Classic Eventing Nation

Fiona Kashel’s WSF Carthago Euthanized After Badminton Injury

Fiona Kashel and WSF Carthago. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’re deeply saddened to report that WSF Carthago, the mount of Great Britain’s Fiona Kashel, has been euthanized as a result of an injury sustained while on course at Badminton Horse Trials on Sunday. The 13-year-old gelding, owned by Frank Breach, was the first of Fiona’s two rides and the second horse out of the start box, and the pair had executed a clear round up until fence 26, the Jubilee Clump Brush fence, where they were eliminated for a rider fall. Though ‘Revel’ didn’t fall, it appeared from footage at the fence that he may have slipped over the edge of the wide angled ditch in front of the fence. Fiona later opted to withdraw her second mount, Creevagh Silver de Haar.

Badminton Horse Trials released a statement on Monday, which reads as follows:

“A sad postscript to cross country day was the injury incurred by WSF Carthago owned by Frank Breach and ridden by Fiona Kashel. WSF Carthago was treated in the Veterinary Clinic at Badminton and subsequently hospitalised. The extent of injury found in surgery meant successful repair was not possible and our commiserations go to the whole team.”

Fiona Kashel’s WSF Carthago. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Badminton was Revel’s third start at five-star: he finished seventh at Luhmühlen last year in his debut at the level, and completed Pau last autumn. Freelance groom Josh Levi, who has long worked alongside Fiona, posted an emotional tribute on social media to the horse, who had inarguably become an enormous part of the family at Fiona’s Surrey yard.

“WSF Carthago. My Golden Child,” he writes. “I don’t really know how to put into words how I’m feeling right now other than how proud and honoured I am to have had such an integral part of your career and life. From seeing you come onto the lorry in Ireland as a big gangly 5 year old and bringing you home with your beautiful kind eye, to watching you complete your first event, to then be by your side the whole way for 7 1/2 years and getting you to your first 5* last year at Luhmuhlen.

“You forever carried such presence and grace wherever you went. I watched you grow and progress into one of the best event horses I have ever worked alongside who just loved their job and I cannot thank you enough for the journey you took me on. Your little whinny in the mornings at breakfast time at shows to the way you dragged me around when grazing for the best grass, you always kept me going. It’s going to take a long time for my heart to heal knowing you’re not here anymore.
“Such a tragic loss of such a quality and special horse and I will forever cherish the memories we had together and the love I have for you has and never will waver.
I want to say a massive thank you to everybody who has been so supportive and to everybody at Badminton yesterday for helping me out on what was one of the toughest days I had to endure.
“Fiona Kashel you produced Revel so beautifully and I will always be proud of what we achieved together with him. My thoughts are with Team Kashel Eventing at this sad time. Run free King.”
Our thoughts and most heartfelt condolences are with Fiona, Josh, Frank, and everyone whose lives were intertwined with this special horse.

Wednesday News & Notes from Ocala Horse Properties

There’s nothing I love more than seeing a happy animal. From the cattle grazing in the fields around my house and my cats purring on my lap, to event horses galloping round the cross country with ears pricked and clear smiles on their faces, animals bring such joy to our lives.

Happy baby animals are a whole pile of double whammy to my heart strings! This little delight is Mirabelle, a 48 hour old foal enjoying her first taste of turn out. Of course she’s like, the cutest thing, but what I love most about this video is that it shows just how much of the training we do with our horses is born from what comes naturally to them. From half-passes and pirouettes, to great long gallop strides, Mirabelle’s got them nailed at two-days-old!

(FYI She took on the logs a few days later, adding potential Badminton winner to her list of future careers!)

U.S. Weekend Preview

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

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

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, VT) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

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

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

Spokane Sport Horse Spring H.T. (Spokane, WA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring] [Volunteer]

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

Wednesday News and Reading

Just calling attention to my EN Team Pick of Kristina Hall-Jackson and CMS Google as the best debutant (horse or rider) at Badminton. Whilst my prediction wasn’t totally accurate (Gemma Stevens’ Jalapeno was the highest placed debutant horse in 6th, and French rider Luc Chateau and Viens Du Mont were top Badminton rookie pair in 11th), Kristina and Google were the highest-placed British first-timers at Badminton, in 29th. I’m taking that as a win – as I’m sure Kristina is. Watching them go cross country was inspiring and educational. They had a couple of green mistakes – which they can go home and work on – but they worked together and completed, and what a feeling that must have been. I totally agree with retiring if you and your horse have problems on course, but sometimes, if your horse is happy, carrying on gives you the chance to have a learning experience that you can only get in competition. I can’t wait to see what the future holds for this exciting partnership. [Google Maps Out An Exciting Future]

Ros Canter and Walter (Lordships Graffalo) are our Badminton champions of 2023 and she credits her horse’s love of all three phases for his success. British Eventing High Performance Coach, Chris Bartle, knows the relationship between the different phases of eventing is intrinsic to the modern day sport. Whilst a great cross country horse will leap up the leaderboard on cross country day, the training that goes into the dressage to deliver a ‘clear round’ test (that perhaps won’t be up at the top after first phase) is what helps the horse to react at speed as they tackle the cross country. When his event horse, Wily Trout tweaked a tendon, Chris worked on dressage as part of the horse’s recuperation. They went on to compete in pure dressage at the 1984 LA Olympics and came 6th! In this archive article, Chris Bartle explains his thoughts on the links between the eventing phases. [Dressage Is Your Friend]

There were five 17-year-olds in the Badminton field this year – Lillian Heard Wood’s LCC Barnaby was one of them. In his twelfth 5* start, Barnaby completed his first Badminton with a top-20 finish. Watching long-term partnerships such as this is such a joy – the trust they have in one another, the total team effort they display, the confidence that a rider must have when they’re taking on the top level with their great friend. Lillian said it all in her interview after they’d finished their show jumping round: “Even if you don’t know, he knows it’s OK. I probably won’t ever have this feeling again in my entire career”. But keeping an older horse is no walk in the park – it takes teamwork, effective training routines, and an adaptable approach. [Supporting The Old Guys]

It’s Buy A Horse Book Day today. I can’t possibly begin to list ALL the horse books I’ve read over the years, although I do still have ‘The Ultimate Horse Book’ on my shelf that I won at school. I spent hours poring over the different breeds and soaking up the world of horses. Discipline doesn’t matter to me – I devoured my signed copy of the story of Desert Orchid alongside ‘How to Train Your Pony for Polo’ and all the Jilly Cooper novels. From kids’ books to adult fiction, training guides to autobiographies, there’s a whole horse world out there just waiting to be read. [Horse Books For Everyone]

Wondering what you – and your horse – should wear for your next show? This is the app for you! The FEI TackApp lets you search for all the info you need about equipment, tack and dress guidelines at FEI events. [Eliminate Show Wear Faux Pas]

Sponsor Corner:

🌾 18 acres of pasture
💧 Your very own pond
🌳 Riding distance to the Goethe State Forest

What more could you ask for? Check out this week’s Dream Horse Farm from Ocala Horse Properties.

