Classic Eventing Nation

Wednesday News & Notes

It’s Badminton week, baby! Hot on the heels of the best weekend all year in the bluegrass, the next big event beckons. We’re barely over our eventing hangovers left behind by all the awesomeness that was Kentucky but we’re getting back out there and will be here for all of it, bringing you every scrap of action from the 75th Anniversary MARS Badminton Horse Trials. Buckle up and settle in for the ride ENers.

Here’s what’s comin’ at ya over the next few days:

Wednesday (today) – 4:30pm BST / 11:30am ET / 5:30pm CEST – First Horse Inspection

🌟 We’ll be bringing you news from the catwalk jog strip as well as photos of the bold and beautiful horses and riders as they get their Badminton underway. Will Chinch show up to dish out some bespoke awards or has he been too busy at the Met Gala? Time will tell…

Thursday and Friday – 9am BST / 4am ET / 5am CEST – Dressage

🌟 I’ll be live blogging ‘til my fingers can live blog no more to bring you all the info on the entries and every step they take as they dance their way ‘round the Main Arena.
🌟 We’ll have a full round-up report of each day’s sport with you just as soon as Tilly can type it.

Satur-yay! – 11:30am BST / 6:30am ET / 12:30pm CEST – Cross Country Day

🌟 Check out what the riders will be facing as they leave the start box in our Badminton Course Walk with Eric Winter.
🌟 We’ll be wrangling together the riders’ thoughts on said course in due time – watch out for our Riders’ React report coming on Saturday morning.
🌟 The live blog will be hotting up with all the cross country action so you won’t have to miss a second of The. Best. Day.
🌟 Full report incoming at the end of the day.

Sunday – 8:30am BST / 3:30am ET / 9:30am CEST – Final Horse Inspection – 11:30am BST / 6:30am ET / 12:30pm CEST – Show Jumping Part One – 2:55pm BST / 9:55am ET / 3:55pm CEST – Show Jumping Finale (Top 20)

🌟 We’ll have all the news from the jog strip before the big finale.
🌟 I’ll be back with the live blog for the top 20 – it’s going to be butt clenching stuff, that’s for sure!
🌟 Tilly will wrap up the whole dang thing in her final round-up report.

Eyes on EN for all the Badminton content you can handle.

And that’s not all…

You can follow along with all the form in EN’s epic form guide – coming soon! – and keep up-to-date with all things Badminton in our Ultimate Guide.

If you’re planning on watching all of the action live and on demand, you’ll need a Badminton TV subscription – find out how it works here.

Bring it on, and go eventing!

PS – I can report that, at time of writing, it is not raining at Badminton.

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

U.S. Weekend Preview

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] [Live Stream]

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]

Wednesday News and Reading

5* tickets alert! Box offices are open on both sides of the pond – get your Burghley tickets here and your Maryland tickets here.

Whether you’re in the market for an eventing prospect or just love to drool over top quality horses, feast your eyes on these future stars. The Marbach DSP Eventing Auction will take place on Saturday, May 11, and will be run in a hybrid format, so you can either bid and follow along online or head to Marbach and try your dream young horse before you buy. You can view the full catalog here and find out more information about the auction, and check out Tilly’s top picks here. Happy drooling/bidding!

The USEA Intercollegiate Eventing Championship happened at Stable View last week. This cool competition saw 18 schools duke it out, with Auburn University ultimately taking the top spot. Find out what went down and hear from the winning team in this write-up.

Patience is a virtue with sensitive horses. I read this blog with interest, given that I’m in a similar situation with my new(ish) horse. My gut instinct has been to give my guy some time, and it’s cool to know I’m on the right track, and that there’s light at the end of the tunnel. Even if you’re not dealing with a difficult horsey situation, this is well worth a read for the insights into equine behavior and horsemanship.

And finally, a word from Phelps. That’s right, Mia Farley’s Kentucky and Maryland ride, the guy that cost just $1. How much? A single dollar. Really? Yep. He’s worth his weight in gold though, and, according to this take on the whole $1 situation – in Phelps’ own words – he’d really rather we stopped going on about the fact he cost $1.

Video Break

The crowds will be hoping for a lil’ spill, but the riders’ll be riding by the seat of their pants not to take a dive – the Badminton lake has seen its fair share of action over the years, not least this awesome display of sportsmanship from Tom Crisp at last year’s event.

Here’s Nicola Wilson walking us through the direct route of this year’s offering:

Video Break: Journey to the Top with Ros Canter

Go behind the curtain with World Champion and 5* victor Ros Canter, who’s tackling Badminton this year with Izilot DHI. In this documentary from LeMieux, Ros goes back to the beginning, telling the tale of how she became the world class event rider she currently is. Spoiler alert: Ros feels nerves and fear just like the rest of us, and she’s put her heart and soul into her career which certainly has more highs to come.

Enjoy, and Go Eventing!

Back to Badminton: Bubby Upton Defies the Odds, Again

Bubby Upton and Cola III. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For U.S. readers, the name Bubby Upton may not be as familiar as others, but in her native UK, she is already – at the tender age of 25 – a household name. A Junior and Young Rider medallist, she is also a two-time winner of the National U25 Championship. Bubby’s name is not only synonymous with success; she is also well known for her grit and determination, having broken her back not once, but twice, and made a spectacular comeback on both occasions.

That first break – of eight vertebrae and a collar bone – was in Summer 2021, but Bubby was back in the saddle – and winning – just a month later. The second break, which came last August, was altogether more serious, leaving Bubby’s spine – and her career – hanging by a thread. Yet once again, she has defied the odds, and is on the entry list for Badminton this weekend, just 9 months after she was told she may never ride again.

We are not here to talk about her injuries though. Much has been written about her fall in August, the surgery that followed and the intensive rehabilitation programme that has allowed her to reach this point. Now though, Bubby is looking to the future, though she is keen to reiterate just how lucky she has been: “It is always at the forefront of my brain how lucky I am to have survived and come out the other side,” she says emphatically, and our conversation is littered with variations on this point, an indicator not only of Bubby’s incredible work ethic, but the reasoning behind it, too.

This ability to focus on the future, rather than to dwell on her misfortune (not that she ever refers to it as such), has provided Bubby with the drive to continue, even when the smallest of tasks seemed nigh on impossible: “Every step, trying to get my right foot forward and then my left was such a challenge, so going into the place that I had previously felt so strong and so fit [much of Bubby’s rehab took place at the Injured Jockey’s Fund (IJF) gym, Peter O’ Sullevan House, the same place she trained at before her accident] was tough. That was one of the few times I felt deflated and demoralised. But the next day I went straight back in, and focussed on recovery and that helped reaffirm how lucky I was and made me positive again.”

Similarly, as soon as her surgeon gave her the go ahead to get back on board, Bubby and her team were already tentatively starting to plan for the season to come: “The rough plan, right back from when my surgeon told me I could ride again [in November] was to do my first competition at Burnham Market. As soon as the surgeon told me I could ride again, I was already thinking – when can I compete again? Ash Wallace [head of strength and conditioning at Team GB] said that Burnham at the end of April would be a realistic target, so obviously we are a little ahead of schedule!” That is quite the understatement – at the time of writing, Bubby has just completed a very successful run at Burnham Market, marking not her first but her fourth competition this season, including two top ten International placings at Kronenberg. Little wonder then, that Bubby’s name features on the entry list for Badminton.

