Classic Eventing Nation

Pau Track Topples Best in the World as French Rise to Occasion on Home Soil

Thibault Fornier and Siniani de Lathus. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It takes a course with a lot of nerve to push the likes of William Fox-Pitt, Oliver Townend, Tim Price and Phillip Dutton out the moon door, but on Pau cross country day, nothing and nobody is sacred. As usual, Pierre Michelet’s take-no-prisoners course laid waste to the dressage leaderboard today — as quick to knock off unlucky giants as it was to reward deserving rookies.

When dressage leader Oliver Townend went overboard at #31A, a double of brushy swans, the door was thrown wide open for mutiny. Enter, to replace the world #1, four-star rookie Thibault Fournier. The 23-year-old Frenchman turned in one of just four fault-free cross country trips today with Siniani De Lathus, a 12-year-old Selle Français gelding (Volchebnik x Elia de Bunouviere, by Tenor de la Cour) owned by the rider and Isabelle Fournier.

“You never know when you have a step up like that how the horse is going to respond, but he went really well,” Thibault says.

Asked to account for all the trouble on course (21 out of 59 starters — over a third of the field — retired or were eliminated), he says, “It was one of those courses where you had to stay concentrated from start to finish. There were a lot of horses who got tired and riders were losing maybe a little bit of concentration and not taking that into account, so maybe that was the reason why there were so many incidents at #34B and #35 which caused a lot of problems.”

Indeed, many riders were on their merry way to the finish flags until the final combination caught them out. #34AB, a big brush atop a mound on a downhill dogleg turn to a triple brush skinny, is enough of an ask, but then #35, another triple brush skinny, pops up in your face another couple strides out. Thibault wouldn’t know anything about that — he was so up on the clock by the time he arrived there, he opted to spare the risk and take the long route.

French riders have won Pau the last three years running (and have three riders in the top 10) and Thibault may well extend the streak tomorrow (not bad for one’s four-star debut). Siniani De Lathus is a one-or-none rail horse — he jumped clear at Bramham and Aachen this year but has had a rail down in his last two runs. He has a rail in hand tomorrow, but Thibault says he’s giving himself no budge room: “I’m going to ride it as if we have no points to spare and stay focused until the end of the competition.”

Gemma Tattersall and Pamero 4. Photo by William Carey Photography.

On Thibault’s heels are Gemma Tattersall of Great Britain and Pamero 4, an 11-year-old Hanoverian gelding (Perigueux x Rita, by Perpignon) owned by Clive Smith. “When I walked the course I thought it was a tough four-star cross country with lots of accuracy questions, and I thought the time would be really tight,” she says.

Pamero’s first four-star was Badminton earlier this year, and Gemma intentionally took her time around the course, coming home with 26 time faults but a confident horse. Today, however, she stepped on the petrol and Pamero delivered, and their double-clear moved them from 13th after dressage into the penultimate spot.

“I think that decision to not go fast at Badminton paid off here,” Gemma says. “He gave me the most wonderful ride around. His jumping was pretty incredible and he was extremely straight to all his skinnies and listening to me, and he finished full of running because we’ve been working on his speed and stamina at home.”

Izzy Taylor and Be Touchable. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sitting 3rd is another Brit, Izzy Taylor, who had three trips around the course today. It was with Be Touchable, a 12-year-old Dutch gelding (Untouchable 27 x Ureka, by Indoctro) owned by Sophie Dodds, that she rose from 7th into the top three.

“His round was very, very smooth,” she says. “He was good through all the combinations, very good at the water and then just toward the end, coming out of the water he chipped in at the swans, went on two and nearly threw me out the door but luckily stayed upright. That knocked the wind out of him a bit and so he was a little tired for 30 seconds, it took him a minute or two to get his breath back.”

Ros Canter and Zenshera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Next down the list is Ros Canter and Zenshera, her own 14-year-old Dutch gelding (Guidam x Telvera, by Matterhorn). Fun fact: EquiRatings has confirmed that if Ros finishes in the top three tomorrow, she will become the new FEI World #1 — the first female to be world #1 since Mary King in 2011. For that to happen, she has to jump clear and Izzy or Gemma need to have one down, or Thibault could have two down.

“I’m absolutely over the moon — I’m very proud of Zenshera,” Ros says. “It was a tough old course out there. He’s not the speed machine that some of the others are. He has to dig deep really from the word go, so it was a long slog for him today, but he just kept trying, and he tried, and he tried again, and at the end he had to try really hard. All he wants to do is go through the flags for me, so I’m really delighted with him.”

Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

On behalf of the Eventing Nation, we would like to formally extend American-based Aussie Ryan Wood an invitation to just come on over to the dark side and ride with Team USA already. We’re fun, we have good team outfits, your accent fits right in, it’ll be grand.

Ryan and Woodstock Bennett, an 11-year-old gelding (Shannondale Sarco St Ghyvan x Ponail Belle, by Beau Royale) owned by Curran Simpson and the rider, were legends out there today, collecting just 5.2 time penalties to move from 36th to 10th place.

“Yeah, it was pretty awesome!” Ryan says. “We set out there kind of conservative and just got into a good rhythm. It’s his first four-star so I didn’t know what exactly to expect, but he stepped up and did everything I asked. He’s a special horse; we’ve had him since he was four years old so we’ve got a good partnership. He came home really strong and I couldn’t be happier.”

Look at ’em go:

“I probably walked it six or eight times, and had a good plan about how to ride each combination and knowing my horse. There were certain jumps, like the ducks coming out of the last water that we walked in one but thought might ride in two, and we were ready for that. He actually did two little ones there, and then the last difficult combination before the arena (#34AB-#35), we thought it would be a bending three or four to a two, and the original plan was three there — after putting in the second stride at the ducks we decided to stay out for four.”

Hallie Coon and Celien. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We also couldn’t be prouder of Hallie Coon and Celien, an 11-year-old Dutch mare (Tenerife Vol x R Quicksilver, by Hamlet) owned by Helen Coon and the rider. (See Tilly’s sweet post-dressage feature on the pair here.) They followed up a personal best dressage score of 29.1 with a clear cross country round in their first four-star, with 24.4 time faults owing to the horse getting a bit tired and Hallie making the good horsemanship decision to take a couple options.

“She jumped through the corners in the infield well and then galloped down to the ditch-and-brush and just came down a little short on the landing side of that,” Hallie recounts. “I kind of punched her into the water in the infield and she just didn’t quite have the step to carry across the distance, so I jumped the B and then circled around and took the option out.” They also opted for the option at the #34AB-#35 booby trap, jumping #34AB in a careful four then circling around to the #35 option.

Hallie Coon and Celien. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The pair will head into show jumping in 20th place. Hallie’s got a competitive streak a mile wide — she told us she didn’t come to Pau to “complete” — and initially she looked a little bummed at the finish about the time penalties, which shuffled her down the scoreboard a bit. (“I set the bar real high for myself, don’t I.”) But then she glanced over her shoulder at her mare in the vet box, steam rising from her dark body and a satisfied glimmer in her eye, and it all shifted into perspective: “I have a happy horse. She has the biggest heart in the world and she tries so hard.”

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border were the third combination out of the box and the first out for the U.S. They looked absolutely super and poised for a successful result. “The course rode well,” Kim says. “Crossy tried, he jumped, he was good, he was on it, but then…”

But then … they had a runout at #35, ultimately picking up the 20 jumping penalties plus 9.2 time.

