Classic Eventing Nation

Fab Freebie: Kerrits Horse Sense Half Zip Riding Shirt

Kerrits Horse Sense Half Zip Riding Shirt. Photo by Lorraine Peachey. Kerrits Horse Sense Half Zip Riding Shirt. Photo by Lorraine Peachey.

While I’m a little sad to see the end of the sunny summer days, I am pretty excited for the arrival of fall. Who doesn’t love to see the changing colors of leaves, the sight of mums everywhere, and pumpkin spice flavored everything?

While I’m slightly obsessed with all things pumpkin flavored, I’m even more excited to be able to welcome back my fall wardrobe with some serious additions. One of the new additions that I’ve welcomed this season is is the Kerrits Horse Sense Half Zip.

I had the opportunity to review the Horse Sense Half Zip, and you can read all about my experience here. The top has been been a terrific addition to my cool weather wardrobe thus far.

The Horse Sense Half Zip is designed using a four-way stretch performance fabric, which is softly brushed on the inner side to provide comfort all the day long. The fabric is also super smooth and easily sheds both dirt and hay.

The half-zip design provides a generous 10-inch zip neck in order to offer more ventilation options in changing temperatures. The longer sleeves are comfortable, and they also provide a thumbhole to keep them nicely in place.

The Horse Sense Half Zip is available in sizes XS through 2X. Colors include Dusk, Denim, Bison, and Black. It retails for $69.00, and you can find it here.

A special thanks goes out to Kerrits for providing this week’s prize! You know the drill. Use the Rafflecopter widget below to enter, and then check back on Friday when we announce our lucky winner. Good luck!

Disclaimer: Information given in the Rafflecopter widget, including email addresses, may be shared with the corresponding sponsor at their request. You will also be signed up for our weekly EN eNews email newsletter, if you aren’t already. Don’t worry — you’ll just wonder what you’ve been missing out on — and you can unsubscribe if you don’t want it.

Monday News and Notes from Fleeceworks

Super Pony Willow having the time of her life (while I hang on tight) at Stable View Advanced Oktoberfest HT. Photo by Kate Samuels. Super Pony Willow having the time of her life (while I hang on tight) at Stable View Advanced Oktoberfest HT. Photo by Kate Samuels.

On Saturday I went down to Stable View in Aiken to photograph the Advanced cross country and get my bearings before bringing the pony down to compete the next day. There were tons of vendors, enthusiastic community support and prize money in every division–all the way down to Beginner Novice! The atmosphere was all there, as was the level of difficulty on course.

I think as journalists and students of the sport, we are fortunate to meet so many people in our travels to events around the country and during our day-to-day interactions with horses and horse people. One of the most special things about competing at this weekend was hearing cheers and shouts of encouragement from friends during every phase and on every corner of the cross country course. Thank you, thank you for being the best sport in the whole world.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stoneleigh-Burnham School Fall H.T. [Website] [Results]

Morven Park Fall CIC & H.T. [Website] [Results]

ESDCTA New Jersey H.T. [Website] [Results]

Fleur de Leap H.T. [Website]

Stable View Advanced Oktoberfest H.T. [Website] [Results]

Woodland Stallion Station H.T. [Website] [Results]

Jump Start H.T. [Website] [Results]

Monday News and Notes:

Worth The Trust Scholarship applications are due TODAY. Are you an amateur that could use a financial leg-up for your eventing education? The USEA Worth The Trust scholarship can help you achieve your dreams. [Click here to apply]

TODAY is the deadline to register to ride with Andreas Dibowski at the Tryon International Equestrian Center on Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2016. Offered for Beginner Novice through Advanced levels. Each session is limited to 4 riders and each rider will have a cross country session as well as a show jumping session with Andreas. Dinner on Monday and Tuesday is included. Dibo will also give a talk on Tuesday night to all riders after dinner. Included in the cost of the clinic is auditing for the week for the rider as well as one other person. [Click here to register]

Italian Emanuele Gaudiano was poised for greatness in the opening five-star class at the Longines Masters in Los Angeles. The crafty rider aboard Guess 6, a 10-year-old  Belgian Warmblood mare, bested former world champion Steve Guerdat of Switzerland by a full second to win the speed class on a clear round. [Read more on Jumper Nation]

Give a bunch of horse people a chance to dress up in costumes and you can bet they’re going to go all out. The Chronicle of the Horse has photos you need to see from the Charity Pan Am Challenge at the Longines Masters of Los Angeles. [Not Your Mother’s Costume Class]

Weekly Business Tip from Mythic Landing Enterprises:If you are advertising your sales horses or boarding services via a classified ad, you will want to do a little research to help make your classified ad count. Some websites will feature certain ads on the homepage, and it can be worth paying a little extra to have your classified featured here. Or in a magazine, there will sometimes be marketplace type ads, which typically cost more than a simple classified but less than a display ad.