Bubby Upton and Cola, Badminton 2022. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Speaking to Bubby just a few days after Kronenberg, where she took both the win in the CCI3*-S as well as the runner up spot in the 4* aboard Cola – I wonder if, perhaps even in the earlier days of her recovery, Bubby dared to envisage an altogether more ambitious plan for the 2024 season?

“Obviously when I got back in the saddle, it [Badminton] was not on my mind at all because I was almost having to learn to ride again, and it was just the sheer joy of being back on board, and working with my horses again. That was enough for me. But then as each week went by, I got a bit stronger, and was able to do the things I hadn’t been able to do – things like rising trot and sitting in canter – and before I knew it I was back doing some dressage and jumping for the first time. Badminton was still not the definitive goal – except maybe subconsciously, in the back of my mind. But then I would be lying if I said that I wasn’t pressing with every ounce of my body to get back there: it’s the absolute pinnacle of the sport, and everyone’s dream to ride around there. So, I guess that while it wasn’t necessarily ‘the plan,’ it was certainly one of the biggest driving forces when I was pushing hard in the gym, rather than just to settle for the easy road, and just been happy to be back competing.”

Unsurprising then, that Bubby has managed to defy the odds once again – as previously indicated she is well ahead of the early targets she and her team had set. Instead of the mooted Burnham Market, she actually started her season a whole month earlier, at Poplar Park. “I knew if I could push the plan forward, then maybe I could give myself a chance of being ready for Badminton. Week by week it seemed that my riding was getting better, and I was more and more comfortable being back in the saddle. Then before I knew it, I was ready for Poplar Park, and I actually entered Badminton while I was out in Kronenberg (20-24th March).”

However, that is not to say that she will definitely be leaving the start box in May, for as she is quick to point out, “I’m not one that wants to go, just to have a canter round. That is not my mindset, not how I operate.” One only need look at Bubby’s 5* results to date to understand what she means by this. Fiercely competitive, she already has an impressive record at the level, with a slew of top 10 placings, including 8th place at Badminton last year. Indeed, the entry was not a forgone conclusion, hence the eleventh hour entry. “It was very much down to how I performed in Kronenberg – did I still have it?” she laughs. As it turns out, yes, she definitely does! “It was just the most incredible week – in some ways it felt like I was riding better than ever, while I am still a bit rusty in others. But I definitely felt like I still had that instinctiveness, as well as the love for what I do, and the hunger for success. That has never ever wavered.”

I suspect that those close to Bubby may not have been surprised to hear that she had somewhat different plans driving her recovery than those they had prescribed – even if they were initially alarmed! “When I told my mum, I was actually having a conversation with Katie Dutton, my head girl about it [Badminton]. I said ‘I still want to go to Badminton with Cola,’ and my mum was very much like, “ Oooh, don’t you think we should just see how we go, even if we just got to Bramham instead?’” Understandable caution from a loving parent who has just witnessed their child survive an horrendous fall, but Bubby remained undeterred – “She quickly realised I wasn’t going to change it as my goal- ” and it would seem that that goal is about to become reality, with Cola and Bubby’s names firmly on that start list.

Still, as she intimates, her the level of expectation that she has for herself remains as high as ever, and her running at Badminton relies upon how confident she is in her riding in the weeks preceding the event. “I am not going to go unless I feel like I am 110% ready in my new circumstances.” Such pragmatism is typical of Bubby, who seems wise beyond her years – hardly surprising given all she has been through. Happily, it seems that she is already passing the ‘readiness’ tests that she has set herself – as she says, Kronenberg was intended as a key indicator as to whether or not she was on track for the Badminton challenge, and two top ten placings surely proved that to be the case.“ I wanted to use it [Kronenberg] to see if I could cope with things like big drop fences, and all of the things that I haven’t done since having had half of my spine made of metal. All of the little things – my reactions, as well as seeing if I still had that bravery and hunger for success. Cantering round an event like Poplar Park is a totally different ballgame to running for the win around a 4* track. It is fair to say that I have missed that feeling more than words can describe, so to feel that buzz again was just so special.”

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

While the love of the sport has clearly not waned at all since her accident, there are of course, other things to consider now too – namely Bubby’s physical fitness which although much improved, looks altogether different to how it did pre-accident – something that she is the first to acknowledge. “How I cope physically – in terms of the pain threshold – is a big indicator for me now, too.”

Although she is reluctant to go into too much detail regarding the daily struggles she still faces in terms of the residual pain from her accident and the resulting injuries – “there’s pain 24/7, but it’s a very small price to pay, given the severity of the break,” – she is very frank about the day to day sacrifices she is prepared to take in order to make the Badminton dream become reality.

“I am having to back off in so many different areas at the moment. As a team, we have sat down and targeted Badminton, so now anything that doesn’t help lead there is not a priority. That is really hard for me, though. I am someone who has always felt that if there is time in the day, I will do something, but I just don’t have the physical capacity to do everything anymore. We have had to restructure the way we do things now because everything we do has an impact on my back, and therefore the pain that I have to manage. So I guess we just have to be a bit more practical, and keep asking – is this going to help towards the end goal, or not? And if the answer is no, then we have to prioritise the things that are. It’s not going to be forever, but if we are to make Badminton – a goal that is in itself defying the odds – a feasible option, then prioritising that is something that we are going to have to do at the moment.”

Of course, reducing her day to day activity on the yard isn’t the only change that Bubby is having to make; she may be back in the saddle, but the rehabilitation continues, and is in itself is gruelling enough, “It’s very turbulent week on week in terms of how my body feels, and we have to react to that on a day to day basis, regarding how much pressure we can put on in the gym. Sometimes we have to back off and stay in the pool, other times we can load a little harder. But I have physio three times a week to complement the rehab, which is five days a week – whether that be hydrotherapy, or cardio, or just mobility work. There is a lot of it, but it’s fine – there was always a lot of strength work but now it’s for a whole different reason.”

Bubby Upton and Cannavaro. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Anyone that follows Bubby on Instagram will see how hard she is working, for she often shares clips of the work that she is putting in behind the scenes, work that would put the most physically fit among us to shame! All of this, plus the prospect of another operation in November mean that though she may be back in the saddle, and already making another extraordinary comeback, the road to recovery still stretches out before her.

“I have another surgery, to remove the top and bottom layers of the metal structure that I have in my spine. They think that they will leave the middle section, although that isn’t confirmed yet – I have another scan in July, and a decision will be made from there as to how much of the metal work can be removed. My surgeon is apprehensive about removing the middle element of the metal structure because there is a worry that without them, my spine may collapse,” she explains, unflinchingly.

It is remarkable – and testament to her incredible inner strength – that Bubby is able to be so matter of fact about the life changing impact that her accident has had – and continues to have – on her day to day life, but one gets the impression that her gratitude to be back doing the thing that she loves overrides any of long lasting impact that her injuries have had. Indeed, she continues to be optimistic about what the future – and the planned surgery – may hold. “At the moment, there are a lot of restrictions created by the metal work, so by reducing it, that will massively help, so I am really looking forward to that!”

Moving away from her own preparations for ‘the big B,’ her love for Cola – the horse she was 8th with at Badminton with last year – is palpable: “he had an amazing run in Kronenberg, and he feels on fantastic form.” Their partnership has a long – and successful one.