“I rode him really well right up until the end,” Kim says. “I thought I was in there really well and he just didn’t try. He tried everywhere else, he was really, really good, he pulled up well — it’s just very unfortunate.”

At the finish Kim was already examining and cross-examining that stretch of three seconds, trying to figure out what went wrong. “He was on (the line), he was right there. I went right by the tree and I almost felt like he kind of just turned away from the tree for just a second, and then he wasn’t on it anymore.”

Despite the blip, and as a testament to the course’s slash-and-burn influence on the dressage scoreboard, the pair still moved from 28th to 25th.

Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Phillip Dutton and Boyd Martin fell onto hard times earlier on course.

Phillip and I’m Sew Ready, a 14-year-old Dutch gelding (Lupicor x Jarda, by Elcaro) owned by Kristine and John Norton, missed their stride jumping up the bank at #7B and belly-flopped. Phillip went out the side door to the left. Both horse and rider walked off course OK.

Boyd Martin and Steady Eddie. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Boyd and Steady Eddie, a 15-year-old New Zealand Thoroughbred gelding (Jetball x Tudnella) owned by Pierre Colin, Denise Lahey, and George and Gretchen Wintersteen, were given 50 penalties for missing a flag at the corner at fence #5B, then retired after a runout at the brush corner at #22.

Pau Top 10 After Cross Country: 

Top 10 Photo Gallery: 

Riders Confirmed for Horseware Indoor Eventing Challenge at The Royal

Selena O’Hanlon returns to the Indoor Eventing Challenge for the 11th consecutive year. Photo courtesy of Alec Thayer.

The countdown is on to the $20,000 Horseware Indoor Eventing Challenge, which takes place Nov. 2-3 at The Royal Horse Show during the annual Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto, Ontario.

Now in its 11th running, the invitation-only event is limited to 10 riders, and the winner will take home a $6,000 chunk of the prize money. Here’s the list of nine Canadians and one American who will face off over Capt. Mark Phillips’ course:

  • Lindsay Beer
  • Diana Burnett
  • Lisa Marie Fergusson
  • Holly Jacks-Smither
  • Lauren Kieffer
  • Kendal Lehari
  • Colleen Loach
  • Brandon McMechan
  • Selena O’Hanlon
  • Karl Slezak

The Horseware Indoor Eventing Challenge will run across Friday and Saturday nights, with penalties for fallen rails and refusals added to the time on the clock. The rider with the lowest combined score on the second night wins. The highest placed Canadian will also take home the Col. Michael Gutowski Award.

Col. Michael Gutowski of Poland played an incredibly important role in Canadian show jumping and eventing. As EN Canadian correspondent Denya Massey so aptly explained: “Col. Michael Gutowski was the cornerstone of Canada’s transition into international competition in show jumping, specifically, and love of eventing more generally.

“He was one of the cornerstones of the Virginia Combined Training Center in the 1960s and early 1970s, designed by Alex Mackay-Smith and Stewart Treviranus as a three-week program with two rotating classes a day of dressage, cross country and jumping. Col. Gutowski taught show jumping.

“Ian Millar credits Gutowski as his mentor and the one who shaped his riding for many years. Jimmy Elder credits him with getting Canadians onto the world stage, and that Gutowski in a temper would mix up his Polish and English swear words. He was a highly decorated World War II hero, and promoted to General before he died at 96 in 2006.”

The Royal Horse Show, now it its 96th year as part of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair, is a huge tradition for Canadian horse enthusiasts. Tickets are still available for both nights of the competition and can be purchased at this link. More information about The Royal is available on the show’s website.

Finding a Horse That Fits: An Excerpt from ‘The Riding Doctor’

In this excerpt from The Riding Doctor, Dr. Beth Glosten talks frankly about how, in order to avoid pain, injury, and lack of riding progress, the shape of the horse needs to suit the rider’s own body.

Photo by Carolynn Bunch.

Cautious is the word that best describes my approach to getting back in the saddle after my surgery for herniated discs in my low back. I waited a year after surgery to consider riding. And that year was full of conditioning and improving my body awareness. Finally, I was ready to find out if riding was an option for me.

I started putting feelers out for a potential mount to lease and slowly get back into riding. My criteria were strict: The horse must not have jarring gaits and must not be spooky. He must not be tall so I could avoid lifting and reaching while grooming and tacking up. I needed a reliable horse upon which I could explore strategies to keep my back supported and secure while in the saddle.

A friend told me about a seven-year-old Fjord pony mare, Solana, who needed some miles under saddle to augment her driving career. This sounded interesting. Perhaps this breed could be a good choice for my riding rehab needs.

I met my friend at her barn one sunny afternoon. I was encouraged at how easy it was to tack up this 14.1-hand pony. We set out on a slow trail ride, and I got a feel for how Solana moved.

After about 30 minutes, my back was getting tight. Solana’s back was relatively broad, requiring my thigh to externally rotate at the hip joint. This put my back in a bit of extension (arch), and caused strain. Solana’s short-coupled back put a lot of swing in her rib cage as she walked, causing a great deal of movement in my pelvis and hip joint. The combination of her build and her walk put my body in a less than ideal position to move with her without strain.

So, while her size and temperament were positive features for me, Solana’s body type was not.

About nine months later, after finding a more suitable mount to get me back in riding shape, I went horse shopping. Again, I was struck by how some horse shapes did not fit me well. I felt strain in my back whenever I rode a horse with a broad back that put my thighbone in too much external rotation and caused my spine to arch. A more narrow-bodied horse fit me best.

I settled on Bluette, a Danish Warmblood mare cross whose dam was a Thoroughbred. Her relatively narrow conformation fit me well. Her gaits were of good quality and reasonable for me to ride. When horse shopping again in 2009, horse size remained an important criterion. Donner Girl, a 16-hand Oldenburg mare fit the bill.

I have worked with two clients who tell a similar story of horse size challenging comfort. Both had knee surgery for entirely different reasons. But both found that riding a horse with a round barrel placed excessive and painful strain on their knee joints: They found that applying leg aids when riding a wide-bodied horse placed unhealthy torque on the knee. However, a horse with a more narrow conformation was not a problem.

If you are looking for a horse and have problems with your back, hip, or knee, don’t discredit the importance of conformation in finding the right mount. Not all horse shapes suit all riders, particularly if you have a physical limitation.

This excerpt from The Riding Doctor by Beth Glosten, MD, is reprinted with permission from Trafalgar Square Books (www.horseandriderbooks.com).

 

Pau Live Updates: Thibault Fournier Leads, Mixed Day for USA

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Welcome to cross country day at Les Etoiles de Pau, the final European CCI4* of the 2018 season. Cross country runs from 1:30-5:45 p.m. CEST (one hour ahead of UK time) or 7:30-11:45 a.m. EST in the USA. You can watch the live stream with English commentary at this link. We will also be running live updates on this page, so keep refreshing for the latest news.

If you missed EN’s cross country course preview with analysis from Irish Olympian Joseph Murphy, now is the time to read it and familiarize yourself with the course. Pierre Michelet’s course is 6,320 meters in length with 38 fences and a total of 45 jumping efforts. The optimum time is 11 minutes, 6 seconds.

Joseph reckons he thinks eight to 10 pairs can catch the time, which I think is probably generous. Only two made the time last year, so I am thinking fewer than five make it. Which one of us will be right? Watch this space! We are in for a thrilling race against the clock in France.