Video Break

Here’s a video of Lillian Heard Wood’s LCC Barnaby as a 7-year-old in the Prelim cross country at Pine Top H.T. in 2013.

I love this horse, in part, because I had a heart pony as a teenager with the same name. Basically, if you want to sell me a horse, tell me it’s called Barnaby.

Between the Ears with Sydney Solomon

It seems like these days we look at each other’s lives through the lens of a highlight reel. We get to see the incredible trips, the best jumps, and the moments that we’re proud enough of to put on social media. What we don’t talk about is how much pressure this adds to athletes on both ends of the news feed.

Riders, whether professional or not, are made to feel like they ‘have to’ post something that makes them look cool and successful. Then, as we consume this content, we are stuck with the disillusioned perception that the sport is easy and that if you’re not succeeding, then maybe you aren’t cut out for it. I would like to take this opportunity to go ‘between the ears’ of some of the riders that make up our Eventing Nation and work to understand some of the real challenges this industry presents.

To read more from the Between the Ears series, click here.

Sydney Soloman and Early Review C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sydney Solomon just had her first crack at the big leagues, taking Laurie Cameron’s Early Review C around the majority of the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event CCI5* track before parting ways at fence 23, just before the 10-minute mark of an 11:26 minute course. So much pressure can go into the outcome of an event like this, so I wanted to get between the ears with Sydney to talk about her experience and her career in the sport that got her here.

Can you tell me a little bit about your background and introduction to eventing?

“My first experience of eventing was when a trainer of mine took me and some other girls from my barn to watch the Fair Hill three-star [now 4*]. We watched a PBS documentary on the O’Connor Event team on the way, so it really was a crash course on the sport. I got my first horse, Bella when I was eight and she was four, and as you can imagine, it wasn’t an easy partnership. Even when I was 10 and Bella was six, eventing the mare didn’t seem like a viable option. So I took my Mom’s draft horse around Beginner Novice and Novice, which was fun to watch because I was tiny and she was giant. Eventually, I got another horse, Lillian Pink, who is actually closely related to my upper-level mount today, Coco. Lily’s full sister is Coco’s mother. Lily and I did young riders and 30 or so Prelims together while training with Lillian Heard. Lillian Heard also helped me shape Bella into a Prelim horse, something that I wasn’t sure would be possible. So with both horses, I got a ton of mileage before I had even finished high school. When Lillian Pink had to be put down after a freak incident in her stall, I was so grateful to have Bella to keep me going.”

How did you end up running your own training business?

“After I graduated high school, I took a gap year to go work for Phillip Dutton as a working student. After two years there, I had three horses in training and Phillip was downsizing his program at the time, so at the age of 20, I essentially went out on my own, renting stalls at True Prospect farm for my horses. At the time, I was thinking I might still go back to school, so I didn’t want to commit to another program, and also with three horses, it’s difficult to go and work for someone else. I had this great opportunity to ride all these horses and I wasn’t sure I would get it somewhere else. In hindsight, maybe I should have gone down to one horse and been in a program, but one of the things I got from going out on my own so young was really learning to think for myself. It was terrifying not having help all the time, but I competed a lot, and had some really accelerated learning. There was a lot of failure but I also had a lot of success. I have to give so much credit to Laurie who trusted me throughout that experience. I did learn how to be very independent and I did come around to be more comfortable doing things without someone telling me every step of the way, although even now I wish I had people telling me what to do more.”

Sydney Solomon and Early Review CBF. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Can you tell me a little bit about your confidence as a rider?

“I definitely had plenty of horse shows that didn’t go the way I wanted them to. That being said, sometimes you can throw everything you have at making your horses go well and you’re still going to go and have problems I’ve had plenty of events where I’ve taken a ton of lessons beforehand but if the horse doesn’t like a ditch it’s not going to jump a ditch and at the end of the day those lessons didn’t matter, but also to be able to reflect back at those events and see that things did go well. I think I am constantly up and down in confidence, and maybe a lot of other riders feel this way as well.

“In 2021 my confidence was at its lowest, I felt like Coco and I would have one really good event and then we would have one really bad event and our best phase was cross country, and all of a sudden we weren’t getting around the cross country- and I was constantly questioning what I was doing wrong. We discovered that she was having issues tying up but it was still me saying ‘wow, I rode horribly’ and sometimes I still have events where I feel like that and sometimes I think ‘I have so much experience, I should be better at this than I am’ – I have probably done over 120 Prelims but it’s still not an easy level and taking any horse around Prelim is not easy.

“Sometimes you get on one horse one day and you can see every distance perfectly and you think that you’ve figured it out, riding horses, and then you get on the next one and they’re leaving the ground at awkward distances and you remember that you don’t.”

Have you ever experienced burnout? How do you handle burnout?

“The hard thing for me with burnout is that if things aren’t going well, I can’t stop. I feel like I can’t take time off because I need to make progress. The times that I am most burnout are when I feel like I’m just not good enough. It doesn’t have anything to do with the crazy hours or anything like that- it wouldn’t matter if I’m having easy days and getting done at 4 p.m. or a hard day and working until 8 p.m..

“When I feel this way, taking lessons usually helps me get out of it. I go into those lessons with an intention and I usually see results in those circumstances. I go to someone that I trust and feel comfortable with. I genuinely feel like I just have to get better at this, and that’s probably something that every rider feels for their entire career that they just have to improve their skills and for me, that’s the best therapy for a lack of confidence” Lessons give me actionable advice that gives me the plan to move forward with.”