Postcards from Pony Land

Monday Video:


Sunday Video: Event Rider Masters Season Snapshot

Six tour legs, hundreds of top competitors, and more than £350,000 in prize money distributed in a single year. The Event Rider Masters Series in Great Britain concluded their inaugural season last month, and over the course of the summer picked up significant momentum and praise for building an innovative new forum for equestrians and non-equestrians alike to experience eventing.

With the more compact, TV-friendly format, the massive social media effort, the professional quality streaming and champagne podium scenes with giant checks, they garnered viewers from over ninety different countries and dozens of time zones. It will be interesting to see how the series will grow and change in coming years after such a successful kickoff.

If you’re totally out of the loop on the ERM, it’s not too late to get in on the fun. We highly recommend starting with this sassy series recap:

Of course, we covered the series faithfully here at EN, and you can visit our ERM Archives to read up on the event day by day.

And finally, you should definitely check out the Event Rider Masters Website, which has loads of information about their intentions, their series riders, and tons of replays from all the series stops.

We’d love to see an ERM tour leg in the United States someday – what do you think EN citizens? Bring William Fox-Pitt along for the ride, and we’ll be there.

Go Eventing.

’21 Series’ To Offer Singular Opportunity to Ambitious Young/Junior Riders

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With their first Advanced division under their belts this weekend, Stable View farm is already looking to the next project where they can break new ground in the sport: The junior and young riders. The Aiken, South Carolina event has teamed up with Fair Hill International and Plantation Field Horse Trials to start a new championship series exclusively for the youth of the sport called the 21 Series. The series is intended to encourage riders to stretch their legs at several venues, earn prize money, and ultimately develop their skills to be more well-rounded and versatile competitors.

The Grand Prize is certainly a worthy incentive: The top three riders at the conclusion of the series will win up to one month of free board at Stable View during the 2018 winter season, and will include apartment accomodations on-site, use of all the facility’s equestrian amenities, and training sessions with top clinicians who set up shop in the area for the winter season.

To be eligible for the championship, junior and young riders must compete in the kick-off event in March at Stable View Farm, and at least one of the other participating venues’ spring horse trials — either Fair Hill International’s April Horse Trials or Plantation Field’s May Horse Trials. The competition will be geared toward competitors in the Preliminary and 1* Divisions.

Carla Geiersbach, Executive Director at Fair Hill International, shares in Stable View’s excitement to host a “student friendly series” which will give that age group exposure to international level riders. “By targeting the Preliminary and 1* level competitors, we will work together to help the next generation of the sport. That is the time in life — during high school and college — when young people are determining their path.”

Mary Coldren, organizer of Plantation Field Equestrian Events, also chipped in their enthusiasm and support. “We are excited to work with Stable View to encourage and support the young riders in the sport and to give them this opportunity!”

Competitors, parents, and trainers interested in learning more about the program can get more information at Stable View’s website, or contact Amber Lee at [email protected].

Go Stable View Farm, and Go Eventing.

Know Your Eventing History: The Brief and Complicated Life of Gold Medalist Ludwig Stubbendorff

In a spin-off from our ever-so-popular Olympic Eventing History series, we now bring you obscure, forgotten history of our sport that has made all of us who we are today. From the first safety vest to the most triumphant stories you've never heard, we'll see to it that you're always learning -- in and out of the saddle.

Ludwig Stubbendorff and Nurmi in Berlin Olympics. Photo courtesy of Reiterverein Hannover.

Ludwig Stubbendorff and Nurmi in Berlin Olympics. Photo courtesy of Reiterverein Hannover.

Born on a frigid February day in 1906, Ludwig Stubbendorf was born to Ludwig Sr. and Franziska Stubbendorff in Gostorf, Germany. His father’s occupation was listed as a “forester” in early census reports, and in the next 1919 census, we see that he lived in a mixed large home with siblings, his mother and no listed father. If his father was still technically in the picture, he likely spent many months away from his family each year performing hard labor in the vast German forests.

