Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

If there’s one thing to take from the sport of eventing, it’s the camaraderie. I know, we say it all the time, but that’s because it’s incredibly true. I had a conversation with a friend in the show jumping industry not too long ago, and I was amazed listening to her talk about how many riders won’t seek help from other professionals for a variety of reasons. While I am sure that there are many exceptions to this, I’m repeatedly blown away by the support even the top riders in the world of eventing show to each other.

Case in point, this post from Bec Braitling, who threw a leg over several of Tamie Smith’s horses this weekend at Galway Downs while Tamie was away competing at Tryon International. Bec also credited Tamie immensely for her help with Caravaggio leading up to his 5* debut at Kentucky last month.

It’s a part of the eventing world that never fails to warm my heart and makes me ever so grateful to be a part of it.

Events Opening This Week

Inavale Farm HT (OR); Summer Coconino H.T. I (AZ), Bouckaert Equestrian H.T. and Area III Eventing Championships (GA), Full Moon Farm’s Aloha HT (MD), Larkin Hill H.T. (NY)

Events Closing Today

Equestrians’ Institute H.T. (WA); IEA Horse Trials (IN); The Spring Event at Archer (WY); Essex H.T. (NJ); MCTA H.T. at Shawan Downs (MD); GMHA June H.T. (VT); Ocala Summer H.T. I (FL); Poplar Place June H.T. (GA); Genesee Valley Riding & Driving Club Spring H.T. (NY); Carriage House Farm Combined Test (MN)

Tuesday News & Reading

Some horses just need their own, perfectly matched person to bring out their best. That was the case for Devon MHF, the subject of the latest “On Course” from the USEA. It’s a story about trusting the process and the budding relationship with a horse, and how those efforts can truly pay off. Read more here.

With Intercollegiate Championships in the rearview, it’s time to revisit some of the stories from an exciting weekend at Stable View. Auburn University’s Hayden Wathen and Contestor showed their chops that weekend, beating out the pros in their Intermediate division. The Chronicle of the Horse caught up with Hayden here.

Biometric research is gaining momentum in the racing industry — could it be much longer before we see a heavier public emphasis on this in our sport, too? The AAEP Racing Committee is looking to use their sensors on some 60 racing 2-year-olds to further their research surrounding the identification of injury risk. I see plenty of parallels to our sport and hope we see some of these projects branching further into sporthorses, too.

Banks on cross country can be a tricky thing to learn, especially considering you can’t exactly build a replica in your arena. Luckily, Phillip Dutton has plenty of experience with this, and he’s teamed up with Practical Horseman for some useful advice on the topic. Read it here.

Sponsor Corner

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Despite it all, Caroline Powell and her gutsy, game mare beat the odds to win the Mars Badminton 5*. It’s so rare that our first place podium spot is filled by someone outside the top five, but Caroline took the lead from sixth place. Catch up on all the action that you might have missed in this report sponsored by Kentucky Performance Products.

Video Break

Grab a quick tip from Olympic rider Andrew Hoy all about maximizing your success at water questions:

Video Break: Farrier Abby Bunyard Breaks Glass Ceilings

You know we love a good girl power story here at EN! In this newest video from the FEI’s RIDE series, presented by Longines, we get to meet farrier Abby Bunyard who knew from the tender age of 6 that shoeing horses was her dream career.

But even with knowing from such a young age what she wanted to be when she grew up, she still had to overcome some immerse hurdles in order to break into the male-dominated industry. Hear from Abby how one mentor risked “career suicide” by hiring her and how she’s since made her way to the verge of being named the first female president of the British Farrier and Blacksmiths Association. Plus, she’s got some great advice for girls trying to enter an industry where they feel unwelcomed.

Weekend Winners: Galway, Majestic Oaks, Unionville, Queeny Park, River Glen, Tryon, & Winona

What a packed weekend! Between Badminton 5* and Tryon 4*, we’ve loved following along the reports and have been glued to socials for updates on riders tackling some of the biggest events around the world.

In addition to the events we’ve been covering all weekend, we saw multiple other events running, from Starter to Advanced CTs, all across the country. Let’s catch up with all of the action from this past weekend as we celebrate our Weekend Winners!

Congrats to all on successful outings, with a special shout out to the winner of our Unofficial Low Score Award: Amber Birtcil and Nadeche, who scored a 19.7 in the Novice Horse at Galway.

Galway Downs Spring H.T. (Temecula, CA) [Website][Scoring]

Advanced CT: Auburn Excell Brady and Galliard’s Lancer (39.7)
Advanced/Intermediate: Erin Kellerhouse and Woodford Reserve (33.8)
Open Intermediate: Taren Hoffos and Regalla (32.6)
Open Preliminary: Tommy Greengard and Purple Reign (31.7)
Preliminary Challenge: Tommy Greengard and That’s Me Z (27.7)
Open Modified: Amber Birtcil and Milagro (29.8)
Open Training: Whitney Tucker Billeter and Aspen (26.7)
Training Rider A: Stacia Lloyd and Kid A (33.5)
Training Rider B: Anastasia Keyser and Bellatrix (37.8)
Novice Horse: Amber Birtcil and Nadeche (19.7)
Novice Rider A: Jessa Hills and Year of the Kitten (24.2)
Novice Rider B: Bari Boersma and Reverie GWF (22.5)
Open Novice: Jessica DiCostanzo and Willis (25.8)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Amanda Tapocik and American Quest (29.6)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Camryn Cummings and Feeling Flirti (35.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Erin Kellerhouse and Jonty (25.3)
Open Starter: Tara Doherty and Sundance Kid (35.0)
Starter Rider: Katie Shea and Indiana Jones (30.7)

Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T. (Reddick, FL) [Website][Scoring]

Open Preliminary: Kyle Carter and RHS Ciarado (26.8)
Preliminary Rider: Stephanie Jackson and Fernhill Quality Vision (35.8)
Open Modified: Vanessa Stevenson and Virgo (32.0)
Open Training: Cindy Rawson and Fourfields Classek (26.1)
Training Rider: Riley Carter and FR’s Trust Fund (31.9)
Novice Rider A: Mary DeBono and Dancing Laila (31.4)
Novice Rider B: Chase Hutchings and Finnegan’s Silver (24.7)
Open Novice A: Declan Bast and FE Limoncello (27.8)
Open Novice B: Anna Loschiavo and Connor (24.4)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Barbara Vizzi and Charismatic (22.9)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Lauren Poley and Faust (28.2)
Open Beginner Novice: Margaret Stocker and Smilla’s Sense of Snow (24.7)
Starter – Intro A: Emily Dermody and Kildare’s Buster Keaton (27.7)
Starter – Intro B: Priscilla Pignatelli and Dittos Gold En Fury (25.7)

Unionville May H.T. (Coatesville, PA) [Website][Scoring]

Open Intermediate: Matthew Grayling and Trudeau (25.8)
Open Preliminary A: Caitlin Silliman and Excel Star Vero Amore (28.2)
Open Preliminary B: Boyd Martin and Vivantura (29.7)
Modified: Boyd Martin and Cadiz 1 (27.0)
Open Training: Lillian Heard Wood and Cooley Maestro (25.0)
Training Rider: Christa Schmidt and Chakiris Star (26.4)
Novice Rider: Annie Renzetti and Molly (26.9)
Open Novice A: Matthew Brown and Suntory Gold (21.7)
Open Novice B: Ryan Wood and Ardeo Cruise (28.6)
Open Beginner Novice: Lynn Kundravi and Fox Ridge Rocket Man (36.2)
Starter: Ashley Zupan and Al Capony (34.0)

Queeny Park H.T. (St. Louis, MO) [Website][Scoring]

Modified Open – Paradox Sporthorses: Anna Banks and Primrose BMD (31.9)
Training Open – The Tack Trunk: Annie Jones and Carolina PCH (28.1)
Novice Open A – Gateway Off-Track Thoroughbreds: Jill Oliphant and Explorationist (35.0)
Novice Open B – WMD Ranch: Jessica Ptak-Hooker and Mr. Flattery (26.4)
Beginner Novice Open A – Mid-Rivers Equine Center: Mariah Johnson and Pablo Picasso (32.2)
Beginner Novice Open B – Homestead Veterninary Hospital: Sophia Lieberman and Bear Necessities (24.7)
Beginner Novice Open C – ICT Tack: Mallory Huggins and Overeasy (28.4)
Starter Open A – Snaffle Sweets: Mallory Huggins and I’m Your Huckleberry (34.7)
Starter Open B – Silver Springs Pony Club: Brynlee Newman and The Smoke Show (30.7)

River Glen Spring H.T. (New Market, TN) [Website][Scoring]

Open Preliminary: Ainsley Slicker and Fernhill Lets Face It (42.1)
Open Modified: Gina Pletch and Charlotte La Bouff (33.2)
Open Training A: Marisa Shulman and Samurai Sam (36.1)
Open Training B: Jules Jarrell and All Dun Up (34.8)
Training/Novice: Kate Schmitz and Undaunted Rags (33.8)
Novice Horse: Deborah Snyder and Eagle Eyed Lady (30.9)
Novice Rider: Jennifer Boshart and Blaze of Charm (24.7)
Open Novice: Jhett Jenkins and Lombardi Avenue (31.9)
BNovice Rider A: Alysha Hendren and Santiago (28.8)
BNovice Rider B: Callie Blackford Winders and Worth A Chance (34.6)
Open BNovice: Margret Stiles and Amano (26.8)
Open Starter A: Sarah Younger and Cody’s Legacy (33.0)
Open Starter B: Zoë Rizzuto and Fitz (28.3)

Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC) [Website][Scoring]

CCI 4*L: Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake (28.6)
CCI 4*S: Colleen Loach and FE Golden Eye (47.7)
CCI 3*L: Sharon White and Jaguars Duende (32.5)
CCI 3*S: Allison Springer and Castle Howard Romeo (40.7)
CCI 2*L: Joe Meyer and Ballygriffin Crossfield Cara (31.9)
CCI 2*S: Caroline Pamukcu and The Sequel (27.9)
CCI 1*S: Lucienne Bellissimo and Duke’s Jory (29.4)

Winona Horse Trials (Hanoverton, OH) [Website][Scoring]

Modified: Brooke Burchianti and Cooley Constellation (51.7)
Training Open: Corinna Garcia and Schiller Nav (29.2)
Novice Open A: Emily Hummel and What’s His Face SSH3 (31.4)
Novice Open B: Carol Kozlowski and Elodon Zodiac (26.4)
Beg Novice Open A: Molly Smith and Kimberlake Samuel (27.9)
Beg Novice Open B: Elliot Bizjak and N’Pressive (29.4)
Beg Novice Open C: Laura Kosiorek-Smith and Tensas Carlos (24.1)
Starter Open A: Olivia Caschera and Puttin’ On The Ritz (105.9)
Starter Open B: Sue Hines and Tarnished Justice (32.3)
Starter SGF: Provisional Scores Holly Shine and Let The River Run (29.0)

The End of an Era: William Fox-Pitt Retires from 5* Competition

William Fox-Pitt celebrates a stellar cross country day at Badminton with his family. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was a retirement we all knew was coming after multiple 5* winner and Olympian William Fox-Pitt hinted that this season would be his last at the top level of the sport. After competing at MARS Badminton Horse Trials this week with the 12-year-old Oldenburg mare Grafennacht, William confirmed it: this would be his swan song and a final farewell to the competitive life — though he’s not hanging his stirrups up all the way just yet, as he’s confirmed he’ll continue to ride and compete younger horses for now.