USA Start Times:

  • Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border: 20 jumping, 29.2 time penalties
  • Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett: Clear, 5.2 time penalties
  • Hallie Coon and Celien: Clear, 24.4 time penalties
  • Boyd Martin and Steady Eddie: Retired at fence 22
  • Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready: Rider fall at fence 7B

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Top 10 at the conclusion of cross country:

11:34: Tom Jackson and Carpa du Buisson Z are home clear with 18.8 time penalties. That is our final pair on course.

11:33: Izzy Taylor has retired Frog Rock after a runout at fence 22.

11:30: Izzy Taylor and Frog Rock picked up a runout at fence 8, the brush after the up bank.

11:29: Gemma Tattersall and Pamero 4 are home clear and 10 seconds inside the time to rocket into second place! AMAZING ROUND! They are the fourth pair to make the time.

11:26: Andreas Ostholt and Corvette completed with 20 jumping penalties and 46.4 time penalties.

11:22: Nicky Roncoroni and Watts Burn are home clear with 12 time penalties.

11:20: Andreas Ostholt and Corvette 31 picked up a runout at the wedge at fence 14, so Thibault Fournier and Siniani de Lathus will be your overnight leaders.

11:17: Joseph Murphy and Fernhill Frankie are home clear with 7.6 time penalties in the horse’s first CCI4* to rocket into 12th place. What a round!

11:14: Andreas Ostholt and Corvette 31 are on course now. They are the only pair that can overtake the lead.

11:11: Katrin Khoddam-Hazrati and Cosma are home clear with 37.2 time penalties.

11:10: Joseph Murphy and Fernhill Frankie are on course now and skipped through fences 13 and 14 like a Pony Club exercise.

11:08: Will Furlong has retired Collien P 2 at fence 16.

11:05: Nicola Hill and MGH Bingo Boy are home clear with 28.8 time penalties.

11: Will Furlong and Collien P 2 glanced off the brush at the first water and then picked up another runout on course at fence 14.

10:55: Bayano slammed on the brakes at fence 22, the white gate and ditch, and sent Flora Harris flying over the fence. She is totally ok.

10:52: Imogen Gloag and Brendonhill Doublet have been eliminated after three refusals at the brush corner at fence 22.

10:50: Alice Dundson and Cool Investment are home clear with 23.6 time penalties.

10:45: Ros Canter and Zenshera are home clear with 7.2 time penalties. That slots her into second place behind Thibault Fournier and Siniani de Lathus. Only Andreas Ostholt and Corvette 31 can overtake Thibault at this point.

10:41: Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready missed their stride jumping up the bank at 7B and belly flopped. Phillip went out the side door to the left. They are both totally OK.

10:38: Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready are away!

10:35: Ros Canter and Zenshera are now on course and can take the lead. She can afford to be 3 seconds over the time but no more than that.

10:33: Jesse Campbell and Cleveland picked up a runout at the skinny brush at fence 16B. He then retired at fence 26.

10:32: Camilla Kruger has retired Biarritz on course after runouts at fences 11 and 13.

10:30: Oliver Townend has fallen from Cilnabradden Evo after the horse left a leg at the swan at fence 31A. He is up and OK.

10:28: Boyd Martin has retired Steady Eddie on course after a runout at the brush corner at fence 22.

10:25:  Thibault Fournier and Siniani de Lathus took the long route at the tricky brushes at 34B and 35 and still finished bang on the optimum time! That is the third pair to make the optimum time and they take the lead!

10:24: Dressage leaders Oliver Townend and Cilnabradden Evo are on course now.

10:23: Boyd Martin and Steady Eddie have been marked as missing a flag at the corner at fence 5B. That will be 50 jumping penalties but can be removed on appeal. They are continuing on.

10:20: Boyd Martin and Steady Eddie are on course now.

10:19: Hallie Coon and Celien are home clear with 24.4 time penalties in their CCI4* debut.

10:15: Marie Caroline Barbier and Picasso d’Oreal have retired after a runout at the brush at fence 8 coming out of the water.

10:14: Hallie Coon took the long route at the brushes at 24B and 25 and is all clear with Celien.

10:12: Sarah d’Argouges and Sebastien Cavaillon came roaring down the hill to the brushes and glanced off at 35 to pick up 20 jumping penalties.

10:08: Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett gave us an incredible show! Home clear with 5.2 time penalties in the horse’s CCI4* debut. GO WOODZY!

Check out their clutch ride through the influential brushes:

10:06: Hallie Coon and Celien are away in their CCI4* debut! Sitting in the top 10 overnight so this is a big round for a lot of reasons.

10:03: Gonzalo Blasco Botin and Sij Veux d’Autize got in too close to the table at fence 15 and fell. They are both up and OK.

10: Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett are all clear through fence 28.

9:56: Dani Dunn and Zocarla BLH picked up a runout at fence 16B, the brush after the big white table.

9:55: Sharon Polding and Findonfirecracker are home clear with 32.4 time penalties.

9:52: U.S.-based Aussie Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett are the next out of the start box.

9:48: No! Ascona M lost her landing gear jumping into the first water complex and Tim Price couldn’t stick the landing. He fell but is up and OK.

9:44: Alix Crouin fell from Palma Belmaniere at the table at fence 22.

9:41: Alix Crouin and Palma Belmaniere picked up a runout at fence 11, the corner coming out of the water. They then picked up another runout at the first brush corner at fence 21.

9:40: Cedric Lyard has retired Qatar du Puech Rouget after a hairy jump at the airy hanging log at fence 20.

9:39: Ryuzo Kitajima and Just Chocolate are home clear with 19.2 time penalties.

9:38: Izzy Taylor and Be Touchable show us how it’s done! Clear with 2.0 time penalties to take the provisional lead!

9:35: Arnaud Boiteau and Quoriano ENE HN have now been marked as clear at the brush and complete with 1.2 time penalties to slot into third place provisionally.

9:30: Arnaud Boiteau and Quoriano ENE HN are the latest pair to pick up 20 jumping penalties at the brush at 34B.

9:27: Christian Chabot and Barlison are home clear with 16.4 time penalties.

9:25: Toshiyuki Tanaka and Kelecyn Pirate just gave us an incredible round — clear with 3.2 time penalties to slot into fourth place provisionally.

9:22: Sarah Way and Dassett Cooley Dun complete with 20 jumping penalties and 32.0 time penalties.

9:18: Sarah Way and Dassett Cooley Dun picked up an early runout at fence 5B but continued on and are going well.

9:15: Sian Coleman and Kilroe Hero are home clear with 22.8 time penalties.

9:12: NO! After a beautiful trip, Little Fire glanced off the first brush at fence 34B and William Fox-Pitt fell. He is up and OK.

9:08: Yasmin Ingham and Night Line are home clear with 23.6 time penalties.

9:05: William Fox-Pitt and Little Fire are on course and giving us an absolute masterclass — clear through fence 10.

9: Joanna Rimmer picked up a runout with Isaac Newton at fence 11, the corner coming out of the water complex.

8:55: FRH Butts Avedon slammed on the brakes with Andreas Dibowski at fence 10, the drop into the first water complex. He continued on until fence 16 and then elected to retire.

8:53: François Pons has retired Siam Taleyrandie after a second runout on course at fence 21, the first of the brush corners.

8:50: François Pons and Siam Taleyrandie pick up a runout at the brush at fence 15.

8:48: The French are COMPLETELY dominating this course. Clara Loiseau and Won’t Wait jumped clear and in incredible 22 seconds inside the time. What a horse! They take the provisional lead!

8:47: David Doel and Chap completed with 40 jumping penalties and 43.6 time penalties.