Cola arrived on her yard in 2016, and together they have come up the levels together, as Bubby explains: “He was my young rider horse in 2018 and 2019. Throughout his career he has been a horse that has continuously amazed me – every time he steps up he seems to take it in his stride. He is a hilarious character – he definitely knows that he is the King of the yard! He is a horse that I owe so much to, he has made my dreams come true, in ways that I never thought possible. We bought him as a horse to do Juniors and Young Riders on, and yet he has gone on to take me around my first Badminton and Burghley. Hopefully we will make many more memories together too. I adore every single horse on my yard, but he is extra special; we have been through so much together.”

It is understandable then, that it is Cola that Bubby has chosen to make her to return to Badminton on. I seems that he is somewhat like an old pair of slippers, and a horse that she knows inside out -and he her – as Bubby confirms: “Every time I get on him, particularly for the cross country, I just feel totally at ease. I know that he will try his absolute heart out for me, and it is up to me to do him justice, because I know that he will give me his all every single time.”

Bubby will undoubtedly ‘do him justice;’ her results so far this season are testament to the fact that she has lost none of her talent, and despite all that she has been through, she remains as fiercely competitive as ever. “I don’t think I will ever lose the perfectionist that is inside of me – I’ve had that since before I can remember. That will never go, no matter what I do – I always want to be the best, so even now, I am hungry for success, and even more determined than ever.”

Her accident has also imbued her with a renewed sense of perspective, an awareness that can only come from such an incident: “When I have has a bad day, and it feels pretty rubbish, I have a much better perspective. Before, I would have spent so long beating myself up about the tiniest of mistakes and dwelling on it. Now, after what I have gone through, I allow myself to analyse it, learn from it, and then move on because I know that in the bigger picture, it is not the end of the world.”

Again, I am struck by Bubby’s prudence – and can’t help but feel that the adversity she has faced have only made her even more of a force to be reckoned with. Some might interpret this that she has a ‘point to prove,’ but to assume that would be to misinterpret the ambition that drives Bubby – and the incredible passion for her horses that lies beneath it all.

Now that Badminton is just around the corner, does Bubby have any specific goals in mind – given that ‘a canter round,’ is, as we have established, not in her remit? “I’m not really a one for putting a number or a placing on things – I feel that takes care of itself. I can’t control what anyone else does either. For me, I just want him to jump really well, and I control what I can – take care to ensure I give him every chance possible, dot every ‘i’ and cross every ‘t’- then hopefully the result will take care of itself.” Remember what I said about a wisdom beyond her years?! A top 20 result would not be out of the question then, I suggest? “Hopefully not, no,” she smiles, and if anyone is deserving of that, it is Bubby. To reach 5* takes years of hard work, setbacks and resilience and as this tenacious young lady has demonstrated she is well versed in all of these things, and has the necessary talent to go with them, too.

As for the future, Bubby is already considering who she might take to Burghley, and it seems she cannot wait to start to incorporate her young horses back into her daily schedule once Badminton is ticked off the list. Amongst them is It’s Cooley Time, who the eagle eyed amongst you will have spotted as the winner of the CCI3*-S in Kronenberg, and the runner up at Burnham Market.

“I think the absolute world of him. He’s taken a lot of time, because he was incredibly sharp as a young horse, but he seems to have really matured and developed in the last couple of years.” The tentative plan for him then, is Blenheim 8/9 year old class, Bubby also cryptically reveals that she has a “very exciting new horse – watch this space with him!” A good result at Badminton won’t see her resting on her laurels, that’s for sure: it seems she is keen to make up for lost time!

Happily, Bubby’s accident has not led to any added nerves: if anything, the thrill of competing – especially at the big events – has increased tenfold: “It has a totally different feel to it now. Going to Kronenberg, I felt like a kid going to my fist International again. That excitement within has been reignited all over again! Even entering Badminton is beyond belief – let alone if I am actually able to drive in those gates and leave the start box.”

Again, Bubby’s gratitude is tangible – not just that she is back out competing, and at the very highest level – but also for those around her who have helped her get to this point.

“It’s been such a huge team effort to get to this point. It simply would never have been possible without my surgeon, without the support of the British Eventing Support Trust (BEST), the Injured Jockey’s Fund, my incredible family: some of the very few people who saw the reality of the situation and saw me at my lowest. To be in this position really does feel too good to be true.”

Typical of Bubby to be so modest – there is no doubt that all those people and organisations helped her along the way, but what of her own strength of character and incredible resolve – she alone has put the work in and physically made it happen, I remind her. “Yes, but also without the opportunity to have this road to recover on, I wouldn’t have been able to do that work to get here, so I really do count my lucky stars every day and every single morning that I wake up, I am super grateful,” she says, with obvious emotion.

Whether it is the luck of the stars or the courage within her – or perhaps a bit of both – one thing is for certain: Bubby Upton is back, and better than ever. Broken bones, what of them?! Badminton, watch out. Bubby and Cola are coming for you, and I can’t wait to see it.

Bubby Upton and Cola III. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

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!

The MARS Badminton Horse Trials: Website | Box Office | Entries | Timetable | Course Preview | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

Rolex Grand Slam Contender Oliver Townend Withdraws from Badminton

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Libby Law.

For the third time, World Number One Oliver Townend has made it to the final hurdle of the coveted Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing, which has only ever been won by two riders, and for the third time, his quest has ended in disappointment. Just a week and a half after taking the Kentucky title with nine-year-old Cooley Rosalent, and following on from a decisive victory in last year’s Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials with the seasoned warhorse Ballaghmor Class, Oliver has announced this afternoon that he will not contest this week’s MARS Badminton Horse Trials, at which he was one of the hot favourites to take the win with his Burghley winner, who has finished in the top five multiple times at the Gloucestershire fixture. Oliver had already withdrawn his other two entrants, Cooley Rosalent – who instead went to Kentucky – and Tregilder.

The decision comes after a notable withdrawal before the dressage for the 17-year-old gelding from the CCI4*-S at Burnham Market, where Oliver historically runs his horses to time after withdrawing them before cross-country at their first four-star outing at Thoresby (or Belton, as it was previously). This, it appears, came as the result of a poorly-timed abscess that has derailed the three-time five-star winner’s preparation.

“Absolutely gutted to withdraw Ballaghmor Class from this week’s Badminton Horse Trials,” writes Oliver in a statement on his social media. “He had [an] abscess earlier in the season and consequently missed a couple of runs and gallops. This morning he went for his final gallop and with the 11&1/2 [minute] cross country course combined with the possible soft ground we don’t feel he’s at his normal 5* fitness right now. This is the first time in his career he’s missed a 5* and with the Rolex Grand Slam being at stake (for the 3rd time for me!) and Thomas’s record with 10 top-5 placings at 5*, 4 of which from Badminton including twice 2nd place, and his 3 wins at Burghley and Kentucky, we really hoped he would finally get the Badminton trophy he so badly deserves.”

To ‘Thomas’s’ legion of fans, Oliver offers some reassurance: “He’s fit and well, and knowing his huge heart he’d give us his all, but it’s simply not in his best interest to run this week and his welfare is our top priority,” he continues. “Thomas will be rerouted to plan B but for now we’d like to give a huge thanks to his owners, our sponsors and our team who are all equally gutted but support us to make this call to look after our superstar.”

