces so it’s harder with the collection work. But we’re still getting to know each other and he’ll be ready to move up to Intermediate soon.”

Final top 5 (view complete results here): 

BATES PRELIMINARY AMATEUR

🏆1st: Arden Wildasin & Watch Out

Two in the top three: “Both horses went in there and did fantastic. It was a partnership that we were building throughout the summer and we were able to perform it today. It was great going in knowing that I’m first and second – you don’t know what’s going to happen.”

On her mount: “The Watch Out horse, I’ve had him for almost 10 years and he only goes Preliminary. Preliminary is his height. He’s been one of my kids – I can’t sell him. He’s been with me since everything and each time I sit on him I continue to learn even though I’ve had him for so long. Yes we’ve had that partnership, but it’s continuing to develop it.”

🏅2nd: Arden Wildasin & Southern Sun

On her second mount: “The Southern Sun horse, he’s a little bit spooky and he did kind of spook at the coin jump, but he jumped it awesome and we’ve had the nemesis of the liverpool – never had anything bad – but he jumped that the best in there which made me really happy.”

A good day at the office: “It’s pretty surreal – it’s unbelievable. I’m pretty proud of those two for always showing up and doing their best and thankfully I was able to participate in doing my best too.”

🏅3rd: Maggie Fearon & Brando

A well-rounded weekend: “He was really good on the flat for him, and was really just relaxed out there which I was happy about – it’s a big atmosphere out there. Cross-country he was absolutely perfect he in the past has been a little sticky and yesterday he was just all out and really good so I was very proud of that. Today he came in and jumped his socks off and was really good so I was very proud of him for his weekend.”

 On their partnership: “I got him when he was four from a hunter jumper trainer and I’ve been bringing him up myself. He is really careful so we’ve taken it pretty slow with him. He’s eight now and he’s coming along really well so I’m excited.”

Final top 5 (view complete results here):

BATES PRELIMINARY RIDER

🏆1st: Julia Spatt & 501 Macintosh

On their show jumping round: “He was a little keen in warmup, I think he was a little excited after going fast yesterday so I kind of had to work on toning him down, keeping the rideability and getting him to listen, but once we got in the ring he really stayed with me, he was really listening and its one of our best show jumping rounds together to date so I’m just thrilled.”

A deserving win: “We got very lucky last year it just kind of happened and wasn’t expected. This year I thought my preparation was a lot better and the hope was a top five finished so I’m just beyond thrilled he made such improvements in all three phases. I’m just blown away by the horse, he deserves the win more than anything.”

On their partnership: “It’s one of the longest partnerships I’ve had with a horse so it’s been really cool to produce him through the levels and I just know him like the back of my hand and he knows me so well so it’s cool looking at the course to see how challenging they are and know that I’m sitting on the horse I want to be on to tackle these challenges and that I can trust him to stay with me pretty much no matter what.”

🏅2nd: Megan Edwards & Loughnatousa Reiner

On their partnership: “I feel very blessed to have the ride. I wasn’t expecting it and I’ve just formed a partnership with him this year and the owner have let me really do a good job of sticking to a plan and every show it’s showing. I had the unfortunate rail but he was such a good boy. He tries really hard – he’s a good Irish horse with a good heart.”

🏅3rd: Carolyn Wehle & Edelmann

On their show jumping round: “My ride was good, he obviously could have been better, he had two rails, it’s not really typical of him. I don’t know if he was just distracted by the atmosphere. He finished really well, he was great yesterday, he ran his little heart out, had one time penalty yesterday, his dressage was phenomenal for him it was probably his best test to date in eventing. He’s pretty green at this level and he jumped around like a rockstar yesterday and I really have no complaints. He was great.”

Final top 5 (view complete results here):

BATES JUNIOR/YOUNG RIDER PRELIMINARY

 🏆1st, Savannah Blackstock & Garryndruig Albie

On show jumping: “That horse is incredible. Show jumping is not my favorite part of this sport but I came in there and he’s such a good boy – he always knows when he’s competing and he just went in there and ate it up. He was so good. It was such a fun ride.”

On their partnership: I love the horse. He’s awesome. He knows his job, he loves his job, he goes in there and does what he supposed to. He’s just incredible. I couldn’t ask for a better partnership.

On training with Kyle Carter: “I fell in love with the program and the horses … it has been the most amazing journey. I have learned so much being with Kyle.”