8:46: Rachel Robinson and MJI Limmerick Bell completed missed their stride jumping up the bank at fence 7B. The horse belly flopped up onto the bank and Rachel fell to his left side. They are both up and walking home.

8:45: David Doel and Chap picked up a runout at 31B, the second swan.

8:41: Peter Flarup and Frankie just smoked the course — clear with 5.2 time penalties to move into second place provisionally!

8:38: Elmo Jankari and Soraya 243 were having a super round but are the latest pair to pick up a runout at the triple brush at 34B. They complete with 20 jumping penalties and 20.8 time penalties.

8:35: Clear and just 3.6 time penalties for Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory. That slots them into second place provisionally behind Alexis Goury.

8:29: Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory are on course and looking super through fence 19.

8:27: Andy Daines and retired Spring Panorama picked up a second runout at fence 25B, the brush in the water. He retired after a hairy jump over fence 28, the skinny on the mound.

8:26: Sarah sadly fell from Lowhill Clover at fence 28. They are both OK and walking home.

8:24: Andy Daines and Spring Panorama glanced off the brush at fence 8, which comes after the up bank out of the water. Jumping penalties are racking up now on Pierre Michelet’s course.

8:23: Sarah Holmes and Lowhill Clover had 20 jumping penalties at the brush at fence 13.

8:20: Bettina Hoy and Designer 10 also picked up 20 penalties at 34B. The triple brush combination is emerging as the most influential on course.

8:19: Andreas Ostholt has now been given 50 penalties for missing a flag at fence 50.

8:16: Bettina Hoy had a hairy moment at 21, the first brush corner, and took the long route at the second corner at fence 22. All clear so far.

8:15: Tom Jackson and Waltham Fiddlers Find are home clear with 16 time penalties.

8:13: Gemma Tattersall and Santiago Bay complete with 20 jumping penalties and 10.4 time penalties.

8:11: Gemma Tattersall and Santiago Bay picked up a runout at fence 25, the angled brush in the water.

8:10: Bettina Hoy and Designer 10 are away for Germany.

8:09: Andreas Ostholt and So Is Et are home clear with 7.6 time penalties.

8:07: Joseph and Sportsfield Othello completed with 20 jumping penalties and 14.4 time penalties.

8:06: Gemma Tattersall and Santiago Bay are on course in the mare’s CCI4* debut and clear through fence 16.

8:04: Joseph and Sportsfield Othello were going guns blazing and unfortunately picked up 20 jumping penalties at fence 34B, the first of the triple brushes.

8:02: What a round for David Britnell and Continuity! Clear with just 6.8 time penalties to add.

8:01: Andreas Bisowksi and So Is Et are also on course for Germany and are clear through fence 14.

7:58: Patricia Pytches and CES Ballycar Chip completed clear with 48 time penalties.

7:53: Joseph Murphy and Sportsfield Othello are away from the start box. This is a seriously experienced pair making their fourth trip around Pau. Joseph has never made the time here but he looks like a man on a mission today.

7:52: Kim and Cooley Cross Border complete with 20 jumping penalties and 29.2 time penalties.

7:51: Kim and Cooley Cross Border were going SO WELL but had a runout at 35, the second brush in the triple brush combination.

7:50: David Britnell and Continuity are on course in their CCI4* debut.

7:49: Kim and Cooley Cross Border are clear through fence 26.

7:47: The French show how to get it done on home soil! Alexis Goury and Trompe l’Oeil d’Emery jump clear and 4 seconds inside the time as the second pair out.

7:46: Kim and Cooley Cross Border are clear through fence 15. Go on Crossy!

7:44: Izzy Taylor and Call Me Maggie May complete clear and 18 seconds over the time to add 7.2 time penalties.

7:43: Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border are on course and clear through fence 5.

7:42: Call Me Maggie may trotted at both of the swans at 31AB — we can expect to see horses tiring at this part of the course. It is a seriously demanding fitness test.

7:38: Alexis Goury and Trompe l’Oeil d’Emery just gave us a textbook trip through the first water — going on a perfect four strides to the up bank at 7B and neatly jumping the angled brush at 8. They pecked on landing jumping back into the water at fence 10 but recovered well to jump the corner at 11.

7:35: Izzy had an early sticky moment when she took the flag at 5B but is all clear and going well as the pathfinder. This is Call Me Maggie May’s CCI4* debut.

7:32: Izzy Taylor and Call Me Maggie May are away as our first out of the start box.

7:15: Good morning, eventing fans! We are counting down to the start of cross country at 1:30 p.m. local time/7:30 a.m. EST. Rain fell throughout the night and into the morning at Pau, but reports from the venue confirm that the ground seems OK at this point. The fog is lifting and temperatures are hovering at 50ºF/10ºC — perfect for cross country.

Pau 2018: Dissecting the Cross Country Course with Joseph Murphy

Joseph Murphy and Sportsfield Othello at Pau 2018. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pau is known for a few things: swimming rats, French stereotypes, abundant day-drinking, and course designer Pierre Michelet, who spends most of his time zooming around the course on a scooter, cackling and twirling the ends of his moustache, or so we’re led to believe. There’s a rumour that suggests that if you stand in front of an arena mirror and say “zut alors, zat is a short four!” three times he’ll appear, red-eyed and spectral, and make you jump a curving line of skinny fences as penance for disturbing his slumber. Others say that you can summon him by putting pointed studs, a triple espresso, and a man in a horse suit in a circle and singing the French national anthem, which is Seven Nation Army by the White Stripes, we think.

Michelet the Menace, as he’s been affectionately dubbed, is the man responsible for one of the most consistently interesting courses in top-level eventing. Lacking the sheer space of venues like Badminton, Burghley, and Kentucky, Pau is best known for its serious twists and turns as it snakes its way between the gas stations and garden allotments of the city’s fringes. It’s not a galloping track, despite the fact that it takes place at a racetrack — instead, it’s rather more akin to go-karting-meets-crazy-golf.

There are three distinct sections to the course: the first and the last sections run just about parallel to one another, and they’re the business ends, with constant turn-and-burn action and swathes of people bunched up against the close roping. There’s very little margin for error in these parts of the course, and the minutes are slow ones here — there’s no opportunity to get ahead of the clock at the beginning of your round, and nor could you plan to shave off the seconds once you hit the final section. Instead, riders will need to plan to pick up the pace quite considerably when they hit the middle section of the course, which takes them out onto the racetrack and offers up some slightly longer galloping stretches. But even so, there’s nothing like Burghley’s infamous Winners’ Avenue here — it’ll take tactical riding and a forward stride into each and every fence to make up the seconds.

Pau cross-country essentials:

  • Length: 6320m
  • Optimum time: 11:06
  • Fences: 38
  • Jumping efforts: 45
  • Potential double-clears: 8 to 10, according to Joseph Murphy

EN walked the course with Ireland’s Joseph Murphy, who rides his eventing warhorse Sportsfield Othello and first-timer Fernhill Frankie this weekend, and is known for his gutsy, get-it-done approach to cross-country. He’s also the king of the hat-cam video, and we’re very excited to report that he’ll be wearing a camera for both of his rounds today — stay tuned for the videos and your chance to ‘ride’ the Pau course for yourself.

“The more I walk it, it’s probably starting to look a little bit better, because at the beginning it was very difficult to see a flow, but after a few walks you can start to get it into your head and figure out where the quickest minutes are,” he explains.