This week’s MARS Badminton Horse Trials will see 71 combinations battle for the crown, following today’s last-minute withdrawal of Laura Collett’s Bling, too.

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!

The MARS Badminton Horse Trials: Website | Box Office | Entries | Timetable | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

Modified Match To Be Introduced at 2024 Woodside Spring Horse Trials

Nadia Vogt and Castle Larchfield Purdy. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

After the first competition at Modified was held at The Horse Park at Woodside in California in 2023, the level will be under an even bigger spotlight with the Modified Match that will be offered at the 2024 Woodside Spring Horse Trials that will take place from May 24-26.

The Modified Match will bring additional prestige, as well as prize money, to the level that is making a positive difference on the development of event horses and riders.

“The Modified is a really important level because it allows horse-and-rider combinations to make a more gradual transition from the lower to the upper levels of the sport in a much more predictable and safer way,” said Steve Roon, Executive Director of The Horse Park at Woodside.

The Modified Match will offer Horse and Rider divisions. Dressage will take place on Friday, May 24, in a large dressage ring with two judges—something that would typically be seen at championships or FEI levels. Cross-country will be on Saturday morning, May 25, and then show jumping will conclude the level later that night in conjunction with the Modified Match Dinner next to the Laughing Monk Arena. In addition to FEI-style ribbons and prizes, there will be prize money that starts at $1,000 per division with an additional $100 per rider added to make up the total amount. (There will also be “regular” Modified competition offered at the Woodside Spring Horse Trials.)

“For The Horse Park, we feel that the level is important enough that it should be highlighted in a special way during our May horse trials and doing it late in the afternoon as our signature show jumping class as we’re also having an arena-side reception to really enhance the spectator experience for both spectators and riders as well,” Roon said.

After approval of what would become eventing’s seventh recognized level by the USEA Board of Governors in 2016, the first Modified competitions with jumps at the height of 3 feet 5 inches were held in 2017, attracting a total of 28 starters. The number of Modified starters increased tenfold to 321 in 2018 and was 1,555 in 2022 when the level celebrated its five-year anniversary.

“Historically, the gap between Training (3 feet 3 inches) and Prelim (3 feet 7 inches) was significant and caused issues for horse-and-rider combinations as they tried to leap that gap,” Roon said. “The other great thing about Modified is that it’s a level that’s approachable for a lot more members of the sport.”
Four eventing venues in California now offer Modified, with The Horse Park at Woodside introducing the level at the 2023 Woodside Summer Horse Trials. Nadia Vogt and Castle Larchfield Purdy (Karistos x Hallo Purdy) won, a stepping stone for a new partnership at the time made up of a 17-year-old rider that had previously competed up to Training and a 21-year-old horse that had represented Puerto Rico at two Olympics with Lauren Billys Shady.

“The cross-country was great,” Vogt said after the victory on her dressage score of 29.5. “I’ve never done Prelim, but I thought it was a very good step-up for Prelim. I like that it followed the Preliminary track, and the course rode really nicely. There were a lot of open spots to gallop. The jumps were really nice, big, and bold.”

Vogt’s observations were what the team at The Horse Park at Woodside had in mind when tasking Bert Wood to design and build a Modified cross-country course.
“It rode beautifully; people said it looked ominous, but then afterward they came off satisfied and had a great sense of accomplishment because it rode well and was so aligned with the Preliminary course that it was a good test to get them ready for that,” said Victoria Klein, who serves on the Board of Governors of The Horse Park at Woodside.

After winning Woodside’s inaugural Modified in what was their second event together, Vogt and “Purdy” did their first FEI competitions at the one-star level that complements Modified to conclude their first season together. They have moved up to Preliminary in 2024, a testament to the role the Modified level plays in the progression through eventing’s levels. With the eventing community’s support, the Modified and one-star levels have become a significant part of the vision for the sport at The Horse Park at Woodside.

“Building the Modified course was only possible through the donations of many of our riders,” Klein said. “I enjoy seeing the many jump plaques that acknowledge their commitment to our sport.”

Entries for the Woodside Spring Horse Trials close TODAY, May 7. In addition, The Horse Park will also host the Woodside Summer Horse Trials from August 9-11 and the Woodside Fall International with FEI levels offered from October 4-6. For more information, visit the Woodside website here.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

 

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It’s here! It’s Badminton week! I am still so jetlagged from Kentucky but I could do a little wee with the excitement of it all! Today, the historic stone stables at the world’s first five-star officially open for their equine residents to move in and I, too, am heading over to sunny Gloucestershire to set my boots on that hallowed turf, ready for a busy week reporting for EN. We’ve got so much content coming your way: before any of the reporting gets started, we’ve got a packed form guide, At-A-Glance visual round-ups of the field, an Ultimate Guide packed with all the information you need, an embarrassingly enormous course preview, and peeks back into the annals of history, too. I can’t wait to tell you all the stories that unfold this week – and if you see me out and about at the event, be sure to say hi! I might make you pose with Chinch for a photo, so prepare yourself.

Events Opening Today: Valinor Farm H.T.Loudoun Hunt Pony Club Summer H.T., Round Top H.T.Stable View Summer H.T.Midsouth Pony Club H.T.Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T.

Events Closing Today: USEA MDHT YEH/NEH QualifierFlora Lea Spring H.T.Willow Draw Charity ShowWoodside Spring H.T.Spring Coconino Horse TrialsVirginia Horse Center Eventing

Tuesday News & Notes from Around the World:

Meghan O’Donoghue is one of the US representatives lining up at Badminton this week, and her debut at this special event has been a long time coming and seriously well-earned. COTH caught up with her to find out more about her journey to the top, and her partnership with ex-racehorse Palm Crescent, ahead of their week of a lifetime in sunny (? maybe?) England. Read the full story here.

We might be heading into one of the best weeks of the year, but we’re still not over the one we just wrapped. If you’re also missing Kentucky, you definitely don’t want to miss the latest episode of the US Eventing Podcast, which sees interim host Rosie Russell sit down for a DMC (that’s a deep, meaningful chat, natch) with newly-minted National Champ Lauren Nicholson. Give it a listen here. Bug 4 Prez.

On the hunt for a fun, horsey job? Ecogold is looking for an Equestrian Sales and Marketing Assistant – and they want someone who’s really passionate about equestrian sport. This sounds like a great entry-level role, and while they’re based in Montreal, they’ll consider remote work for the right person. I’d be willing to be that there’s probably some travel to shows involved with this, and I think you’ll get to meet and work alongside some really cool people, so definitely chuck your hat in the ring if you’re looking for a role!

Hey, breeders and bloodline aficionados, listen up, because this is important: the Marbach DSP Eventers Auction, which will take place on Saturday, has just added a really, really cool lot – the very last frozen straw from the legendary Heraldik. The late Thoroughbred stallion is, arguably, the most influential sire in top-level eventing, and over the last number of years, we’ve seen huge demand for his lines, with several sons fighting for the title of heir apparent. But there’s nothing quite like the real deal, and I’d love to see an EN reader with an eye for matchmaking get their hands on this – I’m already imagining following the story from sperm to superstar, which is the kind of sentence I really can’t say in polite, non-horsey company, but it does thrill me nonetheless. Here’s a little glimpse at how cool Heraldik is, from Marbach:

“The thoroughbred sire of the century from the Birkhof Stud has influenced German and world horse breeding with his offspring like no other. Heraldik, by Caramel xx, born in Slovakia in 1982, was successful in show jumping up to 1.50m level after a short stint on the racetrack. He started his breeding career with the Casper family at the Birkhof stud. Due to his extraordinary charisma, he had many fans right from the beginning and was also widely used beyond the borders of Baden-Württemberg. He has more than rewarded the breeders trust in his hereditary power. While the foals and youngsters were stunning types and great movers, the first “Heraldiks” under saddle were really impressive.