OK, let’s talk about Kentucky, what emotions did you feel throughout the event?

“I was more emotional than I have been in a very long time. I’ve done a lot of four-stars and that’s pretty close to the top level of the sport but it’s nothing compared to the energy at the five-star level. Being at Kentucky I teared up a little as they said ‘Early Review, accepted’ [at the Horse Inspection] and that’s so not me. I’ve learned to separate from the emotions of the sport a lot, you kind of have to in order to survive because if you let yourself feel all the emotions and disappointments that come with this sport, you can’t live like that, because there’s too much. Even on a good day, I’m not crying tears of joy even if I’ve had the best show of my life. Going into the dressage ring, I also felt myself shed a tear. For my next five-star, I don’t think I’ll feel so emotional.”

What were you most afraid of?

“Going into the event my biggest fear was that I was going to go and have a rough cross country round and that’s exactly what happened. I knew I was going to be nervous about cross country because I’ve been nervous about that course for the past two years. I felt like my first few jumps I really attacked and that was great.

“But at some point in the course, my eye wasn’t seeing them forward anymore. I so desperately didn’t want to have something stupid happen that I wasn’t going to trust my eye to see a big open distance. At the coffin, Coco was amazing to get it done, but in my head, I already started telling myself ‘here goes my embarrassing cross country round in front of hundreds of thousands of people.’

“It’s one thing when you go to an Advanced horse trials and you’re in the back of the course and you have a bad jump and the only one who sees it is the jump judge but at Kentucky, there are so many people watching everything you, and maybe I should have ignored that, but it helped me at the beginning of the course and hindered me as soon as things started to get a little rocky.

“We were clean up until fence 23 — basically minute 10 of an 11:26 minute course, and when I fell, I was upset, but I felt like I deserved it and I was just happy that Coco was ok. I wasn’t upset that I fell off, I was upset that I hadn’t ridden better throughout the rest of the course, especially since Coco was so game for it, and she tried so hard. I kept saying to myself, what an amazing horse I am sitting on, but I’m just riding so poorly, and it was definitely worse in the places where there were tons of people watching.

“It was a great learning experience because I know focusing too much on what I looked like to everyone else took away from my ability to focus on riding better. Next time, instead of thinking about the fear of a bad round, I’m going to tell myself that ‘I’m going to go out there and do my best’”

Sydney Solomon and Early Review C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What advice would you give to a young rider with the hopes of making it to the five-star level?

“Find someone who you trust and who is willing to put time into you and learn everything you can from that person.”

At Kentucky, Sydney was awarded the Richard Picken Sportsmanship Award, voted on by other riders at the event. This award was created to honor the late jumping trainer Richard Picken and was awarded to Sydney for her demonstration of a measurable feat of sportsmanship during the event. As a competitor, Sydney is probably one of the nicest human beings that you will find on the scene. It’s not easy to go to Kentucky and come up just short of finishing, but Sydney did so with class, and never for a second laid blame on her horse.

I am so glad that Sydney opened up about her experience and where her focus was on Cross Country day, because fear of other people’s opinions is common at any level.

While seeking the approval of others is a very natural phenomenon, it takes a lot of the rider’s power away. The more we focus on not embarrassing ourselves, the less we focus on the process of riding well and being in the moment. If I tell you “don’t think about a pink elephant”, I dare you not to think about a pink elephant. It’s almost impossible.

Similarly, when we tell ourselves “don’t mess up in front of all these people” all our brain hears is “you’re going to mess up in front of all these people.” Enter: the paradox of wanting to do well, without trying too hard.

I know Sydney will continue to crack on at her goals, and I am excited to see how learning from this experience will shape her mindset in the future.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

I’m still just reveling in the spoils of such great stories from this year’s CCI5* events thus far. You’ve got an incredible partnership that never seems to age in Adelaide winners Shane Rose and Virgil, a first U.S. winner of Kentucky since 2008 in Tamie Smith and Mai Baum, and now (among many, many other stats), Ros Canter becomes one of five riders to win individual gold at World Championships as well as Badminton. ‘

We now turn to a key CCI4*-L in the U.S. this week at Tryon International, with a few weeks to go before the next 5* of the season (Luhmühlen – Germany – June 15-18).

Events Opening This Week

Fox River Valley Pony Club H.T. (IL), Midsouth Pony Club H.T. (KY), Stable View Summer H.T. (SC), Round Top H.T. (CO), Loudoun Hunt Club Summer H.T. (VA), Bucks County Horse Park H.T. (PA), Valinor Farm H.T. (MA),

Events Closing Today

Woodside Spring H.T. (CA), Virginia Horse Center Eventing (VA), Tryon Spring H.T. (NC)

Tuesday News & Notes

Which Kentucky 5* horse loves bananas? What about who would be your drinking buddy? Find out in this round-up of 5* quirks from the USEA.

If you’re thinking of applying for this year’s MARS Bromont Rising grants (available to riders age 25 and under), get that checked off your to-do list by May 1! This is an awesome program full of learning and networking opportunity, and it never hurts to apply! Check eligibility and get more information here.

Speaking of MARS Bromont, the International event is now accepting media credential applications. The marquee early-summer CCI4*-L is always a highlight on the calendar, and we know quite a few pairs who are aiming to compete at the 2023 event. More information on media credentials here.

The popular Educational Three-Day is returning for a second year, this time to Florida Horse Park. After a successful running in 2023, organizers headed up by Dorothy Crowell are pleased to announce a second annual event. The event will occur over Thanksgiving weekend, November 20-25. More information to come, but you can find some information in Dorothy’s social media post here.

Miss any of our coverage of Badminton? Catch up here!

Sponsor Corner

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Tuesday Video Break

Just revisiting two 5*-winning show jump rounds from two incredible women!

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo:

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum:

Monday Video: Ride Along for Contessa’s Kentucky Completion

With out biggest spring five-stars only just behind us, it’s going to take us a moment to come down from the adrenaline high that’s been keeping us running for over two weeks straight at this point. While the excitement of Badminton is extremely fresh, having just concluded this morning (anyone else having a hard time believing it’s Monday and not Sunday for that reason?) and with Kentucky over a week in the rearview mirror at this point, we still have much to cover from a quite triumphant weekend of eventing at the Kentucky Horse Park

We’re always excited to spot a rider wearing a helmet cam and we were extra excited to see Boyd Martin donning the Jockey Cam, which allows for live streaming, for his ride aboard Contessa at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event for both the cross country and show jumping phases. Ride along with them through key combinations on course in the video above and listen to Boyd’s assessment of his rides aboard this newly-minted 5* mare below:

We’ll have to watch out for this pair in Maryland this fall!