In the late 1920s, Ludwig finished his early schooling and immediately joined the 2nd Prussian Artillery Regiment, which was a division of the German State’s “Reichswehr” Army. After the end of WWI, The Treaty of Versailles required that Germany only maintain a defensive military, a fraction of the size its military had previously been, and with no offensive tactical units that could pre-emptively attack.

This may in fact have opened a door for Ludwig, as there was briefly more focus in the German forces on sophisticated training and ceremonial divisions such as those in the competitive cavalry. In the 1930s, an artillery regiment would have had a significant cavalry element as they needed horses to move heavy supplies, and it was likely here Ludwig’s horse skills first flourished. In 1930 those skills earned him a spot in Germany’s illustrious Hannover Cavalry School.

The Cavalry was founded in 1920, and their primary duty was starting and developing horses for officers and delivering them to the troops. They would also go on drag hunts, though it’s not clear if this was a more entertaining form of training or purely a joyous diversion among the men. It was also during this time that Ludwig met his future wife, Margot Dorothea Theidel, who lived in the nearby town of Hannover. They were married May 7, 1933.

Ludwig apprenticed for two years before being asked to join the competitive dressage team, and soon thereafter he found his true knack in eventing, or “versatility” as it was known then. In 1936, he and his Trakehner partner Nurmi were named to the Olympic German eventing team, and the pressure was on. The competition would be on home turf, and in the past year, Adolf Hitler had publicaly revealed the aggressive expansion of the German military in defiance of the Treaty of Versailles. With the equestrians being among some of the exclusively military teams, it was considered vital that they demonstrate their dominance to the world – and they did.

As Leslie Wylie described in a previous synopsis of the 1936 Games, the Germans were actually so dominant – particularly at a few obstacles that the other equestrians had never seen before – that the IOC investigated the possibility of an unfair advantage. The Germans were ultimately cleared of any wrongdoing, but the proverbial asterisk has remained with many of the victories Germany achieved over the Berlin games.

The Ludwig Stubbendorff Olympic Trading Card. Via eBay.

The Ludwig Stubbendorff Olympic Trading Card. Via eBay.

Soon enough, the cheers of the crowds and peaceful pursuit of equestrian excellence would become a distant memory for Ludwig. The war began in earnest in 1939, and Ludwig would be shipped to the front lines with the First Cavalry Division of the German Army. The division initially fought in the Netherlands and later in northeastern France. Ludwig was wounded in battle on May 14, 1940 while attacking the Kornwerderzand Dam when they were hit with grenades. He survived the attack and it appears may have been promoted as a result of the deaths of his superior officers in this battle.

The cavalry’s next assignment was to march to the Eastern Front and participate in the fateful Operation Barbarossa, which is known by historians as one of Germany’s greatest failures and marks the changing of Hitler’s fortunes in the war. The plan had been to invade and destroy the Soviet Union swiftly and devastatingly, but instead Germany found itself dedicating a shocking number of its troops to two major war lines simultaneously, and the Eastern Front proved to be a long, hard slog rather than swift surrender as Hitler had envisioned.

Ludwig would live to see little of this; the invasion began on June 22, 1941, and he would die less than a month later.

According to records pertaining to the First Cavalry, between July 7th and July 31st, the division was engaged in defensive fighting at the Dnjepr/Dnieper River in where is now Bychau, Belarus. There are some sources which suggest that Ludwig died in “fierce hand-to-hand combat” in this battle. He died July 17, 1941, and was buried at the battle site, where he remains to this day. There is a marker in Verden, Germany, which honors his Olympic achievements, his military service, and his Olympic mount, Nurmi.

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Ludwig was not alone in his sacrifice for Germany; of the nine riders who won an individual or team gold medal for Germany in the equestrian events in Berlin, four died in the war (Ludwig, his eventing teammate Rudolf Lippert and show jumpers Heinz Brandt and Kurt Hasse), and a fifth died in Russian captivity in 1953 (Konrad von Wangenheim). Athletes from many sports and many countries perished in the past century of wars, but with few exceptions, they were just men doing their jobs.

While I cannot provide a narrative or primary source of Ludwig’s thoughts and feelings on the Third Reich, what is known is that he was a competent horseman and natural leader – years before the Nazi regime took hold. I cannot and would not canonize Ludwig or any historic figure, but only good can come from understanding the full breadth of our human story.