Among his many successful offspring, the Olympic champions Butts Abraxxas (Ingrid Klimke) and Butts Leon (Andreas Dibowski) as well as the individual European champion FBW Halunke (Michael Jung) stand out in eventing. Other 4* and 5* horses by Heraldik xx include Butts Avedon (Andreas Dibowski), TSF Karascada (Kai Steffen Maier), Happy Times (Shane Rose/AUS), Tabasco (Marylin Little/USA), Hamilton (Josefa Sommer/GER), Harry Belfonte (Thierry van Reine/NED), Hilton (Patrizia Attinger/AUT) and Henri Z (Ralf Kooremans/BEL). A total of six of his offspring jumped at 1.60m level, including the licensed Herald (Markus Beerbaum/GER, Eric Lamaze/CAN) and Hoyo de Monterey (Stein Endresen). In the dressage arena there were four Heraldik’s xx at Grand Prix level, the most successful being H-Ekwador, which took part in the Olympic and World Equestrian Games several times under Katarzyna Milczarek. Last but not least, Stan the Man xx’s son LaBiostetique Sam FBW must be mentioned. Michael Jung’s double Olympic champion was bred from a dam by Heraldik xx! No other thoroughbred sire in recent breeding history has produced so many championship horses. Heraldik xx was ranked in the top ten of the WBFSH world rankings for more than ten years, including top spot five times!”

Phew. What a boy. If you’re interested in registering for the auction, and want to see what else is up for grabs, head over to my wishlist.

Joe Meyer and Harbin. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Sponsor Corner: Joe Meyer’s Harbin has officially proved himself as a 5* horse! The Defender Kentucky Three Day Event was the gray OTTB’s first time moving up to the level. After Sunday’s show jumping phase, he earned a very impressive 14th place. Sally caught up with Joe to discuss Harbin’s past, present, and future. Coverage sponsored by Kentucky Performance Products.

Watch This:

Badminton Grassroots competitors Evie and Donut have made their final preparations and headed to Gloucestershire – here’s how they got those last boxes ticked:

Weekend Winners: Stable View, Texas Rose, Skyline, Waredaca, & Windridge

I’m not sure about the rest of you, but I’m certainly not ready to jump into another work week. Super grateful for this edition of Weekend Winners to help me enjoy the weekend recap, social highlights, and horse-show hangover. This weekend was filled with activity – a multitude of events running, the USEA Interscholastic/Intercollegiate Eventing Championships (catch up on the USEA’s coverage here!), and even some cute puppy rescue (as shared by photographer JJ Sillman).

Congrats to all on a successful weekend! Shout out to all of these winners, with a special shout out to the winner of our Unofficial Low Score Award, Brittney Caflisch and Benmore Westonhouse Boy, who scored a 19.2 in the Open Novice at Texas Rose.

Stable View Local Charities H.T. + USEA Interscholastic/Intercollegiate Eventing Championships (Aiken, SC) [Website][Scoring]

Advanced Dressage: Emily Hamel and Corvett (32.6)
Advanced/Intermediate: Maddie Hale and Cinzano 87 (36.0)
Open Intermediate: Hayden Wathen and Contestor (31.6)
Open Preliminary: Madison Temkin and Fernhill Bertus (29.2)
Preliminary Rider: Ashley Dodds and Lowland (31.4)
Modified Rider: Jillian Newman and Curraghgraigue freeman (25.5)
Open Modified: Cole Horn and The Wellerman (29.3)
Open Training: Natasha Quirk and First Class (26.4)
Training Rider A: Sally Davis and MFF Manhattan Affair (39.8)
Training Rider B: Rose Schild and Acording to Morgan (33.3)
Training Rider C: Callie Snow and Botshabelo MVH Z (29.3)
Novice Rider A: Abby Buenting and Calvin (29.4)
Novice Rider B: Suzanne Hillhouse and Severance Pay (31.4)
Novice Rider C: Emma Suess and On Point (32.2)
Novice Rider D: Alyson Roy and Fire for Effect (29.4)
Novice Rider E: Olivia Martinez and Super Cooper (31.9)
Open Novice A: Lara Roberts and Fernhill Show Biz (21.1)
Open Novice B: Kimmy Cecere and Brooklyn (26.9)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Katie Mendes and McCreary (24.1)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Jack Brennan and Paladin (32.8)
Beginner Novice Rider C: Isabella Henry and Fangio (31.9)
Open Beginner Novice A: Sophie Miller and Bon Fleur (27.8)
Open Beginner Novice B: Jillian Newman and Sunhill Rover (24.4)
Starter A: Kimmy Cecere and Seal The Deal (32.8)
Starter B: Georgia Ranson and Brambleridge Capability Brown (28.3)
Starter C: Sophia Brady-Owen and Overlay (37.7)
Starter D: Madeline Brechtel and Fernhill Sinatra (23.0)

Texas Rose Horse Park H.T. (Tyler, TX) [Website][Scoring]

Intermediate/Preliminary: Eva Hemb and Lexington Hall’s Bentley (57.0)
Open Preliminary: Kate Bell and FE Velvet Black (30.7)
Modified Rider: Casey Locklear and FLS Major Bounce (37.5)
Open Modified: Lauren Lambert and FE Alfonso Z (31.0)
Junior Training Rider: Ava Staton and Lamondale Graciana (33.8)
Open Training: Anna Pierce and Dreamweaver (33.5)
Senior Training Rider: Elle Snyder and Oakland Quality (33.6)
Junior Novice Rider A: Sophia Street and Classic’s Mojah (30.9)
Junior Novice Rider B: Hanna Enderlin and SF Sassafras (32.3)
Novice Horse: Alexis Lind and Elles Bay (29.5)
Open Novice: Brittney Caflisch and Benmore Westonhouse Boy (19.2)
Senior Novice Rider: Mary Hon and Deanfield Disney (35.1)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider A: Willow Lane and Bonne Fete (27.2)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider B: Stella Youngbauer and Wingman (35.3)
Open Beginner Novice A: Jackie Ericksen and Devon Ridge Indira (26.9)
Open Beginner Novice B: Sophia Peters and The Mystery Machine (30.9)
Senior Beginner Novice Rider: Brenda Sheets and Inigo ENF (30.5)
Starter A: Tianna Kelley and Rubin’s St Sofia (31.3)
Starter B: Taylor Geaney and High Jinx Shinx (28.3)
Tadpole: Grace Fahrenbruch and Dream (35.7)

The Event at Skyline (Mount Pleasant, UT) [Website][Scoring]