“I won’t be coming back to Badminton now. I think that’s a shame to finish on a bit of a downer, but I’m cool with that,” William reflected yesterday after what would have been a disappointing show jumping round that eliminated his chance at a podium or even one last 5* victory on Sunday. “She’s a great horse so I shall look forward to see what happens next. I’ll do young ones, I’m going to carry on a bit, but this is my last Badminton.”

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Where to begin when attempting to recap a career that could fill multiple books?

Both William’s parents, William Oliver Lane Fox-Pitt and Marietta Speed, were top flight eventers in their own right, each notching completions at prestigious events like Badminton and Burghley in England. So it was fortuitous that William carried on in their footsteps, quickly showing his own natural abilities in the saddle. After tasting early success as a young rider in the 80s, William won his first Burghley at the age of 25 in 1994. It would be the first of an astounding 14 CCI5* titles earned throughout his career. In the end, he would capture the title at five out of the seven global permanent 5* events, only missing out on Adelaide in Australian and the more recently-added Maryland 5 Star in the U.S. Those titles include Burghley (1994, 2002, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2011), Badminton (2004, 2015), Pau (2011, 2013), Kentucky (2010, 2012, 2014) and Luhmuhlen (2008). He also became the first rider to with Burghley six times, on six different horses.

Embed from Getty Images

William also shored up the British squad for multiple championship titles, including six European Championships team gold medals, six medals at World Championships/World Equestrian Games, and three team medals at the Olympic Games (2004, 2008, 2012).

He’s also become world-renowned for his teaching prowess, sought after each season for spanning the globe and garnering wide respect for his quiet horsemanship and teaching philosophies.

Taylor McFall participates in a clinic with British Olympian William Fox-Pitt. Photo by Jennifer McFall.

In October of 2015, William suffered his worst career injury, falling from a younger horse at Le Lion d’Angers in France and subsequently spending two weeks in a medically-induced coma. Despite struggling initially with temporary blindness and double vision resulting from his traumatic brain injury, William defied the odds and returned to competition the following April.

He’d go on to defy the odds once more with a selection to the British eventing team heading to the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro that summer.

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“I always thought I would come to Rio, but I don’t think anyone else did!” William said then. “It has been quite a journey of uncertainties, but I’ve always had Chilli [his Rio horse Chilli Morning] and there has always been Rio, and having that goal really helped me. I have been so lucky with my type of head injury. Mine has recovered in good time, and my family have been so supportive, really helping put me back to the way I am. I didn’t ride for six months — it was on the back burner. I have no recollection of the accident at all, so I have no fear. But I have had to sharpen myself up, and a lot of people have helped me do that. When you have had a head injury, you lose all sense of adrenaline. I have always had adrenaline, but I just had nothing. It felt like I was schooling a horse at home, so I’ve had to understand that that is normal.”

William would go on to finish 12th individually and fifth with the team at Rio, an ending no one would have predicted the previous year.

Despite the 5* success and the innumerable victories, both professional and personal, across levels he’s had, William thrives even more on the process of training a horse. “I love seeing horses evolve, not necessarily winning events, but the horses going well and enjoying that journey,” William told Horse Network earlier this year. This will be the focus as he moves into this next chapter of a life with horses that’s far from reaching its conclusion.

Absolutely gutted that the fairy tail end didn’t come off but Saturday of @bhorsetrials 2024 will live long in the…

Posted by Alice Fox-Pitt on Sunday, May 12, 2024

A life not spent chasing 5*s will allow more time for William to spend with his loving family, including wife Alice and four kids, Oliver, Thomas, Chloe, and Emily.

William Fox-Pitt and wife Alice celebrate a super day in the office. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But first: one last high. Coming off cross country at Badminton, which proved to be tough and influential, William’s elation was palpable. He’d delivered a clear, fast round with Grafennacht, and, as he put it, for once he wouldn’t leave Saturday filling his head with “what ifs”. “How lucky am I to have her in my swan song era? Sometimes, you know, she really makes me feel like I can ride. I’m very proud that she did the job. Suddenly Badmintons aren’t ‘if onlys’ or ‘I wish I had’ or ‘I could have’ or ‘I should have.’ I’m just so chuffed. She nailed it today and I’m happy.”

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht during the Cross Country phase, Badminton Horse Trials, Gloucestershire UK 11 May 2024

“Lillie” has certainly shown her potential as a competitive 5* horse, and as of now the plan is for the mare to go to a different rider following this weekend. “It won’t be her last [Badminton]. She’ll be back – she might jump better last year, with a new, better, younger rider it will be good. I don’t even know, I’m not even having that discussion with the owner yet. She’s very aware that I’m 55 and who knows what’s going to happen but we’ll have a conversation and make a plan, but she’s a lovely horse and she was amazing yesterday.”

[Editor’s Note] Corrected Grafennacht’s barn name.

“It’s been a great week, I have to say, I’ve really loved it,” William went on to say. “I have been so lucky to have had so many supporters here, family here: it’s been a great send off. It wasn’t the little dream time today but the chances of that were always going to be fairly slim. It was just great yesterday, we enjoyed the moment. No kind of tears. I’m very, very matter of fact about it, I think it is the right thing.”

Monday News & Notes from Futuretrack

While most eyes were on Badminton this weekend (by the way, you can catch up on all of our coverage from Badminton here), there was another key Olympic selection trial happening in Germany at Marbach. The event hosted a CCI4*-L and a CCI4*-S, the latter of which was won by French rider Astier Nicolas and the 13-year-old Selle Francais gelding Babylon de Gamma (Mylo Carthago – Sunshine Des Ka, by Happy Vergoignan) in come-from-behind fashion after starting the weekend in sixth place on a 28.0 and subsequently adding no penalties.

The CCI4*-L was won by Australia’s Andrew Hoy and his Tokyo Olympic partner, Vassilly de Lassos (Jaguar Mail – Illusion Perdue, by Jalienny), finishing nearly on their dressage score with one second of time added on cross country for a total of 31.0.

Other notables from the field include Germany’s Michael Jung with fischerChipmunk (Contendro I – Havanna, by Heraldik), who’s been kept under wraps over the last season to preserve the 16-year-old gelding’s legs ahead of this summer’s Olympics. Michael and his Kentucky champion finished seventh in the 4*-S at Marbach after starting the week in first on a score of 25.3. This would have just been a qualifier for Michael, so some sensible time on cross country kept him from taking the win.

With a fully French podium in the 4*-S and plenty of international heavy hitters in the field, it’s an exciting preview of what’s to come this summer. We now look ahead to what should be an exciting next month as we anxiously await the announcement of short lists and teams moving ahead to Paris. Stay tuned!

You can view full results from Marbach here.

Weekend Results

MARS Badminton Horse Trials [Website][Final Scores] [Livestream Replays] [EN’s Coverage]

Galway Downs Spring H.T. (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Scores]

Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T. (Reddick, FL) [Website] [Scores]

Unionville May H.T. (Coatesville, PA) [Website] [Scores]

Queeny Park H.T. (St. Louis, MO) [Website] [Scores]

River Glen Spring H.T. (New Market, TN) [Website] [Scores]

Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Scores]

Winona Horse Trials (Hanoverton, OH) [Website] [Scores]

European International Events

International Marbach Eventing (GER) [Website] [Scores]

Monday News & Reading

Fresh off a stellar weekend at Kentucky, go “behind the stall door” with the Thoroughbred partner of Jennie Brannigan, Twilightslastgleam. Find out what makes him tick, why he’s affectionately known as “Grandpa”, what brought his personality out as a young horse, and much more in this profile.

Catch up with the newly crowned USEF National 5* champion Lauren Nicholson in the latest edition of the USEA podcast.

Is your horse’s forage meeting his energy requirement? Find out what you should be thinking about with a forage-focused diet here.

The Queen herself was on hand yesterday to take in the final day of the Badminton Horse Trials, which celebrated its 75th anniversary this weekend. See more here.

Monday Video Break

In honor of William Fox-Pitt’s announcement that he was retiring from 5* competition yesterday, let’s look back on his stellar Badminton victory aboard the stallion Chilli Morning, who also had an offspring (Gemma Stephens’ Chilli Knight) competing this weekend!

‘I Never Thought It Was a Possibility’: Caroline Powell Wins MARS Badminton 2024

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier: our birthday Badminton champions. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

In 75 years of Badminton, we’ve seen some extraordinary things: we’ve seen five-year-old champions (our debutant winner, Golden Willow, in 1949); high-flying kids (Richard Walker, who won in 1969 at the age of eighteen aboard his Pony Club horse); near-ponies atop the podium (Our Solo in 1960 and Our Nobby in 1968, who were both 15hh); and retirees return to triumph (Mark Todd in 2011, who was 55 and returning to the sport off the back of a bet at a party). We’ve seen extraordinary accomplishments in the face of adversity, and no shortage of heartbreak dished out over the estate’s well-worn lanes and tracks. We’ve watched on as heroics have unfolded – great saves, the demolishing of statistics, and comebacks that have united the packed grandstands in willing their architects to the finish. We’ve laughed together, we’ve cried together, we’ve gasped in tandem as poles have bounced in their cups and nearly, nearly headed downward, but somehow, kismet has overridden gravity and the fairytale has won out, as it did in 2018 when Jonelle Price won with Classic Moet in the mare’s first clear round in four years.

And so it seemed that the obvious story might be handed to us today: second-placed William Fox-Pitt would jump clear, or as clear as he had to, with Grafennacht, taking the victory from overnight leaders Tim Price and Vitali, who would have just enough rails to drop a couple of places, as their form suggested. William, who is the world’s most successful five-star rider of all time, with fourteen wins to his name already, would make good on his week-long promise that this would be his last Badminton – while accepted the trophy, he’d retire officially in the ring, having helped usher the sport from old (the hey-day of the classic long-format of eventing, as it was when he made his debut in 1989 and for another near-decade-and-a-half thereafter) to the new. We’d see one of the young guns — Ireland’s 27-year-old debutant Lucy Latta, perhaps, or Emily King, herself a daughter of an eventing legend, finish in second place, effectively representing a passing of the baton from the old guard to the new. We’d leave Badminton full of a contended sort of emotion, feeling, finally, as though there might be something like hope on our horizon.

But eventing rarely gives us the obvious story, and so often, it gives us instead the story we need: the story that’ll throw our expectations out of the window, stop us in our tracks, and make us think about where we are, what we’re doing, and why we’re doing it. And, sometimes, it’s the story that gives us all a sage reminder of just how much good can happen if faith, in a horse or a system or in oneself as a rider, can ride all the waves that come its way.

So unfolded the grand finale of the 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials. It had been a week of change: our first-phase podium of Ros Canter, Bubby Upton, and Tim Price was replaced by a new-look post-cross-country podium, with Tim stepping into top spot after a nippy clear with Vitali, William Fox-Pitt taking overnight second with Grafennacht, and Irish debutant and one-horse rider Lucy Latta delivering the fastest round of the day to climb from 46th to an extraordinary third place. It was proper, vintage, game-changing sport – and that theme would continue today as jumping course designer Phillip Kelvin Bywater produced his toughest track yet.

