Classic Eventing Nation

The Galloping Dentist: Catching Up with Harald Ambros at Badminton

Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Nearly everyone who competes at Badminton puts in very long hours, riding horses at dawn and dusk. Only one of them, this year at least, spent the intervening hours – between sunrise and sunset – telling people politely to “open wide” (in German, natürlich) and peering at their gnashers.

Austria’s Harald Ambros, who scored 34.9 in the morning dressage session on Vitorio Du Montet, works full-time as a dentist.

“Since February, it’s been hard,” he concedes. “I’ve been training at 5:30am, getting everything ready, then starting work at 7:30am and often finishing by 5pm —then training again. I’ve kept my other horses out of competition for the past six weeks to focus entirely on him [Vitorio Du Montet].

The other legendary eventing dentist – I know, remarkable to have found two of them – was Henrich Romeike, who won individual and team gold for Germany at the 2008 Olympics. Famously, after the Germans lost their team gold in Athens, Heini used his dentistry skills to forge his own gold medal – who knows whether he handed back the “real” medal to the IOC, or his own copy…?

Harald, 45, last rode at Badminton 18 years ago, finishing 18th on Miss Ferrari, whom he also rode at the Athens Olympic. Three of the Austrian team that year were called Harald, which still amuses eventing journalists old enough to remember those halcyon days.

Paris 2024 was his fourth Olympics, and his Badminton ride, 16-year-old Vitorio Du Montet, was his choice then. The horse has actually been to Badminton before; he had a tired fall at the final fence with French rider Maxime Livio in 2022. The Lando gelding had a couple of jockeys after Maxime before Harald bought him in 2023.

“In the gap between Maxime and me, a young woman owned him with the goal of qualifying for the Olympics, but she had an accident herself and had to sell him. I bought him and started working toward qualification—and we made it. We competed in Paris last year, and now we’re here at Badminton. The original plan was to aim for the Europeans at Blenheim this year. I know Blenheim well—I rode at the Europeans there in 2005 with my last Badminton horse. But it’s very hilly and strong, and I thought Badminton might actually suit Vitorio better. It’s flatter, and he’s a good five-star horse.”

Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet representing Austria in Paris. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

He was fairly happy with his dressage test, saying: “Vittorio is a difficult horse in such big arenas, but he stayed cool, and I was able to ride what was possible. I’m very happy—it’s such an amazing atmosphere in there. The familiarisation yesterday really helped, and we did a lot of dressage work over the past few days. I’m very pleased with him.

“He can do everything technically—flying changes, pirouettes, all of it. But when his nerves kick in, he shuts down. If he gets blocked, he’ll tighten his neck, set his ears back—and you’ll get no points. He needs a clear head.

“At Paris, it was intense. The announcer made a big deal: ‘French horse, French breeding, Maxime Livio,’ and the crowd exploded. You expect it, but still—it’s hard on the horse. You have to prepare them. So now, I do lots of work outside—cantering, showing him the environment, building confidence. We did three sessions yesterday and two today, just making sure he’d seen everything.”

Harald’s last Badminton, 2007, is remembered for the aridity of the weather in the build-up, and the going ended up being firm. “That year was clockwise as well, and the weather was beautiful, just like this year. They’d done a lot of groundwork and sand preparation back then. I much prefer these sunny conditions over rain—it makes a huge difference, and I’m very happy. I think it’s a very fair course; the riders know what to do, and it is clearly presented.”

Asked how it felt to be back at Badminton after such a period of time, he replies: “It’s very special. I’m lucky to have a horse like Vittorio again. I’ve had other horses I could’ve entered, but they wouldn’t have made it through the cross country—not bold enough or not fit enough. They were good for Europeans or World Championships, but this is different. You have to be lucky to have the right horse—and when you do, you give it your best and enjoy every moment.

“When you’re young, you try to catch the time. When you’re older—like me—you’re happy to stay safe, enjoy the ride, and be grateful to be here.”

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

Friday Morning at Badminton: Ros Canter Makes Close Bid

Ros Canter and Lordship’s Graffalo. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

No one has been able to surpass day one frontrunners, Tom McEwen and JL Dublin, on the MARS Badminton Horse Trials leaderboard so far, and at this sunny midpoint of the Friday’s dressage, their 22.4 remains the benchmark for the competition. Closest to the mark so far, though, is 2023 Badminton champions Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, who sit a reasonably snug second on 25.3. 

In many ways, the thirteen-year-old British-bred gelding is looking the best he’s ever had – his early trot work earned nearly unanimous 8s and the odd 9, and he received another 9 for his mid-test halt prior to the reinback. We saw a 10 hit the board, too, from Xavier le Sauce at C for the right-handed trot half-pass, and the trending scores looked well set to surpass Tom and ‘Dubs’ – until the flying changes. 