Special thanks to the many historians who did the heavy lifting in advance of my arrival to this story – Ron Klages, the historians of grebbeberg.nl, and the axis history forums.

Weekly OTTB Wishlist from Cosequin

Photo courtesy of New Vocations. Photo courtesy of New Vocations.

No kidding, when I got married four years ago someone offered to give me an ex-racer as a wedding present. My spouse-to-be put his foot down, and I had to agree that the timing wasn’t quite right, but it never hurts to dream, am I right ladies?

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Swoon. Well, at least we can browse the OTTB listings together here on EN each week. Here is this week’s batch of eligible eventer prospects!

Photo courtesy of New Vocations.

Photo courtesy of New Vocations.

Peppermint Pete, a 2012 15.3-hand gelding (Pacific Waves – Mrs. Obvious, by Afternoon Deelites), is everybody’s friend!

“Peter” is happy go lucky and enjoys working. He is taking well to his new life and has filled out beautifully. He greatly enjoys his turnout time and thinks there is nothing better than a good game of halter tag with his buddies — a game he must be pretty good at because it is not uncommon to find his halter missing in the morning! Peter is currently on night turnout with a group of five other geldings and happy to be lower down in the group. He does not have any stall vices.

Under saddle, Peter is very consistent. Noises and objects around the arena don’t seem to bother him and he is happy to do whatever task is at hand for the day. Peter can sometimes find himself off in lala land but as long as his rider keeps him engaged, he goes around and does his job very well. He is suitable for an intermediate rider. Peter was winless in 15 tries and retired without any apparent injuries. He is suitable for all levels of all disciplines!

View Peppermint Pete on New Vocations.

Photo courtesy of CANTER Ohio.

Photo courtesy of CANTER Ohio.

Harry Potter fans, here is your horse! Meet Azkaban (A. P. Warrior – Quick and Golden, by Medaglia d’Oro), a 2013 15.3-hand gelding. Although we are not sure why this guy is named after an island prison, what we can tell you is that he will make a fantastic project horse.

This 3-year-old baby has a great head on his shoulders and is well on his way to developing three lovely gaits. He is intelligent, athletic and tries very hard for his rider. “Az” is cleared for all disciplines, goes out in a group and has no vices. He would be best suited for someone with experience bringing along young horses. He is still a bit physically immature so his connections believe he has some growing left to do.

View Azkaban on CANTER Ohio.

Photo courtesy of CANTER KY.

Photo courtesy of CANTER KY.

Aluminum Shoes (Gio Ponti – Big Shoes, by Petionville) is a flashy 2013 chestnut gelding with beautiful coloring and lots of chrome!

Aluminum Shoes is a big boy — almost 17 hands and still growing. He was in training but is unraced and sound! He has a great work ethic, no vices and is eager to please. His CANTER connections describe him as very personable and playful, and they note that he gets along with other horses in a herd setting.

He has been started under saddle at the walk, trot and canter and is quickly learning the basics of balance and contact. He has three quality gaits that are constantly improving and has the potential to go in any direction! This horse gets better each time he is ridden, making him a great one to grow with. He does need an experienced rider and handler because he is still very much a youngster both mentally and physically.

His connections think he will go far with the right person and is destined to bring home lots of ribbons with his flashy good looks and willing disposition. Aluminum Shoes is located in Georgetown, KY.

View Aluminum Shoes on CANTER KY.

Sunday Links Presented by One K Helmets

Photo courtesy of Carrie Matteson.

Photo courtesy of Carrie Matteson.

This bad boy is one of the final fences to be added to the brand new preliminary course at the Skyline Equestrian Park in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. My fellow committee members have been working exhaustively around the clock this summer to design, construct and develop tracks for the next level of our event with our talented head course designer, James Atkinson. This week we officially finished the course, and next week it will make its debut at our recognized fall event. Shout out to committee members Carrie Matteson, Dr. Summer Peterson DVM, Lani Homan-Taylor, and Ingrid George. You are wonder women!