🏅2nd, Isabel Finemore & Rutherglen

When your horse is your best teacher: “Riding Rutherglen is such an experience because he’s done so much and to have Andrew Hoy allow me to ride him is just the most incredible thing ever. He’s so good at teaching me what I have to learn but he’s so good at allowing me to learn and not just doing everything. It’s so unbelievable, from Young Riders in July to this, I’m just shocked.”

🏅3rd: Paige Drury & Shanagore Jenga 

On their show jumping round: “She absolutely loves to jump and so in warmup she was a little more forward than I wanted her in show jumping, but she went in there and just listened so well every time I told her to come back. She’s just been awesome all weekend.”

On their partnership: “She took me to my first Training and we did three Trainings, a Modified, and then moved up to Preliminary. She’s been amazing.”

Final top 5 (view complete results here):

EQUISTRO MODIFIED/TRAINING

🏆1st: Kendyl Tracy & Bobbie Burns

On her mount: “Bobby was good boy today. He’s a 6-year-old Oldenburg born in Louisiana. I have had him since he was 4 years old, and I am the only one who has evented him, bringing him up through the levels.

“This is his first ever away show and I wanted to bring him to some atmosphere in order to give him more experience for the future. It has been a really special week because his owner, Po Tatham, traveled with us and has been helping every step of the way. She has been so supportive throughout his entire development, and I am so thankful for her.”

 How the course rode: “I thought Derek was very clever in asking tough questions that were very fair for the horses. If you rode positively and showed them where they needed to be it rode very smoothly. I am glad that the course was at a championship level so it will prepare him for the next level.

“I think he learned a lot on the course, but he actually came out of the start box the most focused he has ever been before which is pretty exciting because he has grown up so much recently despite only being 6.”

 A horse with character: “He is an in-your-pocket personality. He is always looking for cookies and he is very sweet. He has a very big personality — you can always tell what he is thinking just by the expression on his face.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “For tomorrow we are going to just do the best we can. He is a very good jumper if I ride to plan, he should jump well, but it is more about the experience than the placing at the end of the day.”

Top 5 after cross country (view complete leaderboard here):

TRAINING RIDER

🏆1st-T: Jackson Dillard

On cross country: “She is so game on the cross country course, she really just stepped out of the box and went for it, it was great.”

On their partnership: “Layla was my high school project. I got her as I started my freshman year of high school, before she really knew a whole lot. She’s really been the horse that’s allowed me to grow and do so much. I’m so glad I can have a horse that’s so game and willing for me. I just gradated high school and I’m actually taking a gap year, so my four-year project just turned into my four-year-plus-one project. I’m going to be a working student for Patrick McGaughan. I’m looking forward to a great year. She’s going to make the move to Prelim after this and we’re going to see where that takes us.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “It’s a big atmosphere out there but she can really be great. I’m looking forward to it. It’s such an honor to ride in the ring and be here and do all that so I think whatever happens it’s going to be great.”

🏆1st-T: Steph Kohr & Irisina

About her horse: “She’s young – she’s just six – and she moved up to Training earlier this year and it was probably her most confident round yet. I was thrilled with her. There was a lot to do but it was all really inviting – she handled it great and she felt awesome.

“She’s a six year old Dutch horse that I got about a year and a half ago. She didn’t really event last year but she was qualified for the 5-year-old championships but had an abscess so wasn’t able to go. Bad timing. She started eventing this spring down in Florida and has been great.”

On where she calls home: “Waredaca is a big event barn in Area II. We have a lesson program, a Pony Club program, and then I run more of the event training program there. [We have] a lot of students who event but not necessarily all of them. All sorts of levels, everything from starter up through Preliminary, is about where my students are. Most of them are adult amateurs, they do it for fun, I have four of them down here with me this weekend.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “She’s good, she wants to be pretty careful. Show jumping is probably my weakest phase so we’ll see but she’s a very good jumper. She’s certainly never seen anything like this so we’ll just have to see how she handles it.”

On what’s next: “[She moved up to Training] at the end of March, beginning of April. I want to try to do a Modified with her – after today she certainly felt like she’s ready to move up, we both felt like we were ready move up after today. So, a Modified or maybe a Preliminary at the end of the year and then Prelim in the winter.”

Top 5 after cross country (view full leaderboard here): 

TRAINING HORSE

🏆1st: Madeline Backus and Reflektion’s Rio

On their cross country round: “He was great, he loves cross-country – it’s his favorite out of all three phases. I thought it was a really good championship course. There were some good questions out there. I was able to watch some of the cross-country this morning and it was a little looky, some of the horses were a bit sticky coming into that first water, so I rode a bit aggressively but he took right to it. He was brilliant. We had a lot of fun out there.”