The course begins a little further along the back-stretch than it did last year — rather than starting in the gateway of the main arena, competitors will leave the start box behind the collecting ring, giving them plenty of hustle and bustle nearby to contend with. But that’s fine — the first couple of fences are straightforward ones, designed to give the competitors a chance to establish a forward, confident rhythm as soon as possible.

Fence three.

The first fence is the Bac de Châtaignier Audevard, a table with a sloping profile and a generous floral groundline, heading into a sweeping hairpin turn to fence two, the Tronc tordu Locexpo, a simple hanging log. Fence three, the Table de pique-nique Noa, gives us Vietnam-style flashbacks of last year, when we suggested that perhaps the families of beaver-sized swimming rats made use of Pau’s colossal tables for family dinners — this year, the course builders have kindly left a selection of plates and bowls out for them to use.

William Fox-Pitt considers the idea of a dinner party with the rats, and finds it lacking.

But aquatic vermin and a real risk of rabies aside, there’s not much to do here but bowl on down and jump the fence out of as forward a stride as can be managed. Then it’s onto the Château de Pau, a castle on a hill, which used to be the first part of a combination, but is now just a single fence and a disappointing Ed Sheeran song.

Fence four.

Next up is fence 5AB and our first combination, the Oxer ajouré – pointe Freejump, which is a table to a corner and can be ridden on four or five strides.

Fence 5A.

Fence 5B.

Quite an upright fence at six, the Mur de Pierre means that riders will have to waste a second or two setting up, but if they tackle the fence to the right of centre they’ll find themselves on the shortest route to 7AB and 8, the first water.

Fence six.

This was seriously influential last year, but it’s got a whole new look for 2018. Our intrepid competitors will have to pop over an elevated, brush-topped rolltop in the water, four strides up a big bank out and then one stride to 8, an offset hedge. There’s an alternative to 8 that takes you back around to the left, but riders will have to be sure to call out their long route early, as there’s not an enormous amount of space between the bank and the direct route.

Fence 7A.

Fence 7B to 8, combined driving bollards notwithstanding.

“You’ll be arriving here with a fresh horse, and you want them forward but thinking — and normally, fresh horses aren’t thinking,” says Joseph. “So it’s really a case of the rider’s being switched on there and in the right speed and the right forwardness. You don’t want them running through the bridle. The step up could be a looky sort of fence, or it might jump really well — we won’t know until we do it. The least pressure with the most forwardness is key here; I wouldn’t be trying to make too many adjustments.”

After the water it’s a right-hand curve to fence nine, which is the Barrier d’attelage Octobre Rose, a simple but airy upright adorned, apparently, with the contents of a child’s dress-up box in honour of Breast Cancer Awareness month.

Fence nine.

Hallie Coon plans out her second horse inspection outfit.

After popping the rail, competitors will have to head back to that first water — just to confuse everyone a bit — and pop down the drop in. This could take some of the horses by surprise — they’ve seen water once already, but it’s still early on in the course. Then they’ll canter on up and out of the water to fence 11, a beefy corner on an incline.

“Once you get out of the water you’ll almost want to do the next three minutes at 600mpm. It’s going to be a fast part of the course, and the horses have had a chance to get into it, so it’s time to get down to business,” explains Joseph.

Fence 10 from the take-off side…

…and from the landing side.

There’s another straightforward — if enormous — table at 12, before another big question at 13 and 14. This one takes the place of last year’s contentious angled hedges and ditches, which were reminiscent of a couple of Vicarage Vees on an acute turn. This year, there’s still a big jump (13) at the top of the mound, but now the competitors will have to bowl on down to a serious skinny, which is separately numbered as fence 14. There’s an alternative route here — if they don’t fancy the idea of jumping a seriously tall and seriously narrow fence at this point (although why on earth wouldn’t they? It all sounds great fun. Pass us the Bordeaux, please), they can pop 13, gather steam down the mound, and then curve around to a straightforward little log pile.

“I’d be wanting to meet this on my stride, and lining it up a little bit right to left and coming down on three strides, jumping it as I meet it. I don’t think people should worry too much about this fence.”

Fence 14: pretty easy, tbh.

Once clear of 14, it’s time to head out onto the centre of the racetrack, and the goal now will be to continue to ride as forward as possible. After a few slow early minutes, this is the time to gain speed and try to catch up to the clock, so a high cruising speed will be needed here and competitors will be travelling at 600mpm plus to get the job done.

The first fence in the track is 15, the Haie de l’Hippodrome de Pau, a massive but fairly innocuous staggered hedge, with an obvious profile that encourages riders to jump out of stride. Then it’s onto 16AB, a maximum width white table at the four-minute point. It’s four or five strides — four if you want to save time — to another corner.

“That’s on a really generous distance, and you can almost slightly angle the table and just keep rocking on four strides. But you don’t really want to be adding there; even on a short-striding horse that won’t be a great approach.”

Fence 16A is probably the widest fence on the course, though it should ride well and encourage a forward stride…

…down to 16B, the corner. It’s not visible here, but the corner features a helpful angled groundling, which effectively does the work of bisecting the fence for the riders.

At fence 17 we find yet another table, and this one utilises width, rather than height, to test the horses and riders. A lower fence might seem like a nice breather, but actually, it can offer up a bit of a funny jump; it doesn’t give horses an awful lot to look at and they may not make the best effort here. Once again, the key will be power and pace.

The trakehner at fence 18.

A peek into the abyss.

As we turn around the furthest point of the course we come to fence 18, a seriously airy trakehner, angled over a yawning great ditch. Helpfully, there’s a wooden groundline and flowers to help the riders see the right angle to take, which is slightly left to right.

Next up is 19, the Haie de laurier, which is an impressively wide and square box hedge with white rails on the take-off side to make it more readable. At 20 there’s another very airy upright rail like the one we saw at 9, though this one stands solitary in the middle of the open expanse of the racetrack and is a real departure from the wide tables we’ve seen so far in this section. Without much in the way of a groundline —  though there is a bush tucked under the rail — it’ll require slightly more set-up, so riders will need to land kicking to make up that second or two before they loop back around to the right towards 21 and 22, two corners that are jumped on a related distance with some variable terrain in between.

“It’s always a little bit like this at Pau, that you hit a flat bit and you just gallop, but that’s what makes it a little bit difficult, too, because then you come to a combination and your horse is strung out and very forward,” says Joseph. “It’s in the rider’s best interest to put them together a bit. For me, you almost need to be coming into 21 in a forward frame of mind and on the correct line, but not so open. But I do think that whatever stride you meet that corner on, you have to take it. You just have to pick it off on the distance you find.”

The first of the corners at 21 and 22. In the background, you can see the second — but horses and riders will have to traverse a dip in the terrain to get from the first to the second.

Fence 23 is one of the new fences on course this year, and it’s a classic four-star profile — Le palois is an enormous ditch and brush of the sort we see at Burghley and Blenheim. It’s big, it’s bold, it’s inviting, and it’s going to give a great feeling in the air — that’s one hell of a ditch, but a horse who might be tempted to back off the fence will be given even more reason to do so by the bright white sand on the approach. Still, riders will know they’re on the home stretch now, and that positivity will see them tackle it with aplomb.

Fence 23 — big enough for all the Citroens in the south of France to park in.

At 24AB and 25 there’s another water question. 24A is a table on dry land, from which the riders will canter down to two offset angled hedges (24B and 25) in the water. There’s a time-consuming long route here, but we’re unlikely to see many people elect to take it — with positive riding, this direct route should ride well. It’ll certainly ride better than 26, anyway, which was on the course last year, too — a short, squat ditch and rail, it doesn’t look like much but is rather too small for horses to get a read on, and it can cause some awkward efforts, as can the sight of the sudden road landing.