Ordinarily, we see ‘easier’ courses at Badminton and Burghley, both of which host the phase on undulating grass arenas after a seriously stiff cross-country challenge. Conversely, the continental five-stars, Luhmuhlen and Pau, have the toughest final phase, with big, square, technical tracks that make use of pure showjumping questions and benefit from surfaced arenas. But this year, Bywater’s Badminton course leant much more in the direction of its European counterparts – and from the very start of the morning’s session, that increase in intensity made itself very clear.

Seventeen horses and riders came forward to jump in the early session, and between them, they toppled 59 poles. That’s an average of three and a half poles per rider, but in reality, we saw several six or seven-rail rounds, just two one-rail rounds, and not a single clear. The time, too, was proving tight: just three riders caught it in that group.

“Usually,” said Jonelle Price, who came down to watch from the mixed media zone while preparing for her afternoon draw, “we see all these guys in the morning group who have gone a bit slower [yesterday] come out and jump well, and then we go and skittle them in the afternoon. But they skittled them all, so there’s not much hope for us.”

She wasn’t wrong. As the top twenty gathered this afternoon in the collecting ring, which thrummed with quiet tension and the buzz of focus, there was a sense that they were all about to head into battle, and none were quite so sure of their odds. The first of them, Rosie Bradley-Hole and her first-timer Romantic, tipped two rails; their successors, Harry Meade and Away Cruising took three. One (a very good result in the context of the day, actually) fell for Zara Tindall and Class Affair, two came down for British-based US rider Grace Taylor and Game Changer – and then overnight sixteenth-placed Bubby Upton and Cola entered the ring in a bid to complete their comeback event, just eight months after the rider suffered a nearly-career-ending injury, and they did it. They went clear, they caught the time, and they broke through the skin of the tension. It was possible. After another couple of one-rail rounds, for Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance and Gemma Stevens and her 2021 Bicton CCI5* winner Chilli Knight, it happened again, or nearly, anyway, when Tom Rowland and Dreamliner jumped clear and finished two seconds over the time.

In similar fashion we crept through the list, occasionally logging a one-rail round, groaning our way through no shortage of two-rail rounds, and wincing as those three-rail rounds unfolded in front of us, until we hit the business end of the line-up. Jumping in sixth place, New Zealand’s Caroline Powell delivered a classy, tidy round that added no faults and made it look very easy indeed, and then fifth-placed Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson tipped five, dropping them right out of the hunt. Fourth-placed Emily King and Valmy Biats knocked two, despite being one of the highest-rated in the field in this phase, and third-place Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint, too, toppled two.

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It was William’s turn, and everything fell suddenly, achingly, unnervingly silent. He circled the ring, registered the sound of the bell, tipped the peak of his hat to the judges, and picked up a canter. He approached the first, Grafennacht tapped it, but left it up; at the second, she seemed sharper and jumped high, tight, and clear. But then the third came down – a fence he could afford to stay ahead of Caroline, who had crept up to the podium. And then the first part of the treble at 6A, too, fell – another fence he could afford. They jumped the rest of the treble clear, popped neatly, too, over 7 and 8 and the first part of the double at 9A. The crowd held their breath, but to no avail: the second part came down, and this time, he couldn’t afford it.

But he wasn’t done. After navigating the long swing back from 9B to 10 that, too, fell, as did the influential upright over the water tray on a related distance at 11. And, as he turned back to home, with just two more fences between himself and the finish, so, too, would the planks at the penultimate fence at 11. The pair left the arena with six fences on their score card – despite being tipped as statistically the best jumpers in the top five.

Tim Price and Vitali. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

That meant that overnight leader Tim Price would go into the ring with two rails in hand, a worryingly short advantage: at each of Vitali’s four five-stars, plus the Tokyo Olympics, he’d had exactly three rails apiece. Tim, who has attributed the talented gelding’s problems in this phase to mental overwhelm, had spent the winter showjumping him in Spain and the morning session today riding him back and forth down the path to the in-gate in a dressage saddle, letting Vitali hear the noise of the crowd and trying to persuade him that, perhaps, he was just going in to do another test.

But for them, too, it would turn out to be a tough day in the office. Early on, fence three fell, giving him one left in hand, but then they cleared four, five, and the tough treble at 6ABC without issue. Seven and eight, too, were box-ticking exercises. And then, on their way to the double at 9AB, the distance looked to disappear on them, and Tim, desperately trying to salvage it, made a last-minute adjustment to the stride. They tipped the first element; the second stayed in situ, but now, they had nothing left in hand if they wanted to stay in first place.

The story would be told by fence 11, that influential water tray, and when they brought it down, they did it properly. The win – the culmination of a climb from first-phase seventh to second phase sixth to the very top of the leaderboard on the final day, was Caroline Powell’s.

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Is this an unexpected win for Caroline? Perhaps – it’s so rare, after all, to see the victor come from outside the top five, and just last year, she and the now-eleven-year-old Irish-bred mare finished in last place, having picked up 40 cross-country jumping penalties and a heaping helping of time, but committing, nonetheless, to an educational experience. But actually, really, it’s not at all unexpected. Caroline, for her part, is every inch a champion – in 2010, she won Burghley aboard the late, great grey Lenamore; in 2012, she contributed to a team bronze medal at the London Olympics for New Zealand with the little horse, who was then twenty years old. She’s been placed at the five-star level countless times, has ridden at two Olympics, has competed twice at the World Equestrian Games, and has been at the top level of this sport since making her debut at Burghley in 1999. That’s twenty-five whole years.

And with ‘Cavvy’? There’s been the fifth place finish at Pau, which came on the mare’s five-star debut in 2022, the seventh place finish at Aachen last summer, and a sixth place finish, too, at Maryland’s five-star last October. From the mare’s coming of age in the first year of the pandemic, when she finished in the top twenty at the Seven-Year-Old World Championship at Le Lion d’Angers, Caroline’s been eyeing Paris. But to do this along the way? That was something that, perhaps, the 51-year-old competitor had begun to stop thinking could be a possibility.

“It never even entered my mind that I could win it,” she admits. “You know, you sort of get to an age where you start to ebb down a little bit and you think, ‘oh, this is my last time’. I’m saying to [groom] Tristan [Hudson], ‘don’t let me do this ever again!’, and then when entries are coming around, ‘I’m not entering!'”

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

But despite all that, she keeps showing up, and so, too, does her gutsy, game mare, who she rides for and co-owns with first-time owners and great friends Chris and Michelle Mann. The pair began their week in seventh place on a score of 30 and then, over yesterday’s influential track, added 13.2 time penalties in a round that writ large all the necessary lessons that Cav had learned over last year’s track. Today’s buoyant, brilliant round was the cherry atop the cake, even when Caroline thought she might ‘just’ climb to third place.

“She was absolutely amazing — I’m so privileged to ride such a good horse,” beams Caroline. “She’s just a true professional; you don’t really realise how good she is but she was really amazing. We were coming here with the hope of getting into the crowd, because she can be a wee bit leery, so we were sort of thinking that if we do get the chance to go to Paris then she needs to meet the atmosphere and she needs to just become a bit more rideable. So we were here to test the waters and train her and things — so to win it is incredible.”

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

That Paris ticket is looking very nearly like a sure thing for Caroline and Cav now, and even better, Caroline, who has been hard at work since the Lenamore heydays, showing up and battling through Badmintons and Burghleys with horses for whom it never quite happened, and who’s continued the long slog of training all day, every day, in every kind of weather, now has every reason to believe in her ‘why’ again. And that – fruitful decades within the sport as it changed from the old format to the new, and as her own career ebbed and flowed, and as she kept the faith in a horse that spent most of 2021 having 20s every time she went cross-country – represents the very best of what makes eventing so compelling.

“I never actually thought that it was ever even going to be a possibility, because you know, you go for so long and you have a great horse like Lenamore, and then you have nothing, really, to back it up and so you disappear for a while,” she says. “Cav has been quite consistent for the past couple of years, but she’s also has been quite tricky. To have her at this level now, though, is just amazing, and to have her so professional in her job, is just a dream come true.”

That thread of a narrative I’d started to write this morning about the ‘old guard’ passing the baton to the new did, then, actually happen, just in a slightly different way than intended. William’s rails dropped him down to eventual thirteenth – “it just wasn’t my day, was it,” he says, adding that this is, in fact, his last Badminton and his last five-star. “I won’t be coming back to Badminton now. I think that’s a shame to finish on a bit of a downer, but I’m cool with that. She’s a great horse, so I shall look forward to see what happens next, and I’ll do young ones,  so I’m going to carry on a bit. There’s no tears; I’m very matter-of-fact about it. I think it’s the right thing.”

Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

That drop, plus Tim Price and Vitali’s slip down to eighth place, does pass the baton to the next generation, and the very newest of faces. Despite her two rails, Irish first-timer, one-horse rider, and amateur competitor Lucy Latta was still able to secure second place with RCA Patron Saint, closing out a dream week that saw them deliver the fastest round of the day over yesterday’s cross-country track in just their sixth start outside of Ireland.

“It’s something else in there — [the atmosphere], the crowds, when you’re warming up and the cheers and everything,” says Lucy. “It really does get the hairs on the back of your neck standing. I had a really good round – he was really jumping for me considering that was his first time [going cross country for] 11 minutes 19 and how big the fences were yesterday. O had a total rider error to fence three, so I’m really kicking myself about that: I sat up when I shouldn’t have, but that’s for me to learn from my mistake and I will do that the next time. But he jumped really well, and I’m really pleased with him.”

27-year-old Lucy, who works full-time as a brand manager for hard seltzer company White Claw and whose family, which includes cousins Esib and Robbie Power, who are a five-star eventer and a Grand National-winning jockey, respectively, and a grandfather who rode round Badminton and Burghley, is now looking ahead to a bid for even bigger things to come.

“I can dream about the Olympics –I would love to think I could go,” says the rider, whose finish completes a cumulative climb of 44 places from her first phase spot on the leaderboard. “He was phenomenal this week, and there’s still loads to improve on with him in the dressage, and things to clean up in the showjumping.”

Alexander Bragg and Quindiva. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Lucy’s wasn’t the only colossal climb of the week. After producing one of just three clears inside the time today, Alex Bragg and Quindiva were able to sit tight and wait for everyone above them to have rails – and ultimately, they climbed to third place from overnight tenth, having started the week in 51st place. They finished on the same score as Lucy and RCA Patron Saint, but as Lucy had fewer time penalties on her cross-country sheet, she took the leaderboard hierarchy.

Not that that’s dulling the shine of the day for farrier and five-star fan favourites Alex, who says with a broad grin, “we’re going to be living off this forever. I don’t think it’s sunk in for us – we’re just overwhelmed, and so pleased.”

Badminton, he admits, “seriously hasn’t always been my favourite event”, thanks to a string of bad luck and heartbreak at the competition, and so this, he says, “is a magic result. My dream was to be in the top ten with her, and to finish better than that is amazing – I’m speechless, for once.”

Alex’s prowess over today’s track came, in no small part, as the result of plenty of time spent doing pure showjumping with the catty mare, who has previously qualified to jump at the Horse of the Year Show.