In this test, the slightly bitty CCI5* Test C, the first and final of the four flying changes are double-weighted in the scoring – and in the first, Ros and ‘Walter’ scored expensive fours across the board for a rather hoppy change, and in the last, they scored the same again for a slightly stilted effort. Redemptively – or, perhaps more accurately, frustratingly – the middle two changes on the serpentine (the ones, notably, without double-weighting) were much smoother, earning, at the low end, a 6.5, and at the high end, a pair of 8s. 

“The changes have always been something he’s struggled with a bit, and I probably just didn’t help him quite enough in those moments,” says Ros. “I thought he was a bit more established than he was — so that’s my fault, and my hands in the air for that one. But he was amazing, overall.”

Ros Canter and Lordship’s Graffalo. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Ros, though, has never been one to cry over spilt milk or slightly skewiff changes, and she was as taken with Walter’s good work as all of us watching him had been. 

“I was really pleased with it, actually. I thought his work reflected what he’s doing at home — he’s getting stronger all the time, and I was delighted. I got a little bit distracted at the beginning when he started sneezing, which isn’t always a good sign! But he settled quickly and was great.”

While some horses go into Badminton’s atmospheric ring and shrink, ‘Walter’ has never been a horse to shy away from the spotlight. The small issues with his changes, then, weren’t the result of tension – rather, says Ros, it’s a symptom of trying not to school them too much beforehand.

“I think the changes are just a hard movement for me to practice with him,” she explains. “Once he knows they’re coming, he almost drops the contact, and I can’t ride him up into it properly. So maybe that’s just something I need to manage better.”

Ros Canter and Lordship’s Graffalo. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

After his Burghley win of last season, Ros has given Walter the same routine that we’ve seen her use often with her experienced horses – she’s dialled his workload right back and let him have maximum ‘horse’ time.

“He had a proper holiday, and quite a long time off to get fluffy and enjoy himself,” she smiles. “He came back into work at the end of December and had a good month of just hacking and taking it easy. He didn’t start doing anything too exciting until February. [Then,] I try not to overtrain — my natural instinct is to be the enemy and train too much — but I’ve worked to keep things balanced and give him the time he needs. He knows his job now; he’s a total professional. There was a very hairy picture of him on social media at one point where he looked pretty chubby! But it’s amazing — once he knows Badminton is on the cards, he strips himself up. He knows how to get himself ready.”

Georgie Goss and Feloupe. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Ros’s test puts yesterday’s runners-up, Emily King and Valmy Biats, into provisional third place on their 27.3, while debutant pair Tom Woodward and Low Moore Lucky now sit in fourth on their 27.9. In fact, you have to skim down to eighth place to find our next new entrant to the top ten – and that’s the British-based Irish representative pair of Georgie Goss and Feloupe. They posted a 29.6, one mark better than their test here last year on the mare’s five-star debut.

“I’m absolutely delighted – she was amazing,” says Georgie. “I just made one error in the third change, which was so frustrating, because the changes are usually one of her good bits. But I’m over the moon — she was so good. To still score in the sub-30s, even with that mistake, is fab, isn’t it? I’m really pleased.”

That their score is exactly one mark better this year feels, in a funny sort of way, slightly redemptive: “Last year she got a 30.6, but I entered the arena one second too late and got an error of course. I would have been in the 20s then, so I really wanted to get into the 20s this year,” explains Georgie.

Georgie has had the ride on the now-fifteen year old for five years, and though they had a slow start together, she’s always been excited about the potential she felt in her.

“When I got her, she’d done a short four-star but hadn’t had a great experience — I think she’d lost her confidence,” she says. “So our first year together was mostly at Novice, just rebuilding her. She’s one of those inward worriers — she’s very placid and quiet, and anyone can handle her — but she’s also incredibly sensitive, and she really wants to please. She’s always like, ‘Well, Mum, did I get it right?’”

“I love her,” she continues with a grin. “She’s very elegant, and she tries so hard. She’s not built brilliantly — she’s quite downhill, and with her big paces, she can hang on the forehand a bit. But she really tried in there today. I’ve been working with Ian [Woodhead], and he’s the master — so I was really pleased.”

Felix Vogg and Cartania. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

 

Just a hair’s breadth behind Georgie and ‘Lulu’ is Swiss Olympian and five-star winner Felix Vogg and the fourteen-year-old Cartania, who posted a 29.7 for provisional ninth place ahead of Kylie Roddie and SRS Kan Do (tenth on 30.1). 

“I think it was pretty good for her,” says Felix, who was a rare rider to come out of the ring pleasantly surprised at the number on the board – one that represents the mare’s second-best test at this level.

“I wasn’t super happy with how it felt in the ring — at times it seemed like she wasn’t really going forward enough. But they told me it didn’t look like that from the outside, which is good! It always feels different than it looks on the scoreboard, doesn’t it? But yeah, I’ll take that.”