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stoneleigh-Burnham School Fall H.T. [Website] [Live Scores]

Morven Park Fall CIC & H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

ESDCTA New Jersey H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Fleur de Leap H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Stable View Advanced Oktoberfest H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Woodland Stallion Station H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Jump Start H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links:

Show Jumpers Lucy Davis and Scott Brash Riding Their Horses at the Beach is Everything

Jay Duke: Rider Conduct and Expectations at Horse Shows

9 Small Things Equestrians Find Oddly Satisfying

How Every Breath You Take is Affecting Your Horse and His Training

Evidence Places Extinct Horse With Humans in Oregon Cave 14,000 Years Ago 

Sunday Video: Meet the Real Stars of the Longines Masters in LA

Phillip Dutton and Z Win Inaugural Stable View Advanced Horse Trials

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

Phillip Dutton and Z. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

The boys are back in town and making a splash in Aiken as Stable View Farm successfully completed its first inaugural Advanced event to rave reviews. The crew really went for it when they opted to run all three phases on Saturday, but the show went on without a hitch, and Phillip Dutton and Boyd Martin laid claim to many of the top slots.

As he did in the three-star at Plantation Field two weeks ago, Phillip nabbed first and third, this time with Z claiming the top spot over barnmate and Plantation Field winner Mr Candyman. Once again, Boyd Martin managed to split up the hat trick to claim second place on Welcome Shadow and fourth place aboard Steady Eddie.

“Z is only 8, and all credit really has to go to the horse. I didn’t feel like I was going that fast, but he’s extremely quick off the ground and a fantastic jumper,” Phillip told EN. “His run at Plantation Field two weeks ago set him up perfectly for today, so that definitely helped him take the win.”

Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

Boyd Martin and Welcome Shadow managed to lay down a new personal best in dressage at this level this morning, scoring a 29.70 and adding just 2.40 time penalties to that score over the jumping phases.

“Captain Mark Phillips built a pretty tough track. It was a little bit twisty, but then it opened right up and had some good gallops. There were some tough turning questions with the mounds, and it was a great preparation for Shadow (heading to Pau) and for the other competitors heading to Fair Hill. It had terrain so the horses got a fitness run out of it, and I think the horses will come out of it well because the footing was so good. It was well worth the 12-hour drive here. All three phases were world class.”

Boyd’s fourth place ride, Steady Eddie, was the only cross country ride to make the optimum time today.

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Doug Payne accepting his fifth place award from Nick Attwood of Attwood Equestrian Surfaces. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

Doug Payne and Vandiver were able to rise from 11th after dressage to finish in fifth by adding no faults in show jumping and just four time penalties in cross country, finishing on a final score of 39.30.

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Also showing their strength in the jumping phases were Joe Meyer and Clip Clop who moved up the board from 21st to sixth when they added just 3.60 time faults in the final phase.

Joe Meyer accepting his award for sixth place. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian

Joe Meyer accepting his award for sixth place from Nick Attwood of Attwood Equestrian Surfaces. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian.

Allison Springer and her longtime veteran partner Arthur lead the day to begin with a dressage test that earned a 27.7, but they encountered some trouble in show jumping and ultimately finished their day just outside the top ten.

“Big Things to Come in Aiken”

The general consensus among the riders was that Stable View’s inaugural advanced test was a huge success, and a big step for the eventing community in Aiken.

Boyd mentioned how nice it was to have so much of the footing be a prepared synthetic — including in the warmup areas — and he never had to worry about the impact of the event on his horses in any phase. “The cross country course was great, and with perfect footing,” he added. “The whole course is fully irrigated with sprinklers the whole way around.”

Allison Springer and Arthur, trailblazers on the Advanced course at Stable View. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Allison Springer and Arthur, trailblazers on the Advanced course at Stable View. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Phillip echoed Boyd’s sentiments, adding there’s not much more you could want from a new event.

“The organizers did a fantastic job at this inaugural Advanced horse trials. The footing on cross country was excellent, and Mark Phillips’ course was challenging enough with good questions. Richard Jeffery’s show jumping course also proved to be influential, so it was definitely an exciting day for the sport.

“Stable View has put itself on the map as a top-notch venue, and this new Advanced course opens the door for even bigger things to come in the future in Aiken.”

Event Organizer Anne Dearborn, Stable View owners Barry and Cyndy Olliff, Honoree Joannah Glass, and Nick Attwood of Attwood Equestrian Surfaces. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian

Stable View owners Cyndy and Barry Olliff, Honoree Joannah Glass, and Event Organizer Anne Dearborn. Photo by Lisa Thomas, Mid-Atlantic Equestrian

Stable View Links: WebsiteEntry StatusRide TimesLive Scores, EN Coverage

Stable View Inaugural Advanced Division Top 15: 

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Kim Severson Wins on Dressage Score on Soaked Day at Morven Park

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Valerie Durbon.