Open Preliminary: Travis Atkinson and Calzini (26.6)
Open Training: Kirsten Freed and Jasper (25.6)
Open Novice: Lindsay Wagner and GCS Ardeo Jupiter (24.7)
Open Beginner Novice A: Vicki Baker and Professor Loki (23.5)
Open Beginner Novice B: Allison Merritt and Rumors (29.1)
Open Starter: Michelle Cameron Donaldson and Danny Boy (21.7)

Waredaca H.T. (Laytonsville, MD) [Website][Scoring]

Open Preliminary: Kaitlin Clasing and Butts Arthur (41.6)
Modified A: Bailey Hennings and HSH Redfield Red Sox (42.5)
Modified B: Carlin Keefe and Maybe Someday (37.8)
Open Training: Daniel Clasing and Beryl (28.6)
Training Rider: Kara Googins and Silver Bop (31.1)
Novice Horse: Kerri Long and Blue Suede Shoes (Memphis) (30.0)
Novice Rider A: Brynn Miller and Clever Deception (39.3)
Novice Rider B: Haley Miller and He’s True Brew (33.1)
Open Novice A: Kaitlin Clasing and TGS Lions Sunshine (26.1)
Open Novice B: Katelyn Duda and Big Easy Empire (29.2)
Beginner Novice Horse: Gillian Clissold and Thurman Discovery (32.7)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Elliot Bizjack and N’Pressive (28.8)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Emily Hummel and What’s His Face SSH3 (28.5)
Open Beginner Novice: Alissa Genovese and Island Fever (30.5)
Starter A: Ella Norman and Indiana Jones (36.8)
Starter B: Gina Franz and FMF Sullivan (32.7)

Windridge Farm Spring H.T. (NC) [Website][Scoring]

Intermediate/Preliminary: Jasmine Hobart and Dresden Green (54.4)
Preliminary: Dana Cooke and FE Damascus (34.4)
Preliminary/Training: Lisa Borgia and Silmarillion (27.5)
Training: Tarra Gakstatter and How You Doin’ (27.8)
Novice A: Alison Smith and Ruarigh (33.4)
Novice B: Louise Gillam and Wicked Worry (39.9)
Novice C: Logan Harris and Ton Of Gold (26.4)
Beginner Novice JR: Stevens Mosley and SLE Ocean Ablaze (25.9)
Beginner Novice SR1: Roisin O’Rahilly and Happy Times (25.8)
Beginner Novice SR2: Jane Demeulemester and CurraBawn Gatsby (30.0)
Grasshopper: Jasmine Hobart and Brynhild (19.3)
Introductory: Audrey Delap and San Francisco (32.3)
Intro CT: Megan Lapkoff and No Big Deal (32.5)
Starter A: Allison Thompson and Leo the Lion (35.0)
Starter B: Meredith Kapler and Le Magnifique (35.1)

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio Prove Their Mettle at Kentucky

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Dani Sussman left the Kentucky Horse Park on a high.

It’s an indescribable feeling to complete any event, let alone one of the caliber that is the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event. Mix in the hours spent in the truck, shuttling back and forth from Dani’s home base in Colorado to the East coast, the time spent away from understanding and supportive clients (and husbands) and well, it’s safe to say Dani would likely have been thrilled to finish solidly on a number for her efforts.

She did one better, completing the Cosequin Lexington CCI4*-S, which is run alongside the traditional Kentucky CCI5*, in 10th place overall with her own and Carol Mavrakis’ Jos Bravio, just behind U.S. high performance squad riders like Boyd Martin, Liz Halliday, Will Coleman, Sydney Elliott, and Carolina Pamukcu.

For Dani, the result is validating: she’s been chipping away with the 13-year-old “Bravi” since acquiring him from Argentina in 2020, believing in her willingness to understand her horse and adjust her riding accordingly to bring out his potential.

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“He’s honestly just a professional through and through,” Dani described. “He comes out every day ready to work and do the job. He gives everything his all, so he’s been a really great partner in that way. The big things I’ve been working through, training-wise, are to do with the fact that he’s kind of short-coupled and short-necked. It’s a lot of working to get him soft through his neck and over his back and allowing him to open his step.”

Dani’s trusted Buck Davidson with much of her coaching (along with her dressage coach, Sue Martin, and her show jumping coach, Mariano Bedoya, who also assists her in sourcing hoses from Argentina), and she credits his philosophy of forward riding with her recent breakthroughs.

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Looking at Jos Bravio’s record leading up to Kentucky, Dani admits one might raise an eyebrow as to her level of preparation with Jos Bravio, but here she makes an interesting observation: “It’s kind of ironic. The mistakes that happened before Kentucky actually set me up perfectly for Kentucky.”

How so? I wanted to know more.

Dani went on to explain that she began the season in earnest with the Grand-Prix Eventing Festival at Bruce’s Field, where she turned in an impressive and quick-footed cross country round ahead of her other Kentucky preps. However at both attempts at Bouckaert Equestrian’s two prep events, she encountered some trouble on cross country. This prompted her to zoom out and analyze what was causing the issue. She’d to that point been riding Bravi in a nathe gag bit with a running martingale, and she decided to test the theory that lightening her equipment setup might give her horse the opportunity to move more openly and freely. This would, she hoped, translate into making the big distances on cross country come up more naturally. She opted for a loose ring snaffle, sans martingale.

She practiced with this setting at home, immediately feeling a breakthrough in her subsequent schooling rides. At Kentucky, her intuition rang true, and the new setup worked like a charm.

“He does have a big step, and I’ve kind of gotten in the way of that,” Dani said. “Each year it’s gotten a little better and a little better. Now he runs cross country basically in his dressage tack. Buck also encouraged me to feel comfortable on that more open step, allowing things to happen and trusting that when I jump into a combination the strides will be there without me having to make a huge adjustment. It was about trusting myself and trusting my horse, which is a hard thing but it’s so hugely influential.”

Indeed, Dani got the validation she’d been seeking that her theories were correct, and that the trouble she’d encountered en route to Kentucky were actually opportunities to make a positive change.

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Of course, this isn’t a story intended to persuade a reader to take a look at an imperfect record and decide they’ll fix the problems later. For Dani, the lessons learned and the intuition that follows come from a body of work, multiple years spent producing the horse to this level and with the guidance of coaches she trusts.

“It was a really great feeling to know that I’d fixed the issue and could come into Kentucky feeling rock solid,” she continued. “I needed to trust that the fix was there and that I knew it was there. So I felt actually – definitely nervous, properly nervous as you would be for an event like that, not nervous in the way I doubted whether I was ready.”

Dani and Bravi proved their mettle. Despite a couple of bobbles on the flat that prevented a stronger starting position, they clawed their way up the board, delivering a clear cross country with just a handful of time and a rare double clear show jumping on Sunday to move to 10th after starting in equal 20th.

“It was honestly pretty incredible,” Dani reflected. “I wanted to do right by him and keep his confidence up [on cross country], to go out there and do what we had practiced. That was my goal, and I think we delivered that. The double clear show jumping definitely kind of blew me away. I couldn’t be more proud of that.”

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Dani and Bravi now move ahead to their final destination of the spring before heading back to Colorado, competing in the CCI4*-L at The Fork at Tryon International this weekend (May 9-12). There, she hopes to build on what she delivered at Kentucky, knowing there are plenty of opportunities to finish even stronger in this important Long format.

“I’m definitely feeling good ahead of next week, but I also don’t want to go in taking anything for granted,” she said when we talked on the phone. “I want to put as much into next weekend as I did Kentucky – if not more – and see if I can clean up the bobbles here and there.”

Dani’s tentatively got plans for Jos Bravio to test his mettle at the CCI5* level or perhaps in overseas competition, but first things first: ensure he’s confident and competitive at the 4* level, and spend some well-earned time back at home.

Dani Sussman and Jos Bravio. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“I’ve been gone since February,” she described. “I’ve flown back and forth a few times to do as much as I can, and I have a wonderful assistant and staff who fill in and keep the wheels on the bus while I’m gone. Our clients are incredibly supportive and excited for us.”

It’s been a grind in more ways than one to this point, but Dani seems to take everything in stride. She tells me about her husband, Jeff, who flew out to drive to Kentucky from Ocala, where Dani spent the winter, and who is “over the top supportive”, as she puts it.

Determination and grit must be balanced with empathy and patience on this journey with horses, and Dani’s result at Kentucky is demonstrative of this. Mostly, she’s enjoying the ride with a special horse she feels lucky to have formed such a strong partnership with. “He definitely has the ability and the heart. Anything we do from here will be incredible and a dream come true.”

EN’s coverage of the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event is presented by Kentucky Performance Products, your one-stop shop for science-backed nutritional support for all types of horses. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products. You can catch up on all of our stories from Kentucky here.

Don’t Miss Out: Today is the Deadline to Apply for MARS Bromont Rising

Bromont Rising coat Bettina Hoy pins the second place ribbon on Emeline Gilbert and EWSZ Mozart. Photo by Abby Powell.

The MARS Bromont Rising U25 scholarship program, administered by the USEA Foundation, will distribute 10 grants of up to $2,500 each to talented young riders aged 25 and under aiming to compete in the MARS Bromont (Quebec, Canada) U25 CCI’s in June, 2024. Highlighting this year’s program is the return of three-time German Olympic team member Bettina Hoy, as a guest coach for 2024.

A complete training program was devised to help the riders prepare themselves and their horses for competition. The grants assist with travel and entry expenses, but the program also includes classroom sessions with course designers, high performance riders and a dressage test analysis by an 5* FEI judge. Coaching and course walks during the events are also available, in conjunction with riders own coaches.

Three-time German Olympian and former international coach for Holland, Bettina Hoy, speaks extremely highly of the program.

“Programs like Bromont Rising, the USEF and USEA’s Developing Rider Programs, Australia’s Next GEN squads, and in Germany the Stiftung Deutscher Spitzensport-supported mentorship program are very valuable, particularly if students are willing to take them on in an immersive way,” Hoy remarked. “Education goes way beyond riding instruction. In future workshops, I would like to add seminars on horse management – how to plan your season, how to structure your fitness program, and proper aftercare to really complete the cycle of looking at the big picture. And of course we need to discuss social license and the use of social media today.”

You won’t want to miss out on this awesome opportunity for some helpful funding as well as invaluable coaching insights all week at Bromont, so visit the Bromont website to apply TODAY (May 6)!

Young Superstars and Jung Superstars: Our Picks of the 2024 Marbach DSP Auktion Line-Up

Generally speaking, when we’re about a month into the off-season and the weather is truly grim, life’s excitement levels are at an all-time low, and I’ve rewatched the entirety of both Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s magnum opus Fleabag and Natasha Lyonne’s seminal Russian Doll in their entirety for about the eighth time, you can usually find me feeding my hunger for thrills and eventing in one way: sitting in my jim-jams on my sofa, drinking cheap Sauvignon Blanc and window-shopping for the young horses I’d most like to get a sugar daddy to buy for me from any of the major sport horse auctions about to unfurl in Ireland.

And so what a special treat it is to find myself spending the weekend between Kentucky and Badminton, at the cusp of the first fever-pitch of excitement of the season, also sitting in my jim-jams on my sofa, quaffing the savvy b and casting my beady little eyes over some of the stars of tomorrow, who would look really, really, really good on my yard if anyone fancied chucking some loose change my way to make that happen.

This time, though, they’re not sequestered on the Emerald Isle, waiting for me to strike gold and come get them – they’re in Germany, that epicentre of equine excellence, and being sold through Marbach’s DSP (that’s Deutsche Sport Pferd, or German Sporthorse, for us uncultured swine) auction.

You know who’s a very good example of a DSP? Tamie Smith’s 2023 Kentucky CCI5* winner Mai Baum, that’s who, and the folks at Marbach knew exactly how to convince me to open their catalogue up by putting him right there in pride of place on the cover. Yes, I harbour delusions of grandeur! Yes, I do believe that if I were in a position to buy one of these horses, I, too, could maybe win Kentucky! No, I don’t spend much time thinking about the fact that my greatest eventing moment thus far is that I once led the dressage at a Novice (US version, too, not even the UK variety) and then got eliminated at the first fence in showjumping because I could not get my horse near it! That, I think, could be cured by shopping. Everything can be cured by shopping. I love the post-capitalist hellscape my brain has become; it’s a happy, hopeful place to be.

Anyway! Perhaps you, too, can see yourself producing the next Mai Baum, or the next La Biosthetique Sam FBW, or the next Billy the Red, or FE Lifestyle – I can go on listing high-flying DSP representatives for hours, you know – and perhaps you actually do have a budget and a more robustly backed-up faith in your own ability to do so. In which case, let me insert myself into your main character moment by helping you to pick out the horse that’ll change your life, and find yourself safe in the knowledge that when you do buy the horse, and when you do win that five-star in a few years, I will be here, writing smug articles that make it all about me and how I knew the horse was a world-beater from the first moment I saw its photo. It’s a win for everyone, right?

There are 18 horses in this year’s Marbach auction, which will take place on Saturday, May 11 (that’s Badminton cross-country day, which is a very good omen that will definitely push you over the edge and make you buy the horse you’re eyeing). Here are the five I’d most like to put my hand up for.

Lot 1 – Champ

Three-year-old stallion (Canoso x Sue, by Stan the Man). 61.62% blood.

Straight off the bat, they’re getting me where it hurts. A Stan the Man maternal grandson! Oh, lordy, I do like a Stan the Man. You know who else is a Stan the Man? La Biosthetique Sam FBW, that’s who, and he’s been quite good at this eventing malarkey. Champ is the only unridden lot in this auction, but he looks very promising loose-jumping. He’s by Canoso, a very capable jumper, whose sire, Catoki, jumped at the top level and in World Cup classes before stepping down to help educate a young rider. That’s something I like to see: it says there’s a good brain, and a willingness to take a joke, and I’d love to imagine that perhaps that’s one of those winning qualities that’s been passed down to this guy.

Lot 11 – Amadea

Five-year-old mare (Amadei-Geli x Diana, by Diamond Hit). 69.97% blood.

Straight away, I’m charmed by this plain brown wrapper who’s obviously got a tonne of talent tucked away in an unassuming exterior. She’s a tidy, careful jumper, with an expression that looks workmanlike and considered, not like a young horse who jumps high and tight because they’re worried and overcompensating. I get the impression that she’d have a great brain and would be seriously good fun to produce.