Looking ahead to tomorrow: “[Show jumping] is his hardest phase. He’s not always super careful but it’s just a matter of having fun with him and keeping him happy – that’s our most important thing with him. We’re just looking for a fun weekend.”

On his owner: “Her name is Lynn Roberts, she’s actually a vet. She has been riding him, she does dressage on him. Eventually she’ll ride him more when he’s done with his eventing career but for now she helps keep him happy and healthy. She’s such a great owner – she just wants him to be happy. We get to come out and have fun.”

On their relationship: “I did his first elementary on him. He’s had a couple other riders take him to some events. Now that I’m back home more permanently I’ve been able to ride him consistently.”

Top 5 after cross country (view complete leaderboard here): 

JUNIOR TRAINING

🏆1st: Kiersten Miller & Mama Mia

On her mount: “She was absolutely amazing, each time I get out there with her I think it’s not going to get any better but it does, every single time. She runs better and better and she’s easier to maintain out there and listens so well. She was all game on from start to finish.”

Getting past nerves: “I was definitely nervous this morning because I was taking a look at the scores and seeing that it was definitely causing some trouble so I talked to my coach and he said, ‘You know, you just need to worry about yourself. Go out there and do what you know how to do,’ And then I did the first few fences and realized we were oaky. I thought it was amazing, everything rode great.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “She’s a really good show jumper but I always struggle with show jumping mentally but she’s absolutely amazing. Once I’m riding her well and balancing her and not taking long distances and really keeping her compact and under herself she jumps amazing. She jumps her heart out over the fences. I’m looking forward to it but the format of these types of events where you have the show jumping last always makes me the most nervous because that for some reason has always been my most nerve-wracking phase.  I think I’m just going to go out there and execute the plan, have fun and relax and enjoy the moment in the Rolex Stadium.”

Top 5 after cross country (view complete leaderboard here): 

NOVICE LEADERBOARDS

Top 5 after dressage (view complete leaderboards here):

Go Eventing!

Wednesday #AEC2019 Quotes from the Top: Intermediate and Prelim XC, Training Dressage

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A new day, and a new list of current leaders 🔝⁣ ⁣ Open Intermediate Championship: Tamra Smith & En Vogue ⁣ Preliminary Amateur Championship: Arden Wildasin & Watch Out⁣ Preliminary Horse Championship: Robert Meyerhoff & Lumumba⁣ Preliminary Junior/Young Rider Championship: Leila Saxe & Quasar⁣ Preliminary Rider Championship: Julia Spatt & 5o1 Macintosh⁣ Open Modified/Training: Katie Malensek & Landjaeger⁣ Training Amateur Championship: Eleanor Leonard & Alvescot Moneymaker⁣ Training Horse Championship: Madeline Backus & Reflektion's Rio⁣ Training Junior Championship: Kiersten Miller & Mama Mia⁣ Training Rider Championship: Elizabeth Sauter & Giana⁣ ⁣ Good luck tomorrow, everyone! 🥇🎉#AEC2019 #USEventing #BetterTogether 📸: @shannonbrinkman / @useventing

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Talk about an event firing on all cylinders … it’s Wednesday and we’re already two days deep into AEC action! One Intermediate and four Prelim divisions hit the Kentucky Horse Park’s storied cross country course today; meanwhile, five Training divisions took to the sandbox.

Many thanks to Jessica Duffy from the USEA, who from what I can tell is leashed to a desk in the media center transcribing rider interviews all day. You’re a hero, girl. On that note, thanks to all of the USEA staff for their hard work in producing such an incredible showcase of the true heart and soul of American eventing.

Let’s catch up with our Wednesday leaders!

Intermediate: Tamie Smith & En Vogue

On their cross country round: “I couldn’t have asked her to be better. I expected her to be a bit backed off because she hasn’t run, but she knows her job and you have to trust that if you prepare them properly and get them ready that they don’t have to run a ton. I wasn’t certain how she was going to feel and she felt amazing, I was super happy.

“I knew that, if I was going to make the time, I needed to be on my first minute. Both of those horses are horses you can go out of the box quick on – some horses you can’t, you have to settle into it – but I knew I could come out of the box strong. The first combination walks in a seven and I got it in seven on Danito and with Evie I knew I could get six so I got six in there and I was on my first minute and stayed on it the whole time. They’re both really fast horses and have a ton of blood in them. You basically had to land and sprint to the next combination and try not to have to bring them back too soon. They’re both so rideable – the both go in snaffles – it’s easy when you can go really fast because then they just come right back when you bring your shoulders up and they’re right there and paying attention.

“Evie was a little more green than Danito – he was kind of sleeping out there a bit, it was just super easy for him – but he just ran a few weeks ago so I think that probably helped and the course is quite stiff for a horse that hasn’t run since Twin in April. She wasn’t as bold through the coffin and then the last water she overjumped the brush and I added a stride in there, but she was super. She was just looking for the flags and wants to do it and is just a fun horse to ride.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “We’re working on that, it’s a work in progress. She needs quite a technical ride and I just hope I ride her the best I can and that she tries to jump the jumps as clean as possible. I do have rails on her in the past but she is capable of jumping clean, as long as she stays rideable. I’ve been working with Erik Duvander – he’s helped me a ton with her, working on her shape, and she’s getting better and starting to do that and I felt that out on the cross-country. I hope it transfers over to tomorrow!”

Top 5 after cross country (view full leaderboard here):

Preliminary Rider: Julia Spatt & 5o1 Macintosh

On their cross country round: “He was wonderful, he was really on. I was definitely feeling a little bit nervous in the warmup hearing about some of the trouble on course and I knew that the time was going to be really hard to make, but he was really on. He was listening the whole way around and he was actually really good to me in two of the combinations where I wasn’t exactly right and he gave me a really great feeling all the way around. I had to really keep kicking to make the time though, we just kept going and he was right there with me, I’m really pleased.”

On their partnership: “I’ve had him since he was a 5-year-old – I bought him from Jacob Fletcher who I was working for at the time. Jacob did his first two Novices but I’ve done everything since then, so his first Training, his first Preliminary, his first FEI, and he actually ran his first Intermediate this summer. He’s a really exciting horse and I’ve had him for four years so we’ve had a really long partnership and we know each other really well. It’s cool to still be together and he seems like he gets better every year.”

On winning the Prelim Amateur division at last year’s AEC: “I can no longer declare as an amateur because I work for a college as a coach but we managed to win last year, which was a little surprising and unexpected and really exciting. And we were planning to come and try to be competitive this year so it’s exciting that it’s worked out so far.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “He’s really very good in show jumping. I tend to get a little nervous and can ride a little backwards sometimes but if I give him a good ride he’s great. He’s careful, he’s listening, sometimes he just gets a little bold and will get a little strong but if I can keep him rideable he’s a wonderful jumper.”

Top 5 after cross country (view full leaderboard here):

Junior/Young Rider Preliminary: Leila Saxe and Quasar

On their journey to the AEC: “Kyle Carter and Jen Carter are my trainers. [The drive] was good, but it was very long. We left at 4 a.m. It was 12 hours.”

On their cross country round: “Quasar was super. He jumped around like a star. He was five seconds under time and he was just perfect. He’s very solid and he jumps pretty much everything.”

On their partnership: “I’ve had him for almost two years in October. I got him from Buck Davidson, he had run an old three-star but he needs to be a lower level horse so I did an Intermediate on him and it went really well so we just moved down to Prelim for the AEC and then after we’re going to do the three-star at Stable View.”

Looking ahead to show jumping: “He’s very perfect, he listens to everything. He’s a little bit nervous sometimes but he’s perfect. He’s not a very careful jumper, I’m just praying that tomorrow goes well because he does not jump clean but I’m just going to pray and hopefully he picks up his feet.”

Top 5 after cross country (view full leaderboard here):

Preliminary Amateur: Arden Wildasin & Watch Out

On her cross country rounds: “My horses were very happy with cross-country. They loved today and I loved today, it was fantastic. Walter, who is sitting in first right now, I’ve had him for almost ten years, so he’s one of my fun Preliminary kids. He won’t go above that, but we just have so much fun together doing that. With Sunny, this is his second year at this level. He was out there answering all of the questions that were being asked. They didn’t do anything wrong. I might’ve done something, but they were there to save me.”

Of the track: “The course was fantastic. It’s awesome galloping across Kentucky ground. I’ve come here before, but coming [to the AEC], this event has a bit of a different feel. It’s a great track, asked tough questions — my favorite being the bank bounce with the log on top. That was fun!”

Top 5 after cross country (view full leaderboard here):

Modified: Katie Malensek & Landjaeger

On their test strategy: “He’s generally a pretty cool-minded horse so I tried to just not expel too much energy in the warmup and he ended up going in and he was a solid citizen who just put in a good test. I’m really proud of him.”

 

On their partnership: “I keep my horses at home so my horses are my babies, we spend a lot of time together. He’s a sweet horse, he doesn’t have a mean bone in his body and he’s just a little pushy but easy to get along with. He loves his food and his treats. He’s just a really sweet horse and he’s been an easy horse to bring along.”

On the Modified level: “Both of my horses are young and they’d had a good winter season around the Training level and I just wasn’t thinking they were quite ready as 5-year-olds to go up to Preliminary so I started looking for some alternatives. Thankfully, Area III has a ton of Modifieds and I’d never done them before so I just thought let’s just give it a whirl. It’s the perfect in-between level for them. A little more challenging than Training and not so hard on them as youngsters as Preliminary. Coming here, I thought I want do a little harder dressage test and a little harder show jumping – I was hoping the cross-country would be Modified but that’s alright, we’ll have some fun around the Training level.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “[The course] looks fantastic. We’re from Florida where everything’s flat – this horse has hardly ever left the flat sand so he’ll have some fun on the hills I’m sure. It’ll be a little different for him, that’s for sure. I love him, he’s a good boy.”

Top 5 after dressage (view full leaderboard here):

Training Rider: Elizabeth Sauter and Giana 

On their dressage test: “It went really well today, I was super happy with her. We’ve had kind of an up and down season, but she just went in there today feeling very relaxed and was with me the entire way.”

On their partnership: “I’ve been lucky enough to ride her for her whole career, I backed her when she was three. I’m very lucky, my coach owns her and allows me to rider her, and she is an incredible horse. She’s so fun, very honest, and loves her job. She’s a pleasure to work with every day.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “The course looks great. It looks really fun, and there’s certainly a lot to do. The terrain is great and it’s all beautifully presented. I think it’s certainly within her capabilities if I do my job and allow her to do hers.”

Top 5 after dressage (view full leaderboard here):

Training Amateur: Eleanor Leonard & Alvescot Moneymaker

On her horse: “Her name is Maisie, she’s a 9-year-old Anglo European Sport Horse. We imported her from England from Susie Pragnell three years ago and we’ve just been kind of getting to know each other. She’s really great. I took Maisie Preliminary around a year ago and she’s really forgiving horse but she can be challenging, too. So I think right now right now it’s us finding our own confidence and we’re just kind of getting to a really good spot where everything’s clicking.”

On their test: “It was really good. It felt like one of our stronger tests so I was really excited that we were able to go in and be bolder and more confident than we have before. She was really good though, she was more expressive than she’s been in the past.”

On the AEC: “I’ve wanted to come to the AEC for a few years but it’s never really been the right timing. I just had a gap year in Virginia working for Chris Talley and Hannah Salazar so I was coming this way anyway and I thought it would be a good pit stop on the way home to California. I’ve always wanted to come to AEC because it looks like a really special experience, and having it in Kentucky at the Horse Park was really exciting so I wanted to be here.”

On moving east: “I think that moving the East Coast was really beneficial in gaining some independence. Chris was really helpful with the cross country and just being able to show so much more and go schooling, because it’s kind of hard on the west coast sometimes and it’s been really helpful.”

Top 5 after dressage (view full leaderboard here):

 Training Horse: Madeline Backus & Reflektion’s Rio

On their test: “It went really well. He is a pure dressage horse so we’ve done up through third level. He’s really good at dressage but he prefers the jumping – we event to keep him happy and he loves it. I was really pleased with his test today. He stayed focused, which doesn’t always happen, and he was just really rideable. He put in a really nice test I couldn’t be more happy.”

On their best phase: “He’s lovely cross country, it’s his favorite. He used to do dressage with other people and he wasn’t happy and then he got to do cross country and that was it, he loves that so much. Show jumping is probably his weakest phase – sometimes the rails come down and we just accept that. As long as he’s happy we’re all happy.”

On their partnership: “He’s owned by a woman named Lynn Roberts, she’s a client of my mom’s at Pendragon Stud Equestrian Center. I‘ve been competing him for about four years now – it’s been a while. I’ve been riding him on and off because I’ve traveled overseas and competed my upper level horse for a while so my mom’s done a lot of the training on him as well. The last two years we’ve been doing really well and moving up the levels and taking our time and keeping him happy.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “It’s a great championship course I’m really excited to get out there. There’s a lot of good questions but at the same time it’s super fair. It’s just a really good course.”