“This mare is phenomenal at jumping,” he says. “I do a lot of jumping anyway, so I did go in confident, but it’s so easy to just tip a rail, and you always think, ‘have I got enough jump’? But she went in the ring, jumped fence one, and it was like, she is not touching a rail. It was only ever going to be my fault [if she had one]. And I remember coming to the final line, and I took this massive deep breath ,and I think the horse thought we finished — I was like, ‘don’t cop this, Alex, you’re nearly there!’  And then to finish clear was amazing, and to come back in is a surreal feeling — to think ‘okay, you know, top six is maybe on the cards’ and then it’s boom, boom, boom, boom. And then here you are, on the podium here with these girls, and the rest is history, so they say!”

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Emily King, too, has had so much prior bad luck at Badminton, including falling at the penultimate fence on her debut in 2016 while sitting second – but this week, she put all that behind her, delivering three excellent performances to take fourth place on her first completion here. Like Lucy, she, too, had two rails – a surprise for her very good-jumping horse, Valmy Biats, who’s only had one rail in an FEI event since 2022 — but was delighted with how the French-bred gelding finished the event.

“He jumped phenomenally – he touched number two, touched going through the treble, but he  jumped so good generally, and God, I’m so pleased with him,” says Emily. “Just to finish is amazing. I just love him, and I’m so proud of him – he’s never run super quick and then jumped on the last day on the grass, so it’s his first time doing that, and I’m just thrilled with him.”

Jonelle Price and Grappa Nera. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Tom Jackson climbed three places to finish fifth with Capels Hollow Drift after knocking just one rail, while Jonelle Price and her 2022 Pau winner Grappa Nera, too, had one rail to finish sixth. Both riders had been equal 22nd after dressage.

Seventh place went the way of Tom Rowland and Dreamliner, who completed their first five-star together – and just their ninth run as a partnership – with a clear and 0.8 time penalties to finish their climb from first-phase 29th. That made it a very happy birthday indeed for owner and breeder Angela Chamberlayne, who has also bred two full-siblings to the gelding.

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“He’s magic,” says Tom, who took the reins from Oliver Townend fifteen months ago. “He hasn’t had a fence down in a long, long time. I watched this morning and it was quite chaotic, and I thought, ‘well, it doesn’t matter, you can go have a couple down, that’s still a respectable score’. But he’s been jumping really, really well and that’s down to Jay Halim who I’ve been going to, who builds some beastie courses in his arena.”

Tim Price’s eighth place might not be quite where he’d hoped to finish, but a fifth top-ten finish at this level in five starts with Vitali is no small accomplishment – and to manage that finish even with five rails is a testament to the difficulty of today’s track.

“Man, that’s disappointing,” says Tim. “That’s going to hurt, because he’s been going so well and I’ve just been trying different things. He’s different on day three [of a three-day] to a one-day. He had four out of four clear rounds in his build up to this. But once he had that early rail, which is probably him on a good day in this environment, I think we got away with a bit of breathing on a couple but he was jumping okay. Then, just after that triple, I I took quite a quick one in over the triple bar, but I’m used to him be him more reactive to come back, so I was prepared to just fiddle him back, and I thought that would actually help at the double. But he just kept tanking, got under hollow and then took it out at the knees and that just totally rattled us.”

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Ninth place went to Pippa Funnell and her 2023 Bramham winner, the tricky-brained MCS Maverick, who knocked two rails, but for whom the rider felt nothing but abject pride.

“I’m really pleased, because I feel he’s had a great experience, he’s learnt an awful lot — and I’m going to have to keep going a bit longer, with a horse like him,” she laughs. “I’m not going to be defeated! He’s only a ten year old, and he’s got plenty of ability, and hopefully we can keep channelling it and keep developing strength.”

Bubby Upton and Cola. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The top ten is rounded out by Bubby Upton and Cola, who completed their five-star comeback after Bubby’s horrific fall last August that saw her spend the later part of last year relearning how to walk. Their incredible week was capped off with one of those three clear rounds inside the time – a fairytale finish for the two-time British Under-25 National Champion.

“What a horse,” she says through tears. “I’ve said it time and time again, but he just jumped his socks off out there, and he’s been faultless all week. I’m just as proud as punch of what he’s gone and done this week after everything we’ve been through.”

Grace Taylor and Game Changer. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Grace Taylor finished best of the North American contingent, tipping two rails to finish 18th with Game Changer, while Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl had three to take 25th and close the door on Tiana’s return to this event for the first time in a decade.

“I’m really, really proud of her,” she says. “She came out today really well, and she jumped really well. We made some mistakes, she had some rails, but actually, as far as the horse has come through this competition and her ability, moving forward, it’s really exciting.There was no lack of jump today, and no lack of carefulness and willingness, just some adjustments I should have made to how I rode her to make it play out differently for her — but I’m just so excited that I have a Badminton horse that’s on such good form. Hopefully we get more goes at this in the future.”

Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The next go, she says, will, with any luck, come this autumn: “The obvious choice is Burghley,” she says, “but I have this pipe dream of taking her to Maryland. but that would, of course, require a lot of fundraising which is probably not realistic when Burghley is up the road from us. So that would be the pipe dream, but I think one way or another, this weekend has proved what I probably thought for a while, which is that she’s a proper 5* horse and hopefully now, our job is to keep her on the road for a long career.”

Jessica Phoenix and Wabbit. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Canada’s Jessie Phoenix completed her Badminton debut with Wabbit in 30th place after tipping six rails, but her overriding feeling was one of pride in her ex-racehorse’s deep well of try.

“Definitely we were looking for less rails, but honestly, the heart that that horse has is just tremendous,” she says. “Even to be here completing his first Badminton, we’re just thrilled. Coming to Badminton is like things dreams are made of, and I was saying that with his owners just after the show jumping round. I’m like, ‘he did it!’ He was all class yesterday — his cross country round was just an amazing feeling, and he was so proud of himself. Honestly, he’s really proud of himself right now. He thinks that he’s just the champion.”

Cosby Green and Copper Beach. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Cosby Green finished her own Badminton debut just behind Jessie in 31st place, adding seven rails to her scorecard with 18-year-old Copper Beach.

“It was definitely not the round I was looking for, but we completed!” she says. “He was a star yesterday, and just came out a bit fresher than anticipated today. That’s a nice problem, but he was just running through me. It’s good to know he was feeling good.”

Boyd Martin, too, had a slightly bittersweet finish to his up-and-down week – he tipped two rails with Tsetserleg, who began the week in fourth place but dropped down the leaderboard with jumping penalties on cross-country, and took a final 34th place. But, in doing so, he became just the second rider ever to complete all seven global five-stars – an achievement only previously logged by fellow competitor Tim Price.

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I’m obviously a bit heartbroken from yesterday, but he jumped well in there,” says Boyd. “I would have loved to have gone clear, or have one down, but this is his harder phase, and it felt like he actually jumped good. A part of me is devastated, but part of me is still pleased with the horse, because the event was not perfect, but there were bits and pieces that felt like Thomas is at the best he’s ever been. You always have dreams of being right in there at the last minute and jumping first thing on Sunday morning is not what I had envisioned, but half the world’s fighting over a bowl of rice. So we will go home and get stuck back into it and come back again and try again.”

Now, he’s thinking ahead to another crack at five-star with the seasoned 17-year-old, and perhaps one closer to home.

“The Turner family [who own him] have been very generous to me in flying him around the world,” says Boyd. “Part of me thinks that we’ll probably head towards Maryland. It’s one of the 5*s he hasn’t done and it’s 20 minutes down the road from my house, rather than being in Europe. I still feel like the horse has got a bit left in the tank — he doesn’t feel old or used up and I feel like he’s still enjoying himself, and I feel like there’s parts of his performances where we’re getting the best work out of him. Then, obviously, there’s a few parts where I’ve got to ride him a bit better and he’s still got some weak points, but he’s a champion horse and to be in his seventh year of 5* is a huge credit to the heart and toughness and soundness of this horse.”

Of his own accomplishment in completing all the world’s five-stars, he says, “It’s been a long road. I started doing this when I was 19 years old and they were long formats and I didn’t wear a body protector cross country. I was wild, and young, and staying up late, and partying all night, and coming out for the show jumping — and now I’ve got grey hair and I’m a bit stiff and sore and I’ve got three kids. It’s what I live for, though. I really thrive on these 5*s, especially these classic ones. I think all the 5*s are unique; they’re all different. They’ve all got a different flavour. Right from the first one, with Flying Doctor back in 2000, I knew what I was put on this earth for.”

And so, with that, we come to the end of another Badminton – a birthday for the event, and a chance to celebrate all the different ways that greatness can manifest itself. From the returning champion who believed she might have disappeared into the dust of the history books to the newcomer who just wanted to give it a go and found herself on top of the world; from the comeback kid who wouldn’t let herself be broken to the living legend who was always going to bid farewell to the top level on his own terms; from the horses who tried so hard and learned so much and might not feature in the reports this week, but who could come back from last place to take the win in 2025.

It’s been a fitting finale to an important year. We can’t wait for the next one.

Go Eventing.

The top ten of the 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Tickets] [Radio Badminton] [Timing & Scoring] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [EN’s Coverage]

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From Start to Finish, Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake Lead the Yanmar America Tryon International CCI4*-L

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

After a soggy start to the weekend, the sun came out to wrap up the Yanmar America Tryon International CCI4*-L this morning.

The top of the board didn’t give much wiggle room for change – Caroline Pamukcu maintained her lead with HSH Blake, and Will Faudree held onto second with Mama’s Magic Way. However, we saw Phillip Dutton‘s Jewelent (3rd after cross country) eliminated at the final horse inspection, with Liz Halliday sliding into third and fourth with Cooley Quicksilver and Shanroe Cooley after jumping two clears. Phillip’s other ride, Denim, picked up only 0.8 time in the jumping to round out the top 5.

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Caroline Pamukcu and Mollie Hoff and Sherrie Martin’s HSH Blake (Tolan R – Doughiska Lass, by Kannan) have continued developing their strong partnership. Since winning the Pan Ams last year, this duo finished second in the 4*S at Carolina, 5th in the 4*S at Kentucky, and have now secured the win in the 4*L at Tryon, finishing on their dressage score of 28.6.

“This weekend we are over the moon,” Caroline stated. “I have always said [Blake] is such a unicorn – he gives 200%. It’s hard to do two FEI shows back to back, ten days apart, but we followed team selection. It’s the last step towards the Olympics.”

“He lost a shoe on the cross country at both Kentucky and Tryon, so I had to reinvent some lines, take some wide turns or direct lines to keep from slipping. But today I just had to go in there, take a breath, and ride a quiet course,” Caroline said. “I didn’t have to do anything crazy [with the time]. I thought it was a beautiful course, I always love riding and jumping at Tryon, it has such a great atmosphere.”

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“I couldn’t do this without my team,” Caroline expressed her gratitude. “I jumped with Bobby [Costello] this morning, talked with my coach Sharon White, and had my business partner Kelley Hutchinson in the warm up – Kelley sourced Blake for me as a five year old, and is a big reason he’s still in my barn, as well as his owners Mollie Hoff and my mom Sherrie.”