“He Loves Every Phase”: Wire-to-Wire Leader Ros Canter Crowned Queen of Badminton

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo: your 2023 Badminton champions. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

When we started today’s showjumping finale at Badminton, it all seemed rather cut and, well, maybe not quite dry: wire-to-wire leaders Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, assuming no absolute disasters befell them in the ring, were almost certain to win — the only question was how many of the originally two, and ultimately four, fences in hand she’d need to use to get there. Michele Saul’s eleven-year-old British-bred gelding (Grafenstolz x Cornish Queen, by Rock King) had had just one previous career rail in a long-format international, and that had been in his seven-year-old season, but after the taxing test of yesterday’s competition, and with the pressure of being in pole position looming overhead, would we see a dramatic change in form on this final day?

As it turned out, no: Ros and ‘Walter’ executed a truly classy clear round to secure the diminutive former World Champion her first ever five-star victory.

And taking the Badminton title feel?

“Quite cold, actually,” quips Ros, sheltering from the sudden downpour that had kicked into gear just as the prize giving got underway. “It’s a long, long journey to get here, and to get to a result like this, and it’s great.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

That journey began at the very start of ‘Walter’s’ career: Ros debuted him in his first British Eventing competitions in 2017, his five-year-old year, and has largely retained the ride throughout — though he did spend a season under Tom McEwen in 2019, culminating in a top ten finish in the Seven-Year-Old World Championships, while Ros was on maternity leave with daughter Ziggy. Throughout, she’s rated him as a real star, whether taking him around his CCI4*-S debut — at Burnham Market’s Blenheim eight- and nine-year-olds replacement in 2020, where he was second — or his CCI5* debut, here last year, where he was also second, or his British team debut, at the World Championships last year, where he was fourth.

“He’s an amazing horse, and he wouldn’t be very good at sitting home doing nothing, so Badminton, I think, is his highlight of the year,” she says. “He’s amazing, isn’t he? He really is. He hasn’t got a classic technique; he jumps a bit with his head in the air, but by God, does he want to clear those fences when he gets in there. I just think he’s the out and out event horse. He loves every phase, and he loves himself, which is great, and he loves the attention from everybody else. This day couldn’t have gone any better for him, I don’t think.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Though Ros had an extraordinary 16.6 penalties in hand — that’s four rails and a time penalty that she could have happily used — she kept her characteristic level head and used up just 1.6 of them, crossing the finish line with one of the scant four clears today and four seconds’ worth of time penalties. It’s seldom we see such a big margin coming into the final phase of an event — the last time was Burghley in 2016, when Australia’s Chris Burton and Nobilis 18 entered the ring in the lead with 20 penalties in hand, and ended up using 16 of them.

“I think we’ve got the mud to thank for that,” laughs Ros. “But he didn’t care, did he? He didn’t notice the mud; it wasn’t about that for him this week.”

Getting to a five-star at all is hardly a solitary feat — and winning one takes the combined efforts of a huge number of people, including, in this case, grooms Sarah Charnley and Travis Lee, and Ros’s family, including Ziggy, who’s been able to be a part of the whole week of competition thanks to help from Ros’s mother and husband Chris.

“The biggest thing since becoming a mother is the team I’ve got around me; I just couldn’t do without them,” says Ros, who was particularly pleased to have her mother along for the ride. “She doesn’t really like coming if she doesn’t have a big job to do and we had two grooms here this week, so it was touch and go whether she’d come and watch — so I’m delighted she’s here, because she’s the main person that keeps the wheels running.”

And, of course, you can’t get to the top without a great horse — and Ros truly knows one of those when she sees one. She’s had the pleasure of partnering the late, great Allstar B, with who she became World Champion in 2018; she piloted her other ride here, Pencos Crown Jewel — a maternal half-sibling to Lordships Graffalo, and both a product of Pennie Wallace’s breeding programme — to ninth place, and she’s got something truly exceptional in this eleven-year-old superstar, who’s now become a Badminton champion at just the start of his top-level career.

“It’s an absolute privilege, to be quite honest,” she says. “It’s a privilege to ride Walter and to have him in our life, because not only is he a great horse to ride, he is the most wonderful character. He’s got character in absolute abundance. He makes us laugh every day. He’s quite untrainable on the floor, but he’s just a brilliant person to have around. I truly feel privileged. When Allstar B started to become successful, I felt quite a lot of pressure riding him, and so I’ve been determined to enjoy Walter — but it’s easy to enjoy him because he just gives his all, all the time, and I just think he really enjoys doing the job he does.”

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class take second place in the sixteen-year-old gelding’s eighth five-star start — and eighth five-star top ten. Though they tipped a rail at fence three, they held the rest of the round together and crossed the finish line just one second over the optimum time to climb ahead of overnight runners up Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue.

“I was happy with third, and to finish second is as good,” he says. “I think for any of the horses who’ve finished the competition, they’re all absolute winners, because it was not an easy week at all, in any way, shape, or form. Any horse that has finished here is pretty special.”

Though just one of Oliver’s two starters finished the week here — the 15-year-old Swallow Springs was pulled up by stewards on course — the rider credits his runner-up as being one of the best horses he’s ever had.

“He’s unreal, isn’t he? I don’t know how many Badmintons and Burghleys and Kentuckys he’s done, but he’s still not out of the top five,” he says. “I’ve had too many 2nds with him, bless him, and that’s probably down to the jockey, but I can’t tell you how proud I am of him and the team behind him who know him so well — he literally is part of the family. It’s just a huge relief for me that I haven’t mucked it up too much and that he’s had another amazing run here.”

While the two-time five-star winner is nearing his twilight years, Oliver is still looking to the future with the game, gutsy Courage II son.

“I don’t want to keep him going too long, but every year, he’s still improving,” he says. “He’ll tell me when he’s had enough. I get on him for the first time on the 2nd of January every year and we look at each other and go, ‘do you want to go again?’ So far, it’s been a yes.”

Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Yesterday’s heroes of the day were Ireland’s Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue, who skipped around the tough track and difficult conditions to post the fastest round of the day and climb from 34th to second — and although their two rails and 1.2 time penalties dropped them a placing to third today, they’ve been no less lauded for their contribution to Irish eventing. Their finish here makes Austin the first Irish competitor to make the podium at Badminton in forty years — the last to do so was the now racehorse trainer Jessica Harrington in 1983.

“Hopefully it’s a bit of a lift for eventing at home, and following somebody like Jessica Harrington into that position is pretty amazing,” says Austin. “I’m naturally disappointed; I don’t think he jumped as well on this ground as he normally jumps, and it caught up with us. But hey ho — we’re third at Badminton, on the podium with two heroes, two of the best riders in the world, beside me, so I couldn’t be happier.”

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

One of the horses with the best chance of a clear round today was the hugely consistent Toledo de Kerser, and he and Tom McEwen duly delivered the goods. Their clear round inside the time allowed was one of just two in today’s competition, and it allowed them to climb one spot from the fifth place they’d held onto after each of the first two phases.

Although they’re arguably one of the most formidably competitive pairs on the circuit, having won a swathe of medals — including team gold and individual silver at the Tokyo Olympics — and a five-star, at Pau in 2019, Badminton has never really been the happiest of hunting grounds for them, nor for Tom generally.

“It’s the only one I’ve ever done any good at,” he laughs. “Finally! Badminton hasn’t really been my place — it might be my most local place, but I just do stupid things all the time. To come out and have a nice fun weekend with my best buddy, it’s quite nice really.”

Tom and Toledo had come into last year’s competition as the firm favourites, though their week ended early when they took a hugely uncharacteristic tumble late in the course. This year, he was still considered among the favourites to win, but his own attitude had shifted — instead of fighting for the top spot, he would just enjoy each phase with the enormously experienced sixteen-year-old. And so, though his time penalties yesterday might have stood in his way, he has no regrets about the way his week has played out — and nor should he.

“Cross country was so easy [for him], just a little bit slow,” he says. “But when they get a bit older, you have to look after them. There’ll be another day — maybe a Burghley in a dry season will be perfect for him. It’s so lovely that he’s had a great time; he was phenomenal all week and he’s come out really well.”

Though the pair have jumped countless excellent clear showjumping rounds together, this one stood out to Tom as a particular highlight.

“It’s probably the best round he’s jumped since Burghley when he came fourth about a billion years ago. I think it was the most connected round; there’s been the odd bit maybe, [where it’s] just not[[quite] as good. For me, there wasn’t one thing that I would change on the whole round. He was unreal, and he was absolutely loving it. If there was a second lap maybe we might have caught back up  a little bit more — though maybe not with Ros!”

Fighting off the onset of jetlag after a quick dash back from Kentucky on Sunday night might not be every rider’s idea of a dream lead-up to an event, but Tom credits the great performance of his ride there, runner up JL Dublin, with helping to set him up for success here.

“I think, probably, having an amazing run with Dubs last week has really helped,” he says. “He was phenomenal last weekend, so then to come out and do roughly the same again this week has been fantastic. Obviously this has been different, with proper testing conditions. It’s been testing for all — I think you’ve definitely seen some amazing riders and some amazing brains; people actually making decisions, and different decisions on course. It’s been very interesting to watch who did what, and when, around the course. And today, you can see how well they’ve all come out.”

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

Tom Jackson rounds out the top five, having completed Badminton with the twelve-year-old Capels Hollow Drift in similar circumstances to last year’s Burghley, where the pair were runners up: they began the week outside the top ten — fourteenth, in this case, on a 28 — and then delivered a swift clear across the country to move themselves towards the business end of the leaderboard. Then, on the final day, they once again delivered an elusive double clear round and got to watch themselves climb, climb, and climb some more. This time, it was from tenth to fifth place, a result that must surely put them well on the British selectors’ radar ahead of this summer’s European Championships at Haras du Pin.

“It makes him even more impressive, doesn’t it,” marvels Tom upon being told he’d delivered the first clear of the afternoon session. “What a horse he is. To give as much as he did yesterday and then come out today and give even more — he just goes above and beyond and it’s just a privilege to ride him. What a horse. I can’t stop saying it. He just gives you everything all the time, and what more can you ask for? I’m just so happy with him.”

One trip to France could well be in the bag for the pair now — but could another, next year, possibly be on the horizon? 30-year-old Tom’s hopeful but determinedly pragmatic about the prospect: “I’d like to, but I’m not sure we’re quite there yet. But we’re we’re getting there, hopefully we can keep edging closer.”

He’s followed in the top ten by an exultant Gemma Stevens in sixth place aboard Jalapeno, with whom she had a solitary rail to hold her post-cross-country spot on the leaderboard, Tim Price and Vitali, who dropped from fourth to seventh after tipping three rails — “the same as at Burghley, but a better three than at Burghley,” he says — Bubby Upton and Cola, who had two rails but nevertheless maintained their spot in the order and completed a climb from first-phase 31st place to eventual eighth, and Pippa Funnell and Majas Hope, who also had two rails and dropped down one place to tenth, 29 places up from their first-phase result.

Luc Château and Viens du Mont. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

That’s a lot of significant climbs to celebrate over the weekend, but none beat out France’s Luc Chateau, who won the Glentrool Trophy — awarded to the rider who executes the largest first-to-final-phase climb over the week — after rocketing up from 56th place after dressage to eventual 11th with Viens du Mont.

“My horse was tired after yesterday, but he has a huge, huge heart,” he says with a broad smile. This is just the horse’s second five-star: the pair finished ninth at Pau last year on his debut. He’s been an out-and-out cross-country machine throughout his career, and this is his 19th FEI run — and his nineteenth clean cross-country round in an international — and though he added 21.6 time penalties yesterday, which was considerably quicker than the average, he’s now added time in that phase in just five of those nineteen runs. His two rails today shouldn’t rule him out as a horse to keep an eye on with the European Championships around the corner.

Lillian Heard Wood and LCC Barnaby. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Lillian Heard Wood put a cap on a great week with the seventeen-year-old veteran campaigner LCC Barnaby, tipping a solitary rail but crossing the line inside the time allowed to finish 20th — an impressive forty-place climb from the first phase.