The view of 24B and 25 from the take-off side of 24A.

There’s a straightforward pop over the gigantic hedge oxer at 27 to guide horses and riders back into the twisty final section of the course, but our competitors can’t get complacent yet — there’s still plenty to do before they arrive home, and at this, the eight-minute marker, there’s no more opportunity to make up time. Competitors will know their fate here already, at least as far as time penalties are concerned.

The Delta Cambox arrowhead.

The Delta Cambox arrowhead at 28 requires some attentive riding — it’s stuck at the top of the hill and it’s a skinny enough question, and for a tiring horse, it can lead to a less-than-ideal effort. The great Andrew Nicholson took a spill here last year — though it doesn’t look like much, anything can happen here. Then there’s another wide table, the Mur Médias concrete box at 29, to offer a bit of a mental break before 30 and 31AB, the final water combination.

Fence 30 is a hanging log drop in, just like last year, but this year there’s nothing to jump once they’re in the water. Instead, they’ll have to canter up and out of the water and make an acute left-handed turn to two brush swans on a one-stride line.

“I was struggling to find a line for this, but I’ve found it, on reflection,” says Joseph. “You have to jump into the water normally, and as you come out, there’s actually a bit of a muddy patch that’s painted green — I was always planning to come slightly inside of that to keep the flow, but now I realise that’s a bit risky at the last part. I’m going to come one stride more out, thinking about the left turn after the B element — if you turn a bit too early into the A element you’ll find yourself almost parallel to the B element.”

The view from fence 31A to 31B.

Another straightforward table at 32 and a bit of a gallop precede the painter’s palette at 33. Although it’s just a single fence, this very upright skinny is splattered with paint and sits in the dappled light under the trees — last year, this meant that many horses seemed to struggle to read it and left a leg. This year, with a demonstrable lack of actual sunlight, it may give better results.

Fence #33 on the Pau CCI4* cross country course, “Palette de peintre L’Eperon.” Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The final major combination on course — though not, notably, the final combination — comes at 34AB and 35. Here we see the skinny brushes from last year’s enormously influential first water put to a new use — 34A is a big brush atop a mound on a downhill dogleg turn to the first colossal skinny brush at 34B. Because 35 is separately numbered, there’s the option to circle between the two brushes, and there are alternatives, too, but this close to home, many will chance the direct route, and many will have expensive mistakes here, especially if they fail to get a good jump over the first element.

“The first part is big, and they’re going to land a little bit on their heads,” explains Joseph. “So I’m going to jump it from the right to the left to land with a little bit of room so I can do a bit of manoeuvring, and then I’m going to just come down to those skinnies. I’m not going to try to think about it too much, but I’ll do a lot of preparation to the first part so I can land in the correct place and get to the skinnies from the right place. Your eye will tell you the distance, but I think if you come down in three strides it’s a bit risky and your horse will be running blind. If you come down in four, you’ll get the two between the skinnies well. I’ve jumped a good few fences down that hill over the years on both sides, and one thing I know is that they always land from the first fence with absolutely nothing.”

The final skinny brush at 35.

Fence 36 is the final fence before the atmospheric main arena, and it’s a simple one — just a nice, big, steeplechase-style brush to encourage horses home and see them into the roaring crowds and final fences. 37AB is a double of angled hedges, but they’re slightly shorter and with a kinder profile than last year, so shouldn’t cause any issues, and then it’s back around to the other long side and over the huge but sloping final fence.

And that’s your Pau course for 2018 — it’s long, it’s tough, and it’s a serious four-star track. The heavens have opened this morning in France, though the rain looks set to stop by about 1.00pm. Cross-country begins at 1:30pm local time/7.30am EST, and will be live streamed at the link below, or with English colour commentary via the Les Etoiles de Pau free app. There, you can also watch the previous days’ action back, with guest commentary from competitors and slightly hungover Eventing Nation correspondents alike. We’ll be bringing you live updates throughout the day as well as a full dissection of the day’s action later on. We’re wishing safe journeys around the course to all our competitors here today, and sending plenty of lucky vibes to our American contingent, headed up by four-star debutante Hallie Coon, who sits in eighth place overnight.

Want an even more in-depth insight into the course? Check out the CrossCountry app preview, where you can watch Joseph walk the lines in the combinations and discuss some more of the challenges the course presents.

Go Pau, and Go Eventing!

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Saturday Links from Tipperary

Spot the human. Photo via Dawn Britnell on Facebook.

It’s getting to be the last hurrah, folks. Le sigh. Jump on your horse and get out there or curl up with a cup of coffee and enjoy the Pau live stream. Either way, enjoy eventing in the fall! Here are your American ride times to look out for if you’re tuning in to Les 4 Etoiles de Pau:

  • Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border: 1:38 p.m. CEST/7:38 a.m. EST
  • Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett: 3:54 p.m. CEST/9:54 a.m. EST
  • Hallie Coon and Celien: 4:06 p.m. CEST/10:06 a.m. EST
  • Boyd Martin and Steady Eddie: 4:18 p.m. CEST/10:18 a.m. EST
  • Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready: 4:38 p.m. CEST/10:38 a.m. EST

Important update from Waredaca: Two inches of rain fell overnight and the schedule has been changed. The ground is very wet and soggy in many places on the farm. You will most likely need to be pulled in with a tractor.

Today’s divisions of Preliminary and Training Rider will still do dressage and show jumping today. Cross country will be rescheduled to tomorrow afternoon. Times will be available after the show jumping phase concludes this afternoon.

If you choose to withdraw, please either email cindy [email protected] or call the show office 301-570-2150.

National Holiday: National Black Cat Day

Major Events This Weekend:

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Action:

Waredaca Classic 3DE & H.T. [Website] [3DE Entries] [HT Entries] [3DE Ride Times] [HT Ride Times] [3DE Live Scores] [HT Live Scores]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Windermere Run H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Holly Hill Fall H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Saturday Links:

Jim Wofford: Hoofprints Through History

Why I support the rise in eventing entry fees: H&H eventing editor’s unfashionable view

Lessons From The Live Stream: Jim Wofford On Cross-Country Riding

Why Your Mindset Controls Your Riding, And Three Ways To Make It Work For You

Is It Time for Your Horse to Retire?

And … a big EN congrats to Caiti Kuczynski and Codi Trumpower of CDK Eventing and Vixen Hollow Equestrian Center, who are getting hitched today in Hedgesville, West Virginia! Here’s raising a glass to love.

Hot on Jumper Nation: Does it Get Any Cuter? Shetland Steeplechasing Steals Hearts at WIHS

Saturday Video: Click here for a musical drone flyover of the Pau cross country course. The calming piano is almost enough to make you think it’s a relaxing walk in the park. Ha!

Peaking at Pau: Meet Hallie Coon, Your New Favourite Rider

That moment when your best friend gives you everything: Hallie Coon and her horse of a lifetime, Celien. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I don’t usually try something new at a four-star, but I took a risk and it paid off,” laughed 23-year-old Hallie Coon after the career-best test that earned her and Celien a 29.1 today at Pau. That something new could refer to a few things, really — it’s the first time Hallie and the eleven-year-old Dutch mare have dipped below the 30s in an FEI competition, as well as, just as pertinently, the first time they’ve tackled a four-star. But what she’s actually referring to is something else: not content with being an also-ran in her CCI4* debut, she dug deep and took her chances with a bold new tactic today.