Top 5 after dressage (view full leaderboard here):

Junior Training: Kiersten Miller & Mama Mia

On their test: “She was amazing. I knew that if I kept my head on straight and went in did what I know how to do it would be fine. I definitely felt more nervous than usual so I was kind of worried about that because she can tend to feed off that because she’s quite electric in these environments. It all ended up going well though.”

On their partnership: “We just recently started our partnership back in June – I got her back in April. I got a few rides in here and there but she was in a different state than me so I wasn’t able to rider her very much for the first two months. Then in June she came home to Michigan with me and we kind of hit the ground running and we got a few events in and are building a partnership as we go and getting better and better at each event.”

On heading south: “We decided to keep her down there for a little bit longer because she’s not really used to Michigan and Michigan gets warmer a lot later so we were afraid she wouldn’t do well in that environment so we kept her down [in Ocala] with one of my trainers for two months and I was able to fly down on the weekends so I wouldn’t miss school. I got about eight rides in with her during that time. It was two rides here, three rides there, but it wasn’t very consistent. It was difficult to start learning about each other but I did my best to spend some time on the ground with her and just get to know her in that way.”

On their favorite phase: “She’s actually quite new to cross-country – she just started eventing this winter but she loves it. I remember for my first event with her back in June I was nervous, I had no clue how she was really going to react because obviously we haven’t done much together. She just ate it up – every fence I was just smiling. She loves cross-country – that’s definitely her favorite part. It’s fun out there with her.

Looking ahead to cross country: “[The course] is absolutely amazing. I think it’s cool how in the beginning he kind of lets you feel your horse out before he gives you anything too technical and then he slowly amps it up, especially at the head of the lake – I really like the questions there. I’m pretty excited.”

Top 5 after dressage (view full leaderboard here):

Much more to come. Go Eventing!

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Medals on Their Minds: Chef d’Equipes Weigh in on European Championship Team Selection

Chris Bartle and Major Richard Waygood MBE. Photo by Thomas Ix. Chris Bartle and Major Richard Waygood MBE. Photo by Thomas Ix.

The philosophy behind team selection is fascinating. Whom do you name to the squad, and why, and how do those individuals meld into a singular team unit?

For perspective, there’s value in looking to the leaders of other successful eventing teams in our sport. Here, the Chef d’Equipes of three nations currently dominating our sport at the championship level …

  • Germany, the second winningest nation in European Championships history
  • Great Britain, the reigning European and World champions
  • France, the reigning Olympic team gold medalist

… share their team selection philosophies For the 2019 Longines FEI Eventing European Championships underway this week in Luhmühlen. Sweden and Italy, both of whom have been heavily targeting the Nations Cup series as a path to Olympic qualification this year, also weigh in.

In case you missed it, here are links to Tilly Berendt’s very informative analyses of the teams who will be contesting Championships: AustriaBelgium, DenmarkFinlandFranceGermany, Great Britain, Hungary, IrelandItaly, PolandSpainSweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands.

The Nations Cup podium at Houghton International 2019: Germany take the win, USA finish in second place, and Ireland scoop third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Germany: Prof. Dr. Jens Adolphsen

“I think we made the most of our opportunity to nominate some young riders as well as the established ones. Our experienced riders are doing such a terrific job that it was hard for the next generation to gain championship experience. That’s why it’s brilliant to be able to involve so many young talented riders now. From my point of view, in a good team the individual results add up to an excellent one. The atmosphere within the team membership plays an important, inspiring role too. We have tried to nominate in such a way that winning the Championship is possible.”

Chris Bartle and Major Richard Waygood MBE. Photo by Thomas Ix.

Great Britain: Major Richard Waygood MBE

“We are very excited about our squad for the Championships. This year we have a range of experienced and not so experienced horses who all have great potential to excel at this Championships and future Championships. Our riders who partner these horses all have Championships credentials and understand about working in a Team environment as ‘One Team.’ Each rider and member of staff are there to support each other through thick and thin. Our aspirations are of course to win Team Gold and all the individual medals. There is no point in coming otherwise.”

Team gold goes to France at 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. From left: Karim Florent Laghouag, Mathieu Lemoine, Astier Nicolas and Thibaut Vallette. Photo by Jenni Autry.

France: Thierry Touzaint

“The French eventing team is getting ready for the championship. As always, we organized a final training that takes place in Normandy. They can ride on the beach every day and let their horses walk in the sea water. To me this time we spend gathered together is very important for both horses and riders. I think that we have a good team, some horses are quite young but the riders are very experienced. We will do our best to bring home a team medal. I don’t know its color yet, but I definitely think that we can get one with this team.”

Fredrik Bergendorff. Photo by Thomas Ix.

Sweden: Fredrik Bergendorff

“The Swedish team is put together with experience and consistent results in mind. Our number 1 goal is to get Olympic qualification, having said that if we perform to the level we can it would be great to bring back a medal. We have championship experience in our team mixed in with two riders who get the chance to ride in a senior championship for the first time. I think it’s a good mix of getting the result we like and still developing for the future. We are all looking forward to a week of good sport.”

2018 Strzegom Nations Cup Top Three: France, Italy and Poland. Photo by Leszek Wójcik/LOTTO Strzegom Horse Trials.

Italy: Giacomo Della Chiesa

“The European Championships are always beautiful competitions – because we have sport on the highest level with brilliant horses and riders taking part. This year is very important for us because of the chance qualify our team for Tokyo 2020. I think it’s a great team because we have some experienced riders who have already done World Championships and Olympic Games and some younger riders, who are very competitive. Two of them are based in Great Britain, one is based in France, one in Belgium, and the rest are based in Italy. We competed in all the Nations Cups 2019 and the horses look really fit. We will all try our best!”

Visit the Luhmühlen website here. Go Eventing.

[Luhmühlen: Medals in View]

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Tuesday #AEC2019 Quotes from the Top: Trailblazers Up the Centerline

Intermediate and Prelim competitors have been our trailblazers here at the 2019 USEA American Eventing Championships, knocking out dressage on Tuesday and heading out on cross country today — best of luck to all!

Here’s what the dressage leaders had to say after their tests:

Open Intermediate: Tamie Smith & En Vogue ⁣⁣

Tamie leads the division with En Vogue, a 14-year-old Hanoverian mare (Earl x Laurena) owned by Ruth Bley, on a 26.0. Tamie is also third with Danito, a 10-year-old Hanoverian gelding (Dancier x Wie Musik) also owned by Ruth.

On their test: “She actually was quite good. I had a few bobbles in the test, but she’s such an incredible mover and correct, that a couple of fours aren’t going to do too much when you are also getting eights. I was really happy with her.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “The course looks beautiful. Obviously, it’s great to be on the Lexington track and on the turf, with the rolling hills, it’s beautiful. The designer has done a phenomenal job, it’s a championship course. The questions are difficult but readable and it’ll really test the horses, which is what you want.

“She’s a really great cross-country horse, and she’s fun to ride on the flat. It’s big and technical out there. She can be a bit of a spooky horse, and it’s probably the biggest track that will have seen, she’s a green horse, but I feel like she’s ready to move up from Intermediate to Advanced now, but this will be a true test.”

On riding two horses for the same owner: “Ruth is amazing. She trusts me 100% and I feel like I can really put a plan together for the horses and she’s supportive. They’re both such quality horses that even with mistakes they’re scoring well. Their movement and rideability is so good.”

Boyd Martin is second with Luke 140 (Landos x Omega VI), an 8-year-old Holsteiner gelding owned by The Luke 140 Syndicate, on 27.4.

Bates Prelim Amateur: Katherine Nolan & Prince of Power⁣⁣

Katherine Nolan and her own Prince of Power, a 9-year-old OTTB (Prince Joseph x Lady Power), took the dressage lead in the Bates Preliminary Amateur division on a score of 28.2.

On their test: “It was great. He was fabulous – he stayed really focused and supple and soft. We had a plan and we went into the warm-up and we stuck to our plan, which sometimes we don’t do, and he was really good. I was a little worried about the atmosphere and him leaving all the horses and going down the ramp but he was just like, ‘sure, whatever,’ he’s really matured a lot since he was a baby – we’ve come a long way since he was six and bucking in the dressage ring. He’s grown up and it’s been really fun to see it happen.”

On their partnership: “I got him when he just turned four and he’s nine now – I got him off the track. I got him to go two-star, but he didn’t steer or canter so I was like, ‘maybe we’ll do Novice,’ and he just kept going. He only raced twice too – he was so slow, he was last both time. But his race trainers were so great, they brought him back to the barn and put him out in a field with some mares in foal and sold him, they’re really great. It’s nice, I still stay in touch with them.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “I’ve walked the course twice. It’s beautiful, they’ve done a really lovely job. I’m looking forward to running it. We’ll see, there’s a lot to do and it’s big so hopefully he’s ready to go and on his game and ready to gallop. I’m excited because there’s lots of galloping, lots of room, and the footing looks great. We’ve come a long way so hopefully that thoroughbred will kick in tomorrow and we’ll make time.”