“I’m thrilled,” she says. “I just had the one down at the plank — I’ve had a plank down early before so I had a feeling I might have it down, and then I think I overcorrected. But honestly, I’m so happy. Normally if I have a rail, I’m a nightmare — I hate having rails. But it was muddy in there; he was exhausted yesterday; I was thinking the course was tough. I thought, ‘keep your wits about you, Lillian’, and it rode really smooth. I’m so happy to have done it.”

This is Barnaby’s thirteenth five-star, and so inevitably, Lillian has begun to think about what the finale of his prolific career might look like.

“Well, he’s really sound and he has been for a long time,” she says. “In the last year, and continuing on, each time I do [an event], it’s up to him — I’m not going to push him. The minute he feels like he’s less than he was, then I’m done. I’ve competed another five-star horse up to this age, and at the last one I did with him, he felt less than the horse he was before, and I was like, ‘I don’t want to do this anymore’. [Barnaby] didn’t feel that way this time, so we’ll see, but it’s totally up to him. He’s given me everything I need. If he wants to keep doing it, he can.”

His retirement, when it comes, will be an active one: “He doesn’t want to be done, so I’ll probably have to let some kid ride him!”

In any case, whether we get to enjoy watching him around another five-star or if Badminton does turn out to be his last hurrah, he’s been a huge part of Lillian’s life and a fundamental catalyst for so much of her learned experience — even if, or perhaps because, he’s always been a bit of a quirky soul.

“He’s actually been kind of a nightmare his whole life,” she laughs. “Now he’s wonderful! It actually makes you think about where they need to start in order to be a horse that can do this — it’s not necessarily an easy, simple, quiet horse. I’m thinking about the other horses in my barn and I’m like, ‘OK, this one’s a little bit wild — that’s probably a good sign!’ But it’s pretty cool because when you’re at an event like this, where it’s very difficult conditions, and I’m inexperienced at this event and I want to freak out, I just keep saying, ‘most experienced horse, most experienced horse, you’re gonna be OK, he’s the most experienced horse’. Even if you don’t know, he knows it’s OK. I probably won’t ever have this feeling again in my entire career, so I’m going to enjoy it.”

Katherine Coleman and Monbeg Senna set the standard in the first session. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Just one rider in this morning’s ten-strong jumping session managed to pin down a double clear round, and that was US competitor Katherine Coleman, who closed the book on Monbeg Senna‘s first five-star in fine style. The 13-year-old Irish Sport Horse maintained his high-flying jumping style, well demonstrated throughout yesterday’s cross-country, to make the influential course look very nearly easy.

“He was super,” enthuses Katherine. “I knew he had it in him — he’s such a super jumper. I just didn’t want to let him down out there, and he jumped brilliantly. What a horse!”

Though she made light work of the track, she explained that the challenge set by Kelvin Bywater was not at all insignificant: It’s really big — the depth of the water trays, that combination — I think it’s a proper Badminton show jumping track,” she says.

For Katherine, this week has been a particularly special one: it has marked her long-awaited return to five-star, a level at which she last competed back in 2017, when she contested both Badminton and Luhmühlen with Longwood. Now, after putting in the miles and the hard graft with the excellent Monbeg Senna, who she bought from Ireland’s Aoife Clark as a newly-minted Novice horse in 2016, she’s back — and not only has she nailed the long-awaited completion, she’s done so sans jumping penalties to take home a very respectable 23rd place.

“What a mental week,” she laughs. “This is his first five star and with the lack of preparations, when we set out yesterday I just wanted to complete, so we were a bit slow — but I still had a lot of horse left in the end, which is wonderful to know. I’m like, ‘ooh, I could have gone a little bit faster’, but I’d rather finish feeling that way than the other.”

As she told us yesterday, it truly does take a village to get to this point — and she’s had an enviable support team, from groom Hannah Quick to a full line-up of friends helming her on-site fan club.

‘It’s a huge team behind every horse that’s here,” she says. “Our groom probably got five hours of sleep in total this week. It’s a real testament to all the team at Badminton.”

And with that, we come to the end of another Badminton: it’s been a rather wet and wild one, but a competition to remember, certainly. Keep your eyes peeled in the coming days for some bonus content from the last couple of weeks of five-star action, but for now: Go Eventing.

The final top ten at Badminton 2023.

Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Live Stream – Badminton TV] [Radio Badminton] [Tickets] [EN’s Coverage]

Badminton Behind the Scenes: Social Media Roundup from the 5* Weekend

I’ve been glued to live updates and streaming to get the Badminton experience this past weekend, but there’s nothing that makes me feel like I was actually there then a good social media roundup. From the perspective of the fans in the stands, the grooms in the barns, or the organizers working hard to keep everything running, the posts made by the Eventing community itself is really what we love to see!

Weekend Winners: Catalpa Corner, Riga Meadow, Stable View, Skyline, Texas Rose, Waredaca, WindRidge

In addition to Badminton, the action among our horse trials was fierce! We saw plenty of riders tackling new courses, from New York to Iowa to Utah. Recap this busy weekend here as we celebrate our Weekend Winners, and enjoy a solid Instagram roundup so you don’t miss out on the action.

As always, congrats to all on a successful weekend, with an extra shout out to the winner of our Unofficial Low Score Award, Camille Arnall and Scarlet Rose with a 20.6 in the Introductory at WindRidge!

Catalpa Corner May Madness Horse Trials (Iowa City, IA) [Website] [Results]

Open Modified: Camryn Holcomb and Quite Breit (30.3)
Junior Training: Kiley Wenger and DRF Bellacris (34.7)
Senior Training: Paula Matuszak and Hubert (78.6)
Junior Novice: Kaylianna McMorris and Fernhill Future Star (24.7)
Senior Novice: Meaghan Marinovich-Burdick and Autograph (26.4)
Junior Beginner Novice: Ella Scherer and Sueno de Oro (32.2)
Senior Beginner Novice: Magin Day and Despite the Rumors (25.3)
Junior Starter: Sophia Petrin and Notorious Biggie (47.4)
Senior Starter: Amy Nelson and Jalapeño Popper (36.2)
Beginner Novice/Novice: Julia Arechavaleta and Crown Royal (47.3)
Novice/Training: Evan Fleck and Ardeo Platinum (33.9)

Riga Meadow at Coole Park Combined Test (Millbrook, NY) [Website] [Results]

Preliminary CT: Cooper Madden-Hennessey and Retsami (44.8)
Modified CT: Caroline Merison and HSH Mosstown Mexico (33.5)
Training CT: Natasha Quirk and First Class (31.7)
Novice CT A: Lydia Sarro and Clive Christian (26.0)
Novice CT B: Emma Lomangino and Callahan (29.2)
Beginner Novice CT A: Jillian Hoag and Dark Secret (36.8)
Beginner Novice CT B: Mary Shimkin and Captain Kismet (28.4)
Beginner Novice CT C: Suzanne Lavoie and Ryland Patrick (25.6)
Starter A: Abigail Reiners and Quincy (24.7)
Starter B: Harper Howe and Gizmo (33.0)
Starter C: Kristen Smith and Seamus (29.7)

Stable View Local Charities H.T. (Aiken, SC) [Website][Results]

Open Intermediate: Emilie Mudd and Quite Nice 11 (38.2)
Open Preliminary: Sydney Elliott and ChinTonic 3 (25.3)
Preliminary Rider: Solomon Edwards and Giant Red (39.8)
Moedified Rider: Mackenzie VanEffen and Cadall (32.8)
Open Modified: Jane Jennings and Clarkes Sweet Music (32.3)
Open Training: Arden Wildasin and Lobo (28.6)
Training Rider: Grace Ambrose and Forever Saul (30.7)
Novice Rider A: Sophia Caparelli and Cool Jack (31.8)
Novice Rider B: Nancy Read and Classic Chrome PCH (27.8)
Open Novice A: Molly McLaughlin and Top LAmour WV (24.7)
Open Novice B: Kyla Perkins and Dylano Q (30.8)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Shawna Dietrich and R. Chumley (30.6)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Molly Adams and Cougar Crest (30.2)
Open Beginner Novice: Susan Thomas and Carrigfada Imperial Servant (29.7)

The Event at Skyline (Mt. Pleasant, UT) [Website] [Results]

Open Preliminary: Erin Hofmann and UBQuiet (34.0)
Open Preliminary/Training: Shallary Guymon and Coco Chanel (86.3)
Open Training: Travis Atkinson and Don Darco (24.7)
Open Novice A: Travis Atkinson and Calzini (30.0)
Open Novice B: Katherine Lucas and Kestrel (25.6)
Jr. Open Beginner Novice: Tristan Montesano and Mischief Managed (27.4)
Sr. Open Beginner Novice A: Tatiana Larson and Lothario II (34.9)
Sr. Open Beginner Novice B: Allison Merritt and Rumors (31.3)
Starter A: Olivia Brown and Over the Moon (32.7)
Starter B: Tammy Caughlin and Rough & Ready (38.0)
Starter C: Carrie Matteson and Pretend to Fly (41.2)

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

Open Intermediate: Vienna Allport and DHI Zatopek B (63.4)
Intermediate/Preliminary: Anna Pierce and Obiejohn (52.1)
Open Preliminary: Ava Elena Alvarez and Isn’t She Lovely (38.3)
Modified Rider: Lily Armstrong and Sir Oberon (31.7)
Open Modified: Amy Etheridge and Royal Lufttanzer (34.9)
Junior Training Rider: Hudsyn Bagwell and Ardeo Mermus Hill (30.7)
Open Training: Dan Erik Yokay and American Sea (31.2)
Senior Training Rider: Casey Locklear and FLS Major Bounce (29.1)
Junior Novice Rider: Elle Snyder and Oakland Quality (25.3)
Novice Horse: Caitlin Davison and SHF Nova (33.3)
Open Novice: Georgia Phillips and Deanfield Disney (26.9)
Senior Novice Rider A: Shelley Peters and The Mystery Machine (26.9)
Senior Novice Rider B: Scottiann Evans and Chance Encounter (34.3)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider A: Charlotte Schaef and Normandy’s Cole’s Clover (30.1)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider B: Carleigh Cooper and Elianna (33.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Amy Clemmons and Gatsby’s Touch of Chrome (32.5)
Senior Beginner Novice Rider: Jennifer Enderlin and Young American (22.5)
New Event Horse: Jenna McGowan-Terry and Ticket To Tango (71.400)
Young Event Horse – 4 year old: Ellen Doughty-Hume and Orion RSF (79.950)
Young Event Horse – 5 year old: Ashley Horowitz and Monbeg Salt Fever (80.150)
Starter A: Millie Brown and Above The Fold (35.7)
Starter B: Maddi Mumm and Coventry (31.3)
Tadpole: Kahley Fiala and Permesso (35.3)

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

Intermediate: Laine Ashker and Lovedance (40.8)
Open Preliminary: Kate Servais and Cathedro (49.8)
Modified A: Michael Pendleton and Loughtown Bonnie (35.5)
Modified B: Tracey Bienemann and Venezuelan River (28.5)
Open Modified – Jackpot: Berkley Gardner and Aristocrat (37.0)
Open Training: Courtney Cooper and Excel Star Tick Tock (27.2)
Training Rider A: Bailey Kent and Scooby Dooby Doo (30.8)
Training Rider B: Susan Gehris and Steddy Eddy (29.4)
Novice Horse: Ema Klugman and Lamborghini (23.9)
Novice Rider: Coree Reuter-McNamara and Another Concerto (29.2)
Open Novice A: Corinna Garcia and Schiller Nav (26.1)
Open Novice B: Melissa Baumann and Arden Augustus (26.1)
Open Novice – Jackpot: Kendal Fansler and Delilah’s Boy (30.9)
Beginner Novice Horse: Hannah Taylor and Flying W Farms Princess Tsifara (24.4)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Hayden Sheaf and FCF Midnight Encounter (29.0)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Carissa Gavin and The Flying Fox (30.7)
Open Beginner Novice: Jeannette Lussi and Rock’N Ranger (28.5)

WindRidge Farm Spring H.T. (Mooresboro, NC) [Website] [Results]