After rerouting to Tryon from Kentucky, Will Faudree and Jennifer Mosing’s Mama’s Magic Way (Mighty Magic – Straightaway, by Star Regent xx) seemed to have found their way. “I of course was a bit disappointed with an uncharacteristic dressage at Kentucky,” Will reflected. “But I think his back was bothering him. We had treated it, but I think he just needed some more time. After some chiropractor work, he’s felt great in his body all week, which I feel helps them feel better in their brain, too.”

Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“He recovered great [from cross country], I was kicking myself for the two time penalties [yesterday],” Will said.

Going in to show jumping, Will has sought out help with Mason’s unique jumping style, and has been working with Olympic show jumper Lauren Hough over this past winter. “Mason’s not the most orthodox [in the show jumping], and a bit excited to get there. After Burghley last year, my coach Bobby Costello and I talked about connecting with Lauren [Hough] for some help. She’s really helped me give him the time [he needs], and has also helped me change [myself] – I used to show jump with my stirrups on hole seven, and go cross country on hole eleven. My cross country stirrups are the same, but I jump on hole four now.”

“[Lauren and I] talked about the course today, and she reminded me today to move quickly but not to sacrifice a rail by going too fast. Bobby told me to equitate in the combinations – be still and quiet with your body.”

Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

The winter homework with Mason’s jumping seemed to pay off, jumping a double clear in the show jumping today. “[Mason] came out feeling super this morning. I was just thrilled with him all weekend,” Will stated.

Liz Halliday certainly showed her experience and consistency this weekend, having two finish in the top 5, within 0.4 penalties of one another, finishing in third on a 35.2 with The Monster Partnership / Ocala Horse Properties’ Cooley Quicksilver (Womanizer – Kylemore Crystal, by Greggan Diamond), and 4th on a 35.6 with Ocala Horse Properties’ Shanroe Cooley (Dallas – Shanroe Sapphire, by Condios).

Liz Halliday and Cooley Quicksilver. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“My horses were both fantastic today and jumped super clear rounds,” Liz reflected. “Both horses really enjoy big atmospheres, so it was great to jump in the Tryon Stadium! This is always an excellent spring three day event that I look forward to.”

Sharon White and Jaguar Duende. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

In the 4*S, we saw Colleen Loach and her own, Peter Barry, and Amanda Bernhard’s FE Golden Eye (Goldfever 3 x Cascade, by Contendro I) secure the win, Sharon White and Jaguars Duende win the 3*L, Allison Springer and Castle Howard Romeo with the 3*S win, and Joe Meyer and Ballygriffin Crossfield Cara win the 2*L. Caroline Pamukcu took home another win this weekend with The Sequel in the 2*S, and Lucienne Bellissimo secured the 1*S win with Duke’s Jory. You can find all final results here.

Tryon International Three Day Event (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Scoring]

It All Comes Down to This – Let the Clenching Commence! – Live Blog from the Finale of MARS Badminton Horse Trials

Tim Price and Vitali leaped into the lead yesterday. Will they stay there? Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

And so we find ourselves on the final day of this year’s Badminton extravaganza. If you feel like the whole thing’s gone by in a flash, don’t fret – we’ve got your back. Here are all the links you need to catch up on the action thus far:

Dressage Day One:
▶️ Test-by-test blog
▶️ Morning round-up report
▶️ Afternoon round-up report

Dressage Day Two:
▶️ Test-by-test blog
▶️ Morning round-up report
▶️ Afternoon round-up report

Cross Country Day:
▶️ Round-by-round blog
▶️ Round-up report

If you want to follow along with the form as we jump our way through the finale, you’ll be in need of EN’s epic Form Guide, which you’ll find right here.

What a day’s sport we had yesterday. It was a great showing on the world stage and a fitting anniversary celebration for Badminton Horse Trials. In true cross country fashion, yesterday’s competition saw the leaderboard both shaken and stirred – with the speedier rounds making their cross country day climb and unlucky errors seeing a few of the favorites drop out of contention.

There’s an international flair to the top of the scoreboard at this point in the competition, but the margins are tight and we all know just how easily those poles can roll when the pressure’s on. Here’s how things look at the top as we head into the final phase:

1️⃣ 🇳🇿 Clawing his way from third to first with the fourth quickest time of the day – the only rider to have completed all seven of the world’s 5*s (plus the pop-up event at Bicton in 2021) – Tim Price and last year’s seventh place finisher Vitali have been in this position before. He may have joked about his show jumping form (three poles at each of their four 5* runs, and at Tokyo) in the leading rider interviews following the cross country yesterday, but he’s been doing his homework (well, Spain-work) and got in some very good practice on the Sunshine Tour over the winter. Will it all come good for them today? It wasn’t the record-breaking dressage performance we saw them deliver at Burghley last season, but it was mighty impressive nonetheless and slotted them into third place after the first phase on a score of 27.7. They were characteristically quick and brave across the country yesterday, one of few combinations to take on the tricky line out of the water at 17 to the big tree at 18 head on, and made it look easy. Just four time penalties to add for them, leaving them on a two-phase score of 31.7. He’s got three seconds in hand, but not a rail.

2️⃣ 🇬🇧 Just 1.3 points behind is 14-time 5* winner – ‘will-he-won’t-he’ William Fox-Pitt with Maryland runner-up Grafennacht. William lost a couple of seconds yesterday when he chose to take the longer route and circle before that – perhaps very influential, depending on what happens today – big tree with roots at 18, and still managed to come home with the second fastest round of the day, adding just 2.4 time penalties to his dressage score of 33, jumping him from eighth to second on the clubhouse leaderboard. They’ve got a rail but no more over third place coming into the final phase.

3️⃣ 🇮🇪 We love a leaderboard climb to the top on cross country day, and 5* rookie combination – and ‘amateur’ rider – Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint gave us just that. Streaking up 43 places with the fastest round of the day, just a single second over the optimum time, this combination sure have burst onto the 5* scene with a bang. They started off on a score of 36.8 in the dressage and come into today in a podium place alongside two of eventing’s big stars. They’re 4.2 points behind William and have only two seconds in hand over fourth place.

4️⃣ 🇬🇧 Putting their Badminton bad luck well and truly in the past, Emily King and Valmy Biats were also amongst the fastest around the track yesterday, adding just 8.8 time faults to their dressage score to come into today on 38. Her mom, who’s won Badminton twice, was delighted to see them through the finish flags, for Emily’s first Badminton completion in five starts. There’s just a pole and a handful of seconds between her and the top of the podium – might we see a second-generation win here this afternoon?

5️⃣ 🇮🇪 Irish speed demon Sarah Ennis flew ‘round the course yesterday with Grantstown Jackson and put down the third quickest time of the day, hopping 37 places up the leaderboard as a result. They’re just 2 points behind Emily going into the show jumping and there’s not a fence separating her from the podium.

There are just three poles and a few seconds separating the top-10 (which doesn’t make us think of Vitali’s show jumping record one bit, not at all), and zero fences between 6th and 10th place, just two seconds. We all know eventing’s a sport in which anything can happen and it sure is going to be exciting to see just how Badminton 2024 plays out as the top-20 competitors take to the ring for the final phase of this awesome event. One thing we do know is that the poles were a-flying in the first session of jumping, with no clears in 17 rounds and only three inside the time. It’s all to play for this afternoon!

🇺🇲 If you’re following the North American camp, best of the US after cross country is Grace Taylor and Game Changer who are currently sitting in 17th, up from 31st after the first phase. They jumped clear across the country, adding 19.2 time penalties to their dressage score of 34.5 and go into today on 54.6. Another clear cross country round for the States came courtesy of Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl who were 24th following yesterday’s competition and jumped earlier on. They completed their Badminton on a score of 73. Cosby Green and Copper Beach also delivered a clear round yesterday, finishing up in 29th going into today. They also had their round in the first session and complete on a score of 102.1. Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSFl did not have the day Boyd would have wanted yesterday – there was an unlucky crossing of tracks added to a glance off, resulting in 60 penalties, which Boyd freely admitted were totally errors on his part and “Thomas was a champion”. Boyd is going for a completion in all seven of the world’s 5*s this week, a feat only achieved by one other rider, Tim Price. He jumped earlier today and has, in fact, achieved this elite challenge. They finished on a score of 122.6.
🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Wabbit have been flying the Maple Leaf this week, making their characteristic climb up the cross country leaderboard yesterday to hop from 67th to 30th. An unlucky 11 penalties for activating a frangible device kept them from leaping even higher. They go into the final phase on a score of 72.9, jumping in this morning’s session and completing their Badminton on 98.1.

Click here for the full scoreboard.

Based on EquiRatings’ stats, William’s favorite for the win this afternoon, and there’s no doubt that he would be a popular winner at what he’s teasing may be his last Badminton, 35 years after his first. Tim is second-favorite, surely due to that show jumping form, but if it’s come good at the right time – as Tim hopes it has – then he’ll be a no less popular winner. The stats say that the champion is sitting somewhere in the top-5, but as we know, it’s not over ‘til the final horse has passed through the finish line.

Here’s a look at the stats of the overnight top five:

I’ll be bringing you live updates of every round, which will begin at 2:55 p.m. BST / 9:55 a.m. EST, so keep this page refreshed, and watch this space! If you’re catching up with this later and are the type to like things in order, scroll ⬇️ and read ⬆️. If going backwards is more your jam, have at it, although, spoiler alert – I will be revealing the winner.

Click here for all of EN’s Badminton content.

US peeps – I know today is not so much of a dragging yourself/jumping excitedly of bed because it’s Badminton kind of start time, but total props to those Stateside ENers who’ve been here for All. Of. It. And everyone, really. Eventing respect to all.

Let’s find out who’ll win Badminton 2024.
Eyes on, and go eventing.

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11:00am ET

What. A. Competition.

After all’s said and done, we have new Badminton champions:

1️⃣ 🇳🇿 All hail Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier who’ve delivered the goods and taken the top spot with a score of 43.2.
2️⃣ 🇮🇪 In second – just 2 points behind – we have Irish 5* debutant Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint. What a showing from them.
3️⃣ 🇬🇧 And rounding out the top three, on the same score as Lucy, are Alex Bragg and Quindiva.

Emily King ended up having her first Badminton completion end with a fourth place finish with Valmy Biats.

Tim Price and Vitali ended up in 8th spot, and William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht in 13th.

🇺🇲 Best of the US is Grace Taylor and Game Changer who complete their Badminton in 17th position.

You’ll find the whole scoreboard here.

Truly, these results show what an exciting sport we’re so lucky to be a part of. Fairytale endings for some, disappointment for others, but sportsmanship from start to finish.

And there you have it. Badminton is over, eventing hangovers beckon, and I’m off to rest my now considerably shorter fingers after all this typing. It’s been a blast ENers, thanks for coming along for the ride.

Keep an eye or two out for our full round-up of what’s been a truly magnificent 75th anniversary edition of MARS Badminton Horse Trials. In the meantime, you’ll find all our Badminton blood, sweat and tears right here.

I officially have eventing jet-lag, have eaten nothing but pizza since last Tuesday and can’t remember the last time I wasn’t tapping away at my keyboard. But I’ll do it all over again in a heartbeat. Until next time…

Over and out, and go eventing!

10:58am

Ireland’s Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint have finished 2nd in their first ever 5* on a score of 45.2.

In third is Alex Bragg with Quindiva who has his best 5* finish ever. They land on 45.2.
He’s in third as Lucy was closer to the time on the cross country.

They were also tied after dressage.

More scores/placings coming…

10:55am

She’s had 4 top-10 finishes and has completed at Badminton – now – 17 times.

She’s also taken the trophy at both the British big Bs for Ireland – Burghley in 2010 and Badminton in 2024.

10:54am ET

NEW ZEALAND’S CAROLINE POWELL HAS WON BADMINTON WITH GREENACRES SPECIAL CAVALIER.

10:48am ET

🇳🇿 Tim Price and Vitali

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 7th Badminton, 4th Burghley
2022 – 10th Luhmuhlen, 3rd Burghley

🔥Tokyo 2020, 24th individually

⏩ Tim took over the ride from fellow Kiwi eventer James Avery for the 2021 season.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form: Won 4 of the 5*s and been on the podium two of the three he hasn’t (already) won and top-10 at the other. He’s actually completed at all 7 5*s.
Adelaide – 9th (02)
Kentucky – 2nd & 18th (21) 3rd (19) 2nd (15)
Badminton – 7th (23) 20th (22) 10th (19) 12th (18) 3rd (17) 15th (15) 9th (14)
Bicton – 9th
Luhmuhlen – 9th & 10th (22) 1st (19) 4th (16) 15th (15) 1st (14)
Burghley – 4th (23) 3rd & 17th (22) 5th (19) 1st & 10th (18) 5th & 18th (17) 4th & 21st (16) 2nd (15)
Maryland – 1st (22) 3rd (21)
Pau – 34th (23) 1st (21) 3rd, 13th & 14th (20) 6th (19) 3rd & 29th (15)

🏸 form: Made his Badminton debut in 2004 and has nine starts and nine completions on his record; Armada Dish presented in 2018

🥉 World Championships team and individual bronze 2022; 2018 – 8th individually
🔥Tokyo 2020, 24th individually; Rio 2016

📈 Three poles at each of their four 5* runs, and at Tokyo. He did jump clear last time out though. Can he keep those legs out of the way today? That is the big, Badminton-winning, question.

Score after dressage and XC: 31.7
Place: 1

This is it! The final round of Badminton. Will Vitali (finally) pull it out of the bag? Hold your breath…

Tim’s now got two fences in hand.

He’s over the first, and the second. But he takes the third with his back legs. The fourth stays up, and the fifth. They rattle the first part of the treble, but it stays. Another rub at 7, but it stays. Oh no! The first part of the double’s gone. He’s got nothing in hand now. He’s clear through the wide oxer at 10, but it’s all coming apart for Tim also. 11 goes, then 12 and the last. They’re dropped right out. Oh Vitali. Oh Tim.

Tim Price and Vitali finish their Badminton on a score of 51.7.

10:46am ET

🇬🇧 William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 14th Badminton, 2nd Maryland

Rider:
Ridiculously impressive 5⭐ form: Won 5 of the 7 5*s!
🏆 WINS:
Kentucky – 10, 12, 14
Badminton – 04 & 15
Luhmuhlen – 08
Burghley – 94, 02, 05, 07, 08, 11
Pau – 11 & 13

🏸 form: 24 completions on 16 different horses – made his debut in 1989 – 5 Armada Dishes, 2 wins, 3 2nds, 1 3rd

1️⃣ 4 time World No. 1
🔥 5 time Olympian
🗺️ 4 World Championships

🥇🥈🥉World Championships team bronze 2002, 14th individually; team silver 2006, 15th individually; team gold & individual silver 2010; team silver & individual bronze 2014
🥇🥈🥉 European team gold 1995, 5th individually; team gold & individual silver 1997; team gold 2001, 6th individually; team gold 2003, 8th individually; team gold & individual silver 2005; team gold 2009, 4th individually; team bronze 2011, 7th individually; individual bronze 2013; team silver 2015

📈 They lowered one pole at Maryland on their way to 2nd place last year. They had three poles here. It’s a mixed bag in terms of their form – a clear round is not a given here, but the mare does generally keep it to one pole when she does have penalties.

Score after dressage and XC: 33
Place: 2

‘Will-he-won’t-he’ William’s jumping for a 15th 5* win and third time topping the podium here at Badminton. He needs to keep the poles up to keep the pressure on Tim.

The crowd seems to be holding their breath. There’s a tiny tap at the first but it stays, and then she gives the second space to spare. Oh no! The mare’s not high enough at the third and it comes straight down. He gets her back for the oxer at 4 and the green rails at 5 are fine. But then the first part of the treble goes and then the second part of the double at 9 goes. Oh, it’s coming apart. 10 goes, and 11, then 12 and there’s 0.4 time to add also. Oh, what a shame for William. But that’s eventing.

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht finish their Badminton on a score of 57.4.

10:43am ET

🇮🇪 Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint

5⭐ rookie combination.

Horse:
Recent form: 4th in the 4*-L at Blair Castle last season; 29th at Burnham Market this year where they added just 8 XC time penalties to their dressage score.

Rider:
🐴 Lucy’s a one-horse rider.

📈 Their last six runs look like this: 0 | 4 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 4.

Score after dressage and XC: 37.2
Place: 3

OK, here we go – top-3.

Patron Saint’s got lucky Irish clovers on his quarters, let’s hope they do the trick today.

They’re safely over the first and then careful over the second. They’re a bit quick to the third and drift a little right and it drops. They clear the next two and are ultra careful through the treble at 6. This horse is really trying for her. They’re clear through the Liverpool and then over the double really nicely. They rub the wide oxer but it stays, and then the Liverpool at 11 goes. They clear the final two. That slips them behind Caroline, but they’ll finish no worse than 4th or 5th.

Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint finish their Badminton on a score of 45.2.

10:40am ET

🇬🇧 Emily King and Valmy Biats

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 24th Luhmuhlen, 25th Burghley
2022 – 8th Pau

🏆 Winner of the Grantham Cup at Thoresby this year, retaining their title from 2023. This win put them on EquiRatings’ radar as being in with a shot at Badminton.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form: 4th on her debut at the level in 2015 at Pau.
Luhmuhlen – 24th (23)
Burghley – 25th (23)
Pau – 8th (21)

🏸 form: Retired on cross country last year in a display of excellent horsemanship – ‘Val’ was going really well but Emily decided that he wasn’t enjoying the very wet going and so walked home. She’s had 4 Badminton starts and is looking for her first completion here this week.

🏆 British Under-25 Champion 2018

📈 Clear at their two FEI runs this season and one pole at Burghley last year – that broke a streak of four clears, including one at Luhmuhlen. ‘Val’ is the fourth most reliable jumper in the top-20 here today.

Score after dressage and XC: 38
Place: 4

C’mon Emily, we all want to see what your mom does when you complete, or perhaps win!

Emily looks to mean business as she comes in and clears the first. They rub the second though and then the third comes down. That’s a shame. They clear the wide oxer and then the Grand Slam rails at 5, but that white rail in the middle of the triple combination comes down. He looks a little flat over some of these fences. They get things back together and clear the rest. Two down for them and 0.4 of a time penalty. But this is a Badminton completion and that it great.

Emily King and Valmy Biats finish their Badminton on a score of 46.4.

10:37am ET

🇮🇪 Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson

Horse:
5⭐ form: 22nd Pau 23

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 32nd (17) 34th (16) 38th (13)
Pau – 22nd (23)

🏸 form: 3 completions

🥈 World Championships team silver 2018, 5th individually
🔥 Tokyo 2020 Olympics; World Championships 2014 & 2018; European Championships 2013, 2017, 2019, 2023

📈 4 penalties in each of their last three FEI runs, including at Pau last season. Based on this gelding’s form, we’re expecting penalties here today, but he’s most likely to keep it to one pole.

Score after dressage and XC: 40
Place: 5

We’re into the top-5 now!

They get their round underway clear over the first and then are careful over the second. They’re a bit keen at 3 but it stays, but they pay the price at the wide oxer at 4, and then the Grand Slam rails comes down. They’re clear through the triple combination at 7, but then have the second part of the double at 9. 11 goes also. They clear the last two. Five down and 0.4 of a time penalty. That’s been an expensive round, a real shame after such a great showing yesterday.

Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson finish their Badminton on a score of 60.4.

10:34am ET

🇳🇿 Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 30th Badminton, 6th Maryland
2022 – 5th Pau

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 30th (23) 29th & 31st (18)
Burghley – 20th (19) 31st (18)
Maryland – 6th (23)
Pau – 5th (22)

🏸 form: 16 completions, 3 Armada Dishes, 4 top-10 finishes

🔥 Olympic team bronze London 2012
🥉 World Championships team bronze 2010
🏆 Won Burghley 2010 with the late, great Lenamore

📈 Caroline has the most Badminton show jumping clears since 2010 in today’s field and ‘Cavvy’ is the third most reliable jumper. This pair were clear at Maryland but lowered two poles here last year. There are many, many more clears on their record than penalties.

Score after dressage and XC: 43.2
Place: 6

They clear the first convincingly and the mare is really giving the fences some air as she clears the next few. She’s ultra careful through the treble combination at 6 and then again at the Liverpool at 7. Her ears are pricked and she’s really working hard. She’s superb through the double, which she takes on a long one. They’re not even close to touching anything. They clear the rest, inside the time. No worse than 6th for them.

Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier finish their Badminton on a score of 43.2.

10:31am ET

🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Cartania

5⭐ form: 15th Badminton 23

🗺️14th World Championships 22; 8th European Championships 21 (very nearly finished on their dressage)

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 6th (19)
Badminton – 15th (23)
Luhmuhlen – 1st (22)

🏸 form: Made his Badminton debut last year.

🔥 Tokyo 2020; Rio 2016
🗺️ 14th World Championships 2022; 8th European Championships 2021

📈 Three poles here last season, but that’s the most they’ve had since 2020. They’ve got plenty of clears on their record and more often than not keep it to one pole when they do have penalties.

Score after dressage and XC: 43.4
Place: 7

Felix gets off to a great start with a super shot over the first fence and then the second. The mare doesn’t respect the third and jumps straight through that top rail. They have the first part of the triple combination at 6 as well, and then things seems to fall apart a bit and they have the Liverpool at 7 also. They get back together and are clear through the double, and then the final line gives them no trouble. Three down for them – Alex Bragg is on the climb.

Felix Vogg and Cartania finish their Badminton on a score of 55.4.

10:29am ET

🇬🇧 Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 5th Badminton
2022 – 16th Badminton, 2nd Burghley

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 5th (23) 16th (22) 35th (19)
Luhmuhlen – 6th (23)
Burghley – 2nd (22)
Pau – 20th (23) 7th (21) 13th & 18th (18)

🏸 form: 5 starts, 4 completions

📈 According to EquiRatings, this is the most reliable show jumper in the field. They’ve had a single pole in twelve FEI runs since 2020.

Score after dressage and XC: 44.4
Place: 8

Ah, this pair have the first down – it’s right by the grandstand. They’re extra careful over the second though and then clear the next couple. The horse is great through the triple combination at 6 and is really giving the fences a lot of space, he’s really trying hard after that early mistake. The double is easy for him and then they’re clear to the final line. 12 is no bother, and they clear the last. One down for them, putting them behind Alex, but they’re top-10.

Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift finish their Badminton on a score of 48.4.

10:26am ET

🇬🇧 Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick

5⭐ form: Made his 5* debut at Pau last season and finished 11th.

Rider:
Recent(ish) 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 6th & 14th (22) 1st (03)
Badminton – 10th (23) 16th (19) 12th & 23rd (15) 6th (14) 56th (13) 1st (05) 1st & 6th (03) 1st (02) 9th (97)
Bicton – 2nd & 5th (21)
Luhmuhlen – 16th (23)
Burghley – 6th (23) 8th & 16th (22) 1st (19) 13th (18) 16th (13) 28th & 30th (11) 15th (10) 1st (03) 6th (02)
Pau – 11th & 15th (23) 3rd (07)

🏸 form: 3 time winner (19, 05, 02); 23 starts, 2 Armada Dishes, 9 top-20 placings

🔥 Olympic team silver 2000; team silver & individual bronze 2004
🥉 World Championships team bronze 2002; 5th individually 2010
🏆 European Champion 1999 & 2001
🥇🥈🥉 European team gold 1999; team gold 2001; team gold & individual bronze 2003; team silver 2015; team silver 2019

📈 Five down at Pau last season, breaking a streak of five clear rounds. They were clear in their one FEI run this season.

Score after dressage and XC: 45.1
Place: 9

Pippa looks to mean business as she salutes to the judges. They’re very careful over the first and have a huge jump over the second. They make nothing of the tricky line to the third and clear the wide oxer at 4. She clears the Grand Slam fence at 5 and then Pippa rides for everything through the treble at 6. The double’s no trouble for them either. Pippa’s cutting the corners keeping the time in mind, but then have the Liverpool at 11 down and then the planks at 12. They clear the last. That’s two down for them, moving Alex, Jonelle and Tom up.

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick finish their Badminton on a score of 53.1.

10:23am ET

🇬🇧 Alexander Bragg and Quindiva

5⭐ form: Made her 5* debut here at Badminton last year, but like a lot of the competitors at that wet and wild Badminton edition, Alex pulled up on course when he felt like the mare wasn’t enjoying the ground. They came back out at Burghley and came 15th.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 36th (18)
Luhmuhlen – 3rd (19) 20th (17)
Burghley – 15th (23) 34th (16)
Pau – 29th (23) 18th (21) 4th &32nd (20) 4th (19) 5th (17) 5th (16)

🏸 form: 6 starts since his Badminton debut in 2017.

📈 EquiRatings have ‘Diva’ down as the second most reliable show jumper in the field – there’s nary a pole on her record since 2019.

Score after dressage and XC: 45.2
Place: 10

We’re into the top-10 now!

Alex came into this phase on the same score as Jonelle, but nabbed the final spot in the top-10 because he was slightly quicker yesterday, and therefore picked up less cross country penalties.

Diva looks ready as they canter round towards the first. They’re class over the first and clear the second with a lovely big jump. They’re a little close to three but clear it no problem. He’s good over the green rails at 5 and then he rides brilliantly through the treble at 6. They get a great shot to the triple bar and then balance for the double and clear it. This is a really confident round. Alex is getting his best finishing score – he’s holding on to top-10. He’s delighted. Super clear round for them.

Alexander Bragg and Quindiva finish their Badminton on a score of 45.2.

10:20am ET

🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Grappa Nera

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2022 – 1st Pau
2021 – 28th Kentucky

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 18th (22)
Badminton – 11th (22) 1st (18) 10th (16)
Luhmuhlen – 2nd (15)
Burghley – 4th (22) 3rd (16) 5th (15)
Maryland – 8th (21)
Pau – 1st (22) 3rd (21)

🏸 form: 8 starts over 20 years, 6 completions – 1 win, Armada Dish presented in 2019

🔥 Olympic team bronze London 2012; individually 12th Tokyo 2020; individually 17th Rio 2016
🥉 World Championships team bronze 2022; 4th individually 2014

📈 Clear on her way to winning Pau in 2022.

Score after dressage and XC: 45.2
Place: 11

Jonelle takes her time to make sure this mare is ready before she sets off. They’re clear over the first three and then make a great turn after the wide oxer at 4. They take the white rails at the middle element of the treble, after clipping the first element but it stayed in the cups. They’re good up to the planks at the second last, which they rub but it stays. They clear the last. Just one rail for them, and they’re just inside the time.

Jonelle Price and Grappa Nera finish their Badminton on a score of 49.2.

10:17am ET

🇳🇿 Jesse Campbell and Cooley Lafitte

Facts and Form:

Horse:
5⭐ form: Made his 5* debut at Pau last year but was eliminated on the cross country.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 11th (21)
Badminton – 19th (19)
Luhmuhlen – 19th (18)

🏸 form: Completed on his Badminton debut in 2016, returned in 2017 but didn’t complete. Came back in 2019 for a top-20 finish.

🔥Tokyo 2020, 22nd individually

📈 His form’s a bit of a mixed bag, but he for sure can go clear on his day. His last five runs look like this: 4 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 0.

Score after dressage and XC: 46.5
Place: 12

Jesse’s mom must be so happy that she decided to get that last minute flight from New Zealand to see Jesse compete at Badminton in person.

They take a chance at the first but it stays up, and then give the second plenty of space. They’re good over 3 and 4. They come round for the green rails of the Grand Slam fence and then are super through the triple combination. They run slightly into the Liverpool at 7 and take that, then make a real mistake at the wide oxer at 10. They finish up with 3 down, inside the time.

Jesse Campbell and Cooley Lafitte finish their Badminton on a score of 58.5.

10:14am ET

🇬🇧 Tom Rowland and Dreamliner

5⭐ form: 12th Luhmuhlen 22 (with Oliver Townend)

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 19th (23) 46th (22) 36th (19)
Burghley – 27th (18)
Pau – 21st (23)

🏸 form: 3 completions from 3 starts

📈 Two clears thus far this season, and two clears to end last season. Prior to that, a few faults throughout his form.

Score after dressage and XC: 49.3
Place: 13

Tom and ‘Dreamy’ are very high over the first and then make the second look tiny. They’re good for the distance to 3 and he gives a lot of air to the wide oxer at 4. The green rails at 5 don’t bother them and they’re clear through the treble. Dreamy’s really responding to Tom, who’s really riding this positively and accurately. They’re clear up to the planks at the second last, and then clear over the last. Clear jumping and 0.8 time. They’ll be 13th at worst. They get a huge cheer as they finish.

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner finish their Badminton on a score of 50.1.

10:12am ET

🇬🇧 Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance

Horse: Made his 5* debut at Pau last season but retired after a 20 out on cross country.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 12th (23) 25th (19)
Burghley – 5th & 8th (23) 13th (22)

🏸 form: 3 starts, 2 completions

📈 Dropped one pole at Burghley last season. His form in his four runs before that looks like this: 8 | 0 | 8 | 4.

Score after dressage and XC: 51.8
Place: 14

Wills and ‘Mr P’ look good over the first and make a very tidy turn to the second, which he’s really careful over. 3 is no trouble and he puts in another massive jump over the wide oxer at 4. Unfortunately they take the white upright rails in the middle of the treble combination at 7. They jump the Liverpool and then are clear through the double. They’re super down the line through 10 and 11, rub the last, but it stays. One down for them, no time.

Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance finish their Badminton on a score of 55.8.

10:09am ET

🇬🇧 Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight

Horse:
5⭐ form: Made his 5* debut at Pau in 2019 but was withdrawn before the second Horse Inspection. Came back out after/during the Covid hiatus and won the pop-up 5* at Bicton in 2021, where they finished on their dressage.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 6th (23) 20th (19) 4th & 22nd (18) 7th (17) 3rd (16) 16th (15)
Bicton – 1st (21)
Burghley – 7th (19) 3rd (17) 5th (14)
Pau – 2nd & 23rd (18)

🏸 form: Made her 5* debut at Badminton in 2007, 8 completions, Armada Dish presented in 2019

📈 Gemma has the second most Badminton show jumping clears since 2010 in today’s field. She’s also no stranger in the pure show jumping ring and has competed in the Hickstead Derby and the Puissance at London International. This horse jumped clear at both of his FEI runs this season, but prior to this year does have a smattering of faults in his form.

Score after dressage and XC: 53.9
Place: 15

Gemma came into this phase on the same score as Bubby, but a place ahead because her overall cross country penalties were a few points less than Bubby’s.

Gemma looks right at home in the show jumping ring. Chilli Knight looks great too. They absolutely leap the first and he’s very careful over the second and third. He’s jumping his socks off over these fences so far. They clear the green rails at 5 and Gemma’s clicking as they make their way through the treble. They veer a little left over the Liverpool at 7 but it stays, but then the first part of the double goes. She brushes the wide oxer but it doesn’t come down and finish up the rest of the course without problem. That drops her behind Bubby, but she’ll finish no worse than 16th.

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight finish their Badminton on a score of 57.9.

10:06am ET

🇬🇧 Bubby Upton and Cola

Horse:
5⭐ form
2023 – 8th Badminton
2022 – 36th Badminton, 14th Burghley
2021 – 12th Pau

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Badminton – 8th (23) 36th (22)
Burghley – 14t (22)
Pau – 6th (22) 12th (21)

🏸 form: 2 completions – 8th last year

🏆 British Under-25 Champion 21 & 23

📈 Two poles here last year but clear at their season opener in the 4*-S at Kronenberg on the way to 2nd place.

Score after dressage and XC: 53.9
Place: 16

Excuse me a minute while I have a little blub for Bubby. It’s been an emotional comeback for this determined young lady and, although we were hoping for a fairytale podium finish after they danced their way into second after the dressage, we’re all so delighted to see her here, at the top of the sport and completing Badminton.

There’s an extra loud clap for Bubby as she comes into the ring. The bell goes and she gets a perfect shot to the first. Cola’s got his ears pricked as he flies the second and the third and fourth are no problem either. They easily clear the Rolex rails at 5, brush the first part of the treble but it stays, and then sail over the Liverpool at 7. They have a massive jumper over the wide oxer at 10 and Cola really shows he knows his job through the double. The last three are no trouble either and the crowd erupts. Clear inside the time. Bubby’s crying and pointing to Cola. What a horse. And what a girl.

Bubby Upton and Cola finish their Badminton on a score of 53.9.

10:03am ET

🇺🇲 Grace Taylor and Game Changer

Facts and Form:

Horse:
5⭐ form: Made his 5* debut at Burghley last season but was withdrawn before the show jumping after jumping clear ‘round the cross country.

Rider: Made her 5* debut alongside Game Changer at Burghley.

🏸 form: Making her Badminton debut.

📈 Generally more faults than clears, although they can keep the poles up on their day. Their last five runs look like this – 4 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 12.

Score after dressage and XC: 54.6
Place: 17

Grace gets her final phase of Badminton underway. She takes her time circling before she starts and must use all of her time up. It’s worth it as they clear the first really convincingly. There’s a little rub at the second but they manage the tricky distance to the third and clear it. They’re clear through the treble at 6, have another rub at 7 but they’re lucky and it stays up. They’re good through the double but the wide oxer at 10 goes and then the Liverpool at 11 also. That’s two down and no time for them.

Grace Taylor and Game Changer finish their Badminton on a score of 62.6.

10am ET

🇬🇧 Harry Meade and Away Cruising

Facts and Form:

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 16th Badminton, 27th Burghley
2022 – 29th Badminton
2018 – 16th Badminton, 6th Burghley
2017 – 14th Luhmuhlen, 15th Burghley

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 5th (21)
Badminton – 16th (23) 16th (18) 3rd (14) 10th (09)
Luhmuhlen – 5th (23)
Burghley – 3rd (23) 6th (18) 15th (17)
Maryland – 7th (22)
Pau – 24th (22)

🏸 form: 12 completions, 6 top-20 finishes, 2 Armada Dishes

5️⃣ World No. 5
🥈 World Championships team silver 2014

📈 Clear at Burghley last season but three down here last year.

Score after dressage and XC: 55
Place: 18

Harry and ‘Spot’ start their round off with a tiny tap on the first fence, but it stays and they give the second more space. They don’t manage the difficult distance to the third an it goes. They’re clear through the treble at 6 but make a real mistake at the Liverpool as Spot seems to look into the tray. They have the first part of the double at 9 also. The rest of the course gives them no bother though, although get 0.8 of a time penalty.

Harry Meade and Away Cruising finish their Badminton on a score of 67.8.

9:57am ET

🇬🇧 Zara Tindall and Class Affair

Horse:
5⭐ form:
2023 – 15th Kentucky
2021 – 30th Maryland

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form:
Kentucky – 15th (23) 3rd (17)
Badminton – 23rd (16) 16th & 19th (08)
Luhmuhlen – 2nd (13)
Maryland – 30th (23)

🏸 form: 8 starts, 4 completions

🏆 World Champion 2006; European Champion 2005
🔥 Olympic team silver London 2012, 8th individually
🥈 World Championship team silver 2014
🥇 European team gold 2005

📈 On a streak of four clears, but there are penalties scattered throughout their show jumping form. ‘Socks’ is still the fifth most reliable show jumper in the top-20 here today.

Score after dressage and XC: 55.6
Place: 19

Zara and Socks clear the first and then the second and the third. The next few are fine but there’s a rub on the first element of the triple combination but it stays. They good over the Liverpool at 7 but then the first part of the double goes. They have another rub at the Liverpool at 11, but they’re lucky again. They clear the final two and finish inside the time.

Zara Tindall and Class Affair finish their Badminton on a score of 59.6.

9:55am ET

🇬🇧 Rosie Bradely Hole and Romantic

Horse:
5⭐ first-timer
Recent form: 3rd in the 4*-L at Blair Castle last fall.

Rider:
Recent 5⭐ form: 47th Badminton 22

🏸 form: Completed on her debut in 2022.

📈 One fence in eight FEI runs since the fall of 2021.

Score after dressage and XC: 56.4
Place: 20

Getting the afternoon’s sport underway, Rosie and Romantic enter the ring and get their show jumping round off to a great start. They clear the first four very convincingly and the Rolex Grand Slam at 5 is no trouble for them either. Ah, the first part of the treble combination at 6 goes, but they clear the rest. The Liverpool’s fine for them, and they’re clear through the double. They’re good for the second Liverpool at 11, but unfortunately have the second last down. They clear the last and finish inside the time.

Rosie Bradely Hole and Romantic finish their Badminton on a score of 64.4.

9:50am ET

This is it ENers! Buckle up, we’re in for an exciting ride. First horse incoming in around 5 minutes! Don’t forget to keep this page refreshed as we moved through the top-20 rounds.

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products, your go-to source for science-backed nutritional support across all types of horses, disciplines, and needs. Click here to learn more about what KPP can do for your horse — thank you for supporting our wonderful sponsors!

One Horse Spun and Three Withdrawals at MARS Badminton Final Horse Inspection

Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s always remarkable just how many people pitch up to watch Sunday morning’s early final horse inspection at the MARS Badminton Horse Trials. Unfazed by an unsociable waking hour, nor by the unique kind of fatigue that sets in after a long day of walking around a cross-country course and breathlessly following the action, they arrive in droves, packing the stands, sprawling across the grass, and, really, really unnervingly, spontaneously bursting into loud laughter.

Our best guess is that they were all equipped with Badminton Radio earpieces, which must have been broadcasting heretofore unheard levels of sass, but for those us without the radio on the go, it was a bit like this: a rider and their horse would appear, grim-faced with determination after a long evening of icing and maintenance and very little sleep, probably nursing a zesty little hangover from last night’s lakeside party. They would square up to meet the ground jury, comprised of president Sandy Phillips, Christian Steiner, and Jane Hamlin, and, once given the nod, they’d step forward to begin their presentation. And then, the laughter would begin, rippling through the crowd and swiftly gaining in decibels, while the person on show no doubt felt a shiver of panic that perhaps they’d tucked their skirt into the back of their knickers after a quick trip to the loo. In all, a weird sort of experience for everybody, frankly.

Harry Mutch and HD Bronze. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But it wasn’t all laughs at the front facade of Badminton House. Two horses were sent to the holding box throughout the course of proceedings, and neither will proceed to showjumping: Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy, who delivered the best round of their partnership yesterday to climb from 53rd to 13th place, opted to withdraw from the box, while Harry Mutch and HD Bronze, who were thrilled to log their first five-star clear round and sat 29th overnight, re-presented but were not accepted into the competition.

Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Our field is further thinned by two withdrawals ahead of the horse inspection. Those came from yesterday’s pathfinders, Tom Jackson and Farndon, who were 14th overnight, and Helen Martin and Andreas, who were 37th. Tom will now ride just one horse today – 2022 Burghley runner-up Capels Hollow Drift, with whom he sits eighth.

That gives us a final field of 37 horses and riders to tackle Phillip Kelvin Bywater’s showjumping track. The first seventeen of these will jump from 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST) in the main arena, while the top twenty will head to battle from 2.55 p.m. (9.55 a.m. EST), following a parade of competitors and a band display over lunch.

It’s going to be a particularly exciting day in the office, because much of our top ten is peppered with horses with varying showjumping form. Overnight leaders Tim Price and Vitali are on two-phase score of 31.7, giving them just a 1.3 penalty margin over second-placed William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht – that’s three seconds in hand, but nothing more. William, for his part, has a rail in hand over third-placed five-star debutant and one-horse rider Lucy Latta and her RCA Patron Saint, who became overnight superstars after producing the fastest round of the day yesterday. Fourth-placed Emily King and Valmy Biats are 6.3 penalties away from the lead, which translates in real-world terms to a rail and six seconds, but they’re the best-rated jumpers at the business end of the field, and our pals at EquiRatings tell us that William has the highest win chance today. That would certainly be a poignant finish: William has floated the idea that this may be his last Badminton, and finishing on a victory would be extraordinarily sweet. He’s previously won here twice, in 2004 and 2015, and he’s the rider with the most five-star wins in eventing history, with fourteen to his credit so far.

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But will it be that simple? After all, Grafennacht had three rails down here last year, though the ground conditions were more testing and horses were certainly more tired on the final day than they can feasibly be expected to be today. Leaders Tim and Vitali are achingly familiar with the three-rail round, too – they’ve done just that in all four of their previous five-stars, and at the Tokyo Olympics, but have been hard at work jumping in Spain over the winter. Lucy Latta had three rails apiece in three of her five FEI runs last season; in the other two, she had one rail. But her sole FEI run this season before Badminton saw her jump clear, and she’s spent five weeks this spring based with her cousin and coach Esib Power, who has show jumped at the top level alongside her own five-star eventing career, so we could be about to see the result of that intensive boot camp in action. Emily and Valmy have had just one rail in an FEI class since Pau in 2022, but that rail did come at a five-star: they tipped it at Burghley last season.

The very best five-stars are the ones that throw up new stories and great leaps up the leaderboard on each day of competition. Yesterday was one of those days, and we suspect today may well be one of them, too. Keep it locked onto EN for live updates throughout today’s competition, and a full report of everything that went down, with insights from the riders, once we’ve crowned our 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials champion. Until then: Go Eventing.

The top ten after cross-country at the 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Tickets] [Radio Badminton] [Timing & Scoring] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products, your go-to source for science-backed nutritional support across all types of horses, disciplines, and needs. Click here to learn more about what KPP can do for your horse — thank you for supporting our wonderful sponsors!

Sunday Links from EcoVet

It’s one more early morning for us yankees, but after yesterday’s adventures at Badminton House, we are all but sprinting to our screens to watch the finale of this year’s event. If you missed it, you can catch up on all the action as it happened live — if you close your eyes, you can almost smell it — here in Cheg’s Cross Country Live Blog. We don’t have to explain just how influential this weekend is for all these superstars (whether British, Kiwi, or otherwise) wanting to prove themselves to the selectors, but even we here at EN can’t agree on who could be in the forefront of their minds for the British trio to take on Paris in July, so try not to bite your nails too much as this monumental weekend comes to a close!

Our current top 3 stand as follows:

🇳🇿 1st – Tim Price & Vitali (NZL)
🇬🇧 2nd – William Fox-Pitt & Grafennacht (GBR)
🇮🇪 3rd – Lucy Latta & RCA Patron Saint (IRL)

Tune in for the first round over the sticks at 11.30 a.m. BST / 6.30 a.m. EST, with the top 20 contenders taking to the stadium at 2.55 p.m. BST / 9.55 a.m. EST. This will definitely be something you don’t want to miss, so get that £19.99 subscription to Badminton TV for access to the livestream from anywhere in the world — as well as nearly 100 hours of archive footage from prior events, peaks behind the scenes, course previews, and profiles so you don’t have to come down from the Badminton high. If you’re in Britain, you’ll need to turn to BBC2 to watch the finale!

MARS Badminton Horse Trials [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Tickets] [Radio Badminton] [Timing & Scoring] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [EN’s Coverage]
U.S. Weekend Action

Galway Downs Spring H.T. (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T. (Reddick, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Unionville May H.T. (Coatesville, PA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Queeny Park H.T. (St. Louis, MO) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

River Glen Spring H.T. (New Market, TN) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Tryon International Three-Day Event (Mill Spring, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Winona Horse Trials (Hanoverton, OH) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

European International Events

International Marbach Eventing (GER) [Website] [Timetable] [Entries] [Scoring] [Live Stream]

Links to Start Your Sunday:

I know it’s not the one we’re all chomping at the bit for, but: USEF Announces Dressage Team Short List For Paris Olympics

An equestrian brand featured in the muggle world: The Founding Story of Kerrits and Navigating the Modern Retail Landscape

Don’t worry, there’s just something in my eye: Bubby Upton on her emotional dressage finish

Would you jump off here? A look at the BE90 grassroots championships cross-country course at Badminton

What did you think of yesterday’s course at Badminton? Listen in to the course designer’s thoughts

Sponsor Corner: Have you noticed your Ecovet fly spray has changed in color? This is due to natural color variations in the food-grade fatty acids. The formula is still the same with the same effectiveness that you know and love, just with a color variation. [Buy your next bottle of Ecovet here]

Morning Viewing: Catch up on some of the leading rider reactions after Badminton cross country here!