“I got her a bit fired up in the warm-up so she’d be more active and pushing with her hindend,” she explains. “I’m always a bit scared of doing that, because she can get quite hot in the arena, but I decided to take the risk. I was sick of being mediocre, and I thought if I tried it, I’d either be really wonderful or really terrible! So we took the risk, and it paid off.”

The toes of a true princess – crown emoji non-negotiable. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It most certainly did — the pair’s three-star dressage average in their six runs this season has been 33.4, and to shave off over four marks at the biggest competition of your life, and riding the most difficult test yet, is a rare triumph.

“Honestly, coming into this I didn’t think there was any possibility of this outcome after day one,” she says. “It’s very, very surprising to me; I’m a little bit stunned and shellshocked still!”

But Hallie has always been quietly confident that the test was in there somewhere: “I’ve worked really hard, and I felt coming here that the horse was really quality and in a really good place, but I was questioning  whether I could put it together on the day. I’m as surprised as everyone else is — and I know everyone is surprised,” she laughs.

Hallie Coon and Celien. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

But should she be, really? After all, she’s produced Cece herself, taking her from her first event through to Advanced in just under two years. She bought her sight unseen from a video — “she was just a blur, jumping around in the rain” — as a rising six-year-old, and though the Dutch-bred mare had only showjumped and thus never even seen a solid fence, she knew she had to have her. Hallie was just seventeen at the time, but she knew she was onto something special.

“There was something there, a certain spring in her step, and this exuberance that she took everything on with,” she explains. “She’s not perfect; her form wasn’t necessarily perfect, but attitude shone through for me. I try to work off my gut instincts and not overthink things, and so I just went with it. I was at Buck [Davidson’s] when I saw it, and I called my parents straight away — I’ve never relied on them to get me horses, but I knew I had to move fast. We got her cheap and everything just came together.”

Hallie Coon and Namaste at Red Hills 2014. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Until that point, Hallie had enjoyed a taste of what was to come with Namaste, the tricky gelding she took over from sister Aryn and who she produced to three-star after moving up to him from her childhood pony. Though talented, Namaste wasn’t the easiest horse to maintain, and Hallie hoped that Cece might be the horse that could follow through on her major ambitions.

Hallie Coon and Celien at Fair Hill 2015. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Celien made her eventing debut at the Novice level in 2013, jumping around Ocala International for an inauspicious 13th place. Then she moved up to Training level a couple of weeks later, but Hallie decided after this second event that the mare, who had only ever seen the inside of showjumping arenas in Belgium, needed some more time to grow and mature. She spent much of the next ten months riding her around the fields of New Hampshire, letting her figure out her balance and grow into herself. When they returned to competition in early 2014, they did so with all guns blazing: within twelve months Cece moved through the levels from Training to Advanced.

“She’s extraordinary — she went from nothing to Advanced so quickly, because no challenge was great enough for her and she just had to have it all thrown at her or she’d get bored.”

Hallie Coon and Celien – a first trip abroad, courtesy of Karen Stives. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Now, Celien (Tenerife VDL x R Quicksilver, by Hamlet, a KWPN combination that sees her possess just 35.65% blood breeding) is eleven, with three-and-a-half seasons at the three-star level under her belt. After being named to the Emerging Athlete Eventing 5 program and receiving the Karen Stives Endowment Fund Grant, which allowed her to make her first competitive trip abroad this spring, a whole new world was opened up for Hallie and her mare. They helped the US team to second place at Houghton’s Nations Cup CICO3* in England, finishing best of the Americans in 15th place on their team debut and finishing on their dressage score of 34.7. Then, they took on the under-25 CCI3* at Bramham — widely regarded as one of the toughest three-star tracks in the world — and although an untimely abscess meant that they withdrew from the final horse inspection, they went clear across the country. Suddenly, Hallie realised that she could play with the big boys.

A team effort: Hallie Coon, Katherine Coleman, and Caroline Martin scoop second place in the Nations Cup, helmed by chef d’equipe Leslie Law. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Coming to the UK has been a brilliant experience,” she says. “It’s the first time I’ve been in a really high-pressure situation — Houghton was my first team appearance and I took it really seriously, so I was a bit crushed after my dressage. I just put a whole load of pressure on myself to get it done; I had to finish on that score, in my eyes. You can’t redo your first senior team experience. After Bramham, I realised that when it came to be crunch time, I could deliver. I’d always been a confident rider and competitor, but this gave me a whole new sense of confidence. I’ve never been put in that situation before — to find out I was able to rise to the occasion was as surprising to me as anyone else.”

Hallie Coon and Celien at Houghton. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But the one thing that didn’t surprise her was how easy it was to get to work in the UK, even when sharing warm-up rings with the likes of Oliver Townend, the Price family, and Andrew Nicholson.

“The only thing that could have freaked me out about the top guys being around was that maybe I could have gone up against them, thinking it didn’t faze me, and choked. That would have been a real thing for me, discovering that — in my head, we’re all human, everyone makes mistakes, and some people are more successful than others. It doesn’t scare me or affect me, but I have great respect and admiration for all those guys that would make a lot of people starstuck. I feel like I can relate to them — we’re all here for the same reason.”

Through thunder and rain: Hallie Coon and Celien at Houghton CICO3*. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After the disappointment of Bramham, Hallie knew she had two options: she could let her time in the UK come to an end and try again next year, or she could get creative and continue the learning experience. She opted for the later, and picked up the phone to her friend and confidante Richard Sheane, the brains behind the world-famous Cooley horse-sourcing enterprise in Ireland.

“After Bramham, I wasn’t really sure what to do, and I had to regroup and make new plan. My first call was to Richard; we’d met through Liz Halliday-Sharp a few years prior and he’d been really helpful when I was in search of a young horse, so I felt that he was the person I could go to, and trusted. We hopped over to his stables in Ireland, and from there, we were able to prepare for Mallow CIC3*, which was the final qualification we needed to go four-star. I went home for a couple weeks and they prepared her for me and really made it so that I was able to do it all. They were wonderful with her, and they’re genuinely amazing human beings. They took me in even though I wasn’t on a Cooley horse, and there was no benefit to their business as such — they’re just really genuine people who are willing to help out.”

Hallie Coon and Celien at Bramham. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After Mallow, Cece enjoyed a well-earned holiday before the excitement of the latter part of the season. In August, they headed to Millstreet CICO3* for their second team appearance, though their sophomore effort didn’t go quite the way of the first. The US team failed to complete, and though Hallie finished the competition happy with the way Cece felt, they incurred an early and uncharacteristic 20 penalties for a step back at the event’s infamous Irish bank.

Hallie Coon and Celien at the Irish Bank. Photo by Radka Preislerova Photography.

After a summer of flying back and forth between Ireland and the States, where her remaining horses still needed runs, Hallie was ready to head back to the UK for the final preparations. She’s been based at Liz Halliday-Sharp‘s Chailey Stud this autumn, where Liz’s string of horses shares equal turf with the top-level dressage horses piloted by Luke Baber-Davies.

“We all do our own thing at Chailey, but it’s a great place to have been based because Liz will give her input here and there while we’re riding, just little things like, ‘activate the hind legs,'” Hallie says. “I also get to see dressage horses schooled every day – really good Grand Prix horses. Having that as the everyday standard might have upped my game a bit. They say you have to be around people who raise your standards, and both of those guys have certainly done that for me this fall.”