Preliminary: Brooke Kahl and Nata Montada SCF (32.6)
Preliminary CT: Zoe Crawford and About Time Too (32.2)
Preliminary/Training: Zoe Crawford and Willbrook Brown Yeats (34.3)
Training A: Morgan Hiller and Irishtown (33.6)
Training B: Katherine Thornton and Carlingford Castle (38.6)
Novice A: Amanda Miller and Parkmore Irish Annie (32.1)
Novice B: Cynthia Holbrook and Sweet Pea (24.2)
Novice C: Kylee Willis and Drumloman Lad (31.8)
Beginner Novice A: Jennifer Scherrens and Figment (27.1)
Beginner Novice B: Sarah Smith and Cairo Holiday (26.2)
Beginner Novice C: Zoe Crawford and Trending (29.0)
Introductory: Camille Arnall and Scarlet Rose (20.6)
Starter A: Stevens Mosley and SLE Ocean Ablaze (33.7)
Starter B: Ben Douglas and Magnolia (41.3)
Starter C: Brianna Manning and BFF EMISSARY (22.3)

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

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A post shared by Ros Canter (@ros_canter_eventing)

Behold: the face of your two-phase Badminton leader, Lordships Graffalo. Frankly, I can’t think of anyone with a smile better suited to taking the top honours in this prestigious competition. What a noodle. It’s also well worth noting that both Ros’s rides, Lordships Graffalo and Pencos Crown Jewel, who’s currently sitting seventh, were bred by the same person, Pennie Wallace, and are out of the same mare, Cornish Queen. What a boon for both British breeding and fans of trawling a good dam line.

National Holiday: It’s National Reward Yourself Day. Yes, you do need that thirtieth saddle pad.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Catalpa Corner May Madness Horse Trials (Iowa City, IA) [Website] [Results]

Riga Meadow at Coole Park Combined Test (Millbrook, NY) [Website] [Results]

Stable View Local Charities H.T. (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Results]

The Event at Skyline (Mt. Pleasant, UT) [Website] [Results]

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

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

WindRidge Farm Spring H.T. (Mooresboro, NC) [Website] [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Amid all the action of Badminton yesterday, there was one round that stood out among the rest. Perhaps not for the reasons the rider in question had hoped for, mind you: after a barnstorming trip around two thirds of the tough course with the excellent little Liberty and Glory, Tom Crisp came a cropper after being jumped out of the tack at the huge corner in the lake. But how he dealt with the dunking? Well, that’ll live on in Badminton legend forever.

If you’ve been on horsey Facebook recently, you might have seen something rather haunting: a curiously faceless nonhuman entity atop a horse, merrily undergoing a lunge lesson. That little nightmare agent is Sandy, a dummy that’s been designed to help horses with neurological deficits learn to balance with weight on board, without the extra complications that come with a real human being. It’s frightening, but it’s a great idea, actually. 

Omega-3s are everywhere at the moment — heck, even I’m taking them. But what benefits do they actually offer to your horse’s diet? Are they worth the money or another snake oil supplement? Here’s everything you need to know. 

Riding from Canada to Brazil should be impossible, right? Wrong — although we can only imagine how much planning, and dehydrated food, something like that would take. If you want to dive into all the details of Filipe Leite, who undertook the trek in 2014, a new documentary premiering this month offers the chance to follow him. It’s a New Zealand release for now, but should be followed by a more widespread release. Get the popcorn ready.

You can put all the thought you like into breeding the ultimate sport horse, but a top eventer needs something that’s not always that easy to breed for: grit and gumption. Justine Griffin rounds up some of the best examples of pure heart at Kentucky in this piece.

FutureTrack Follow:

 

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If you’re not hugely familiar with continental eventing, the name Gireg le Coz might be a new one to you — but he’s well worth keeping an eye on, particularly when partnered with his incredible Aisprit de la Loge, who logged a second clear round at Badminton yesterday to put him well in contention.

Morning Viewing:

Rewatch all of Ros Canter’s leading round at Badminton with Lordships Graffalo here and get inspired ahead of this afternoon’s showjumping:

All Pass With No Overnight Withdrawals at Badminton Final Horse Inspection

Overnight runners-up Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue demonstrate the general mood of the morning at a soggy final horse inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After the close of competition yesterday, which saw thirty horses complete after battling the holding ground, we were all pretty unified in one sentiment: this morning’s horse inspection would be an interesting one. How many would withdraw overnight? How many would be sent to the holding box? In a passing chat with one of the commentary team, I put my bets on our numbers going down by three; he said he reckoned five.

British-based Kiwi Hollie Swain (28th) wrangles a very fresh Solo up the trot strip. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As it turned out, we were both wildly wrong, which is something I never begrudge when it comes to something like sound horses. All thirty of yesterday’s finishers materialised in front of Badminton House this morning, and all thirty were deemed fit and ready to compete by the ground jury of Angela Tucker, Xavier Le Sauce, and Andrew Bennie — and even better, several of those thirty still looked as though they could tackle another batch of solid fences, particularly fiery Solo, who spent most of the trot-up alternatively trying to canter down the strip or send poor Hollie Swain crowd-surfing.

Charlotte Holifield takes the top groom’s prize. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Treehouse Sporting Goods was on hand at the inspection to award a prize for the groom of the week, who was deemed to have taken the most robust care of the horse or horses in their charge throughout the course of the competition. The prize went the way of Charlotte Holifield, longtime groom for Oliver Townend’s Ballaghmor Class.

Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno, sixth overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Now, we head into the showjumping finale, which will begin at 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST) with the ten riders placed between 30th and 20th. The top twenty will jump at 2.55 p.m. (9.55 a.m. EST) — and although we saw all our competitors looking fresh and well this morning, there’s still plenty of potential for movement: the rain has kicked back into gear today, which will turn yesterday’s holding, sticky ground into the kind of bog that’ll be particularly tricky for horses to jump out of on the final day. There are some extraordinary margins to play with, which riders will be glad of — particularly overnight leader Ros Canter, who’ll head into the ring with Lordships Graffalo with a healthy nine penalties in hand over Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue. That’s two rails and two seconds over the time to play with — which could open up further if the riders before her struggle in the conditions. Third placed Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class sits 12.2 penalties off the lead, giving Ros three rails in hand over them, and from top spot to tenth place is a margin of 24.7, or six rails and a time penalty.

The top ten going into showjumping at Badminton.

Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule] [Live Stream – Badminton TV] [Radio Badminton] [Tickets] [EN’s Coverage]