Bates Prelim Horse: Bobby Meyerhof & Lumumba⁣⁣

Bobby Meyerhoff and his own and The Donavan Group’s Lumumba,an 8-year-old Mecklenburg mare (Levisonn x Lamara), took the early lead on a score of 26.9.

On coming back after a break: “She’s coming off a win at Bromont in the 2* long, and I gave her a nice break and brought her back to work; this is her first show back. Her test today was good. I’ve been working on some different things, and pushing her a little bit, and it’s really coming together. Her body came back very strong after the break which I was really happy about, and I think just her overall strength is coming along. We’re making it nice and easy for her.”

On their partnership: “I found her in the middle of nowhere in Germany. I brought her over as a seven year old, she’d never evented before, she’d done some small jumper shows. It took the first year to teach her about eventing and get her through the lower levels, and then she started Preliminary and has been successful.

“I’m just producing her very slowly. I think she’s going to move up the levels pretty quickly, because of all of the work she’s doing. I did one Intermediate with her at Virginia Horse Center before Bromont, and she had a great run there. It was great preparation. I felt after jumping that, that she was ready.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “I just finished walking the course. It looks great, with little twists and turns which is good- it’ll slow people down. It’s a big open field so there are lots of opportunities to gallop. There are some technical questions so you’ve got to balance and make sure that your horse is listening. Where she’s at, I think it’s just right for her and I can’t wait to run her on it. She’s a great jumper. Her personality is one where she just wants to attack it, she’s a bit overzealous, but I’m going to need that when we get to the bigger jumps.”

Bates Prelim Junior/ Young Rider: Elizabeth Henry & Charlotte La Bouff

Elizabeth Henry and Charlotte La Bouff, her own 11-year-old Oldenburg mare, scored a 24.6 to take the early lead.

On their test: “It was awesome. She went in there so happy and so willing to work with me. It was a beautiful test. She’s been so happy [since she got back] – she got two week’s break and went right back into work and she felt like she was the queen of the world when she got back.”

On their partnership: “I got her about 2.5 years and she was my move up to Training horse. She had done a few Preliminaries, but not very successfully so she just needed another year at Training and I was moving up so it was the perfect mesh. We just bonded right when I started riding her and I just love her to death. We have a great bond – I trust her, she trusts me, she puts her best foot forward, I do my best – it’s a great partnership we have.”

What’s next: “She’s going to get a little break and then we’re probably going to do some I/Ps and hopefully move up to Intermediate this winter down in Ocala. I’m super excited about it.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “It looks like so much fun, I can’t wait. I feel like Rebecca was more decorated and dressed up, but the questions and the rideability here is a lot tougher. It’s going to be a lot of fun. She loves it – it’s probably her best phase, honestly. She loves it and I love it so it’s perfect.”

Bates Prelim Rider: Isabel Holden & Rebel Soul ⁣

Isabel Holden and Rebel Soul, her 8-year-old Thoroughbred gelding Rebel Soul (Bernstein x Bronze Abe), have the lead on a score of 26.1.

On their partnership: “He is an off the track Thoroughbred. I got him as a 4-year-old and he had only raced up until that point. We gave him a different career and he has excelled in that. He likes to please and he is very workmanlike.”

On their test: “Our ride went really well. I was glad that I did the pre-ride. He was a bit tense yesterday going into the big ring for the first time ever. He is nice and relaxed and did his job for me. It was pretty surreal riding in there. I was here a couple of months ago with Leslie Law and his horse splash and I got them all dolled up and sent down the shoot so to be riding myself is fancy.”

Looking ahead to cross country: “It looks really fun. Knock on wood he has been a machine these last few shows. Fingers crossed everything goes really well. It looks like a Championship course. There are some parts when I walked with Leslie [Law, her coach] he was even like, ‘oh that was nice of Derek or oh that was brave of Derek.’ The rider has to take a lot of responsibility at certain points so I am excited to see how it goes.”

Much more to come! The EN crew (one reporter + one baby + one stuffed animal) is en route to Lexington and will be bringing you all the latest for the rest of the week. Be sure also to keep an eye on the USEA website for even more comprehensive coverage. Go Eventing.

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