I’m also very interested in her breeding: her dam, Diana, who’s already had offspring out eventing successfully, is by dressage stallion Diamond Hit, whose own pedigree is flashy toes on top (he’s a son of Donnerhall) and jumpers on the bottom (he’s a great-grandson of Ramiro Z via Ramino, who jumped at 1.50m). Dressage breeding creeping into eventing isn’t a wholly new concept, and it’s not always something that works out, but when it does, it’s special – look, for example, to Mollie Summerland’s Luhmühlen CCI5* winner Charly van ter Heiden, who’s a son of Contendros Bube. That actually makes him sort of, kind of related to this mare, who’s got Pik Bube I, Charly’s grandsire, through her own sire’s granddam. That might be too tenuous a link to base a horse purchase off of, which is fine, but consider this, too: that example of a top-level dressage-bred eventer made the time twice at five-star, despite boasting only about 23%, while this mare is nearly 70% blood, thanks to – wait for it – her Akhal-Teke sire, Amadei-Geli. Yes, really, the golden horses from the horse breeds encyclopaedias your aunts and uncles bought you every Christmas and birthday. Can I name a single Akhal-Teke in any Olympic discipline? No, I absolutely cannot. Do I think it would be a really cool story, and one that our breeding expert here at EN, Amanda Chance, would jump on like a fly on the proverbial, if you were to take a half-bred Akhal-Teke to the top of the sport? Totally. Akhal-Tekes are a desert breed, well used for endurance, and as someone who’s obsessed with the toughness, talent, brains, and stamina of Anglo-Arabs, I think this combination could be a real sleeper hit. Be the one to set the trend.

Also, for what it’s worth, Amadei-Geli is owned and produced by Germany’s Julia Schmid, and if you don’t know that name, remember it: a lot of the very best riders in the world give her a call when they’re looking for a seriously special young horse. She knows her stuff, and if she rates this stallion, then I rate it too, by default. She only found and produced a young fischerRocana, after all.

Lot 12 – Conde

Five-year-old gelding (Casino Berlin x Stalypso’s Lady, by Stalypso). 37.45% blood. 

Look, if you’re going to shell out on a horse from Germany, you want it to look German, right? And let’s be real, this boy looks so German that I heard a faint ‘genau’ as I turned the page onto him. He’s practically shoving a schnitzel and a bucket of mustard at me through the screen. I’ve been told not to mention the war around him. (I kid, I kid, I’m sorry – I have a German passport, please don’t cancel me for my crap jokes.) Anyway, he’s very much of a type, and that type is full-bodied (like a nice glass of Bordeaux?) yet somehow still elegantly proportioned, with a continental, compact head and a set of knees that love to visit the sky. He’s a fine-looking stamp of a thing, and looks to have no shortage of scope to play with. I like his breeding, too: his sire is by Eurocommerce Berlin, also known as Caspar, who has sired excellent eventers including Clarke Johnstone’s Menlo Park, and Berlin is himself a son of the excellent Cassini I, whose knees seem to be stamped through generations. The bottom half of his sire line is no less interesting; he’s got a great-grandsire in Landor S, who has contributed, either as a parent or grandparent, to a number of serious eventers, including DSP Quintana, who competed at Badminton last year. I used to ride a Landor S who was a bit of a teenage dirtbag, actually, but he could really jump, and I did quite enjoy his antics, because he was smart and surefooted and never, ever boring.

I think, probably, you’ll need to buy a cob- or pony-sized bridle for this cute little head, but frankly, if you’re buying a smart young horse from Germany, you can cough up for a trip to the tack shop – and it’ll be worth it, anyway, because whether you keep him for the long haul or produce him as a serious young riders’ prospect, there’ll be plenty of reason to pat yourself on the back for taking this one home.

Lot 14 – Gladdys

Five-year-old mare (Icare d’Olympe AA x Gräfin Guayana, by Donauzauber). 50% blood. 

Hello! Only me again, here to tell you about how much I like Anglo-Arabs for eventing! I mean, seriously though, can you blame me? Some of the sport’s coolest, most versatile, toughest horses with the most memorable characters have made use of this savvy mix of Thoroughbred and Arabian lines, and when that recipe is folded in with a sprinkling of continental quality, it yields a delicious result. Vassily de Lassos! Tamarillo! Opgun Louvo! fischerTakinou! These are just a tiny smattering of the top-level event horses who are either themselves registered as Anglo-Arabs, or who have significant Anglo-Arab breeding. The French, who I think are the world’s leaders at finding the balance between blood and quality (sorry, Germany, you are also very, very good) are very much on the AA hype train already, and young horse master Tom Carlile loves an Anglo-Arab dam line. You don’t have to listen to me, but definitely listen to that lot, because they are well good.

Gladdys here (what a name, by the way) is by the Anglo-Arab sire Icare d’Olympe, a French Anglo-Arab who competed to Advanced himself. On the bottom, she’s Trakehner – another breed I love for similar reasons – and goes back to the great Gribaldi, so there’s some dressage influence coming through there, too. On video, she’s an interesting prospect: her trot isn’t anything to write home about at this early stage, but if you buy for a trot, you’re a silly sausage anyway. Her canter is active and balanced, her footwork to a fence is catty and clever, and, if I’m perfectly honest, every bit of her says “I’m Anglo-Arab up top and Trak down below which means you’d better sit tight and listen to a few options, buddy, before I start winning things for you.” More power to her, frankly.

Lot 9 – Vino

Four-year-old gelding (Vingino x Nastasia II, by HPH Candillo). 47.27% blood. 

Forgive me for skipping around a bit, here – I’m like a child in a sweet shop with auction catalogues, and I follow no man’s rules but my own. And one of those rules? Only ever fall in love with a grey if you’re sending it in someone else’s direction and thus won’t ever have to wash poo stains off it at four in the morning before a dressage test. And so, I present to you: Vino. What a charmingly-named chap, and what a sweet, game soul he appears to be. He’s got a lovely, active hindleg, a sunny countenance, an appealing buoyancy and balance to his paces, and a cute-as-a-button pop over a fence, and I think he’s going to make somebody very, very happy. (That somebody will not be the person holding the stain-removing spray in a few years when he really starts to fade, mind you.)

Vino’s sire line is a who’s-who of jumping tours de force, with Voltaire and Cassini I contributing to all those qualities I like in him, and on the bottom, he’s… also got Cassini I, which is quite Sweet Home Alabama of him. No Hapsburg chin to be found here, though, so we’ll consider this example of kissing cousins an acceptable one.

Plus, if you’re into damlines, Michael Jung, and great names, don’t miss…

  • Lot 2, Arocan, who’s out of a full sister to fischerRocana and by the same Akhal-Teke stallion as lot 11, mentioned above
  • Lot 18, Senorita, who’s out of a full sister to Nereo and Armada and by Ramiro B, which might make her Oliver Townend’s new favourite young horse
  • Lots 16, 17, and 18 again, who were bred by Michael Jung
  • Lot 15, who’s called… Kumquat

You can check out the Marbach DSP Eventing Auction catalogue in full here, and find videos of each lot in this playlist. The 2024 auction will take place on Saturday, May 11, and will be run in a hybrid format, so you can either bid and follow along from afar, or head to Marbach to get involved and try your dream young horse before you buy. Horses will be available to view and try from tomorrow, May 6, through Friday, May 10, and during the day on Saturday, they can be viewed on the cross-country course before the auction begins at 7.00pm local time/6.00pm GMT/1.00 pm EST. For more information, or to register as a bidder, head to the website here – and happy bidding!