Kim Severson and Cooley Cross Border. Photo by Valerie Durbon.

The weather was yet again the ultimate foe to battle at Morven Park this year, but Kim Severson and her own Cooley Cross Border slayed the wet dragon to finish the CIC3* on their dressage score of 46.70. Will Faudree managed to lay claim to the second and third place slots aboard Hans Dampf and Pfun, respectively.

Kim and the Irish Sport Horse gelding set out today to nab a qualification for Fair Hill and did so in style despite the tough conditions. They were the only double-clear round of the day, and Kim was quick to credit her horse’s good attitude and a little bit of luck.

“I didn’t take him to Plantation Field, so I knew I wanted to run him here to get qualified for Fair Hill,” Kim told EN. “I knew how he would feel about the rain and the softer footing, but he prefers this, really. He was terrific today, he felt really good and I finally gave him a decent ride! And we kept all four shoes this year which helped a lot – we’d lost both front shoes by the fourth fence last year, so we were lucky today!”

There were a handful of trouble spots on course today, including the early 4ab combination of a square floating beam to an imposing skinny table which had the rider’s attention. But the pairs sailed through with flying colors and loads of confidence going into their fall season finale.

4b at Morven Park. Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App

4b at Morven Park. Photo courtesy of CrossCountry App

“We knew that fence four had been giving people problems all day and the ground was a bit deep, but he was very good there and everywhere. He was great on all the tricky stuff and was really jumping in stride, which is big for him.

“We’ll see how he looks tomorrow and make sure everything is on track, but he felt great and very within himself; it felt like a really great fitness run for him,” Added Kim. “It’s wonderful to know you’re on a good jumper, and he’s really the kind of horse we’re always looking for. I’m very lucky.”

Will Faudree

Will Faudree and Hans Dampf. Photo by Valerie Durbon

Will Faudree and Hans Dampf added just two time faults to their earlier phases to pop up from fourth to second place to finish their weekend, and had the second-fastest time of the day. The pair finished on a score of 57 even. Hans just edged out barnmate Pfun, who added twelve time faults to finish in third on 61.8.

There were several withdrawals overnight, including all four of Canadian Jessica Phoenix’s entries, Justine Dutton and Huck Finn, and Ronald Zabala-Goetcshel and Wundermaske. While it was a tough day to ride, those who did were rewarded for the most part, with only one retirement on course and one stop in the three-star.

It was quite a different story in the Advanced, where several horses opted not to run today, and the horses who did attempt to run ultimately retired early. Four combinations headed out on course today, three of whom opted to retire, and a fourth mandatory retirement. In one of the stranger endings to a division, there were no ribbons to give out, but the horses and riders are safe, mostly dry, and will duke it out on course another day.

Morven Park Links: WebsiteScheduleEntry StatusRide TimesLive Scores

Morven Park CIC3* Top Eight:

cic3-top-8

 

Watch: Stable View Advanced Show Jumping and Cross Country Live Stream

Fence 25. Photo by Kate Samuels.

Fence 25. Photo by Kate Samuels.

No better way to see the brand new Advanced Stable View cross country course than to see it in action! Show Jumping and Cross Country are running somewhat concurrently in Stable View’s one day event format, so you can watch the advanced show jumping starting at 1:00 p.m. ET, and cross country rounds beginning at 1:20 p.m. ET. Both will be show intermittently on Stable View’s live stream on their website.

Click here to visit the Stable View Website and Free Live Stream 

Allison Springer and Arthur currently lead the charge on a dressage score of 27.7, followed closely by Phillip Dutton aboard Z on 29.1 and Boyd Martin in third on Welcome Shadow with a 29.70.

With the top 15 separated by less than ten points and a tight optimum time of 6:19 over an unfamiliar course, there’s plenty of room for the leaderboard to see a big shakeup.

Be sure to check out Maggie Deatrick’s statistical preview of the weekend, as well as a fence-by-fence preview of the course by Kate Samuels.

Stable View Links: WebsiteEntry StatusRide TimesLive Scores

Stable View Advanced Top 15:

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