Now, after eighteen years of four-star dreaming and two nearly-there moments — Hallie first intended to make the move-up at Kentucky in 2014 and then again in 2015 with former three-star horse Namaste, but last-minute problems put paid to those plans — she’s finally at her first CCI4*.

Four-star debutantes Hallie Coon and Celien. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For the girl who once “begged on my hands and knees to go to Ocala with my sister”, where they ended up having to share a bed for three months to make it work, this is the dawning of everything she’s ever hoped for. She’s even treated herself to the rare help of a groom for the week — freelancer Prairie StipeMaas Tobul, who formerly worked for Doug Payne, heads up her support team for the week. She’s also enjoying the support of Voltaire DesignFairfax & Favor, and Holland Cooper clothing, as well as team chef d’equipe Erik Duvander.

Praire StipeMaas Tobul and Celien at Pau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

On her way to the top level, one thing’s for certain: Hallie has always found her own way to adapt, survive, and thrive in the sport she loves, and she’s not going to stop anytime soon.

“Next, I’d like to bring a horse or two over to compete in the spring,” she says, thinking ahead to what looks set to be an enormously exciting career. “Through that, I’m hoping to make it stick and stay in the UK. I’d like to aim for every senior team possible, have a horse at every level, and tackle the four-stars and the Event Rider Masters classes.”

We’ll be cheering Hallie on throughout the rest of the weekend at Pau (and beyond!) — you can watch her go cross country tomorrow at 4:06pm local time/11.06am EST, and you can find her on Instagram, too, where she’s busy documenting her adventures. Fellow four-star eventer Tom Crisp has kindly bestowed upon Hallie the charming nickname ‘Flat White’ — she, um, likes coffee — and so we propose a hashtag for your online cheerleading needs. #FlatWhiteGoesToFourStar — and she’s making it look easy so far!

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

In Praise of Pau’s Shameless Frenchness

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

One thing I love about Pau is that you never 100% know what’s going on, or what is going to happen next.

That unknowing is owed in large part, I think, to a language barrier that neither side seems that excited to scale. But little breakdowns in communication can be fun or frustrating, depending on your sense of humor. Maybe they hand the winner a ribbon, send ’em on a victory gallop, and everybody packs up and goes home, or maybe tiny men in horse suits gallop out and the next thing you know everybody around you is line dancing. Frankly, I’d prefer the latter. Je ne sais quoi. 

We have some tools for bridging the gap. Take Google Translate, for instance. It tries so hard to be a smart technology, yet has a tendency to turn perfectly normal phrases into steaming hot piles of hilariously random speech.

Exhibit A: Google Translate’s stab at translating the Pau CCI4* dressage test. Mixed results, I’d say.

Medium walk = no way! Or this adorable Facebook translation:

And then there’s the culture itself. I do not mean to engage in undue cultural stereotyping, but there is a lot of cliché Frenchness happening around here. Like the jog-side smoking section:

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

I wish I’d taken a photo of it, but I swear I saw a mustachioed man smoking a cig while biking the cross country course.

And I’ve gotten honked at a LOT while driving — I’m sure I deserved most of it but come on, throw the clueless American a tiny bone. Your roads are hard.

And you, mademoiselle, are cranky.

The last time I was here in 2015, I tried to capture Pau’s French vibes in this music vid:

Foux du fafa. Go Eventing.

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Pau Day 2 Instagram Roundup: Dressage in the Rearview

Is Pau dressage over already? At some events Thursday and Friday seem to drag on forever, but here in France they seem to be flying by. Is time collapsing in on itself, or are we just having that much fun?

Who is to say, really. As a fleeting memento of the dressage good times we’ve shared, and a tease for the cross country action soon to come, here are a few of your snapshots:

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Some of the 38 4* cross country fences here @4etoilesdepau

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Pour commencer la journée je suis allée à la visite vétérinaire des chevaux du CCI 4**** puis avec les 3 autres filles de mon groupe (Apolline, Sixtine et Ophélie), nous avons rejoint les #grooms pour commencer à toiletter les chevaux présentés à la vente. Nous sommes ensuite allées faire un tour du côté des épreuves (aujourd’hui du dressage). A 11h nous avons préparé les chevaux de la vente et nous mettre chacune à notre poste, moi j'étais dans le rond d’havrincourt avec une Chambrière pour aider à faire avancer les chevaux pour sauter pendant que les filles amènent les chevaux et s'occupent de la porte du rond. Après avoir terminé la présentation nous avons brossé les chevaux, rangé les affaires, puis nous avons été manger. En début d'après-midi je suis allée voir le dressage du 4**** avant d'avoir été placé sur un poste pour la porte qui consistait à ouvrir le passage des chevaux quand ils arrivaient et fermer le passage des piétons. Le reste de la journée j'ai continué à regarder le dressage et à me balader autour des stands et du site. En fin de journée nous avons fait une petite répétition pour notre flashmob de dimanche avant d'aller manger. Solène

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Pour commencer la journée, nous avons regardé la visite vétérinaire du CCI **** ensuite nous avons fait le poste de lapin (récupérer les protocoles de notation des juges) du CIC**. Puis à 12h00, nous avons mangé des pâtes et du poulet avec de la mayonnaise, du ketchup et en dessert une Danette. Puis à 12h30 nous sommes retournés à la carrière d'honneur pour nettoyer la lisse de dressage, puis Canelle a ratissé la piste de la carrière, ensuite Nostalgie à Vins et Gilles Pons ont fait ouvreur pour le dressage du CCI **** ! Et avec Canelle nous étions " ultra " synchronisés lors des déplacements pour l'ouverture et la fermeture du carré de dressage A la fin des épreuves de dressage d'aujourd'hui nous avons commencé à apprendre le flashmob, puis nous sommes allés manger. Enzo

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4**** PAU

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Go Eventing.

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

#FlashbackFriday Video from World Equestrian Brands: Joseph Murphy vs. Pau 2016

Joseph Murphy and Sportsfield Othello at Pau 2018. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ireland’s Joseph Murphy and his longtime partner Sportsfield Othello are the old pros of the 2018 Pau field. This is their fourth crack at the event together, having finished 27th in 2011, 5th in 2014, and 24th in 2016 with a hat trick of clear cross country rounds. Coincidentally they picked up the exact same number of time penalties — 2.4 — in 2011 and 2014, and 5.6 in 2016.

On other horses, Joseph finished 5th in 2015, and 8th and 41st in 2013. All total, in six trips around the course, Joseph has had just 20 jump and 18 time penalties. He’ll add two more tours of the course to his résumé tomorrow when he tackles the track once more with Sportsfield Othello (“Franky”), now 17-years-young with more stars in his crown than we can count, as well as four-star first-timer Fernhill Frankie.

Joseph Murphy and Sportsfield Othello at Pau 2018. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Clearly Joseph has a handle on navigating Pau swiftly and successfully, and he’s been much sought after for course advice this week — you can have a virtual wander around Pierre Michelet’s track with him and Nick Turner via Cross Country App here. You can also take some tips in person stateside next month, as he’ll be teaching a cross country clinic on Nov. 5-7 at Boyd Martin’s Windurra USA in Cochranville, Pennsylvania. Click here for details.

To tide us over until the action begins tomorrow, take a spin around the 2016 course with Joseph and Franky.

What a partnership, and what a tremendous run this pair has enjoyed together over the past decade. Here’s to safe, happy trips for all tomorrow! Go Eventing.

Pau Links: WebsiteEntriesXC Start TimesLive ScoringLive StreamForm GuideEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram