Classic Eventing Nation

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]

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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!

Age is But a Number: Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake Hold the Lead in Yanmar America Tryon International CCI4*-L

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

This trio is hard to shake! We have the same top three as yesterday in the Yanmar America Tryon International CCI4*-L, with only a slight change.

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake added nothing to their dressage score (28.6) to hold onto their lead. Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way added just two time penalties to keep their second place slot. Meanwhile, Phillip Dutton swapped horses in the third spot, moving up from eighth with Jewelent, while Denim delivered a solid clear but picked up eight time penalties to drop to eighth.

Caroline and HSH Blake (Tolan R – Doughiska Lass, by Kannan), owned by Mollie Hoff and Sherrie Martin, may be the youngest of our top three but she’s showing that the only number that matters is zero: zero time penalties and zero cross country faults. Despite her previous reservations about the twistiness of the course, she pulled off a double clear round with nine-year-old “Blake,” and was the only rider to cross the finish line inside the time.

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

“He lost his shoe early on, just like at Kentucky,” Caroline said. “So I was like, ‘Okay, I have to adapt.’ So that’s the cool thing with him, like I could adapt in my head. ‘Okay, I need to go as straight as possible so I can risk not slipping as much,’ and he did not care one bit. So that’s just that’s the coolest thing about him and he was super fit, which I’m also really excited about because I was in Pennsylvania till January 5, and then I moved all the horses down to Florida. So they’re in Florida, January, February, March, and all of April. I’m just excited that I could get them as fit as I wanted to for a course with a lot of terrain.”

“I’ve had Blake since he was [five years old]. When you’ve had them from babies, like King’s Especiale, he’s the same way. It really makes a difference. They just know you inside and out. And I made plenty of mistakes on course, and maybe didn’t give him the perfect ride in some places, but he has my back 200 percent,” Caroline said. “He’s just a trier and yeah, he’s unbelievable. He’s a unicorn.”

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

Will Faudree is holding onto his story as somewhat of a “comeback kid” after rerouting to Tryon after withdrawing from the Defender Kentucky Three Day Event CCI5*.

“The time was definitely tough to get. I was pretty down on the clock around the four and the five minute mark,” Will said. “My watch was beeping as I was jumping out of the last water which was about oh, probably eight to 10 seconds down on the clock. I said, okay, got up in my galloping position, gave him a cluck and a kick and he dragged me up the hill. Unfortunately I’m showing my age a little bit because as I did get a bit closer to the last few jumps, I slowed him down. You know, I checked him a couple of times to make sure we jumped the last few fences. But I think if he had had his way and if I was 20 years younger, I probably would have been a bit riskier and could have maybe gotten the time.”

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

He and Mama’s Magic Way (Mighty Magic – Straightaway, by Star Regent xx), owned by Jennifer Mosing, need Caroline to drop just one rail to shoot them into first place. Let’s not forget how influential just one rail can be, after Tamie Smith had one rail that dropped her from first into seventh place in the 4*-S yesterday.

“I’ve been getting some help with Lauren Hough this year, which has been just phenomenally helpful. He’s a good jumper and I’ve just got to help him jump cleanly and keep him really soft. He loves to jump and he loves to get there, which makes him such a great cross country horse. Plus, I can get a little aggressive so I’m just going to have to be on my game and we’ll go ahead and do the best we can,” Will said.

Phillip Dutton and Jewelent. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Phillip Dutton swapped out Denim for Jewelent, as eight time penalties dropped Denim from third to sixth place. Jewelent (Valent – Bellaney Jewel, by Roselier), owned by the Jewelent Group, is a 2012 Irish Sport Horse gelding who may now be best known for patiently waiting for Phillip to get back in the saddle in a miraculous save in the Cosequin Lexington 4* at the Kentucky Horse Park just last month. Luckily, Phillip and Jewelent had a clean, straightforward ride across the country today.

“Jewelent is quite experienced which gave me the confidence to set out pretty quick and he finished well within himself. I feel like I’m getting to know him and form a good partnership,” Phillip said.

Now, Jewelent is flying around Tryon -– literally. This gray gelding was the horse closest to the time, outside of HSH Blake, with only 1.6 time penalties. According to Phillip, “The time is always hard to get at Tryon. The terrain and constant up and down makes it difficult to keep a fast pace. I tried to be efficient with good tight turns and making the round as nice for my horse as possible.”

Out of 25 attempts, 21 riders completed the 6,200 meter course designed by Great Britain’s Helen West with assistance from Captain Mark Phillips. As previously mentioned, only one horse (Caroline and HSH Blake) made the optimum time, while three came within three seconds of it: Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way, Phillip Dutton and Jewelent, and Julie Wolfert and SSH Playboy.

As predicted by Will in yesterday’s report, the question that caused the most trouble was the half-coffin combination at 16AB, which racked up three refusals, but he said it didn’t give him and “Mason” too much of a hard time.

Phillip Dutton and Possante. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“That’s where I was down on my minutes,” said Will. “I galloped into that field and jumped that big brush corner and– he’s not a strong horse and he goes in a French-link snaffle– and so I galloped till I was pretty close to it. And then he came right back to me and he was like, ‘Oh. That’s weird.’ It made him look, but then he just popped it and then jumped across the ditch and onward.”

In the CCI4*-S, Colleen Loach took the win with FE Golden Eye (Goldfever 3 x Cascade, by Contendro I), owned by the rider, Peter Barry, and Amanda Bernhard. This is another pair fresh off the Cosequin Lexington 4*-S at the Kentucky Horse Park, where 14 time penalties and a refusal or run out placed them in 25th. Today, they put together a smooth cross country round with no obstacle faults and 14 time penalties. Out of the 15 pairs who completed the course, Colleen and FE Golden Eye were closest to making the time.

“It was the best ride I’ve ever had on him. He was nice and forward, I came out of the box very determined, which helped him be determined, too. I didn’t have a bad jump on him,” Colleen said. “Historically, we’re not a fast combination, although we’ve been working on it. But I came out in the right mindset, which helped him be in the right mindset. His advantage is that in the combinations he backs himself off a little bit, so I didn’t have to check him too much. I was very efficient in the lines and the turns. I thought it all rode like it walked for me, pretty much anyways. They were challenging questions but in a fair way, I thought Helen did a good job.”

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

While tomorrow the 4*-L, 3*-L, and 2*-L will wrap up the weekend with the show jumping phase, the 4*-S, 3*-S, and 2*-S get to end the weekend early. Spectators take note, the 2*-L will kick off the day in the stadium, so 4*-L will actually begin at 11:40 a.m., followed by the 3*-L. Stay tuned to Eventing Nation for the final report of the weekend tomorrow.

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

An Emboldening Day for the Sport: Tim Price Takes the Lead on Vintage Badminton Cross-Country Day

Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift demonstrate the incredible scale of the Badminton fences. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It’s been a golden day of cross-country at the MARS Badminton Horse Trials, and not just because the sun shone merrily all day, steadily working the ground back to something like decent going – it’s also, from top to bottom, been a great showcase for our sport, with just one horse fall recorded. That came late in the day for Wills Oakden and his second ride, A Class Cooley, and was only a horse fall by the rules: the pair found a tricky distance to the final skinny stump at the Lightsource bp Mound at 26ABCD, and pecked on landing. The gelding stumbled, pitching onto his front end, and while his shoulder did touch the ground – the requirement to be considered a horse fall by FEI rules – his hind end remained upright and he swiftly righted himself, sans rider.

And so, that one relatively undramatic moment aside, there was much to celebrate. Problems were spread evenly across the course, with Huntsman’s Close at 7 providing the most action – ten riders faulted there – the Lightsource bp Mound at 26 not far behind with nine, the Sunken Road at 20 causing eight, six at the Lake at 10, and the LeMieux Eyelashes coffin complex at 15 causing three problems. The ground, which had raised so many question marks over the last few days – would it be holding, or very variable, or dead underfoot? – certainly did play a part, with riders having to manage their horses’ energy levels sensibly, but it was better than expected and improved throughout the day, yielding an average 16.3 time penalties, or just shy of 41 seconds over the time, and 32 of our 62 starters jumped clear, giving a 51.6% clear rate and a 66.1% completion rate. We’ll head into tomorrow morning’s final horse inspection with a field of 41, overnight withdrawals notwithstanding.

Tim Price and Vitali. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

But that’s tomorrow, and right now, we’re all about today. Though our pathfinders, Tom Jackson and Farndon, made the course look straightforward with a steady clear that bolstered the overarching feeling of positivity around the place, the day absolutely exerted its influence, and we end it with a new leader in the clubhouse. New Zealand’s Tim Price and Vitali now hold the top spot, having added just 4 time penalties – theirs was the fourth fastest round of the day – to climb up from overnight third.

The door was opened for that upward move by two significant moments. The first came for overnight runner-up Bubby Upton, who rode as though she’d never had the horrendous injury that saw her spend the end of last year relearning to walk: she and Cola looked a picture around Eric Winter’s track, finishing with 15.6 time penalties but, more crucially, with a frustrating 11 jumping penalties, too, for activating a MIMclip at fence 21, a silver birch rail set just back from a lip at the top of an incline. That drops her to eighteenth overnight.

And then it was the turn of last year’s champion, Ros Canter, who led the dressage with her 2023 Pau winner, Izilot DHI. That she had a MIM activation of her own at the deformable upright A element of the Lake at 10ABCD was a shock; that she went on to have a run-out at the final element, perhaps even more so. But the fact that she then opted to put her hand up and retire after circling back and giving the relatively inexperienced horse a confidence-boosting pop over the final skinny wasn’t at all – she’d been vocal after her leading dressage test that she intended to set out competitively but with a completely open mind, and would be ready to put her hand up the moment she felt her historically quirky, spooky, but hugely talented young horse might be overfaced.

“I’m very philosophical and positive about the whole thing,” she says. “It was always going to be a question mark as to how ‘Isaac’ was going to cope with the day today, and he didn’t quite cope with it. That’s absolutely fine — he went pretty spooky on the run up to the Lake, and then it just set the tone and that tends to be what happens with Isaac. Once he’s lost it, suddenly lots of things that aren’t normally spooky became extremely spooky, and that’s fine. But he’s a class horse, and I think the world of him. He’s one of the world’s best. We know what he’s like — he’s been like this all along. We either win or we don’t and when we don’t, we do it in very dramatic fashion. So at least you’ll remember him, one way or another!”

And so it’s all eyes on Tim and Vitali, now – a position they’ve been in before. They led the first two phases at Burghley last year, where they ultimately finished fourth after a three-rail round on the final day. That’s a work in progress – the gelding has had three rails at each of his four five-stars, and at the Tokyo Olympics — but Tim’s been hard at work on it, jumping the gelding in Spain over the winter and looking excellent in that phase at Thoresby CCI4*-S this spring, where he jumped clear in a tight arena. He’ll need that good juju to continue in order to take the win: he goes into jumping on a two-phase score of 31.7, which gives him a leading margin of just 1.3 penalties – that’s just three seconds in hand, but certainly not a rail.

Tim Price and Vitali. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

There may be a question mark looming over tomorrow, but today was another masterclass from the 14-year-old gelding and his world-class rider, who have never finished out of the top ten in those four five-stars thus far.

“He’s proper cross country horse, isn’t he,” says Tim with a grin. “I was just saying to Austin [O’Connor], it’s just so nice that even with these ones that have been around a few five-stars, they just keep getting better with knowing what it’s like to be pushing towards the end, and recognising themselves in that way, and just keeping on giving. And that’s what he did. He keeps thinking, he keeps getting in the air when it’s important, and he’s just a thrill to ride.”

Tim had a late draw – he left the start box after three p.m., three-and-a-half hours into the action, and while that can be a tough situation to manage with rather a lot of time to wait and worry, he used it to his advantage. Most pertinently, we saw that in action at fence 17AB and 18, the MARS Sustainability Bay water, which featured an upright rail to a drop in at 17AB and then a log at 18, placed perpendicular to the drop. Very nearly all the field opted to run up out of the water and, rather than turning at the last stride to find the line and pop the log on an angle, throw in a right-handed turn and circle back to jump it straight, which wouldn’t incur penalties as it was a separately-numbered fence. But Tim, having watched that so many times and having seen a couple of decent attempts at the straight route, decided to trust his horse, his line, and his process, and took it on directly, saving himself several seconds in the process.

“It’s hard, because we all say we want to watch some but don’t want to watch too many, and you don’t want to wait, but I just tried to keep making that a bit of an advantage,” he says. “You know, you’re not afraid to change your plan. I walked the course this morning and the ground was better than I expected, but then it rode a bit softer, and these are things we learn a little bit from the way that horses are dealing with them. So things sort of changed and manoeuvred; I walked with my good mate, [Brazilian Olympian] Carlos Parro, this morning. He’s really helpful — I find him very positive, and he’s got a good eye for the through-the-horse’s-ears kind of look at fences, and so that was really beneficial as well. But mostly, it’s just been a good day of quietly waiting till 3:13 this afternoon.”

Tim Price and Vitali arrive home in fine style. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though Tim and Vitali’s class-leading round at Burghley last year was excellent on paper, Tim felt at the time that the horse didn’t feel as good as he perhaps could have on that run. This time, though, he was much happier with the feeling underneath him – an improvement that he attributes to changes in the gelding’s management.

“It’s just worked really well this time. We’ve got his body, his stomach, and the looking after him working well this time, and then he’s had good preparation,” says Tim. “We’ve had four good runs, which have all been in the soft ground, which in a way it turns out to be an advantage when you come here and you’re a little more on top of the ground, so I think that feels good for the horses. It was just a good run in. Burghley wasn’t the best run; we lost Gatcombe [in August], and that’s [a competition that] really sets them up beautifully for Burghley, but this time he’s had all his gallops and he’s felt very good. I think hopefully we’ll stay in a good stead for the three phases.”

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

William Fox-Pitt, who has been such a mainstay at this event since his debut in 1989, has been floating the idea that this might be the last time we’ll see him here — “it should be, shouldn’t it?” he mused after his dressage test – and if that’s the case, then he’s making sure he ends his reign on a high. He’ll go into tomorrow’s final day of competition in second place after nipping around the track for just 2.4 time penalties with his 2023 Maryland runner-up Grafennacht, returning home to the collecting ring to an electric wave of collective emotion and fondness.

“How lucky am I to have her in my swansong era?” he says. “Sometimes, you know, she really makes me feel like I can ride. I saw some long ones and I didn’t pull the reins. That was quite exciting! Particularly number one, I thought ‘bullseye!’ because I hook and pop number one like ‘here we go, nicely, all very calm.’ But I took a good shot, and she was cool there. I’m very proud that she did the job.”

Coming back elated isn’t always a given, as William well knows: there are the wins, such as those he logged in 2004 and 2015, and there are the retirements, the eliminations, the penalty-riddled rounds, and the ones, too, that come so close to being great but for the niggling little regrets. Today, though, there was only joy and pride in a job well done.

“So many Badmintons are ‘if onlys’ or ‘I wish I had’ or ‘I could have’ or ‘I should have’,” he says. “So I’m just so chuffed. She nailed it today, and I’m happy.”

William came achingly close to catching the time, but decided to play it safe, as nearly all today’s competitors did, and add a loop to the final element of the MARS Sustainability Bay water – a choice he doesn’t regret at all.

“She lost no time in the second half — the only time she lost was going the long route [at 18] and that was my three time faults. I’m afraid that was six seconds, wasn’t it? If not more? And I made that choice — I’m still right that I made it. But purely, I thought, ‘I don’t want any stupid ifs — ‘why didn’t I go long like everyone else?’ ‘Why didn’t I see that?’ I was totally going to go straight this morning. She would have gone straight, but what if you go home with a runout — I’ve done that enough times, so you know what? I’m sacrificing. At least tonight, I won’t be going ‘bollocks!'”

The rest, he says, “rode well, and I’m surprised that the ground rode as well as it did. I said yesterday, I think it’s a clever course. It was demanding, it was relentless with the S bending, testing that shoulder control, that straightness. But they’re always so good here with lovely big flags — I think that’s always a real Badminton flag. You know you’re here, but the flags certainly give you a bit more of a tunnel. You’ll go off to Luhmuhlen, and you’ll get a pokey one down there that they’re kind of hoping you don’t see. But at Badminton, they are there for the riding and I think that does make you get on it.”

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

Everywhere around the course, William got the sense that the twelve-year-old, who finished fourteenth here last year and who’s the first mare he’s ever ridden at this event, was giving him her all.

“I missed a bit in the bottom of the Quarry [at 4AB and 5], but that was probably good to sharpen us both back up,” he laughs. “She was really good over the Eyelash coffin [at15abc], Because I thought she could well have thought that ditch was rather horrendous and straightened up to it, and it would have been a hell of an angle, but she stayed on her line there. I kept on saying to myself ‘shorten my reins!’ — I know my reins got a bit long, but she didn’t need any reins, did she? She would’ve gone around in a head collar! Anyone could ride her – she’s a good old man’s conveyance.”

Though Grafennacht finished last year’s Badminton with three rails down, that came after a much more gruelling run around the cross-country, and on ground in the showjumping arena that was much tougher than tomorrow’s is likely to be. Ordinarily, she tends to be more of a one-or-none horse; she had one on the final day at Maryland in October, but there are no out-and-out showjumpers in the current top ten, and so the competition remains, achingly, excitingly, enormously wide open.

“I’ve not been [in this position] in a while – tomorrow I’ll have to wake up!” says William.

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

In an anniversary year, as it is this year at Badminton, there’s naturally even more of a focus on the rich history of a competition such as this – but while the intricate threads of the past are so important, so, too, is the future of the sport.

That future was represented in fine fashion by a name that won’t be familiar even to many committed fans of the sport, who propelled herself firmly into the spotlight after delivering one of the most exceptional rounds of the day today. Ireland’s Lucy Latta isn’t just a Badminton first-timer, nor is she just a five-star debutant – she’s also a one-horse rider, who fits in training and competing her horse, RCA Patron Saint, around a full-time job as brand manager for drinks company White Claw.

But, she says, “I think whenever anyone here is like, ‘I have a full time job’ or anything like that, they’re like ‘oh, you’re an amateur.’ I don’t look at it like that. I have two jobs and I do both very professionally — as professionally as I can. So I wouldn’t let myself off the hook as easy as being like, ‘I can make a mistake because I’m an amateur’ — I don’t think like that at all. And I don’t think you can coming somewhere like here — you have to be in it and focused and really determined to get from point A to point B.”

Riding just one horse means, too, that she knows him inside and out – a great benefit when tackling the biggest, toughest course of one’s life.

“There’s pros and cons to it. Like, I’m not away at any events for weeks at a time. I get to train, me and him, all the time, all year round, so it means our partnership is extremely strong.”

The strength of that partnership certainly helped 27-year-old Lucy and ‘Paddy’ today: they delivered the fastest round of the day, coming in just one second over the time to add 0.4 to their first-phase score of 37.2, boosting them an incredible 43 places up the leaderboard to overnight third. She’s now 4.2 penalties behind William, giving him a rail in hand but nothing more.

“He was amazing out there, like, he just gallops all day long,” she says. “He didn’t look at any of the crowds. I wasn’t sure, because he hasn’t done a five-star before at an event of this calibre with the crowd out there — it’s just insane. But he stayed listening to me the whole way. He was so adjustable, so brave and just gave me everything that he had. I mean, I had every faith in the horse cross country, and to pull it off is something else. I would have taken hands and all if you told me we’d be in this position when we started the week.”

Staying up on the clock in the early part of the course was a key part of Lucy’s very near capturing of the time.

“I have blind faith in this horse, and I know he’d stay galloping, so I didn’t want to give away any time around the good ground in the first few minutes of the course,” she says. “I knew I’d be able to give him a breather if he needed more air in his lungs and to take time on the way home. I knew he’d get the trip. And it helped that I’d done Blair [Castle 4*L] — I finished fourth last year — and that was soft ground and it’s extremely hilly there. Granted, it’s a minute and 20 seconds shorter, and the fences were not as big as here, but I just had so much faith that he would get the trip.”

Also helpful is that looking at Lucy aboard Paddy isn’t at all dissimilar to the happy old sight of Ros Canter aboard her lanky World Champion, the late Allstar B.

“I’m only five foot two, which helps, and I’ve gotten myself as lean as I possibly can just so that those last few minutes would be made a lot easier on him,” she says. “I felt he needed a breather up at the top, jumping those three brush fences and the gate [at 28ABC and 29]. I felt like, ‘okay, maybe I’m just going to have to ease off him coming home’, and when he turned the hill and came back down and saw the crowds, I was like, ‘oh my gosh, he’s actually full of running’. I’ve every faith going to any event now that he’s well able to get the trip, and he’s able through these type of fences. It’s consistently so much bigger, every fence, than what you would get at four-star long. Of course, those aren’t small, but this is just a whole other level, and he’s just a professional at this phase.”

Horses might not be Lucy’s full-time occupation, but they’re certainly in her blood: her grandfather evented at top level, her mother evented at junior level, and her cousins Robbie and Esib Power are a top-level jockey and a top-level eventer, respectively. Esib, she explains, has been a particularly significant influence on her riding.

“[Esib] has been an amazing coach to me,” she says. “I’ve been based there for the five weeks in the lead up to the event. She’s given me so much advice and guidance on all aspects — dressage, cross country, getting them fit for show jumping. She’s a phenomenal coach — she’s done six Badmintons and is a brilliant rider in her own right. She has just helped me tremendously. I can’t thank her enough.”

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

Badminton is an extraordinary physical challenge, but one of the major tasks in nailing down an excellent performance is managing your headspace – and that’s even harder when in a competitive position at an event you’ve historically had bad luck at. That was the case for Emily King, who’s had more than her fair share of rotten luck at this fixture, and who still made the noble call last year to put her hand up when she felt Valmy Biats tire in the final third of the course, despite knowing she could retain a very good placing if she pushed him through it. And so karma, perhaps, owed her a good turn — and today, it came. She pulled off a remarkable feat of mental compartmentalisation to deliver an excellent, quick clear with the gelding, adding 8.8 time penalties to move up one place to overnight fourth.

“To be honest, I try not to think about the fact I’ve never finished before and more think — this sounds a bit silly — but it’s another competition,” she says. “So you have to try and just do what you know works. And I thought, at Thoresby he was awesome in the mud, and he really jumped around the dimensions of Burghley, which was the biggest he’s done. So I really tried to concentrate on the things I know make his performance go well, rather than get a bit swept away with ‘you’re at Badminton, you haven’t finished before’. I look at it this time, and try and just focus. I felt so nicely in sync with him that then, he could really concentrate on the little bits rather than having to work too hard and it all becoming a bit blurred.”

But, she says, “I’m not going to lie, I was thinking about it coming up that last avenue to the big roll top! I was like ‘you’re nearly there, don’t mess it up, come on!’ And there, I just let him gallop in between, but I wanted to really just set him up. I thought, you know, ‘I’ve got to this point before; I’ve just been a bit free and a bit brave [Emily fell at the penultimate fence in 2016 while in second place]. I thought ‘no, I want to get home — I want to be quick, I want to be competitive, but I want to get home’, and I think just giving him that extra lifeline helped his balance. He so wants to jump around, he wants to do a good job, so it’s up to me to just help his balance, and I’m glad I didn’t let him down.”

That balance is the key factor, she explains, to getting the very best out of the scopey gelding.

“He’s an incredible cross country horse, and the only mistakes we’ve had is when he’s actually too brave,” she says. “I’ve come and I’ve overridden and it’s gotten us into trouble, but it’s bloomin’ hard going out round there. You just want to just sit back and kick and kick. But with Val, it can cause problems. I’ve got to really hold his balance, be a touch extra balanced, and a touch cautious but whilst going quick — which, when you haven’t done a huge amount of five stars, you’ve got to just really believe in his scope. I tried to do that and he was incredible. He galloped so well at the end; I didn’t have to chase him. He just felt so within himself. It was actually fun!”

This season has seen Val looking on the form of his life: he and Emily won the Grantham Cup CCI4*-S at Thoresby for the second year running, and much of his success on softer ground can be contributed to how he’s managed at home. He lives out 24/7 on variable footing and terrain, and much of his galloping work, too, is done on grass, no matter the weather.

“He’s been so lucky having had a few runs this spring on the soft going. We’re so lucky at home — my partner’s parents let us gallop on the grass there, and I think he’s galloping in the sticky going at home, he’s used to, he’s conditioned. He’s not going on the all-weather gallops with a little incline. He’s so fit, and I think he’s come here and he’s within himself, rather than halfway round finding it a bit tiring. I’m really thankful to be able to get him that fit, but obviously, you can get them as fit as possible at home, and as fit as possible around the four shorts and the Advanceds — but the five stars, they just stretch them. Stretch their lungs, stretch their bodies and they come out and just find it that bit easier. And he did find it easy, which was lovely.”

Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

At the FEI European Eventing Championships last year, a little-known, low-mileage horse was handed the pathfinder role – and despite ground conditions even tougher than that year’s Badminton, diminutive Grantstown Jackson and his rider, Ireland’s Sarah Ennis, skimmed right over the top of the sticky mud and nipped home with just a couple of time penalties to show for it and no obvious diminishing of the petrol levels in his tank.

Today, they did just the same again in the gelding’s sophomore five-star start. They added just 3.6 time penalties to record the third-fastest round of the day, propelling them from 42nd overnight to fifth going into the final day of competition — and smashed every expectation that last year’s Europeans had placed on their shoulders.

“I’m so proud of him,” says Sarah. “He lived up to his name after Europeans. There’s been a pressure on about that: everyone’s like, ‘Oh, he’ll make the time, he’s so fast.’ I was just on it everywhere; he made it feel so easy.”

His easy speed, she says, comes down to “light feet, and the engine within him – he’s 80% blood with a Thoroughbred mother. He’s very funny at the first gallop of the year — he’ll bolt up the gallops, and you just let him go because there’s no point — when he gets to the top he’ll stop. He just has this will to run. When he was broken, he ran off a lot, and that’s the thing — he just likes running. He’s like Forrest Gump! That’s him. He loves running. He loves galloping. And he just got faster and faster. All the time I went, ‘good boy Jackie boy,’ and you feel him going ‘Oh, that’s okay, I did well’ and move on to the next one. You don’t want to go out of the startbox and put the gun to their head and think ‘we have to be the fastest’. I just decided I had to go out, let him hit up the rhythm, and then try and stay there as much as you can with straight routes. Because it just goes wrong when you’re chasing at the start. You just have to level your head.”

Sarah and Jackson’s scant time penalties came as the result of one long route: like much of the field, they chose to add in a circle to the separately-numbered final element at the MARS Sustainability Bay water.

“That was definitely our nine seconds, but I just didn’t want to take the chance at 18 with a little skinny log,” says Sarah. “He just wouldn’t be so cool when you adjust the last stride — h likes to be left alone. But what a cross country machine, like with no ‘oh shit moments’, as I call them, which was amazing around a track like that. I couldn’t be prouder of him. He’s incredible, but he took a long time to mature, and now he’s the ultimate machine. So I’d say to people out there who think that it’s not working, to actually hang on in there. Especially with Irish horses — they get better and better and better, and you end up with this.”

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

One of the dominant themes of the day has been progression from this time one year ago, when horses and riders alike had to battle through extraordinarily tough conditions and many crossed the finish line with uncharacteristic penalties on their scoresheet, or didn’t cross it at all after their riders decided to call it a day.

One of the horses in the former camp was then-ten-year-old Greenacres Special Cavalier who, despite having jumped clear around her five-star debut at Pau the autumn prior for fifth place, picked up green jumping penalties early on the course. But rather than retiring, Caroline Powell decided to use the rest of the round to give her talented young mare experience of longer distances, trickier combinations, and the intense atmosphere of the Badminton course, and by the time the pair finished, ‘Cavvy’ looked to have matured considerably.

Since then, she’s gone from strength to strength: she finished in the top seven at CHIO Aachen, won a CCI4*-S at Ballindenisk, and then travelled across the Atlantic to Maryland 5*, where she finished sixth. And today, on her return to Badminton, she completed the circle, starting the course with the maturity she finished it with last year and looking throughout like a horse with years more mileage than she actually has. They ultimately crossed the finish line 33 seconds over the 11:19 optimum time, adding 13.2 time penalties to their tally and stepping up one place on the leaderboard to sixth.

“She enjoyed that, didn’t she? I think probably a bit more than I did!” laughs Caroline. “She loved it — this is the day she enjoys. She didn’t even notice the ground, which I didn’t think she would, as it’s drying out all the time.”

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

Caroline was one of the few riders to do the straight route at 17AB and 18, the MARS Sustainability Bay – but initially, she’d actually planned to add in the loop to the log that we saw so many other riders do today.

“I did have a rethink about the tree after watching Tim and Jonelle do the skinny thing so beautifully,” she admits. “I thought, ‘hmm, we might give that one a shot!’ But everything else was bang on [my initial plan]. She took a few tired steps just coming home and then she came through [the finish] and she’s just tanking [the grooms] home. So we’ll have to go home and calm her down!”

Caroline was also one of the first starters of the day with five-star debutant CBI Aldo, who she opted to retire at fence 20, the sunken road, after picking up jumping penalties there and at Huntsman’s Close – but he, too, will have benefitted from the exposure the day gave him, she says.

“I think the hard thing now is we’ve lost the Gatcombes, and we’ve lost the big atmosphere events, which is why I wanted to bring the other one here — just to give him that experience and bring him home safe. He’ll come out a better horse the next day,” she says. “He just went out a degree greener, and after his round, we then rewalked a few of the lines because they were very tricky. For her they were very easy, but that’s experience and that’s why both of them here. She’s had quite a good trip: we went to Maryland, she did Aachen, and she absolutely adored them — she just loves people and she loves showing off, which is a great attribute to a horse, isn’t it? She’s a bit of a diva!”

The consistency that Cavvy is showing now is a sweet payoff to a considered, committed development programme that previous Burghley champion Caroline has had her on since her international career began in 2019.

“She had her time of being quite tricky at 4* level, and we just kept running her and she kept making mistakes — and now she’s looking for the flags and she’s helping me out and doing her job, so it was well worth it,” she says. “We had a horrible year [in 2021] of having too many 20s to actually bring her through [the levels] and just let her learn. They’re not good horses until they’ve been here three or four times.”

Felix Vogg and Cartania. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

As just the eighth rider out of the box, Swiss five-star winner Felix Vogg had limited intel to take to the track with him, but he didn’t need it: his own plan was so robust, and so based around his own horse, that he was able to deliver the best round of the competition at that point with Cartania and show the riders to come that there was, perhaps, more that could be done on course than initially assumed.

“She was a bit strong at the beginning but she’s so clever,” says Felix, who felt that cleverness in full effect when he opted to take the seldom-used direct route out of the water at the MARS Sustainability Bay at 17AB and 18. The catty mare hung her left leg, but quickly rotated her shoulder to get out of her own way and landed safely.

“I didn’t hear that anyone was doing the loop – they all pretended like they would go straight,” says Felix with a laugh. “She jumped really well in — I’d said I’d only go the long way when she stumbles a bit, or something else happens, or she’s empty. But we walked it that way, and I rode it a bit different. I rode it a bit more direct. She left a little bit of leg, but she was really clever. That is a good thing about her — she really has her own opinion of what she wants to do, but at the end, when she comes in trouble, she still helps herself.”

The pair kept up a high cruising speed around the course, finishing with by far the fastest time at that early stage for just 10.8 time penalties and a move-up from equal fifteenth to seventh – but in hindsight Felix, who finished fifteenth here last year with the mare, felt that he could have made up even more time across the breadth of the track.

“I’m just a bit frustrated, because she had so much left when I came home,” he admits. “I’m a bit angry with myself that I didn’t go a bit faster earlier. But better home like this than last year [when the horses finished so tired].”

Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Pathfinder Tom Jackson took the knowledge he’d gained at the start of the day with Farndon, who finished clear with 14.4 time penalties to move up from 33rd to 14th, into his ride with top horse and 2022 Burghley runner-up Capels Hollow Drift, who was the penultimate starter this afternoon. But while ‘Walshy’ was characteristically game and gutsy at the fences, he found the holding ground trickier than his stablemate, and ended the course with 10 time penalties – a touch more, perhaps, than expected from this reliable second-phase star, but still a competitive enough performance to climb from 22nd to eighth and redeem a first-phase score that had been marred by the effects of the bum-cam yesterday.

“He was fantastic everywhere — he’s just an out-and-out cross country machine,” says Tom, who’s the only rider today to finish on two horses. “It wasn’t our best performance in the dressage yesterday, and I went out with a real determination to try and get as close as we could to the time. He was there or thereabouts, until he just started to tire. This isn’t his perfect going – his action naturally sends him down into the ground a little bit, so he gets a bit more stuck in it, so that didn’t help him out, but I’m over the moon with him. He  just tries so hard every single time, and you just can’t beat that in a horse.”

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

Last night, we got the news that Pippa Funnell had withdrawn her early-draw ride, the experienced Majas Hope, after an uncharacteristically tricky dressage that put him well out of the hunt. That meant that she was left with just one ride, her 2023 Bramham victor MCS Maverick, who was the last horse of the day to leave the start box, and who was making his Badminton debut after finishing eleventh in his first five-star at Pau last autumn.

Though MCS Maverick is a uniquely tricky horse – he took fright at the crowds at Wednesday’s horse inspection, nearly turning himself over, and has subsequently been getting escorts around the busy estate from hunt horses – he showed his innate toughness today, even at the tail end of the course when, while starting to tire, he had a couple of slightly sticky jumps at the Worcester Avenue Brushes at 28ABC. Though his steadier pace in this latter section contributed to his 13.2 time penalties, it was still enough to move the pair from first-phase twelfth place to overnight ninth.

“I’m really, really delighted with him,” says Pippa, who took the ride on just last year from fellow five-star rider and stable jockey Helen Wilson. “I know I’m going to get back to the lorry and think, ‘why didn’t I use his speed more?’ but it’s his first time here and again, I had to be escorted by two hunt horses [to get to the collecting ring and the start box]. For me, that’s where I’ve got to try and channel him so I can warm him up in the right way because to me, my warm up here was over the first five fences, getting the rideability before Huntsman’s Close [at 7]. I was actually down on the clock at two minutes because he was running just fresh, so I had to try and anchor him. He’s such a big, galloping, scopey horse, and I’m an old girl, and he’s not ready yet — he’s too naive yet just to let him keep trucking in there. I think just at the end through the brushes, I could have made it much simpler and kept a straighter line, but I think he showed by a little bit of pecking that he was weary. He kept galloping — he’s very fit, but he’s going to strengthen up. To me, it’s still a work in progress, but  to come for the first time to Badminton and to give you the feeling that he’s really ‘let me at the fence’… it was lovely to come down to the Vicarage Vee on a horse like him.”

Though she’s now in a competitive position to vie for a top placing herself, Pippa’s picked her dream podium-topper, echoing the feelings of so many here: “Oh, my God, I’m just so hoping for my old mate William to win. I will be very emotional [if he does]!”

Alexander Bragg and Quindiva. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

One of the most colossal climbs of the day came at the eleventh hour when Alex Bragg, the seventh-to-last rider to leave the start box, delivered a nimble performance with 14-year-old Quindiva, adding just 7.6 time penalties to climb from 51st place to tenth. Last year, we saw Alex, like Emily, deliver one of the commendable masterclasses in horsemanship when he opted to pull the mare up while she was running well and competitively, and today, his emotion at giving her the finish both horse and rider deserved was palpable.

“She was amazing — and it’s such an amazing feeling finishing here at Badminton,” he says. “I’ve started many times and not always come through that finish line. It’s been a tricky show for me. This mare is very sensitive, and at this time of year, mares are tough because they come into season and getting them this fit is hard. She had a tricky couple of weeks build up, so we weren’t sure if we were going to even be here, but she tried her heart out today, and coming to that last fence I was nearly in tears. I was like,  ‘open your eyes and don’t miss at this fence!’ I was just saying to one of my daughters, I punched the air before I was through the finish line, which is probably not very professional, and could have wasted one second, but when you finish like that and you have that much emotion and the crowd is going absolutely wild… thanks to all those guys in the main arena! You’ve just got to enjoy it, and all that hardship that you go through, all the bad weather we’ve had, it’s all been worth it for that for that one magic moment.”

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

It’s been a mixed bag of a day for the North American contingent at Badminton, who came into cross-country day with two representatives in the top ten thanks to excellent tests from Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF (fourth after dressage on a 29) and Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl (sixth after dressage on 29.8). Now, the best of the bunch is British-based Grace Taylor, the daughter of US Olympian Ann Sutton and British team selector Nigel Taylor, who produced a steady, classy effort with Game Changer to finish her Badminton cross-country debut with 19.2 time penalties. That’s catapulted her to 19th place overnight, up from a first-phase 31st.

“I’m really proud of him – he was amazing,” says Grace. “He stayed with me the whole way round. He’s a very laid-back horse, but his eye was taken by the crowd at the odd time – but once he was in front of the jump, he just jumped. I’m so grateful to him for what he did today.”

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

Tiana Coudray logged an exciting clear round with Cancaras Girl, who proved her mettle as a five-star horse with some game, genuine efforts over the tough track, but slips from sixth to 26th overnight due to her 30.4 time penalties.

Regardless, though, Tiana is thrilled – and rightly so, after a decade of hard work since her last appearance here.

“I have a Badminton horse! I’m thrilled,” she says. “She had to fight in a few places – she pecked really badly jumping the Broken Bridge, and I think the whole crowd thought she was going to go down, but luckily I stayed in the middle and she came back up underneath me. She was brilliant. I’m kicking myself because I set out quite slow — I think it got in my head that it’s hot, and the ground is tough, and horses are finishing are struggling to finish, and I probably set off too slow. But having said that, she finished brilliantly, and she jumped round, and she’s had a fantastic trip — and hopefully it’s the first of many, so we can move forward and set out to be a bit quicker next time.”

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

The tough LeMieux Eyelash Brushes coffin complex at 15ABC was another place in the course where Cancaras Girl stepped up to the plate: like many horses, she peeked at the water in the ditch at B and ballooned over it, but despite the awkward jump, immediately locked onto the angled hedge at C and made a neat effort over it when a run-out would have been easy to cash in. But for ‘Nana’, Tiana says, running out was never on the agenda.

“It felt like it wouldn’t have mattered what her legs were doing — she knew where she was going,” she says. “She’s always been, from day one, so straight and so honest. In a couple of places she maybe locked on to the wrong thing, or saw it at the last minute and then went, ‘Oh, yeah — got it!’ That makes total sense!'”

This is a second five-star start and first cross-country completion at the level for the mare, who tackled Burghley last year but was eliminated for a rider fall after picking up 40 penalties early on.

“I think I went into Burghley full of confidence because she had been phenomenal around her four-stars — really tough four stars,” says Tiana, who placed in Bramham’s colossal CCI4*-L with Cancaras Girl in 2022. “And I thought, ‘this is the best cross country horse in the world, of course she’s going to jump around Burghley!’ So I was probably a bit too casual about a few things, and I paid for it. The good thing about Burghley was she jumped far enough around that I went, ‘she’s got the scope. She’ll do the distance. She’s a five-star horse — we just made mistakes.’ And I think I set out today much more conservative, thinking ‘dot your i’s, cross your t’s, make sure to get it done.’ And clearly she’s a proper five-star horse, so now I can afford to be a little bit braver. I know now what she does around a track like this, so we kick on a bit more next time — but my God, I was so proud of her.”

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

Cosby Green, too, dropped down the leaderboard with 18-year-old Copper Beach after logging a clear round with 38.8 time penalties, which knocked her from 18th to 32nd place – but like Tiana, she was delighted with the bigger picture of her commendable round, which marks her first trip to Badminton and just her second-ever five-star.

thought it was perfect – well, obviously not 100% perfect, but as perfect as I can imagine!” she says with a grin. “He was just so bold out there, and we were so on the same page. I had to set him up a couple of times, but he was absolutely flying; you never know how they’re going to jump those big jumps, and he took it absolutely in his stride, so I’m pleased. It was an out-and-out clear round, so I’m happy with that.”

Cosby, who has embarked upon her second year basing in the UK with Tim and Jonelle Price, has benefitted enormously from training with the two superstar riders, and from their insight this week, too – but today, she wasn’t able to get valuable feedback from them on how the course might ride, because both had later draws than she did. Rather than letting that unnerve her, though, Cosby took on the mantle of Team Price pathfinder with composure and confidence.

“It was scary at the beginning, but with that said, I’m proud that I was able to go out first and put that behind me – that’s their good training on me reflecting back,” she says. Confidence, she admits, has been a key factor she’s struggled with – and today’s effort is an enormously emboldening one.

“I just feel like I need to pinch myself. It’s just going to really put me in the right direction; I struggle with confidence a lot, so to have two clear five-star cross-country rounds in my first two attempts is going to make me more confident in who I am, and make me better,” she says. To boost her confidence ahead of a momentous occasion such as this one, she explains, “I do a lot of envisioning, and just kind of telling myself I can do it – kind of faking it until I make it! This morning I got up and I told anyone who would listen that failure’s not an option. Even though I don’t believe that, if I say it enough times, I start to believe it. I tell myself I can do it, and then I do it.”

Jessie Phoenix and Wabbit. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Canada’s Jessie Phoenix and her ex-racehorse Wabbit added 21.6 time penalties and picked up 11 penalties for a safety device activation at fence 23, the Rolex Grand Slam Rails, which are effectively a ‘lead-in’ Vicarage Vee ahead of the real thing a few strides later. Nonetheless, their round boost them from first-phase 62nd to overnight 33rd, and Jessie returned thrilled by her horse’s efforts on the tough course.

“He truly was amazing. That horse is just — there is no bottom to him. He is all heart and he loves this job,” she says. “Every time he gets to go cross-country it’s like Christmas to him.”

Despite her pin at the rails, Jessie opted to continue on the direct route to the subsequent, even more difficult Vicarage Vee, which the pair cleared easily.

“We came down the hill [to the Rails] and he just got, like, a little tight behind. I thought, you know, should we just keep going to the Vicarage Vee, should we do an option? And then I saw this beauty distance and I said, ‘Let’s do it.’ And he just flew over it like nothing,” she says. “It’s definitely all about the ears you’re looking through, and [the course] rode pretty much standard for the way Wabbit goes, which is just amazing start to finish.”

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

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg had a tough day in the office, dropping from overnight fourth to 38th after a drive-by at the A element of the INEOS Grenadier Sunken Road at 20ABC – and that 20 quickly turned to a 60 when they crossed their tracks on the re-approach. They also added 25.2 time penalties, but ultimately completed the course.

“He’s a good old horse, and he was going great guns, but I think I just got to that point in the track and started thinking, ‘I’m in with a chance here’, and going a bit  too hard, and he was getting a bit numb in the bridle,” says Boyd. “I screwed up a  bit — I was worried he wasn’t going to make the three strides there, so I wanted to get a forward shot at the skinny, but it was ridiculous — I saw one off the turn and flapped my elbows and he ran by it. That’s definitely not how to ride that jump.”

With that behind them, Boyd pulled back on the pace and nursed Thomas home without further issues.

“I eased off a bit once he had a run out. It’s pretty hard out there — I’ve ridden a lot of 5*’s, and I thought it was quite challenging,” he says.

Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Sadly, both Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent and Allie Knowles and Morswood saw their Badminton debuts end early with rider falls – Meghan was tipped out of the plate after a twisting jump over the A element of the Sunken Road at 20ABC, and though she looked, for a second, as though she might be able to make the save of the day, the steep downhill slope after the fence meant that gravity won the fight. Allie and Morswood parted company at the final element of the very tough Voltaire Design Huntsman’s Close at 7ABCD. Both riders were immediately back on their feet following their falls.

Course designer Eric Winter was delighted with how the day played out, and how his course — which was roundly praised by riders — worked.

“The ground was obviously an influence, and I’m really glad we moved back by a week, because it wouldn’t have been such a pleasurable experience last week,” he says. “Higher forces smiled upon us: from Tuesday we’ve had great weather, and it’s really dried out, which has made a huge difference. What I wanted to test was the same as always — rider skill. It’s always about jumping the fence and being patient and riding the turn; jumping the fence and having a little bit of ability to go, ‘I’m going to go on three, or four, to shorten, or lengthen’ — to trust your instincts and develop instincts with your riding. There were some great results; the more ‘mature’ riders in first and second, but as you look down the list, there was a whole heap of younger riders coming through that showed super skills today. That was as fulfilling for me as anything — that the next generation of the sport is in good hands.”

Since he took the reins as designer in 2017, 427 combinations have started the event here, and just two have finished on their dressage score.

“That’s proper cross-country,” he says with a grin.

Here, here – we’ll raise a glass to that, and to a great day of sport here at Badminton. Now, it’s onto Sunday, which begins bright and early at 8.30 a.m. BST/3.30 a.m. EST with the final horse inspection in front of Badminton House. Then, we’ll crack on with showjumping from 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST), followed by the top twenty at 2.55 p.m. (9.55 a.m. EST). You can check out the cross-country results in full here, and catch up on all the day’s action with Cheg’s live updates here — and we’ll see you again tomorrow for lots more stories and analysis from this great weekend of sport. 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] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [Form Guide] [Ultimate Guide] [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!

 

It’s Satur-yay! Butts On Seats and Buckle Up – Live Blog from Cross Country Day at MARS Badminton Horse Trials

Please Note: Refresh this page often for the latest updates.

Here we go ENers. It’s cross country day and… the weather’s holding up. All hail the British weather for Badminton weekend. Although, we may be complaining about the heat as the day progresses…

We’re in the thick of the competition now, with two days of dressage behind us and a clubhouse leaderboard to peruse. Here’s how things are shaping up so far at the 75th edition of MARS Badminton Horse Trials:

The clubhouse leaderboard as we head into cross country looks like this:

1️⃣ Leader of the pack after dressage is EquiRatings’ favorite for the win – Great Britain’s Ros Canter with Izilot DHI on a score of 25.5.
2️⃣ 2 points behind, also representing Britain is Thursday’s overnight leader Bubby Upton and Cola on 27.5.
3️⃣ And topping off the podium places after the first phase, for New Zealand, is Tim Price with Vitali on 27.7, just 0.2 behind.
4️⃣ The best of the US, Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF are right up there in 4th – they’re on a score of 29.
5️⃣ Just behind is Britain’s Emily King with Valmy Biats – on 29.2.
6️⃣ Another American sits right on their tails – Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl are on 29.8.

The scores are really tight, right the way from the top to the bottom of the table, so every second will really count out on course today.

Click here for the full scoreboard.

Here are the links you need to catch up on all that went down in the dressage:

Dressage Day One:
▶️ [Test-by-test reports]
▶️ [Morning round-up]
▶️ [Afternoon round-up]

Dressage Day Two:

▶️[Test-by-test reports]
▶️ [Morning round-up]
▶️ [Afternoon round-up]

And now we turn out attention to The. Best. Day. Cross country day.

You can follow along with the form as you enjoy all the country action with EN’s epic Form Guide, which you’ll find right here.

While you’re eagerly awaiting the first countdown of the day, check out what the runners and riders will be facing as they thunder along the track, in our course preview here, and if you want to know the riders’ thoughts on this year’s cross country offering, we’ve wrangled them together and given them to you here.

And when you’re done with all that, feast your eyes on all of EN’s Badminton content and mosey on along to our IG account @goeventing.

Sally Spickard will get things going with live updates from the cross country and then Cheg Darlington will take over later – EN’s here throughout the day, 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 ⬆️.

It’s here. It’s the best day.
I’m not going to shout-out the superfans in the States today because of course you’ve got up while it’s still dark to follow along – it’s cross country day.
Refresh, refresh, refresh – and go eventing!

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!

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

11:25am ET

And so cross country day draws to a close at the 75th anniversary edition of MARS Badminton Horse Trials. What a fitting celebration of sport it’s been. We’ve had tears and cheers and everything in between. Best of all, we’ve seen true athletes at the top of their game, galloping and jumping and showing the world what a wonderful sport we’re so lucky to be a part of.

The clubhouse leaderboard as we head into the finale looks like this:

1️⃣ Heading the charge and hoping to stay there is Kiwi Tim Price with Vitali on a score of 31.7.
2️⃣ Not a show jump behind is Great Britain’s – William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht on 33.
3️⃣ And topping off the podium places as things stand is 5* rookie combination, Ireland’s Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint on 37.2.

Best of the US is Grace Taylor and Game Changer – they’re in 19th on a score of 54.6.

Click here for the full scoreboard.

Tomorrow we’ll know who will take the Badminton crown. Will there be a scuffle on the scoreboard? Where will your favorites end up? It’s all to play for as the final day beckons.

I’ll be back for every single fence in the finale of the show jumping with live updates as the top 20 take to the ring to wrap up MARS Badminton Horse Trials 2024 – don’t miss it!

We’ll have a full round-up of all of today’s competition for you – Tilly’s pounding the keys as we speak – eyes on EN for that, coming soon.

In the meantime, click here for all the Badminton content you can handle.

Until tomorrow ENers, rest easy, and go eventing.

11:23am ET Pippa squeaks her way through the three angled hedges at 28 and then rattles the white gate at 29. They fly the last combination, and then the second last. She comes into the Main Arena and the crowd are cheering. They clear the last and come through the finish. What a round to wrap up the day’s sport. Such a treat. Maverick looks very pleased with himself, and so he should be. That was a great round from both horse and rider. What a day. What a sport.

11:21am ET Ooo, they land steep after the Vicarage Vee and Pippa’s pitched forward. She looks to lose a stirrup. But she’s back straight away and kicking on.

11:18am ET Tom chooses to do the two uprights at 27 rather than take the maximum spread table. Capels Hollows Drift looks a tad tired, but he’s jumping cleanly. There’s a huge cheer as he comes into the Main Arena and clears the last. Pippa’s the only one out on course now. She’s 10 seconds down at Sustainability Bay and chooses to turn back to the massive tree with roots she didn’t like the look of – but it’s easy for her and they gallop on. They’re clear through the sunken road at 20 – it’s been a real question for a lot of people but Pippa makes it happen and hunts her way through.

11:16am ET Pippa’s at the Lake at 10. She drops in and sees her distance a mile off. She gives us a lesson through there. Tom and Capels Hollow Drift are through the Mound at 26 and are on their way home. Pippa is flying, meanwhile. The dogs are already swimming in the lake now that Pippa’s been through that section of the course! She leaps off the broken bridge at 13 and comes to the tricky combination at 15. She holds her line beautifully. Wow, she’s riding super. What a star she is.

11:13am ET The final pair of the day are being counted down and are on their way! They could go onto the podium if they’re quick and clear.

🇬🇧 Pippa Funnell and MCS Maverick. This gelding made his 5* debut at Pau last season and finished just outside the top-10. He’s a relatively new ride for Pippa, who took over the reins for last season. Since then he’s had nary a XC jumping penalty in 7 FEI runs and on his day, he’s no slouch either. Pippa is a 3-time Badminton winner and winner of the Rolex Grand Slam – she’s always one to watch 👀

We see them clear the first few fences and Maverick looks to be very keen. Caroline’s at the white gate close to the end of the course. She sets up for the two open parallel rails and Cav’s got her ears pricked and looks to have plenty left in the tank. She’s not quick enough to go ahead of Tim Price though. She clears the last and crosses the line 33 seconds over the time.

11:11am ET Caroline’s at the brush-ditch-brush at 15. There’s a bit of fancy footwork but they make their way through no problem. We catch up with Tom Rowland who’s come to a grinding halt at the step down at 26. He turns and canters back up but KND Steel Pulse says no thanks. It’s the end to their day as they’re eliminated. Caroline’s at the water at 17 and decides to take the time to turn before the massive tree at 18. Meanwhile, we have a new starter on course:

🇬🇧 Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift are now out on course. Just one more combination to go after this. This horse stepped up to the level here in 2022 and finished 16th, jumping clear across the country and adding just 10 time penalties. Later that year he was runner-up at Burghley where he added just 3.6 XC time penalties to his score across the entire competition. They came here last year and were 5th, delivering another impressive cross country round. He’s a great jumper – amongst the most reliable in the field according to EquiRatings – and quick. This is one to watch, right here 👀

They’re brilliantly through Huntsman’s at 7 and well on their way.

11:07am ET Alex Bragg is just telling Clare Balding how emotional he was as he crossed the finish line. What a very cool sport this is. Meanwhile, we have this lady out on course – who could go into the lead:

🇳🇿 Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier have left the start box. We’re down to our final three to go. This mare was 30th here last year, with 40 XC jumping penalties on her card. There are plenty of clears on there too though, including at Pau in 2022 where she finished 5th, and Maryland last year where she was 6th. Caroline has 16 Badminton completions under her belt and a Burghley win – in 2010 with the late, great Lenamore.

Oh no! Wills and A Class Cooley have parted company. I didn’t quite catch which fence it was sorry. That’s a shame as they were going beautifully. Things just went arwy slightly and Wills was catapulted out the front door. He looked to get straight up, no real damage done, just an end to their competition.

We have another combination on course:

🇬🇧 Tom Rowland and KND Steel Pulse are on track. This gelding made his 5* debut at Pau last year and finished 21st with a clear round on the cross country. Tom has 3 Badminton starts and has 3 completions under his belt – he was 19th last year. He’s a total Badminton fanatic – first visiting the event when he was just 11 months old! (As a spectator, not to ride.) He can name every Badminton winner.

We didn’t see much of the start of his round, and unfortunately we pick him up having trouble at the sunken road at 20. They come back round and continue on towards the Vicarage Vee.

11:03am ET Wills has made his way smoothly through the brush-ditch-brush at 15 and has popped the brush oxer at 16. They’re headed to the water at Sustainability Bay now. They pop down and then decide to turn before the enormous tree with roots at 18 – no problems there for them. He comes to the tricky terrain through the sunken road at 20 and are very bold through there. They tap the rail at 21 and we hear the clip rattle but there’s no problem at all and they continue on to the Vicarage Vee.

10:58am ET We have a new starter on course:

🇬🇧 Wills Oakden and A Class Cooley are with us on course now. We’re into our final five rounds of the day now. ‘Felix’ made his 5* debut at Pau last season but retired after a 20 out on cross country. There’s just one other 20 on his record in 14 FEI competitions and some good form at the 4*’L level with a win at Blair Castle last year and 2nd at Ballindenisk. Will’s got a 12th place here under his belt from last year and was 25th in 2029.

We catch up with them coming into the Lake at 10. He balances on the way in and is positive to the corner. Everything comes up beautifully for them and they’re excellent through there. We’re hearing that Gemma will be contesting the 15 penalties she was given for the flag at the C element of Huntsman’s Close – Fence 7.

10:53am ET Libby Seed comes through the finish line to huge cheers from the crowd. Laura and Hester are at the Lake. The mare has a little look at the water and jumps up high over the first element. Laura’s sitting up and making this combination happen. There’s a huge leap over the middle element – Laura’s back in her stirrups and locking on, and Hester’s responding. She makes the final element happen too and that is cross country riding at it’s best. But oh no! We see them at the combination at 15 and Hester looks right into that massive open ditch at the B element. She stops and Laura puts her hand up. This is a 5* first timer and will have learned a lot from her trip here this week, regardless of it ending early. Unfortunately we haven’t seen much of Alex until he comes through the finish. He’s punching the air and the crowd are cheering. This must have been an excellent round, and it’s really quite quick. He’s gone into 7th.

10:50am ET We haven’t seen much of Libby’s round sorry. We join her now as they come to the Vicarage Vee. There’s elbows and heels going and they fly it. They look to be having a really fun round together. They drop bravely off the Mound at 26 and are galloping toward home.

Meanwhile:

🇬🇧 Alexander Bragg and Quindiva are underway. ‘Diva’ made her 5* debut here at Badminton last year, but like a few 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, jumping clear across the country and adding just 14 XC time penalties to their score across the competition. Alex has made 6 starts at Badminton since his debut in 2017.

Alex is through the water at 17. He makes a really tight turn round to 18 – probably the neatest we’ve seen all day. Not much time wasted there.

And so is:

🇬🇧 Laura Collett and Hester. We’re into the two horse riders now. Hester’s a 5* first-timer, although Laura’s no rookie – she won the whole dang thing with London 53 in 2022, one of 3 5* wins on her card. Hester was first produced by Jonelle Price before fellow Badminton competitor Alex Bragg took the reins in 2019. Laura took to the irons for the 2021 season. Since then, she’s added no XC jumping penalties to her record and has proven to have a swift turn of foot too. This pair could very well be ones to watch 👀

They’re at Huntsman’s when we pick them up and it’s beautifully ridden by Laura through there. Really convincing and that’ll give her confidence.

10:45am ET Gemma is growling her way round the track, she’s really riding with determination. We’re hearing news that she has been given the 15 penalties for the flag at Huntsman’s. Chilli Knight is still pulling as they come to the three angled brushes at 28ABC. They come to the white rails and jump that really cleanly and Gemma’s using her voice over the two big open oxers at 30. Just two fences left now. They gallop over the second last, come into the Main Arena and clear the last. Her arm’s in the air, she’s patting her boy. She won’t be aware of the time penalties, and there may well be a review of them. We’ll have to wait for the live scoreboard to be updated, possibly later. Only Caroline Powell and Greenacres Special Cavalier can go ahead of Tim Price now.

10:41am ET I’m sorry, I seem to have missed that Lauren Innes had started. Here’s a look at their form coming into Badminton:

🇳🇿 Lauren Innes and Global Fision M. ‘Flipper’ finished 24th at both Badminton and Burghley last season, jumping clear across the country at both the British 5* offerings. Since 2020, he’s added XC jumping penalties to his card just once. Lauren’s an amateur rider and full-time accountant. Flipper’s her only upper-level horse and spends his days in the field while Lauren’s at work. The pair have two Badminton completions under their belt, and are looking to make it a third here this week.

Also on track:

🇬🇧 Libby Seed and Heartbreaker Star Quality are now out on course. This mare made her 5* debut at Badminton in 2022 and finished 28th. She came back for another go at the level at Pau last year and finished 14th. In 24 FEI runs she’s completed in all but one of them and jumped clear cross country in all but one. Libby’s an amateur eventer with just one horse in her string – in her real life she’s a full-time accounts manager.

Gemma is flying! She’s cleared the ditch and brush at 19. Meanwhile, Lauren’s actually nearing the end of the course. She’s pushing and riding really confidently up to the final few. They fly over the last fence and Lauren pumps her fist – Badminton cross country completed. Great work.

10:40am ET We have a new starter:

🇬🇧 Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight have got their Badminton cross country underway. This guy made his 5* debut at Pau in 2019 but was withdrawn before the second Horse Inspection. He came back out after/during the Covid hiatus and won the pop-up 5* at Bicton in 2021, where they finished on their dressage. He’s back at 5* for the first time since then. Badminton’s in his blood though, for sure – his sire is the former William Fox-Pitt 5* ride Chilli Morning, who was the first stallion to win a European top-level event when he became Badminton champ in 2015. He’s been clear XC jumping in each of his runs since Pau and had no faults on his card before that – that’s 27 runs without a single jumping penalty. He’s also speedy – amongst the very fastest horses in the field according to EquiRatings – Blink and you’ll miss ‘em! Eyes on this one 👀

We see them at Huntsman’s and they squeak through the flags at the C element. That may be reviewed. Chilli Knight really showed he’s a horse that’s desperate to get through the flags – red on the right… Meanwhile Selina’s had a problem at the Mound at 26. She made it down the A element but then came to a halt at the narrow brush after it.

10:33am ET Selina clears the Lake complex at 10 and then gallops the waterfall fence. They look to be going really well. Helen has a save of the day when Diego leaps off the step at 26. She’s thrown forward but sits up. Unfortunately there’s no way she hasn’t crossed her tracks from the position she ended up in. That’s a shame as they were going really confidently. Meanwhile, Selina’s at Sustainability Bay (17). They make a bold leap down the step into the water and then are very clearly going the long route to 18. They circle, come round and make a very nice jump over the tree. Helen and Diego are nearing home now. They’re quite a bit over the time after those problems at the Mound. They have a great jump over the second last and Diego fights for his head into the last, they get close but they’re over and through the finish – she’s delighted with her horse, who looks very, very pleased with himself as he trots along taking in the claps and cheers that he’s sure are all for him. Helen won’t mind that.

10:29am ET Daragh’s decided to pull up – not his day today. I have a couple of new starters to update you on:

🇬🇧 Helen Bates and Carpe Diem are up and running. ‘Diego’ made his 5* debut at Pau last season, finishing 23rd and adding only XC time to his dressage score. This guy is a cross country jumping machine, with just a couple of unlucky eliminations on his card due to rider tumbles in 22 FEI competitions. He’s just as clean show jumping too. Helen will be seizing the day as she makes her Badminton debut.

We see her through Huntsman’s and Helen does a great job to keep Diego’s shoulder in to clear the C element. They squeak through and gallop down the track.

And…

🇬🇧 Selina Milnes and Gelmer have got their Badminton cross country underway. Gelmer made his 5* debut at Pau last season but was withdrawn before the show jumping. He picked up 20 out on course there, the first XC jumping penalties on his record. Selina’s finished top-25 here and top-10 at Pau.

Gelmer flies the brush at C and gallop towards the meat of the course.

10:26am ET Tim isn’t far off the time. He flies the white gate at 29 – gets the perfect shot – and then he sets up for the wide open rails at the final combination. 20 seconds to get home. He’s careful at the second last and then pushes on. They come into the Main Arena and are into time. They clear the last and stop the clock. Tim punches the air. They’ve gone into the lead! The team are running beside them and there’s a huge cheer from the crowd. Just 4 penalties for them. A superb round.

We have a new starter on course:

🇮🇪 Daragh Byrne and Kilcannon Ramiro are away. This pair made their 5* debut at Pau last season where an unlucky tumble for Daragh means they’re looking for their first completion at the level this week. The form suggests that this is a horse who is well capable of producing a clear round cross country, and he’s no slow poke. But a completion will be what Daragh’s looking for today, so we hope the luck of the Irish is shining on them as they make their Badminton debut.

Unfortunately we see them having a problem at 15, just run past the hedge at the C element. They come back round and continue on.

10:23am ET We’re seeing Holly Richardson being pulled up close to home. It seems that they’ve missed a fence out. That’s really disappointing for them.

10:18am ET Emily’s taking no chances as she comes to the final few fences – she’s being very precise in her presentation to each fence. They’re over the double at 30, they’re close to the time but they’re not going to make it. It turns red as she approaches the second last. She gallops into the Main Arena and clears the Mars M – she’s beaming, so delighted, big pats for Valmy. What a super round – clear with just a few time penalties and slides into 3rd as things stand.

Meanwhile, Vitali’s got his feet wet at Fence 9 and now comes round for the Lake combination. He rattles the palisade but it’s up, they get on their line and are through – a riding lesson from Tim right there. He’s super focused and Vitali is too. They look like they’ve got their eye on the prize. Oh no! Holly and Louis have a problem at the sunken road – a fly past by the looks of it. She comes round and jumps it on the second time of asking.. Tim’s dropping down into the pond at Sustainability Bay (17) and he goes straight towards that tree and are smoothly through – no time wasted there. He chooses to go round the tree to keep straight towards the narrow element into the sunken road complex at 20. They’re perfect through there.

10:12am ET Emily’s really in a great rhythm and riding brilliantly. She soars over the triple bar at 14 and she really rides forward through the brush-ditch-brush combination and it comes up beautifully for them.

She’s joined on course by:

🇬🇧 Holly Richardson and Bally Louis. This pair made their 5* debut at Burghley last year and jumped a super clear round cross country to finish just outside the top-20. The didn’t have a single XC jumping penalty last season.

Emily’s going long between 17 and 18 – the Sustainability Bay complex and the big tree. She circles smoothly and they fly over the log and gallop on. Holly’s at Huntsman’s when we pick her up (7). She takes the flag at the C element but are safely through. Valmy really comes back to Emily at the rails at 21 and jumps it very cleanly. The Vicarage Vee is very easy for this horse – what’s all the fuss about? he says. They trot into the steep drop down at 26, she needed to really because he’s such a bold horse. They gallop on towards the finish.

We have a new starter, who’s very important in terms of the leaderboard – he could go into the lead:

🇳🇿 Tim Price and Vitali are out on track. This talented gelding broke all kinds of records in the dressage arena at Burghley last year, then jumped clear cross country with just 8 time faults to finish 5th. They were 7th here at Badminton, with another cross country clear – in fact there’s just a single 20 on this guy’s record, way back in 2017 at his first FEI event. EquiRatings rank him as the second most reliable cross country jumper in the field and he’s second favorite for the win. He’s swift across the ground too, with time penalties generally kept to single figures. As well as last season’s great form, he had a pretty smart 2022 also, with a top-10 finish at Luhmuhlen and a 3rd place at Burghley. The stats on Tim’s 5* successes could take all year to write, so I’ll summarize: all 7 5*s completed, wins in 4 of them and podiums in two of the others. He’s had 9 Badminton starts and 9 completions. Eyes on this one 👀

10:08am ET We pick back up with Jesse as he flies towards the finish. They’re at the second last and are just into time penalties. The horse is really digging deep but Jesse’s riding very sympathetically and has taken his foot right off the gas. They’re not very high over the last, but they’re over and through the finish clear. Meanwhile, Valmy’s got his feet wet at 9 – the log into the lake. They come round to the palisade into the lake proper and he leaves his back legs on it but it doesn’t come down. They clear the wide corner in the water and he doesn’t seem to lock onto the C element, but Emily guides him through.

10:03am ET There’s a new rider on course for the States:

🇺🇲 Alexandra Knowles and Morswood are away. ‘Ginge’ has 3 5* completions under his cinch, with a top-20 place at Pau last season, where he jumped clear cross country, and a top-10 at Maryland in 2022. The pair have made the trip across the Pond to make their Badminton debut here this week.

Unfortunately, they have a very early end to their round though. They don’t make the jump over the corner coming out of Huntsman’s Close (7), it comes down and Allie’s popped out of the tack. Her and Morswood are up and fine, but very frustrating for them.

There’s another new starter:

🇬🇧 Emily King and Valmy Biats have left the start box. This pair put themselves on EquiRatings’ radar as being in with a shot here this week after retaining their Grantham Cup title at Thoresby last month – they’re third favorite for the win. They were 25th at Badminton last year, activating a frangible device on cross country for 11 penalties, and 24th at Luhmuhlen, where they had a 20. But don’t underestimate this truly talented pairing – they do have unlucky blips on their record, but there’s no doubt that their time at the top of the level is a matter of when, not if.

They’re confidently through the quarry and Emily looks to really mean business.

10am ET Gubby’s been so quick up to the water at 17 that he’s really got the luxury of turning a circle before that tree at 18. Meanwhile, Harry and HD Bronze rattle the top rail of the white gate at 29 but it stays up. Gubby’s had a problem at the Vicarage Vee. The horse is backing off a mile away and leaps sideways over the ditch past the fence – Gubby does a great job staying on. They go the long route but oh no! Royal Harvest stops at the top of the step down at 26. That’s a real surprise and shame when their round was looking so confident earlier on. Meanwhile, we have a new starter on course:

🇳🇿 Jesse Campbell and Cooley Lafitte have got their Badminton cross country underway. This gelding made his 5* debut at Pau last season but an uncharacteristic mistake on the cross country means he’s looking for his first completion. He’s a cross country machine usually, with just one 20 on his record in 18 FEI competitions. He’s quick to boot, mostly keeping any time penalties to single figures. Jesse’s got two Badminton completions under his belt, with a top-20 finish here in 2019.

Meanwhile, Harry Mutch and HD Bronze have completed clear. Jesse’s come through Sustainability Bay (17) the best we’ve seen all day – straight through, awesome.

9:56am ET We have another new starter on course:

🇬🇧 Gubby Leach and Royal Harvest have left the start box. It’s a first 5* for Royal Harvest, who seems like a real sweetheart of a horse – Gubby says he’d trust the gelding to give his kids pony rides. Gubby’s back at the level after a bit of a hiatus but has two Burghley completions under his belt. At the 4* level, this horse can be very quick, with 4 finishes on his dressage score on his record. According to EquiRatings he’s amongst the fastest horses in the field. Blink and you’ll miss ‘em!

Meanwhile, Grace and Game Changer have crossed the finish line for the US and gone into 10th. They’ve had a great round, so positive and forward thinking, real cross country riding. Gubby is at the Lake (10) and decides to take the longer route but there’s not much time wasted, and this is a really fast horse. Harry is just at Sustainability Bay – Fence 17. He looks like he’s going for the straight route, but then doesn’t. He circles round and clears it no problem. We’re not sure he presented at the fence, he certainly didn’t yell ‘long’ like a lot of the earlier riders were doing. We’ll have to wait and see what the judges thought of that. He makes his way to the Mound and HD Bronze is very brave at the step down – he just canters off the end. They’re on their way home now.

9:53am ET Grace is really working hard but it having a great round – they’re safely through the sunken road at 20. Meanwhile we have a new starter:

🇬🇧 Harry Mutch and HD Bronze are now out on course. This pair completed on their debut at the level here in 2019 and are back for the first time since then. Since Harry took on the ride in 2015, they’ve been placed at every level bar 5*. They completed at the pop-up 5* at Bicton in 2021 and have had two Burghley starts since then, but are looking for everything to come together for them here today to add second 5* completion to their record.

We pick them up at the Lake and this is a big horse for Harry to navigate through those distances but it actually comes up nicely for them. He stands off the waterfall fence at 11 and they gallop on down the track. Ooo, there’s a little dog making a bit of a play as Grace makes her way homeward, but all’s well. She’s over the white gate at 29 and she’s almost at the finish flags.

9:48am ET The next US rider has got their Badminton cross country underway:

🇺🇲 Grace Taylor and Game Changer are underway. This pair made their 5* debut at Burghley last season and jumped clear cross country but withdrew before the show jumping. There’s a whole host of XC clear form on their card and eventing is truly in Grace’s genes – her mom represented the US at the 1988 Olympics and was later team selector and chef d’equipe for USEF and her dad represented Britain at the European and World Championships. Grace is treading in their footsteps as she makes her Badminton debut – both her mom and dad competed here, plus a number of other family members – as she’s just explained to Claire Balding in her interview.

She sets out very positively, looking very confident. We pick them up at the Lake at 10. They get a great shot in, really bold, and they pick up that corner at B straight away, Grace kicks on and makes it all happen – super cross country riding. Oooo! Game Changer makes a huge leap over the open ditch in the middle of the combination at 15! Grace sits back, turns for the angled hedge at C and they cat leap that too. They come to the water at 17AB and they drop down into the water then Grace chooses to go right round the back of the rooted tree at 18 to circle back round to it – no penalties there, the fence is separately numbered, just quite a bit of time taken.

9:43am We have a new starter on course:

🇬🇧 Felicity Collins and RHS Contend OR have left the start box. They made their Badminton debut in 2022 and jumped clear across the country to finish just outside the top-20. They came back last year but an unfortunate tumble out on course meant their competition ended early. There are plenty of XC clears on their record and this is a fast combination, generally keeping time penalties to single figures.

We pick them up at Huntsman’s Close (7) and they demolish the C element – the whole fence is clipped from different sides/angles/you name it. Everyone’s fine, it just looked dramatic seeing a cross country fence collapse, but it does seem as though she’s decided to call it a day.

9:35am ET We’ve just had a look at current leader Ros Canter in the warm up as she prepares to start her round. Meanwhile, Lucy’s all the way to the Vicarage Vee and appears to be having a great first Badminton, and first 5*! They’re flying round this super challenging track. They make very light work of the Mound at 26 and are on their way home.

The overnight leader is starting her round:

🇬🇧 Rosalind Canter and Izilot DHI are with us on course now. The reigning champ and World No. 2 is here to defend her crown, this time with quirky Izilot DHI, who came out at his first 5* last season at Pau and smashed it out of the park for the win. Last season he had three wins, a second and a 4th on his card, and he’s come out this year in similar form. He’s proved he can jump clear without question around the top level, and he’s got the speed to match his jumping ability. This is an exciting one for sure – EquiRatings have them down as favorites for the win – eyes on 👀

Ros gets off to a really confident start with ‘Isaac’. He looks settled and keen to get on with his job. We pick them up at Fence 4 – the Quarry – and they make this early combination look very easy. Meanwhile, Lucy Latta – 5* debutant – has finished just 1 second over the time! A rookie combination shows us all how it’s done! What a superb performance from both horse and rider. Good for them. She gives her horse a huge pat. What a day for her! Congratulations coming in from her whole team. Meanwhile, Ros and Isaac are coming towards the Lake at 10. Isaac spooks at another fence as he gallops along the side of the lake, but Ros pushes him on. Oh no! The first part of the combination comes down – it’s a deforming fence – he saw the water at the last second and drops his back legs on it and down it comes. And then they have a run past as the B element – he spooked at the fence decoration and it took his eye off the fence. They come back round but it’s a green jump, and Ros circles round to finish up with a confidence building jump before putting her hand up. The reigning champion and overnight leader is out.

9:31am ET Luc and Viens du Mont come through the finish and look like they’d have been close to the time if it wasn’t for the problem at the Mound. We catch up with Francis at a real moment at the water at 17. Prince was tricky down the big step in but Francis takes the short route to that big tree with roots at 18. It doesn’t come off for him. Prince climbs all over it, slides off the side really, and stops. Francis puts his hand up.

🇮🇪 Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint have joined us on course. Lucy’s a one-horse rider and the pair are making their 5* debut here at Badminton. She’s got top-level competition in her blood though – her granddad competed at Badminton and Burghley and her cousin has completed Badminton four times. Another cousin, Robert Powell, won the English Grand National in 2007. They’re on a streak of 8 XC jumping clears and are pretty speedy. They’re a combination to watch for an exciting future, that’s for sure.

9:25am ET We have another new starter:

🇬🇧 Francis Whittington and DHI Purple Rain have got their Badminton cross country underway. This gorgeous horse was super impressive here last year when he ate up the track in the tough conditions, jumping clear and finishing just outside the top-20. He’s got such an extravagant action you’d be forgiven for thinking the heavy going would have taken it out of him, but ‘Prince’ truly rose to the challenge and shone. He was 19th at Burghley later in the season with another clear XC jumping round, in fact, he has just one 20 on his record in 26 FEI competitions.

Meanwhile, Luc is through the sunken road at 20 and galloping on. Francis and ‘Prince’ are at Huntsman’s Close (7). Francis holds the gelding together really well between the oxer and the first corner but then, ah! Prince doesn’t look where he’s going and they sail past the second corner. That’s a 20 for them. He’s now at the Lake at 10. They drop in and weave their way through – no problems for them there. We pick Luc back up as he has a 20 at the Mound at 26. They’re hesitant off the big step and then miss the narrow tree stump. That’s real disappointing for them, but they come round and make their way through and continue towards home.

9:21am ET We’ve just got Jonelle out on course for a minute. They’re coming towards Fence 31 with time penalties clocking up. They come into the Main Arena and jump the last. There’s time penalties for them – 10.8.

We have a new starter on course:

🇫🇷 Luc Château and Viens du Mont are underway. This gelding made his 5* debut at Pau in 2022, jumped ‘round clear inside the time and came 9th; he came here last year and truly proved his mettle in the tough conditions, finishing just outside the top-10. Burghley wasn’t such a happy hunting ground for them last fall, but that was a blip on an otherwise faultless XC record. This is a proven clear and quick combination – eyes on this one 👀

We pick up Luc at the Lake at Fence 10. They pop in and Luc really drives Viens towards the second element, but then he doesn’t have the stride he wants to C, they’re over and take the flag with them – that’ll be reviewed. On the subject of flags, Jonelle has been given 15 penalties according to the live scoreboard.

9:15am ET Jonelle’s at the combination at 15 and make it look easy. Grappa Nera has a very good look down the step at the Sustainability Bay at 17, but she drops into the water and… take the straight route. Go Jonelle! It’s a tiny bit sticky, but they’re through and on with their round.

🇬🇧 Richard Jones and Alfies Clover are up and running. Fan favorite Alfies Clover is back at Badminton for a 5th time. Richard opted to retire out on course last year due to the tricky ground conditions, in one of the displays of expert horsemanship we saw that day. He was 10th here in 2022 and 7th at Burghley. This is a very reliable XC clear horse and can be relatively speedy. They’ll be a popular combination to cross the finish line – all being well – today.

Arthur and Church’ile are nearing the end of their round, they jump the combination at 30 but then there’s a red flag in front of them. Arthur’s not best pleased, they were very close to the end, but he’s been stopped and that’s the end of their competition. Meanwhile, we have trouble at the Lake (10) for Richard and Alfies Clover. They jump in OK but then Richard seems to take a non-traditional route to the B element and it doesn’t come up for him. They run past and Richard’s hand goes up. A shame for this 5* stalwart horse.

9:12am ET And another combination’s joined us on course:

🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Grappa Nera are away. This mare made her 5* debut at Kentucky in 2021 and jumped clear with 7.6 time penalties, finishing up in 28th spot. She went to Pau the following season and won, adding just 1.2 time across the country. After sitting out most of last season, she’s back for a Badminton debut. Not so much Jonelle, who’s made 8 starts here over the last two decades, taking the title with another mare, Classic Moet, in 2018. We know Jonelle’s one quick lady across the country, and Grappa Nera’s well-suited to her rider’s speedy ways – this has the potential to be a really exciting round. Blink and you’ll miss ‘em!

We join them at Huntsman’s Close (7), Jonelle goes for the six strides through there and it comes up beautifully for them. Class riding – of course. Oh no, meanwhile Arthur’s had problems at the sunken road at 20. He comes around and weaves his way around the long route in a particularly long fashion. They continue on though and clear the rails at 21. Jonelle’s at the Lake. They’re really confident through there. Jonelle’s needing to slow Grappa Nera down – she’s so bold. Arthur’s now through the mound at 26 and is nearing the end of his round now.

9:07pm ET We have a new starter:

🇫🇷 Arthur Marx and Church’ile are out on track. This family homebred is by the same sire as William Fox-Pitt’s Badminton ride, and last year’s winner Lordships Graffalo. Arthur’s dad rode the gelding’s dam and grand-dam. They made their Badminton debut last year but an unfortunate parting of company out on cross country means they’re looking for their first completion. They were just outside the top-20 at Pau in 2022 at the gelding’s first 5*. This is a speedy pair for sure – blink and you’ll miss ‘em!

We see them go through Huntsman’s Close at 7 and it’s absolutely textbook from horse and rider. They come up to the Lake at 10 and get a good shot in, albeit tapping the top of the wall. No problems for them and Arthur punches the air as they gallop away from that tricky combination. Meanwhile, Louise and Native Spirit are coming to the end of their round. They clear the last. They’ve got 40 jumping penalties and 42.8 time.

9:04am ET Nicky and Bingo Boy rattle the clips on the big open rails at 30AB, but they stay up and they gallop on towards home. They fly the final two and cross the finish line – 9.2 time penalties for them and into 4th on the clubhouse leaderboard. Louise and Native Spirit are carrying that 20 but they look to really be together as they come through the sunken road at 20 – lovely preparation came good across the question. She growls as they fly the Vicarage Vee at 24/25 and they continue on to the Mound, which they drop down well, but then, ah! Native Spirit gallops off and they sail past the skinny at B.

9am ET Hello ENers! Harry and Away Cruising are cruising home now. They gallop into the Main Arena and over the Mars M – they’re 51 seconds over the time. What a horse this is. And he didn’t cross his tracks – so clear jumping for them. Meanwhile Nicky has flown the Vicarage Vee and moves onto that big step down. Louise and Native Spirit go the longer route at the Lake, but have a glance off the the skinny brush at C. She’d lost both her stirrups. But they’re back together now and continue on their way.

8:55 a.m. ET: I’m going to hand things off to my fellow eventing nerd, Cheg Darlington, who will bring us home with the live blog! Thanks for following along with me.

8:55 a.m. ET: Oh no! Away Cruising just gets a little bit stuck, leaving a leg at that tricky raised rail coming down the Lightsource bp Mound and Harry might have crossed his tracks getting to the long route. What a huge bummer after such a great round.

8:53 a.m. ET: Nicky has chosen to go long from the get go at the Huntsmans Close, which does add quite a few seconds but was likely the best choice for MGH Bingo Boy. Harry Meade is going to be another one close to the time if he can stay clear. He’s at the Birch Rails.

8:53 a.m. ET: 🇬🇧 Louise Harwood and Native Spirit will be next to us on course. Louise has 7 Badminton completions under her belt as she comes forward with Native Spirit for the gelding’s third 5* start, looking for his first completion.

Harry has gone straight with Away Cruising at the MARS Sustainability Bay and it pays off in the best way of the three to take this route so far. Beautifully ridden.

8:52 a.m. ET: Very good riding so far on this Badminton track, which is certainly exerting its influence but hasn’t caused me to clutch my non-existent pearls to this point. Here’s hoping the rest of the day continues as such.

8:51 a.m. ET: Harry Meade and Away Cruising are clear through the MARS Badminton Lake.

🇬🇧 Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy have left the start box. This pair were 18th here in 2019 and 20th at Burghley last year, where they jumped clear XC and added 21.6 time penalties. They started at Badminton in 2022 but were carrying a 20 on their card and withdrew after XC.

8:49 a.m. ET: There is just something spectacular about watching a horse dig deep late on course. Copper Beach switches his tail as he clears the final combination and digs in for Cosby — what a horse, man. You’ll remember this horse also went 5* many years ago with Buck Davidson, and now he’s home clear again with about 97 seconds of time.

8:48 a.m. ET: Tiana Coudray shares the story of finding Cancaras Girl on a Facebook post in Scotland. She liked the mare’s breeding but she wasn’t the fanciest horse — Tiana thought she’d make a nice junior horse, so she bought her to sell. “We had really no big expectations of her. Started producing her and she never had a huge result to make her worth big, big money so we just kept going and she just kept climbing the grades,” she said, noting she began to have some “phenomenal” results once she stepped up to 4*. “I always rated her, but we thought this is actually a really good horse. Everything is a work in progress, and her heart and her brain has got her here and — she’s a Badminton horse now, I can’t believe it!”

Cosby and Copper Beach are still strong at the Worcester Avenue Brushes close to home at question 28.

🇬🇧 Harry Meade and Away Cruising, his sole ride left after withdrawing his other two rides, are underway. This stalwart 5* campaigner was 16th here last year and has 7 5* completions under his cinch. It was the shock of the day when he had a glance-off at Burghley last year, the only 20 on his card since way back in 2017 – in fact, in 36 FEI runs he has just three XC jumping penalties and one missed flag on his record. Because of all that, he’s amongst the most reliable cross country jumpers in the field according to EquiRatings. He’s not going to be the fastest horse today, but boy is he dependable, and if you’re looking to watch real pros in action, these guys are your guys. Harry’s got 12 Badminton completions under his belt, with 6 top-20 finishes.

8:45 a.m. ET: Cosby and Copper Beach almost looked like they thought about going direct at MARS Sustainability Bay, but she opts for the long route. She’s prioritizing getting home clear as she’s well down on the time here. Kristina Hall-Jackson and CMS Google have quite a scary moment as CMS Google his the first corner and bounces out of the fallen rails. Kristina then tried to go the final corner and pops off to the left unfortunately. That will be the end of the their day — they’re both looking no worse for the wear. Georgia Bartlett has finished with Spano de Nazca.

8:43 a.m. ET: 🇬🇧 Kristina Hall-Jackson and CMS Google have got their Badminton cross country underway. Officially the best Christmas present ever, ‘Google’ was 29th here last year and 21st at Burghley. The mare’s had green mistakes out on cross country in each of her three 5* runs thus far, but there’s been potential to spare on show and that clear jumping round will come out soon for sure, hopefully today.

8:41 a.m. ET: Helen Martin is working to get Andreas home safely, and he jumps the last well to collect about a minute and a half over time, plus that aggravating 20. Spano de Nazca and Georgia have a hairy moment at the Vicarage Vee that made my heart stop, but they still clear it well.

We haven’t seen her yet, but 🇺🇲 Cosby Green and Copper Beach are with us on course now and clear through fence 12. Cosby made the trip from the US to the UK with three of her horses last year to be based with fellow Badminton competitors Tim and Jonelle Price, making her 5* debut at Pau and finishing 16th. Copper Beach is a former Buck Davidson ride, with whom he was top-10 at Kentucky in 2018. In 17 FEI starts with Cosby, the gelding’s had XC jumping penalties just twice.

8:40 a.m. ET: 🇬🇧 Helen Martin and Andreas are just showing on our screen now. This combination made their 5* debut here last year but an unfortunate tumble out on course means they’re looking for their first completion. This is a local horse and rider – when the wind’s blowing the right direction ‘Alfie’ can smell the Badminton turf. On his day, Alfie’s reasonably quick and has some solid XC clear jumping form behind him. He’s one of the older horses in the field at 18, but he sure doesn’t show any sign of slowing down as he’s reached the pinnacle of the sport.

They have a glance-off at the C element of the Lightsource bp Mound but are clear on the next attempt.

We’re also joined by 🇬🇧 Georgia Bartlett and Spano de Nazcaout on track. This combination made their debut at the level here at Badminton last season but withdrew out on course after a couple of green problems. That’s the only blip on their otherwise clear XC jumping record. They’re a speedy pair too, with time penalties, when there are any, almost always kept to single figures. Blink and you’ll miss ‘em.

8:38 a.m. ET: “I was trying very hard. She’s an amazing mare. She’s just fabulous. She always says yes. [The long route] was my choice. I absolutely knew she was very unlikely to make the time. All the way around I thought she was going so well, I thought you know what this might be my last Badminton, it would be annoying to finish with a hiccup.” — William Fox-Pitt at the finish.

8:36 a.m. ET: Tiana Coudray is still working on a stellar clear and while Cancaras Girl will be well into time — this would likely be according to Tiana’s plan to make this first experience as positive as she can — she is looking very fresh and fit coming home.

8:35 a.m. ET: I’m not crying, you’re crying.

8:33 a.m. ET: Tiana rebalances Cancaras Girl ahead of the Sunken Road and navigates this very neatly. This is a strong round for a first Badminton for this incredible mare.

8:31 a.m. ET: William’s going to be SO close as he enters the main arena. Rosie just picks up 6 seconds of time to put this pair on a 33 overnight. This could be in or very close to the lead based on how the day has gone. What. A. Ride. Please don’t leave us William.

8:30 a.m. ET: Graffenacht navigates the Worcester Avenue Brushes and the The Sound Gates. She and William have about a minute to get home and should be fairly close to the time. Tiana clears the Le Mieux Brushes very nicely.

8:28 a.m. ET: Will is home and celebrates in well-deserved fashion with about a minute of time penalties. William allows Graffenacht to find her way through the Lightsource bp Mound at fence 26. Nearly home now for this pair.

8:26 a.m. ET: William smoothly opts for the long route at the MARS Sustainability Bay, making sure to give his horse as simple of an approach in that energy-sapping circle back to the log. Will Rawling gives Ballycoog Breaker Boy some encouragement as they come toward the final handful of fences. Tiana is clear through fence 8, the Pedigree Kennel. Graffenacht is very catty at the Birch Rails and sails over the righthanded side.

8:26 a.m. ET: William schools us all through the Le Mieux Eyelash Brushes, giving “Rosie” a wonderful ride as he now heads to MARS Sustainability Bay as the next big question.

8:24 a.m. ET: William is riding economically, taking a tighter line in that Badminton Lake combination. Graffenacht should be capable of getting close to the time and this would put this pair into very good standing if they can manage the rest of the way.

🇺🇲 Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl are away. This mare made her 5* debut at Burghley last year but was eliminated on the cross country after Tiana’s air jacket went off during a mishap – and save of the day – early on course. She tried to continue but have you tried breathing in one of those things once it’s inflated?! Fingers crossed everything stays intact for them here today. Before Burghley, Tiana’s last appearance at the level was here in 2014 when she finished 25th.

8:22 a.m. ET: Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy are crawl over the brush at the Le Mieux Eyelashes but are somehow clear. And yes, it looks like Florian was pulled up and subsequently advised not to continue. I think Will’s airvest actually went off at that brush debacle; this is why a lot of these top riders choose not to wear airvests as they are a bit prone to setting off with a defensive distance or a sketchy one. William is clear at the MARS Badminton Lake.

8:20 a.m. ET: Florian Ganneval has been pulled up. They might be working on the Rolex Grand Slam Rails that Wabbit had down, which is the next fence ahead of Florian. The hold, depending on length, may be beneficial for Blue Bird de Beaufour, who was looking slightly tired at the Sunken Road. The challenge of a hold is that the horse could switch off.

[Correction] We incorrectly stated that Florian might have been pulled up due to tiredness; this was not correct as it was judged he had actually not jumped the Vicarage Vee and thus was eliminated.

🇬🇧 William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht are now out on course. This tough mare has a 2nd place at Maryland 5* under her girth and was 14th here last year when she really proved her mettle in tricky conditions. I could try and list William’s 5* form here but it’ll take us to next year’s event so suffice to say, this legend has won 5 of the 7 5*s and has 34 Badminton completions under his belt.

8:17 a.m. ET: Florian Ganneval and Blue Bird de Beaufour navigate the MARS Badminton Lake safely.

“He lived up to his name! He was incredible,” Sarah Ennis says at the finish. “He is a special cross country horse. He’s one of those typically Irish horses…as they learn and progress, they do more and more and more. They do take time to make, when he was 11 we almost gave up with him…he was amazing at Boekelo, so he obviously wanted to do it. He just can’t gallop fast enough, he just wants to go faster and faster. He’s 80 percent blood out of a Thoroughbred dam.” — Sarah Ennis says.

Jessie Phoenix finishes with 54 seconds of time and that unfortunate 11 penalties.

🇬🇧 Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy have left the start box. It’s a 5* debut for this gelding but there’s plenty of clear round form on his card at the lower levels – in fact, there’s 22 XC jumping clears on there. He can be quick on his day too – amongst the quickest in the field according to EquiRatings – blink and you’ll miss ‘em! Will finished just outside the top-20 at Luhmuhlen last season on his debut at the level.

8:15 a.m. ET: Wabbit says I SEE IT MOM as they sweep through the Sunken Road and now the Birch Rails. What a jump this Thoroughbred has. Jessie rides very boldly to the Vicarage Vee after having the setup Rolex Grand Slam Rails go awry with the pin dropped for 11 penalties.

8:14 a.m. ET: Sarah and Jackson get into time penalties, but not far — she collects just 9 seconds which is an absolute stellar round. This should put Sarah into great stead ahead of Sunday on a score of 40.0, especially considering the hefty time penalties we’ve seen accrued to this point.

8:13 a.m. ET: Sarah Ennis is getting close to home and is absolutely FULL of running with a little under a minute to get home. She’s going to be the closest to the optimum time of 11:19.

8:12 a.m. ET: Jessie chooses a slight left-to-right swoop to the corner in the water at the MARS Badminton Lake and takes the right hand flag at the C but looks to be inside them.

🇫🇷 Florian Ganneval and Blue Bird De Beaufour are underway. Amateur rider and full-time farrier, Florian’s here at Badminton for the first time. This pair had a successful 5* season last year, with a 26th place at Luhmuhlen and 17th at Pau, jumping clear across the country on both occasions. In 22 FEI starts, Blue Bird has just one non-completion on his card and one 11 penalties for activating a frangible device – other than that it’s clear all the way.

8:11 a.m. ET: Sarah and Jackson have a lovely jump over the Vicarage Vee and are also clear at the Lightsource bp Mound at 26. This is looking very quick.

8:09 a.m. ET: Sarah also takes the long route at the MARS Sustainability Bay. She’s looking to be the quickest so far with Grantstown Jackson. Jessie and Wabbit are clear through Huntsmans Close and the Pedigree Kennel at 8.

8:08 a.m. ET: Jessie, Wabbit, and his adorable ears are clear at the HorseQuest Quarry Feeders (4AB).

8:07 a.m. ET: Hats off to the grounds crew as they got that corner at Huntsmans Close rebuilt with lightning speed. Sarah Ennis has no trouble here.

Let’s go Canada! 🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Wabbit are now hopping their way ‘round the Badminton track. This full Thoroughbred is as speedy across the country as you’d expect him to be, and with three 5* XC clear rounds under his cinch, he’s got plenty of top-level experience to stand him in good stead as he makes his Badminton debut – he was 19th at Kentucky last year, and 11th at Burghley. There are 19 clear XC rounds on his record – will he make it 20 today?

8:06 a.m. ET: Ah man, Huberthus also says no at the Vicarage Vee after coming under a strong ride to the Rolex Grand Slam Rails just before, and now Bill has put his hand up. Sarah Ennis is clear at the Bloomfields Brush Buckets at fence 6 with Grantstown Jackson.

8:04 a.m. ET: I’m quite surprised at how much trouble the A element of the Ineos Grenadier Sunken Road has caused as it now prompts a runout from Huberthus AC and Bill Levett. It is a very skinny element, but I guess I just wouldn’t have anticipated the issues we’ve seen there. Here’s a look at the fence:

Photo via CrossCountryApp.

8:03 a.m. ET: Our next starters will be 🇮🇪 Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson. This guy made his 5* debut at Pau last year and finished just outside the top-20 after picking up a 20 out on cross country. It’s the only XC jumping penalty on his record since 2022 though, and he can be pretty swift on his day – the third fastest horse in the field according to EquiRatings. Blink and you’ll miss ‘em! Sarah’s got three Badminton completions under her belt and has represented Ireland at Olympic, World and European level.

Gaspard and Kan-Do 2 now take the MIM-clipped A of the MARS Badminton Lake, and he’s now made the smart decision to call it a day as the course only gets tougher from here.

8:01 a.m. ET: Woof, Gaspard and Kan-Do 2 absolutely demolish the D element of the Huntsmans Close — I think we might see a hold at the start while the fence crew rebuilds the fence. The horse and rider are fine, though they may get penalized for missing the flag there. Bill Levett and Huberthus AC take the long route at the MARS Sustainability Bay. Rosie Bradley-Hole is elated at the finish as Romantic collects 46 seconds of time with a stellar and scrappy clear round. What a GENUINE horse this one is, I love it.

8:00 a.m. ET: Rosie and Romatic are clear through the Worcester Avenue Brushes (28) and are working on getting home clear.

7:58 a.m. ET: To my eye everyone seems to be choosing the righthand side of the Agria Silver Birch Rails, which again is set a big farther back from the crest of the incline. Bill Levett has a huge jump over the Lightsource bp Log with Huberthus AC. He then leaves a stride out going out of the MARS Badminton Lake complex but the clever footwork serves this pair well here.

🇫🇷 Gaspard Maksud and Kan-Do 2 have left the start box. Kan-do 2 is one of the smallest horses in the field at 15.2 and at 10, he’s also one of the youngest. The gelding made his 5* debut alongside Gaspard at the end of last season at Pau where they jumped clear cross country but added 11 penalties for activating a frangible device, finishing 28th. This is a rider with all the flair of the French and with just one 20 on his XC jumping record, Kan-do 2 will hopefully be showing he can do this whole Badminton thang.

7:56 a.m. ET: Rosie gives Romatic a ton of verbal praise as they get through the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes clear. This hasn’t caused much trouble but it’s still a very demanding/distracting line. Rosie calls out for the long route at MARS Sustainability Bay.

7:55 a.m. ET: Romantic really responds well to the striding at the MARS Badminton Lake for Rosie. A really confident and bold ride for this pair so far. Bill Levett is out of the box and clear through fence 5.

7:53 a.m. ET: 🇦🇺 William Levett and Huberthus AC will be our next to see. Bill brought ‘Bart’ to Badminton last year but wasn’t sure about the conditions at that particularly wet and wild edition of the event for the horse’s 5* debut. He retired after a 20 out on cross country and re-routed to Luhmuhlen where they were eliminated out on course. He’s come out this season and put in three clear XC jumping rounds. Bill thinks a lot of this horse and it’ll be cool to see him put in the 5* round that Bill knows is in him – fingers crossed.

Rosie Bradley-Hole and Romantic navigated the Huntsmans Close well and are well on their way to the tougher portions of the track.

7:49 a.m. ET: Georgie and Feloupe are home about a minute, 20 seconds over time. Alice Casburn and Topspin have had a stop at the Lightsource bp Log at fence 9, just before the Badminton Lake question. Alice has now opted to retire after jumping in to school the fence. Meghan O’Donoghue unfortunately looks to have fallen from Palm Crescent at fence 20, the same place where Boyd had trouble. What a BUMMER. Palmer just dropped a shoulder a bit and pitched Meghan over the right side and she nearly hung on but gravity took its toll. She looks totally fine, but what a devastating finish for this incredible pair.

7:49 a.m. ET: 🇬🇧 Rosie Bradley-Hole and Romantic will be our next to see. Rosie completed on her Badminton debut in 2022 and comes back to the estate this year with 5* first-timer Romantic. There’s just one 20 on this mare’s record in 12 FEI finishes.

7:48 a.m. ET: Georgie is carrying 15 on her card at fence 17, the MARS Sustainability Bay. Meghan O’Donogue takes the long route at the same question.

7:46 a.m. ET: “Palmer” stands way off the massive corner in the MARS Badminton Lake but this scrappy pair makes it work and continue on to the “4*-Short” part of the course. Alice Casburn and Topspin leave a bit of a leg at the A element of the Quarry but are upright and get away with it.

7:45 a.m. ET: We’ve only seen Meghan once so far but she’s listed clear through 11. Georgie is clear with a big effort at the Vicarage Vee.

🇬🇧 Alice Casburn and Topspin are up and running. Alice is the youngest competitor here this week, riding her family’s second generation homebred, ‘Spinach’. This pair were 18th here last year, and 7th at Burghley, where they jumped clear cross country and added just 7.6 time penalties to their dressage score across the three phases. There are a couple of green 20s on their record, but they’ve got XC clear form at 5* on their card too – they were 5th at Burghley in 2022. Eyes on for a leaderboard climb today 🪜

7:44 a.m. ET: Georgie Goss takes a longer circular route at the MARS Sustainability Bay. Tom Crisp is home clear with 48 seconds of time, likely closer to that 30 second average had it not been for that save at the Sustainability Bay.

7:43 a.m. ET: Feloupe shows his heart at the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes and makes the out work despite losing the line a bit. Meghan O’Donoghue is tidily through the Huntsmans Close. Let’s go Meg!

7:41 a.m. ET: “I’m so proud of my horse. He never failed to give me his absolute all. It was so unbelievably tough out there, I can’t even explain…I had to work quite hard, which is rare on that horse. I’m gutted for him about that pin, he was fault-less. It is what it is, but it doesn’t take away from what an unbelievable horse he is.” — Bubby Upton at the finish.

Sammi Birch is home but is showing with two flag penalties on her card. I’m also catching up on our newest starters as we aren’t seeing everyone on the live feed.

🇮🇪 Georgie Goss and Feloupe are away and at MARS Badminton Lake. It’s a 5* debut for Feloupe who’s on a run of 6 clear XC jumping rounds. Georgie came here for the first time in 2008 when she was just 19, and in 2009 was the only rider to have two rides inside the time.

We’re also now joined by the other U.S. rider, 🇺🇲 Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent. Meghan and ‘Palmer’ are making their Badminton debut after successfully completing the other big B in 2022 and finishing just outside the top-25. They were 11th at Kentucky that season, adding just 6 time penalties out on cross country. Palmer showed his Thoroughbred speed in the bluegrass last spring, jumping clear and coming home just a few seconds over the time for 2.4 penalties. This guy can be quick and clear on his day, but there are a couple of blips on his jumping record at the level. Fingers crossed today’s his day.

7:39 a.m. ET: OMG, Tom almost takes a swim at the MARS Sustainability Bay and I almost put my foot in my mouth, but he makes a save aided by a very good Liberty and Glory who stopped right away and waited for her rider to upright himself. Well done!

7:39 a.m. ET: “He’s such a good jumper but he comes off the bridle and I’m like, not now there’s too many big jumps! He’s quite a little horse and he had to work very hard. I don’t feel very fit today! But when you get it done it’s such a big achievement. I was a bit slow and I hate being slow, and the ground is actually just dead — it looks fine but it’s just a bit dead and they’re not bouncing up the way you’d expect them to.” — Zara Tindall debriefs with Claire Balding at the finish, also noting that Class Affair isn’t a huge fan of crowds of people (me either, buddy, super relatable).

7:37 a.m. ET: You might remember Tom’s famous swim at the Lake last year and we’re pleased to report he’s safely made it through drily this year!

7:35 a.m. ET: Now Kylie has been stopped as the ground jury has decided she did not jump the Vicarage Vee. She’ll be kicking herself for not coming back to do the long route, which clearly did occur to her and what a tough decision to make in the moment. Ugh ugh ugh. Sammi Birch also goes long at MARS Sustainability Bay. Tom Crisp is shown clear through 11.

7:34 a.m. ET: It’s unclear of whether or not SRS Kan Do made it inside the righthand flag at the Vicarage Vee. The slow motion shows maybe not, but it’s hard to say — Kylie also appeared to question it as she hesitated a bit before continuing on.

7:32 a.m. ET: 🇬🇧 Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory are underway. Tom famously took at dive into Badminton lake last year, and thrilled the crowd with his swimming antics. He’ll be hoping to stay dry this time around. This pair were 14th at Burghley last season and top-10 in 2022. This feisty mare’s a proven leaderboard climber 🪜 At Pau in 2018, she galloped her way 54 places up the order to finish 6th.

Kylie Roddy is still invisible on the feed but is clear through 23 and Sammi Birch, who we’ve also yet to see, is clear through 11.

7:31 a.m. ET: Bubby finishes about 37 seconds over, and while they will drop down the board with those 11 penalties, you cannot discount what it took for Bubby to get to this point. You know she isn’t riding totally pain-free and just wow, it’s quite a story.

“I was sitting on a really good mare,” Felix Vogg says at the finish. “This year, it’s a totally different course and I’m really pleased with her.”

7:29 a.m. ET: We’ve not seen any of Kylie Roddy and SRS Kan Do, but they are listed as clear through fence 12.

🇦🇺 Sammi Birch and Finduss PB are up and running. This pair were 25th here in 2022 when they added just a handful of XC time in a super clear jumping round. Their last 5* run was at Burghley that year, where they were eliminated on the cross country. Sammi finished 7th on her Badminton debut in 1999.

7:27 a.m. ET: Class Affair is home clear with 46 seconds of time. Zara has had her share of grief with this horse and she has to be pretty happy with today’s performance. Bubby is clear at the Ineos Grenadier Sunken Road but does have a pin at the Agria Silver Birch Rails (21), where she had opted for the right hand side. Damn.

7:26 a.m. ET: Bubby Upton takes the long route at the MARS Sustainability Bay.

7:24 a.m. ET: Class Affair stumbles just a bit between the tree stumps at the Lightsource BP Mound but Zara sits tight and they soar over the final element. Bubby now enters the toughest part of the course after clearing the KBIS Broken Bridge. She’s now clear through the LeMieux Eyelashes, and Cola did peek a little at the water-filled ditch but there’s no issue here.

🇬🇧 Kylie Roddy and SRS Kan Do will be next to leave the start box. Kylie’s looking for her first Badminton completion here this week after retiring out on course with SRS Kan Do in 2022 and withdrawing before cross country last year due to the tricky ground conditions. This pair were 5th at Pau at the end of last season where they added just 8 XC time penalties to their score across the competition. They were 6th at Luhmuhlen in 2022, jumping clear inside the time on cross country day. This could well be one to watch 👀

7:23 a.m. ET: I love the style Cola has. He’s got a great gallop and just looks like he rides very in front of the leg — what a feeling it must be to take this one around cross country. Bubby’s clear at the MARS Badminton Lake.

7:21 a.m. ET: Cola gives the oxer at the Huntsman’s Close a bit of a rattle, but he and Bubby are clear through this influential element. Zara opts to go long at MARS Sustainability Bay.

7:20 a.m. ET: Zara uses her voice to get Class Affair in front of her leg after he peeks looking into the water. They get it done!

7:19 a.m. ET: As Zara navigates Huntsman’s Close clear, we now look to 🇬🇧 Bubby Upton and Cola, who have just got their Badminton cross country underway. Bubby’s back eventing after a serious injury last season, and we’re thrilled she’s able to be with us here today. This pair were 8th here last year, when they laid to rest the ghost of the heartbreaking run out they had at the final fence in 2022. Cola’s had no XC jumping penalties since then and when the going’s great, he’s pretty speedy, keeping time penalties to single figures. EquiRatings have him down as amongst the most reliable jumpers in the field.

7:17 a.m. ET: Felix is still working on a clear, and he’ll catch some time penalties but he’s not going to be super far off I don’t think. He’s really going for it with the toughest parts (lol) of the course done now. He finishes with about 27 seconds of time, which is telling as Felix was certainly on it most of the way around.

🇬🇧 Zara Tindall and Class Affair are with us on course now. This pairing were 15th at Kentucky last season where they jumped clear across the country and added 18 time penalties. They retired at Burghley in the fall after a 20 out on course, the gelding’s first XC jumping faults since Burghley the previous year. Will ‘Socks’ pull his socks up for his showing today? Let’s hope so.

7:15 a.m. ET: Cartania gets close to the B and long to the C of the BP Lightsource Mound, but that’s cross country riding — you ride what’s under you. India Wishart takes the frangible pin at the big oxer coming into the Huntsman’s Close with Diamond Sundance. The horse has taken a couple funny steps after getting his hind end a bit caught up in the fallen rail and India has made the decision to pull up. What a bummer for your Badminton debut, but the horse comes first and she won’t have lost much fitness this early on so she can still reroute for a spring Long format if she desires.

7:13 a.m. ET: Felix takes a gamble also at MARS Sustainability and Cartania does drop a shoulder over the log but they make it work and will be in better stead on the clock as a result. Felix is really working on a nice round. SAP Talisman is looking fit coming home, and while Sam will be disappointed with the penalties and resulting time, he’s still got a fit and confident horse coming home which is a big deal in itself.

7:11 a.m. ET: Sam Watson takes another frangible device, this time the Vicarage Vee. Super disappointing for this pair, which have been a great cross country pair to this point. Felix Vogg is clear at the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes.

🇬🇧 India Wishart and Diamond Sundance are next away. India and ‘Sunny’ are making their Badminton debut here this week. They had their first start at the level at Pau last season, where they jumped clear XC and finished up in 27th. This guy is a clear round machine with 19 consecutive XC jumping clears on their record.

7:09 a.m. ET: Sam Watson is the first to go direct at MARS Sustainability Bay and boldly goes for it with SAP Talisman. The gamble pays off.

7:09 a.m. ET: Felix and Cartania navigate Huntsman’s Close clear and very tidily.

7:08 a.m. : 🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Cartania have left the start box. This mare made her 5* debut here at Badminton last year and finished 15th with a clear round across the country – in fact, in 32 FEI competitions she’s got just a single XC jumping penalty on her card – one. That was at a 1* way back in 2018. This jumping machine is one to watch 👀 Felix is a 5* winner, topping the Luhmuhlen leaderboard in 2022 on his birthday.

7:06 a.m: SAP Talisman hits the A of the MARS Badminton Lake and will incur 11 penalties there for dropping the frangible pin.

“I was going great through the first two thirds and I started to hunt along too much and Thomas got a bit tired,” Boyd says, saying he also saw a longer distance to the A element where he had the trouble and takes full responsibility for the trouble there. Good on ya, Boyd.

7:05 a.m. ET Ah rats, Monbeg Exclusive has had another driveby at the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes. Boyd also, of note, had 60 penalties at fence 20, apologies as I had missed the second runout or perhaps he crossed his tracks coming back around.

🇮🇪 Sam Watson and SAP Talisman are underway and hoping for the luck of the Irish as they take on Badminton. Sam has three completions on his card, but it’s a first time for ‘Podge’ who made his 5* debut at Burghley last year and finished 13th. He was clear and impressively speedy that day – just one second over the time. Fingers crossed he can replicate that 5* flair here today.

7:01 a.m. ET: Thomas finishes well with Boyd and while he’ll be sore about the trouble and extra time, we’re one step closer to that historic seventh 5* finish. Meanwhile, Max Warburton tries to move up to the D Element of the Huntsmans Close and Monbeg Exclusive doesn’t answer the question, forcing a retry.

7:00 a.m. ET: “I was a bit nervous, it’s only my ninth event on Dreamer and it’s very hot, the ground’s quite sticky,” Tom Rowland says at the finish. “He’s finished really well.”

Boyd takes another long route at the Lightsource BP Mound, focusing on getting Thomas home safely. This will certainly not be the ride Boyd visualized today.

6:58 a.m. ET: Boyd is safely through the Vicarage Vee.

🇬🇧 Max Warburton and Monbeg Exclusive are out on track. Rookie combination alert! This is a former Andrew Nicolson ride, with Max taking over the reins for the 2022 season. In 8 FEI starts together, they’ve just got an 11 penalties for activating a frangible device on their card, otherwise, it’s clear XC jumping all the way.

6:57 a.m. ET: Arklow Puissance is pretty tired coming home but another one clear with 30+ seconds of time and Wills has given him a great ride today. He finishes looking great with ears pricked.

No! Boyd and Tsetserleg have come to grief at the A element of the Sunken Road, Boyd comes around for an attempt at the long route, which will take more energy away unfortunately. Thomas has not looked 100% on form today, which is attributable to many things but Boyd will be giving him a sensible ride home.

6:56 a.m. ET: Boyd is the latest to go long at MARS Sustainability Bay. Who will we see go direct here? Why is Doug Payne not here?

6:55 a.m. ET: Thomas makes a huge effort at the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes. It will be interesting to see how much Thomas has in the tank by the end with the effort he’s had to make at some of these questions, though with so many 5* events under his belt at this point he will be one of the fittest horses here in terms of his base of fitness.

6:51 a.m. ET: Tom is going to finish a clear round with Dreamliner, who’s a bit flagging but didn’t lose his jump to the finish. Terrific round with some time (about 36 seconds’ worth, which so far has been about average with two home).

Boyd really gets a left leg workout to the D element of the Huntsmans Close. I think he was clear but the ground jury will be looking to make sure Thomas’ shoulders made it through the flags.

6:49 a.m. ET: Dreamliner slithers off the sneaky bank at Lightsource BP Mound (26ABCD). With the little raised rail at the ground line of the bank I think it will be super interesting to see how horses jump down. The rail discourages horses from dropping right down, though Dreamliner jumped down more like a “normal” bank, but some may launch over that.

Tom is clear through 28 and Wills clear through 14.

🇺🇲 Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF have got their Badminton cross country underway. We haven’t seen Boyd at Badminton since 2016 and he’s looking for his first completion of the event here this week – when he achieves it, he’ll have completed at all seven of the world’s 5*s. ‘Thomas’ finished top-10 at Burghley last year where he added just 9.6 time penalties out on XC. Earlier in the season he’d had an uncharacteristic 20 at Luhmuhlen and Kentucky, so let’s hope the clear at Burghley got him back on track and we see this special 17-year-old gelding doing what he does best here today.

6:47 a.m. ET: Tom Rowland also opts to go long at the MARS Sustainability Bay. Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance is through the first combination at the HorseQuest Quarry Feeders (4AB).

6:45 a.m. ET: “All credit to the horse. If you’d have told me when I got him three or four years that he was going to come to Badminton, let alone jump around the way he did, I wouldn’t have believed you,” Tom Jackson says at the finish.

🇬🇧 Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance are our next to see. ‘Mr P’ is another former Oliver Townend ride. He was 8th at Burghley with Wills last season, where he added just 4.4 time penalties out on course. Wills’ is looking for redemption here with this gelding today after a tumble on XC last year. He’s got 2 completions under his belt with other horses in his string and a 12th place finish on his record.

6:44 a.m. ET: Dreamliner comes under a strong ride at the MARS Badminton Lake (10) to make the distances, but he’s through it without issue.

Meanwhile Caroline has pulled up after a runout at the A element of fence 20 and will come back to try another time.

6:42 a.m. ET: 14.4 time penalties added for Tom Jackson, who gives a huge fist pump at the finish and I am having all the feelings. What a tone-setter! What a ride! What a horse! Tom Rowland is clear through the Huntsman’s Close with Dreamliner. We still haven’t seen much of Caroline Powell but I’m keeping an eye on her progress on fence analysis. Caroline does pop up for us at 17, MARS Sustainability Bay, where she also opts to go long at the angled log out of the water. CBI Aldo is looking a little quiet, and this is not the part of that course where that would give you a great feeling.

6:41 a.m. ET: Tom is down on the clock as he comes to the final handful of elements. Caroline is showing through fence 13 on course.

🇬🇧 Tom Rowland and Dreamliner are also up and running. Tom’s got 3 Badminton completions from 3 starts under his belt, which should have him feeling good as he gets his round underway today. Dreamliner jumped clear inside the time ‘round Luhmuhlen with fellow Badminton competitor Oliver Townend in 2022, on the gelding’s debut at the level. He added nothing in the XC in the 4*-L at Blenheim last season with Tom and there are no XC jumping penalties on his card since 2019.

6:40 a.m. ET: Tom navigates the big drop and tree stumps at 26, and now he’s just got a handful of fences standing between him and the finish. Farndon is still galloping quite well and looks not to have taken a ton out of the bank at this point.

6:38 a.m. ET: Tom opts for the right handed upright rail, slightly bigger than its left counterpart but set with an extra stride on top of the hill. Caroline has run into trouble at Huntsmans Close, driving by the open corner.

6:37 a.m. ET: Tom opts to go the long route involving a circle to the log out of the water at MARS Sustainability Bay at 17, but it really didn’t look to take a ton of extra time and will be a worthwhile option here for many riders. Caroline Powell and CBI Aldo haven’t been shown a ton yet but are shown clear through 7.

6:36 a.m. ET: Farndon answers my question of whether or not the horses would care about jumping water vs going through it at the LeMieux Eyelash Brushes at 15, and his answer was “psh”.

6:36 a.m. ET: 🇳🇿 Caroline Powell and CBI Aldo are now out on course. CBI Aldo’s making his 5* debut here this week. In 11 FEI runs, this gelding’s only had XC jumping penalties twice. He’s reasonably speedy too. Caroline has 16 Badminton completions under her belt and a Burghley win – in 2010 with the late, great Lenamore.

Tom is getting into the meaty part of the course now, clearing the KBIS Broken Bridge easily.

6:35 a.m. ET: Tom now navigates the big water complex at 10, where the strategically placed pagodas I think will really help the riders pick up their lines. Farndon easily makes the distance to the massive corner in the water. This is a really nice round so far, quiet but flowing.

6:32 a.m. ET: It’s so interesting to watch these combinations ride early on. Tom made the Voltaire Design Huntsmans Close at 7ABCD look very doable, making use of the S turn the elements are set on to find his lines, and Farndon responds beautifully.

6:31 a.m. ET: Tom’s started off at a fairly sensible pace and is neatly through the first combination, HorseQuest Quarry Feeders at 4AB.

6:30 a.m. ET: What must it be like to be the first out of the box at any event like this? Tom will be able to gather some intel for his second ride toward the end of the day, but the conditions will be different now than they will be later. He’s quite experienced at this level, but you won’t catch me jealous of his pathfinder position.

6:29 a.m. ET: Ooooo, I’m BUZZING. Here we go with Tom Jackson and Farndon, about 20 seconds from start. Let’s get this party started!

6:27 a.m. ET: We’ve had another late withdrawal: Emma Thomas (GBR) has withdrawn Icarus. Here’s a look at the other withdrawals for today:

6:30 a.m. ET: Don’t forget, you can get a deeper look at Eric Winter’s buzzing course in both our course preview here and on CrossCountryApp here.

6:20 a.m. ET: And good morning to you, EN! Sally Spickard checking in here to get us started with today’s live blog. Cheg’s already got you well-prepared for the day ahead, and we’ll see our first pair (Tom Jackson and Farndon) in just about 10 minutes’ time. Stay tuned for more!

Trailblazing their way out of the start box and kicking off Badminton cross country are 🇬🇧 Tom Jackson and Farndon. We’re up and running! This pair were 6th at Luhmuhlen last year where they finished on their dressage. They’re a really handy combination to give us a good indication of how the track’s going to ride today. They’ll be playing sardines in the riders’ tent for a look at Tom’s round, for sure.

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

Good morning citizens of Eventing Nation! And a good morning indeed, as it’s another morning of jam-packed cross country action!

First off, if you’re located stateside, you’ll want to pour yourself a hefty cup of coffee if you’re planning to catch MARS Badminton cross country live. Especially so if you’re looking to catch leading American pair Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg — they leave the start box at 11:49am BST / 6:49am ET / 12:49pm CEST. Catch up on all our Badminton coverage and all the need-to-knows right here in our Ultimate Guide.

Next up, there’s a little thing called Tryon International on this side of the pond and there are some impressive pairs fighting for the top of the leaderboard in the 4*-L. There is no live stream, but you can results-watch here starting at 8:30am ET. The 4*-L action begins at 10:20am ET.

And finally, don’t forget to show some love to eventing as it’s aired on mainstream TV when a recap of this year’s Defender Kentucky airs on ESPN2 this Saturday and Sunday! The more viewers that tune in, the better the ratings, and then just maaaaaybe we can get some more eventing on TV someday to reach and inspire the next generation of riders.

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]

UK International Events

MARS Badminton Horse Trials (Gloucestershire, UK) [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Tickets] [Radio Badminton] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [EN’s Coverage]

European International Events

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

Links to Start Your Weekend:

Clinic Report: Eventer Monica Spencer Is All About The Set-Up

Who’s Responsible For Horse Safety? Badminton 2024 Cross Country

‘Not a $1 Horse’: Changing the Narrative of the Thoroughbred Beyond Racing

Dismantling Whitewashed History: Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw Productions to Produce Documentary Series on Black Cowboys

Connemara Wil’Ya Love Me’s Seen Waskiewicz Through All of Life’s Ups and Downs

Sponsor Corner: Who doesn’t want their horse to have a more squishable nose?? World Equestrian Brands‘ Vespucci bridles offer enhanced communication and style.

Morning Viewing: Join Sydney Steverson for her own version of a Badminton course walk! Click here!

A 5* With a 4*-S in the Middle – Riders React to Cross Country at MARS Badminton Horse Trials

Just a gigantic tree, with roots, that the horses and riders are going to jump over, off a blind turn – that’s all. Photo via CrossCountryApp.

One (very experienced) rider’s sick to his stomach (with nerves, we think, not dodgy burger or something); another’s very glad she had a trip to Badminton as a spectator last year so she’s not so stagestruck by the sheer amount of people she’ll be performing in front of; stats guy Sam Watson predicts more runouts than usual, and every rider is very, very aware that the middle of the course is very, very intense.

The leader of the pack, Ros Canter, is open-minded about what may or may not transpire when she takes her turn on Eric Winter’s track, given the relative inexperience of her horse, Izilot DHI, despite the gelding already having a 5* win under his cinch. Nothing’s a given when it comes to Badminton. But one thing is for certain – this is not a dressage competition and there is a serious amount of work to be done before anyone can even begin to dream of their Badminton completion.

Last year we were all, very Britishly, talking about the weather – the incessant rain that mucked up everything. This year, the weather’s still very much on the riders’ minds. Yes, we’ve had years (it seems) of neverending downpours which have thoroughly saturated the ground, and yes, it’s still sticky despite the fact that the rain has, in fact, relented in the past couple of weeks (huzzah!). However, it’s forecast to be in the low-20s C / high 60s into the 70s F for cross country day – temperatures we’re just not used to in Britain generally at the best of times, never mind as we come out of a very long winter.

The horses won’t have been working in that kind of heat, and it’s likely to take its toll as they gallop across the country. Add to that the potentially holding ground, and well, that’s a whole other dimension added to an already huge challenge.

Like last year, the riders will have to be smart and sensible, and totally on their game in terms of horsemanship. They did the sport proud twelve months ago on the whole, with top names pulling up when they looked to be going well, using all their feel and relationship with their horses to make the very best decision for them. This is something that is very much on the riders’ minds as they come into tomorrow’s challenge, with the majority noting that horsemanship will 100% come before competition.

I think that’s a positive note for me to end on.

Let’s get the riders’ reactions – in their own words – to the challenge ahead at the 75th Anniversary MARS Badminton Horse Trials…

If you want to see when your favorites will be heading out of the start box, you’ll find the ride times here.

We’ll be bringing you live updates from the whole of today’s cross country – eyes on EN for our live blog – as well as daily reports from each stage of the competition, and SO MUCH MORE! Keep it locked onto EN and click here for all the Badminton content you can handle As if that isn’t enough, we’ve also got loads of great IG content happening courtesy of our team on the ground too @goeventing.

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

🇬🇧 Ros CanterIzilot DHI – 25.3 – 1st

Ros Canter Izilot DHI. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Clubhouse leader Ros Canter may be sat on a 5* winner, and she may be in with a shot of retaining her Badminton title from last year (the last person to do that was Pippa Funnell in 2002/03), but she’s keeping a level head and thinking horse-first:

“We’re very open minded about tomorrow. I intend to go out the start box meaning business. We’re here to be competitive if we can, but the length of this course, the ground and everything else, would be a bit of a question mark for this horse. He’s a bit less proven, he’s less blood than Walter [Lordships Graffalo – last year’s champ] anyway. If at any point I think he’s done, we’ll be calling it a day. But up until that point, I’ll be going out, trying to knuckle down and get on with it.”

Are there any particular fences she’s got her eye on?

“The log coming out of that top water, the angled log [Fence 18, which comes after the MARS Sustainability Bay combination]. I think it’s one of those less than a split second things, whether it goes right or wrong. It’s got that big, old stump and roots on it, so it’s even more blind. But it’s big all the way around. I’m not sure there’s one combination that shouts out at me, other than that it’s Badminton and, every time I do the first course walk, I go, ‘Ooh, that’s okay,’ because each individual fence is okay. But then you start to break it down and you go, “Well, that’s a ditch, and then two later, that’s a ditch, and that’s a ditch, and then, that’s a drop, and that’s drop, and that’s a drop,’ and that’s where it starts to become the challenge.”

A lot of ditches and drops then, and that log is on quite a few of the riders’ minds.

🇬🇧 Bubby UptonCola – 27.3 – 2nd

 

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It was an emotional moment for everyone when Bubby completed her dressage test on Thursday. It’s wonderful to see her back, doing what she loves, on a horse that she loves. She’s one determined lady, that’s for sure. How does she feel about what she’ll face when she gallops out of the start box with Cola?

“I’ve only had a really brief look at it [when we spoke to her, she’s certainly walked it properly by now!] and it always makes me laugh, asking what do you think of the course – I think I said that a couple of years ago. Of course, it’s absolutely enormous and a lot to be jumped out there. But there’s no horse that I’d rather be sat on on Saturday, so I’m really excited for it.”

🇳🇿 Tim PriceVitali – 27.7 – 3rd

Tim Price and Vitali. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Tim summed things up very nicely when we asked him what he thought of the course:

“I think it’s really solid, really challenging. The time is going to be really difficult with all the various combinations, and we have to think about our lines. When you’re thinking, you’re usually slowing down a little bit. It’s big and I’m excited to have a go.”
🇺🇲 Boyd MartinTsetserleg TSF – 29 – 4th

 

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Boyd’s kinda out of his comfort zone here at Badminton. He has been here once before, in 2016, but he didn’t complete. There’s added pressure this time around: he’s going for a completion in all seven of the world’s 5*s. He’s been top-10 at all six of the top-level events he has completed, it’s just the elusive spring big B that’s eluded him… thus far. He’s in a great spot, on a great horse, who deserves a top-placing just as much as Boyd wants it. Eventing fans should all have their fingers crossed for this pair as they gallop off down the track.

Boyd seems to be feeling the nerves of tackling the unfamiliar, particularly as he’s so familiar with the 5* tracks he’s frequented over recent years:

“I’m sick to my stomach. I haven’t done this one very much – I’ve only done it once, and I didn’t finish. I’m pretty familiar with the Kentuckys and Luhmuhlens and Paus, and even Burghley – I’m quite comfortable there now. I’m going to walk it a couple more times than usual just to really get an understanding of where I want to be. It looks pretty tough to me.”

Are there any parts that are playing on his mind more than others?

“It just looks big – big jumps. And that circle, down the Vicarage Vee area [Fences 22, 23, 24 and 25] – to me that just looks relentless. It’s just tough question after tough question. I feel like if I can get through that and I’ve got a bit of horse left, I should be alright.”

🇬🇧 Emily KingValmy Biats – 29.2 – 5th

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

That tricky middle section has caught Emily’s attention on this not just proper, but proper, proper track:

“It’s a proper, proper track. I think Eric [Winter] has done an amazing job. It’s got some big questions: the loop down at the bottom [the Vicarage Vee area Boyd also noted], the pond up there [Fence 17AB MARS Sustainability Bay], and the step down [Fence 26ABCD The Lightsource bp Mound] – all of that.”

Emily’s one of the riders who really impressed last year, when she was going brilliantly, is desperate for the Badminton completion that’s eluded her thus far, but pulled ‘Val’ up on course and walked home. We couldn’t see anything untoward with the horse, and there wasn’t. Emily felt him start to feel like things were just getting a bit too tiring, due to the muddy going, and she heard him and responded accordingly. She’s thinking very much along the same lines this year, with horsemanship at the forefront of her mind:

“There’s a lot happening and I think that [the ground] is drying up, so hopefully it will make a little bit easier for [the horses]. But still, I think they’re going to be feeling the softness there, so [we need] just to look after them, and I think we’ll all have that at the forefront of our minds – that we might need to be a bit steady in places to just get them home and feeling good and safe.”

🇳🇿 Caroline PowellGreenacres Special Cavalier
30 – 7th / CBI Aldo – 35.6 – =33rd

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

There’s a wee bit of a question mark on the ground for Caroline, but overall, she’s just going to give it a darn good ride:

“I think it’s a nice course. I think there’s a lot to jump at the end, a lot that can go wrong. There’s no one piece in particular that I’m thinking, ‘Oh, that’s a bit unjumpable,’ but there’s so much happening. We’ve also got the ground, which is going to be a wee bit undecided how it’s going to ride. It is drying out all the time. I think the course is a good course, as good a course as I’ve seen for a while, and I think everything’s there in front of you to jump, you’ve just got to give it a good ride and hopefully we will do.”

🇬🇧 William Fox-PittGrafennacht – 30.6 – =8th

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

Eventing legend William Fox-Pitt walked the course with eventing king Yogi Breisner. He’s won five of the seven 5*s and has completed here at Badminton 24 times on 16 different horses – he’s been the champ twice and has graced the other two podium spots with his long, long frame on multiple occasions. He didn’t even seem to notice the jumps out there:

“I’m very excited to have been able to walk the course with Yogi Breisner – he had some good ideas about it. I think it looks good – it’s a decent track, isn’t it? I think it will be holding in parts, particularly in the second half, and I think it’ll ride well until the Lake [Fence 10ABCD] – that’s pretty damn good ground, to be honest. Round the back it’s mucky in bits, and it varies a bit, and it’s going to get harder – it’ll walk good underfoot, but it’s pudding for a long way down because it’s rained for the last six months. There’s no firmness there. It’ll be hard work – some will go well in that. It’s very different to last year, which was quite slippy and slidey, and maybe felt a bit uncomfortable, but the horses weren’t having to work so hard as maybe they’ll have to work here.”

This is William’s 20th time at the Badminton estate. What’s he learned over his two decades of competing here?

“You never know what’s going to happen. Since 1998, it’s changed quite a lot: it’s short, it’s technical, it’s high-powered, but it’s a lot less time on horseback. We were riding, in the old days, for nearly an hour and a half on cross-country day, and now we’re on for ten minutes. It’s just so different, and it’s exciting, because it’s maybe more demanding and more competitive, with trickier lines, angles, and turns, but you do need a different apparatus to do it with.”

🇬🇧 Gemma StevensChilli Knight – 31.7 – =10th

Gemma’s got a long wait ahead of her before she gets her Badminton cross country underway, which is a blessing and a curse, really. She noticed the big fences during her course walk, and the question after question. She’s under no illusions – she’s definitely at a 5*:

“I mean, Jesus, it’s Badminton. It’s serious. Down in the Vicarage area, it’s so intense – big fence after big fence, after question after question. [Eric’s] used every single bit of the ground. The second water, [Fences 17AB and 18 MARS Sustainability Bay], that is five-star ten out of ten question. I think that’s going to cause trouble and as yet, I don’t have a plan for that one fence, but I have a plan for everything else and that is straight.

That is a benefit of going near the end, although it’s a long day. It’s terrible for the nerves, but actually it is nice to learn a bit about the course. It’s really tough going out first round these five-stars when you’re just not sure how they’re gonna jump it, but listen, it’s a tough track. Probably [at] Fence Five you’re at five-star, you’re at Badminton, and it means it.”

🇬🇧 Pippa FunnellMCS Maverick – 31.9 – 12th

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

Pippa’s won this whole dang thing three times, and, as ever, has delightfully clear opinions about what’s out there on track. And she really Does. Not. Like. that tree stump. Not. A. Bit:

“It’s beautifully presented, very clever. Lots of questions all the way through, really. We’ll be glad to get through Huntsman’s Close [Fence 7ABCD] – that’s a tough ask early on. Then it all comes – The Lake [10ABCD], the Vicarage [Fences 15ABCD and then Fences 24 and 25] – it seems very intense all the way. It seems as though we’re longer out there. I think it’s a bit deceiving when you’ve been here so many times, you think you come out and you’ve got a long way to go home, but you’ve actually got longer in that Vicarage loop with plenty of drops, plenty of big drops. If I’m honest, the fence I really don’t like is that tree stump out of that water [Fence 18, which comes after the MARS Sustainability Bay combination that Ros also noted]. It’s an ugly thing, you can’t see it and it’s got the roots of the tree and I don’t like that.”

She’s sitting in a good place with her relatively inexperienced at the level MCS Maverick, who showed a whole bunch of character and then some at the First Horse Inspection eliciting a big “Wooooo” from the crowd. But he was settled and attentive in the Main Arena for his dressage, which has got to have Pippa feeling really good about getting out there on him:

“I’ve had some really good rides on him cross country. He gave me a fantastic ride at Pau [for his 5* debut, where he finished 11th] and at Bramham. But listen, this is Badminton and it’s different. He’s got all the ability to jump around: he’s got scope, he’s got gallop, he’s got all that. He’s got to concentrate on me and concentrate on what he’s got in front of him to jump.”

Pippa went for a hack/to scout out the ground. It’s a concern, particularly as she’ll be last to go:

I personally thought the ground is still a concern. I think it’s softer than we all think. It’s important that I didn’t want to override the horse at all, so I went for a lovely hack this morning and I was surprised at how wet it was, so we’ll see [what it’s like] at the end of the day.”

🇨🇭 Felix VoggCartania – 32.6 – =15th

 

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Swiss rider Felix Vogg won Luhmuhlen on his birthday in 2022. It’s not his birthday here at Badminton, but I’m really not sure that the stars aligning is a formal a prerequisite for a Swiss man to win a 5*. He’s right in line to push up the leaderboard tomorrow with his World Championships partner, Cartania, but he’s feeling like there might be two courses out there:

“[It’s] a totally different course again than last year. A lot of questions as well, especially in the middle part – it seems a bit like a small, short four-star format in the middle part. I think there’s a lot to do and will be interesting.”

🇺🇲 Cosby GreenCopper Beach – 33.7 – 18th

 

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Cosby Green’s feeling a little stagestruck at her first Badminton, but she’s in attack-mode:

“It is stunning. I cannot wait to get out there. The jumps are massive and it seems like they’re not possible, but I believe it is and I’ll just go out there and give my horse the ride he deserves and attack it. I did come [last year as a spectator], which I’m so glad I did because otherwise I would have been in shock yesterday, just seeing the people at the [First Horse Inspection]. I was really nervous just for the number of people, so I’m glad I have a little bit more expectation of what to expect on Saturday with the crowds.”

🇬🇧 Kylie RoddySRS Kan Do – 34 – 20th

Kylie Roddy and SRS Kan Do. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kylie is particularly concerned about the weather, and the ground:

“It’s not really a day look forward to here is it? [I think that depends on whether you’re riding or spectating with a glass of something fizzy, perhaps. I digress, back to Kylie.] But it is a day where the gauntlet is laid and I truly believe that the ground is going to be a massive influencing factor with the temperature. We’ve got some softer going at the moment, which could go a bit sticky. I think we’ve got about 23 degree heat [Centigrade] on Saturday. When you think about the winter that these horses have had – they’ve probably not even galloped anywhere near that heat. So there’ll be a fatigue factor that kicks in and it’ll be efficiency in the way you ride your lines. Efficient cross country riding, I’m sure will pay dividends on Saturday.”

🇬🇧 Laura CollettHester – 34.1 – 21st

 

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Laura’s a previous Badminton champion, but she’s here this year with a 5* debutant. She’s got experience on her side when it comes to formulating a plan in terms of how she’ll ride the course, and her plan for Hester is purely about having a good experience:

“I think it’s a really decent cross country track. I think it’s built beautifully. There’s not one fence in particular that stands out; I think it is from start to finish a test. The Vicarage area [Fences 15ABCD and then Fences 24 and 25] is seriously intense, and we’ve learned over the years that that really takes it out of them mentally as well as physically, so just have to bear that in mind. This this week for [Hester] is all about giving her a good experience. She has been a fantastic cross country horse, but she has lower mileage and we’ll see what happens tomorrow, but I’m looking forward to it.”

🇳🇿 Jonelle PriceGrappa Nera – 34.4 – =22nd

Jonelle Price and Grappa Nera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Jonelle’s been coming to Badminton for two decades, and won the thing in 2018 with Classic Moet. She’s in no doubt that she’s at Badminton, but she does have doubts about the ground:

“I think it’s a true five-star track – it is a true Badminton track. It’ll be interesting how much the ground proves a bit holding. Obviously with the heat – we haven’t had any hot weather this year, so I think that’s going to hit the horses quite hard. It’ll be interesting to see how they come home and it’s big all the way home. I think you’ll need some sensible riding and the accumulation effect: I think it’s really important you keep them confident, and jumping healthily all the way around.”

🇬🇧 Felicity CollinsRHS Contend OR – 34.5 – 24th

Felicity’s plan is to have one, but really, it’s all about what happens when you get out there:

“[Eric’s] built a very good track, but there’s a lot of areas where you can have a problem and I think my main feeling from it is, it’s about knowing your horse, knowing what you’re sat on. I think you’ve just got to ride your lines and prepare your horse in the right way, and then they’ve got to decide where they want to take off from. I don’t think it’s going to be the easiest course to plan for – I think it’s going to be a bit about getting out there and seeing seeing what you’ve got, really.”

Will she watch what’s going on to help with that?

“I am someone who does like to watch when you’ve got the opportunity to, so I’ll try and pick some good jumping horses, some nice scopey horses, and some good riders to watch and hopefully get some confidence, and they’ll make it look really easy.”

And is she as focused on the ground as many other riders are? For sure:

“We won’t know until a few horses have gone round. I don’t think it’s as much as last year – I don’t think anything could be this like that. But yes, obviously it’s gonna be a hotter day and it’s whether the ground is a bit tacky as it’s drying. And you’ve got hot weather and maybe tired horses because of that.”

🇬🇧 Tom RowlandDreamliner – 34.9 – 29th / KND Steel Pulse – 36.9 – 47th

 

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‘Dermot’ be nimble, Dreamer be quick, horseys jump over.. the jumps. I clearly didn’t think this through when I set out down this path. Anyhoo… Tom’s hoping his two rides – ‘Dermot’ AKA HND Steel Pulse, and ‘Dreamer’, clearly Dreamliner – will be nimble enough to make those very, very tight acute turns he’s spotted out there:

“I think it’s quite different in the sense that obviously, it’s very big and brave and you’ve got big jumps – a lot of big jumps – but I think you will also need quite a nimble horse, maybe more so than in recent years. [There are] a lot more skinnies and some really very, very tight acute turns. Obviously we do have that, but there seems to be even more of an emphasis on this – you really want that nimble horse.”

🇬🇧 Alice CasburnTopspin – 35.3 – 30th

Alice Casburn and Topspin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Youngest rider in the field for three years running, Alice is here with second generation homebred Topspin, and has got two top-20 placings under her belt, as well as two top-10s at Burghley. She’s walked the course with her mom, who owns, bred and used to ride Topspin. Alice can really go out there in the confidence that her horse has been here, seen that, and knows what he’s doing by now:

“If I have a stop before the unfinished bridge [Fence 13], I probably won’t carry on because [Topspin] should really know what he’s doing now. But then when you hit that – I said to mum, ‘I’ve got brain ache!’. And that’s what mum always says about five-stars; she said, ‘If you put one of those questions in a four-star, it’d probably be alright,’ – but it’s the accumulation – big fence after big fence. I’d like to think he knows what he’s doing by now, but with horses, that’s the excitement of it! You never know.”

🇺🇲 Alexandra KnowlesMorswood – 35.6 – =33rd

Alexandra Knowles and Morswood. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Allie and ‘Ginge’ are here from the States for their first trip to Badminton. How does she think he’ll take to the British track?

“[Morswood’s] a cross country machine. It doesn’t look easy, by any means, but I would rather do it on this horse than any other horse, so I’m looking forward to it. It’s a beautiful track, a lot of different questions and we’ll see how we get on.”

🇦🇺 Sammi BirchFinduss PB – 36.2 – =39th

There’s no place Sammi’d rather be than sat on Finduss PB (rhyme intended) – on Saturday at Badminton:

“Certainly doesn’t look [like anything’s] unjumpable, but I think the ground’s going to play a big factor. And it’s the cumulative effect really, isn’t it, at Badminton? so that’s exciting. And to be honest, I don’t want to be sat on anything else on Saturday. Fingers crossed, I can do him justice.”

🇬🇧 Kristina Hall-JacksonCMS Google – 36.2 – =39th

Kristina is really, really hoping for the clear round that’s eluded her thus far at her three attempts at the British 5*s – this is her second Badminton. She knows Google’s got it in her, it’s just a case of getting all their ducks in a row on the day:

“It’s a very big, bold track. Compared to last year, it’s a lot tougher out there and I’m just hoping it suits us. She’s a big galloping machine, and hopefully, it’s not going to be a dressage competition.”

🇬🇧 Wills OakdenA Class Cooley – 36.2 – =39th / Arklow Puissance – 39.4 – 61st

 

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Wills will be making his way out of the start box twice on cross country day. What’s his plan for his guys?

“I think you just take it each time as it comes and just see what’s there, and take each ride as it comes. You just hope that they come out the start box feeling as strong as I think they are. At the end of the day, if they’re not, you bring them home safe and well and look after them, and go again.”

🇬🇧 Alexander BraggQuindiva – 37.6 – 51st

Alex Bragg and Quindiva. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex is one of the riders that pulled up on course last year, showing great horsemanship when he felt his mare wasn’t enjoying the ground. What does he think of the going this time around?

“I know [we’ve had] the sunshine – it looks fantastic on top, but it is going to be tacky in places, really tacky. I’ve got a late draw, whether that’s good or bad I find out tomorrow, but I shall be picking different bits of ground and watching how the horses are traveling and jumping out of certain areas as well.”

But is he more optimistic than last year? Yes:

“It’s a really good course actually. I like the fact, when you come over from the intense area at the back [The Vicarage Vee area], you come up that draw uphill back towards the lake, which is always heavy going. It’s a nice finish from there and it’s much shorter than it has been. I think that’s great for the horses and we should see lots more finishes than last year coming over that MARS fence in the main arena, and hopefully lots more happy people that can jump on the Sunday.”

🇬🇧 Tom CrispLiberty and Glory – 38 – =54th

Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom is famous for taking a long drink from the lake last year, following it up with a couple of widths of doggy paddle. He’s obviously hoping for a drier round this time, but what does he think of the course?

“It felt a bit stronger this year, but you can often walk a course and it walks difficult but it rides quite well, and then it can be the other way around. The the ground is going to add a dynamic to it. Hopefully people will have learned from last year – we might get a few fitter horses. I think [Eric’s] been quite fair to finish the last minute and a half on the flat, so the tired horses won’t look so bad coming over the finish line. It does feel more technical, but it is a real strong patch in the middle. I think it starts early on and doesn’t really let up, does it? Until you’re on the way home.”

🇬🇧 Rosie Bradley-HoleRomantic – 38 – =54th

 

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Rosie is succinct in what she thinks of the course – basically big:

“It looks big. It looks like an Eric course, but [Romantic’s] very honest and genuine so if I can get my lines, she will try her best for me.”

🇬🇧 Helen BatesCarpe Diem – 38.5 – 58th

Helen is much preferring the weather this year to last. She’s also noticed that the course is big. And Badminton:

“I think there’s enough to do. There’s quite a lot of combinations. I don’t think there’s going to be that much let up. And it’s big – it’s Badminton – but I’m really excited to get out there. Definitely since Wednesday, it’s drying out all the time. The sun is really, really helping. I think there’ll still be a couple of soft patches but it’s definitely better than when it’s raining.”

🇮🇪 Sam WatsonSAP Talisman – 39.1 – 60th

Sam Watson and SAP Talisman. Photo by Tilly Berendt

Hoping for the luck of the Irish, stats geek Sam thinks the course is brilliant. And of course he can’t help himself, and makes a prediction or two:

“It’s brilliant. There’s more chance of runouts than Eric normally builds, but it has all his normal features of slowing you down – using terrain, using every lump and bump. I’ve never known the Vicarage Vee – and there’s pretty much two of them – to be Fence 25 on course, and it’s pretty much a direct run home. I don’t think the Vicarage Vee has ever been so close to the finish line or ever will be again, with the route he’s done. It’s going to be different to see how horses are at that stage because the ground is dead. There’s a lot of jumping to do, a lot of concentration and they’re going to have to hold it all the way to the end.”

He’s found himself a little down the order going into the cross country, but he’s on a great guy for the job and is sure to be one of the speedier combinations, based on past form. He has another prediction for us, some life advice, and a whole lotta love for this awesome sport:

“I’d love to have been on a 35 – it gives you an extra four penalties, an extra 10 seconds. But look, we’re there. I think it’s going to be a very disruptive and very influential Saturday, and that’s what the sport should be, and that’s, of course what this horse should thrive on. It keeps me sharp as a rider and keeps me feeling alive about how great this sport is. It’s tough, it’s challenging. I’m out of my comfort zone 100%, but that’s a good place to be.”

And there you have it, straight from the horses’ mouths, so to speak.
Go eventing!

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!

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A Soggy Start to the Yanmar America Tryon International Three-Day Event

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

Have you ever heard that it’s good luck if it rains on your wedding day? Well, I hope that’s also true for horse trials because boy did it rain during the Tryon jog. But this morning, all of the competitors in the CCI4* emerged from their hiding places, dried out, and ready to ride. After two full days of dressage, we can now say we have the official line up at the end of phase one.

Leading the way is Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake, owned by Mollie Hoff and Sherrie Martin on a score of 28.6. She’s closely followed by Phillip Dutton & Denim and Will Faudree & Mama’s Magic Way, who are currently tied for second place with a score of 28.9.

Caroline and HSH Blake (Tolan R – Doughiska Lass, by Kannan) are quickly becoming household names, having earned major achievements including fifth in last month’s Cosequin Lexington 4*-S and winning the Pan American Games as part of the USA’s silver-medal-winning team in 2023. Fun fact: “Blake” hasn’t placed below the top five in an FEI event since 2022. It’s looking as though Tryon will be no different.

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

“Honestly, he’s just a unicorn. I’m pretty spoiled with him. He really does make me look good. Even though he’s only nine, he’s pretty trained now at the level because he did his first 4* last year. So he’s pretty trained. He’s just a pleasure to ride and I keep telling everyone he’ll only get better and better the stronger he is.”

Fresh off the top placing at Kentucky’s 4*-S, which was used as a set-up for this Long format by several pairs, Caroline’s got her eye on one goal in particular: building on her individual gold and team silver at the Pan American Games last fall with a selection to the U.S. Olympic squad. This weekend marks the final selection trial designated by US Equestrian for pairs hoping to catch the selectors’ eyes for a team spot (Badminton is also considered a selection trial by USEF).

“Since Kentucky, Blake had a really quiet week of hacking and no pressure, just enjoying trot sets and stuff like that. And then this week, we just did a lot of cavaletti work and again, a lot of hacking since we’ve been here,” Caroline said. “I put his dressage saddle on for the first time last night for ring familiarization. He was perfect. And then I actually told everyone that he felt the best he’s ever felt yesterday. So I was really excited going in today.”

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

Will Faudree and Mama’s Magic Way (Mighty Magic – Straightaway, by Star Regent xx), owned by Jennifer Mosing, are having one heck of a comeback weekend. After withdrawing before cross country at the Defender Kentucky Three Day Event last weekend, Will and “Mason” rerouted to Tryon to give the 4*-L a go.

“Obviously, I didn’t have a good test at Kentucky and opted to reroute here, he’s 13. He’s done five five stars. He doesn’t need to go and prove that he can jump around at that level. And you know, it’s an Olympic year and you put that pressure on yourself and you want to go in and do it, but it’s hard,” Will said. “It was a hard decision and I’m so grateful to his owner, Jennifer Mosing, who supported me in that decision. And obviously, I was gutted. I was disappointed at Kentucky, but I just needed to put aside my personal wants, and do the right thing. For me, the right thing was to say, ‘Look, we know we can go out and jump around this level. We’ve done it a lot. At the end of the day, he’s only done one 4*-L in his life. And he’s done five five stars. So let’s just take the pressure back and take the intensity of the competition away a little bit.’”

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

While Will is competing here in the states, he still has one eye on the action happening overseas at the MARS Badminton Horse Trials. “I read an article that Pippa Funnell put out because she did not have a great test on Majas Hope. She made a comment, ‘You know what, he doesn’t need the experience to go run around this and why do I want to run when I’m not on my competitive mark?’ And, you know, I think that that’s very admirable and I don’t at all consider myself in the same league as Pippa Funnell by any stretch of imagination,” Will said. “But that was awesome to read because I felt she kind of took the words out of my mouth when she said that. You know, I love my horses. We put a lot into it. And sometimes it’s not your weekend.”

Today, Mason and Will were on their A-game, receiving a handful of 8s throughout their test. As for Will, he says that his biggest accomplishment was riding the test exactly like he rides at home. “My focus was to just practice just doing this like we’re at home and he really stayed with me. Every time he started to get a little bit amped up, I had to put my best Meryl Streep acting on because I just had to keep telling him that we’re just practicing. I had to become an actor because we do this work all the time and sometimes the excitement and the desire to be so good, gets the best of us. And you know, he’s a horse that is so incredibly talented and he loves it and he wants to do it.”

Phillip Dutton and Denim. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Phillip Dutton and Denim (Dinken – Celia II, by Ibisco xx), owned by Ann Jones, Ann Lapides, Caroline Moran, and Neill Sites, are currently dueling it out with Will for second place. Called “Denny” at home, the 9-year-old Holsteiner is a somewhat recent addition to Phillip’s string, as Phillip took over the ride on the bay gelding from Netherland’s Merel Blom-Hulsman in 2022. However, it seems to be all smooth sailing in Camp Dutton at the end of phase one.

“Denim was very professional in his dressage test. There’s a lot of areas that we can improve on– I’m really excited about his future,” Phillip said.

At the end of the day yesterday, Phillip was leading the 4*-L with Possante (Namelus R – Wendelien, by Otangelo), owned by The Possante Group. Tryon marks their fourth FEI event together for this new pair, although Phillip took over the horse from Great Britain’s Emily King in 2023. According to Phillip, “Possante is a big impressive horse on the flat. Once we get a bit more experience together he’s going to be very competitive.”

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

Slotting into fourth place after dressage, ahead of Phillip’s new placing with Possante after day two, are Liz Halliday with The Monster Partnership / Ocala Horse Properties’ Cooley Quicksilver (Womanizer – Kylemore Crystal, by Greggan Diamond) on a score of 29.2. This is the first Long format “Monster” has done since Maryland in 2022, when Liz retired on cross country. After a light 2023, the 13-year-old Irish gelding has been on top form in 2024 so far and stands a strong shot to contend for the title at Tryon.

Leslie Law and Lady Chatterley. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

In the 4*-S division, Leslie Law and Lady Chatterley (Connor 48 – Jucy, by Mytens xx), owned by the rider and Jackie and Steve Brown, are leading the way on a score of 31 even, after a rail knocked Tamie Smith and Kynan (Envoy – Danieta, by Zirroco Blue) out of first place. After retiring at the Cosequin Lexington 4*-S after a refusal on cross country, they rerouted to Tryon. They’re already off to a great start, beating out their Kentucky dressage score by 0.6 points. A very experienced pair, Leslie and “Fleur” have been competing at the 4* level since 2021, with some very impressive results, never placing lower than tenth. Chances look good that they’ll end the weekend with a podium finish.

“She really did a very good solid [dressage] test where she didn’t make any mistakes and you know, just a good solid test. She jumped a really good round. I’m very, very happy with that. She rode very well,” Leslie said.

Now, all riders have turned their eyes towards tomorrow and are on their final walks of the cross country course. The rain has somewhat complicated the footing in certain areas, which is sure to be a concern for everyone leaving the startbox. We’ll keep our fingers crossed for drier weather overnight. The Tryon 4*-L is proving to be a unique track best described by words typically used for a 4*-S.

“They made it way more twisty and turny than I expected. You double back on yourself quite a lot, which I feel like is unusual for a 4*-L. So I think it’s gonna be pretty hard on the horses. For a four long it rides like a four short, which is quite exhausting, mentally and physically,” Caroline said.

The rider with the most experience of our group of leaders, Phillip’s biggest concern at the moment is the footing. “The course looks pretty wet at the moment, hopefully we will have some drying weather between now and cross country start time. I think the beginning of the course is very inviting. There’s some difficult combinations spread throughout the course and the undulating terrain adds an element of difficulty to the test.”

You can take a look at the 4*-L track, newly designed by Helen West this year, who’s taken over for previous designer Capt. Mark Phillips, on CrossCountryApp here. Capt. Phillips is still involved with the course this year, assisting Helen.

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

Maybe Will’s trademark Jolly Roger skull-and-cross bones will lend him some luck as he sets sail through the soggy course tomorrow morning. “I’m looking forward to tomorrow. We’ve got some work to do, but he’s fit and he’s ready,” Will said. “There’s a lot of terrain questions, a lot of uphill stuff and it’s very intense at minute three to five. And then you have a little bit of a– it’s not really a breather– but you have a minute where you just have two fences, you have a corner but it’s flagged very generously, and then a half coffin, which is tough. It’s a chevron to a ditch. It does take some riding, but then it gets quite intense again. So yeah, lots to do. Lots to think about. It wheels pretty tight, so I think the time is going to be tough.”

“I say I’m excited and looking forward to it. But if you ask me that at probably nine o’clock tonight, I’ll be wondering, ‘Why do I still do this?’ Will laughed. “No, we’re ready for the challenge and looking forward to it.”

Tomorrow the 4*-S will break ground on the cross country first, with a start time of 8:30 a.m. EST. The 4*-L will leave the start box at 10:20 a.m. EST. Keep an eye on EN for another report with all the action from the day tomorrow evening.

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

Don’t Miss the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event on ESPN This Weekend

We look forward to the annual recap of the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event, and this year the “mainstream” highlight show has moved from NBC/Peacock to ESPN properties. This weekend, you’ll have a couple chances to watch the show:

Saturday, May 11, you can catch the show on ESPN2 (check your local listings or use the ESPN app) at 10 a.m. ET. If you miss that one, you can watch another showing on Sunday, May 12 at 4 p.m. ET on ESPNNEWS.

To catch up on all of our coverage from Kentucky this year, click here.

Friday Afternoon at Badminton: Ros Retains Lead Amid Bum-Cam Reign of Terror

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

As we predicted in the lunch break report, this morning’s new leaders, 2023 Pau champions Ros Canter and Izilot DHI will be the leaders of the pack as we head into tomorrow’s cross-country – but our compact afternoon double of sessions still saw some changes at the business end of the MARS Badminton leaderboard, which ends the day with just six combinations having broken into the 20s.

Chief among those new additions was British-based Kiwi Caroline Powell, who put a 30 on the board and took first-phase seventh place with the eleven-year-old Greenacres Special Cavalier – a minuscule departure from the sub-30s scores the partnership has previously recorded at five-star, but a score that, in this harsh-marking environment, still represented a test to celebrate.

“I’m so, so pleased with her,” beams Caroline, who finished sixth at Maryland last year and fifth at Pau the year prior with ‘Cavvy’. “She just keeps getting better and better.”

Though Cavvy is still a very young five-star horse – young enough that you could feasibly think of her as being suitable for not just Paris, but also, very easily, Los Angeles – she’s already remarkably accomplished, and each outing that Caroline has given her has provided her with tools to understand how to eke the very best out of her horse. Among those? The knowledge that a buzz of excitement in the air helps to bring out the very best in her work.

Caroline has two horses here – she also rides debutant CBI Aldo, who sits in equal 33rd overnight on a 35.6 – which gave her a 50/50 chance that she’d get the draw she wanted to allow Cavvy, her competitive, rather than foundational ride, to really show what she could do.

“I really wanted to ride her in the afternoon dressage so that she could get in with the atmosphere — and it’s a great atmosphere in there,” she says. “I was chuffed to bits with her — she didn’t really miss a beat, and she was brilliant.”

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

Knowing your horse this well does sometimes mean taking the flip side with a smile, though: “When she’s in the boards, she does [focus in an atmospher]; outside, the atmosphere sort of gets to her a bit and she’s a wee bit wild,” Caroline laughs. “It’s quite entertaining — but then she goes into the arena and she knows she’s got to perform. She loves crowds, so it’s nice to be able to get her to the stage where we can put her into that situation and push the buttons in the right way. She’s only, hopefully, going to get better and better.”

This will be a second crack at Badminton for Cavvy, who completed here last year in the memorably tough conditions but had an educational run, rather than a competitive one: she picked up 40 penalties on course in a rare green moment, but Caroline opted to continue on and allow her to gain the experience and the fitness that comes with a completion. That tactic looked to have paid dividends when the pair ran at Maryland in the autumn, and now, former Burghley champion Caroline is looking forward to getting out there again with a year’s worth of physical and mental growth to work with.

“I think it’s a nice course,” she says. “I think there’s a lot to jump at the end, a lot that can go wrong. There’s no one piece in particular that I’m sort of thinking ‘oh, that’s a bit unjumpable’, but, you know, there’s so much happening, and we’ve also got the ground, which is going to be a wee bit undecided how it’s going to ride. It’s drying out all the time. I think the course is a good course — as good a course as I’ve seen for a while, and I think everything’s there in front of you to jump, you’ve just got to give it a good ride. Hopefully we do.”

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Gemma Stevens and her 2021 Bicton pop-up CCI5* winner Chilli Knight will sit in equal tenth place, tied with Max Warburton and Monbeg Exclusive, going into cross-country as the gelding makes his long-awaited comeback from an injury he picked up on that victorious run – and Gemma, for her part, rode out of the ring beaming from ear to ear. Whether that’s because of her horse’s return, his excellent performance, which earned them a 31.7, or because it’s finally stopped raining in the UK, we’re not sure – but either way, we can confirm she’s very definitely delighted to be here, even if the scores this week at Badminton are a little, well, lacklustre.

“I mean, my God, they’re grumpy judges aren’t they?” she laughs. “But honestly, that little horse, he was exactly the same in the ring as he is out here [in the warm-up]. He goes in 100% with me, every step of the way — apart from one jog in the walk! He couldn’t have done any more than what he did today.”

These first-phase successes mean even more, she explains, because the son of 2015 winner Chilli Morning isn’t a natural dressage horse.

“He is what he is. He’s not Valegro; he’s not London 52; he’s not a big mover, but he is so well trained and he’s so obedient, so I was chuffed to bits,” she says.

Even sweeter is the reward after nearly three years waiting and working for it.

“It’s been a really long, like, massive long road to here,” she says. “We actually got him in from the field from having a whole year off this time last year, with this in mind. He’s literally worked a long, slow process from then to now, doing all sorts of different things to get him fit in a really long and slow and thorough way, to have him as strong in his body but as fit and lean as possible. It’s no stone unturned.”

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

But, Gemma explains, there’s plenty of ways to very nearly throw a spanner in the works: “When I fell out of the lorry door on Tuesday when I got here, I was like ‘I’ve managed to get the horse here in one piece, and now I’ve fallen!’ Like, please don’t break yourself now, it’s been a whole year!”

Gemma, who’s previously finished on the podium here with the late Arctic Soul, will have a long day ahead of her tomorrow: she’s one of the last batch of riders to go, and will have to wait until 3.34 p.m. to start her campaign on Eric Winter’s track.

“[Being able to see how it’s riding] is a benefit of going near the end, although it’s a long day, and it’s terrible for the nerves,” she says. “But actually, it is nice to learn a bit about the course. It’s really tough going out first round these five-stars when you’re just not sure how they’re going to jump it, and it’s a tough track. At fence five you know you’re at Badminton, and it means it.”

And once she’s out on course?

“I’m going to let the handbrake off,” she grins. “He’s had the handbrake come since he’s been back, and he’ll be very happy about that coming off!”

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

Though she didn’t quite break into the top ten, Pippa Funnell was delighted with her 2023 Bramham winner MCS Maverick, who’s still a relatively new ride and an inexperienced, tricky, young horse. After the disappointment of her test with the much more experienced Majas Hope yesterday, which saw her score a 40.8 for first-phase 63rd, it was a welcome tonic to post a much more positive 31.9 for overnight twelfth.

“I mean, I have to be delighted because I tell you what, we’ve had a real, real difficult time trying to get him out of the stables and up here, and I think that the vet inspection really [set him off],” she says, referring back to Wednesday’s horse inspection, in which the gelding spooked and reared so spectacularly that he nearly went over.

Today, to ease his mind and give him some extra support, she enlisted the help of hunt horse Albert and rider Zoe, who escorted Pippa and Maverick from the stables, to the warm-up, and then into the arena, and back out and back to the stables again afterwards.

“I think people underestimate – it’s very easy for the public just to see the horses here [at the ring], but really there’s one thing that makes Badminton very different from any other event,” says Pippa. “That’s that the stables, behind those arches into the main courtyard, are absolutely ‘backstage’, and it’s really quite relaxed for the horses. But when they come into the park through that gate, it’s like walking onto the main stage every time. He got quite anxious in the trot-up; I think he was just surprised, because he came under the arch and clocked all these people, and he’s not used to it. You can’t prepare for Badminton; until you get here, you never know what they’re going to do — and they are very, very fit. The main thing is, in a little bit of nervousness, is try and hold their hand and figure out the best way through. You have to stay with them, you know, and keep them on side, and he was really onside in the arena.”

“It’s no secret that he’s tricky in that phase,” she continues, reflecting on the test. “He’s just a horse who’s pumped with adrenaline, and so I was very pleased. Obviously there was a blip in the shoulder-in, and after the rein back he struck off wrong, but otherwise, I was really delighted.”

There were a couple of other horses who might feasibly have been expected to have cracked the top ten, including Tom Jackson‘s 2022 Burghley runner-up Capels Hollow Drift — but he, like so many other horses today, took fright in the ring at a new camera, which has been placed close to A, bafflingly over-shrouded in dressing, and serves no purpose other than to provide livestream viewers with a wide angle, ground-level shot of each horse’s backside reversing at speed towards it while performing the reinback. A view that, if we’re totally honest, reminds wholly and completely of Bridget Jones sliding down a fireman’s pole, directly onto her cameraman – and so, in short, probably a shot that’s not worth giving poor Tom Jackson a 34.4 and 22nd place overnight, nor frightening countless other horses through the two days of dressage. Nor, indeed, pissing off sweet, jolly, perennially optimistic Alex Bragg, who pointed out how tricky it made several of the test’s bigger asks for the horses: “There’s a little camera in the corner – don’t put one there again, guys!  Whoever organised the media team, it was a terrible, terrible decision with horses. It’s so awkward walking towards that, and also having your first canter towards it.”

The people have spoken: no more strange, fun-house style bum-shots for 2025, maybe.

Now, we’re looking ahead to tomorrow’s cross-country challenge, which will begin at 11.30 a.m. with Tom Jackson pathfinding aboard Farndon, who’s 17th overnight on a 33. There’s been a lot of chat about how the ground might look tomorrow: at the start of the week, it was soft and wet, and as William Fox-Pitt put it, ‘pudding all the way down’ even if it were to harden, because of six months of nearly non-stop rainfall in the UK. Since then, it’s been hot with a light breeze, which is swiftly cooking the top layer of the mud, at least – but what that means for tomorrow is anyone’s guess. It’s very likely we’ll see variation across the course, with some sloppier areas, some quicker areas, and quite a lot of sticky, holding ground – but it’s also very likely that with tomorrow’s hot forecast, we’ll also see it change throughout the day. While early horses will benefit from virgin ground, which will be a great boon if it does get holding or churned up later on, some ground analytics done onsite by Mark Lucey also suggest that the conditions could improve as the day unfolds, with faster going later in the afternoon. In short? The quality of the going is as up in the air as the entire competition currently appears to be, with 20 penalties covering the top 64 riders, out of a total of 65 currently set to start tomorrow.

The eagle-eyed among you will note that that number has diminished somewhat – and it’s thanks to a couple of key withdrawals. Harry Meade won’t be the first rider since the early ’70s to ride three horses around Badminton’s cross-country in one year, following the withdrawal before dressage of his third ride, Red Kite, and of his first ride, Cavalier Crystal, who was sitting in 44th place on a 36.7. We’ve also seen the withdrawal of many people’s favourite for the win this week, David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed, who were 19th on a 33.9. David spoke to Horse&Hound, sharing the news that Galileo is fine, but not quite himself this week.

Keep it locked on EN, as we’ll be bringing you the riders’ thoughts on, and reactions to, Eric Winter’s seriously tough track – and in the meantime, you can relive all of today’s action through Cheg’s live updates, and give the course a walk with our in-depth preview. We’ll be back soon with plenty more from Badminton – until then, Go Eventing!

The top ten at the close of dressage at the 2024 MARS Badminton Horse Trials.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Tickets] [Radio Badminton] [Livestream] [Cross Country Course] [Form Guide] [Ultimate Guide] [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!