Cartania has finished in the top fifteen here in each of the last two renewals of Badminton – but those were both years notable for their boggy, tough conditions, and this weekend’s challenge is a much faster, top-of-the-ground sort of affair. That, says Felix, is something that he’s been quietly mulling over.

“She’s okay on [firmer ground], but it’s not so easy to get her back in front of the jumps on quicker ground,” says Felix. “It’s easier for her to get going, but maybe that makes it harder for me! We’ll see. She’s very good at cross country, but on this kind of going, she can maybe run a bit too fast. I know that sounds a bit like a stupid complainer kind of thing — a bit of a worry — but that’s the only thing I can think of that might challenge us tomorrow.”

This year’s course is also widely regarded as being much more flowing than the last few years’ tracks have been – which, in conjunction with the quicker ground, could potentially see the cross-country hold less overall influence in the final results.

“I hope it’s difficult enough. I like when the courses are more challenging. I think that’s good for the sport. Most people seem to think the same,” he muses.

The US saw its second representative in the ring this morning in British-born and -raised Grace Taylor, the daughter of US Olympian Ann Sutton and British team selector Nigel Taylor. She and Game Changer trended well throughout almost the entirety of their test and looked set to replicate the impressive 28.9 they posted at Burghley in 2023 – but a late mistake cost them dearly, and they walked away with a 35.4 and provisional 35th place. 

That mistake? A beautifully performed but strides-early final flying change, which earned them double-weighted 1s across the board and also impacted their previous movement, the canter half-pass into counter-canter, for which they received 4s for not showing any strides of counter-canter.

Nevertheless, says Grace, “I’m really pleased with him. He tried really hard—he was a very good boy!”

The flying changes were a highlight of Grace’s test, despite that final premature delivery, and that’s something that she’s been hard at work on behind the scenes. 

“We’ve been working on everything, but definitely just making sure the changes are mine and not when he decides to throw them in,” she says. “That last change was definitely his change. We did it well, but it was just a little early. Overall, we’ve just been focusing on making the work more secure and consistent — so that the Burghley result two years ago wasn’t a one-off. We want that level of performance to be something we can deliver consistently.”

We’re heading back to the boards now for the latter half of today’s competition, and with some heavy-hitters to come, there’s much that could yet change. Follow along with all the action on Cheg’s live updates or via the livestream on ClipMyHorse.TV, and join us back here after the close of competition for a full report on the key stories of the day. Go Eventing. 

The top ten at the Friday lunch break at Badminton.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

Back at Badminton – Follow Along with the Action on Dressage Day Two: Live Blog from MARS Badminton

Good morrow ENers. I’m back with all of the dressage action from the second day at MARS Badminton. If you missed out yesterday, you’ll find a test-by-test analysis of all that went down on the first day of dressage right here.

Here’s how the leaderboard looked overnight:

1️⃣ 🇬🇧 Storming into the lead, Tom McEwen and JL Dublin totally delivered the goods and then some, putting down their best ever 5* dressage test to sit on a score of 22.4.

2️⃣ 🇬🇧 Slotting into second, Emily King and Valmy Biats produced a truly lovely test for a score of 27.3.

3️⃣ 🇬🇧 Shooting onto the 5* scene on their debut at the level, Tom Woodward and Low Moor Lucky had the time of their lives, launching themselves into the big leagues with a score of 27.9.

You’ll find the full leaderboard here and you can catch up with everything you need to know about all of the competitors in our new-look Form Guide – you’ll find it here.

We sure did get an overview of the quality that makes up the MARS Badminton field this year as the first half of the combinations strutted their stuff between the white boards. But there’s still so much to come. I can’t pick them all out – there’s so many – but a couple of notable examples include 2023 champs Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, who’ll put their mark on the competition at 9:28am local time / 4:28am EST / 10:28am CEST; Oliver Townend will be back with his second ride, 2024 Kentucky winner Cooley Rosalent at 3:28pm local time / 10:28am EST / 4:28pm CEST, and don’t even think about going anywhere until after Tim Price wraps things up for the dressage phase at 4:17pm local time / 11:17am EST / 5:17pm CEST with Vitali – he broke the Burghley record in 2023 when he went sub-20 with space to spare and posted a score of 18.7. Eyes on ENers, all the way to the end of play when we’ll know who’ll head out onto tomorrow’s cross country in pole position.

Before we turn our focus to the dressage ring, a further ‘refresher’ of the no. 1 rule of following EN’s classic live blog – refresh, refresh, refresh and all will be revealed.

If you’re catching up with this later and are the type to like things in order, scroll ⬇️ and read ⬆️. If going backwards is more your jam, have at it.

As you know, here at EN we go over and above to bring our fellow eventing geeks every single scrap of info, fun, crazy, weird and wild that 5* events throw up, relinquishing sleep and sanity for the sake of our awesome sport. You’ll find all of our blood, sweat, tears and hilarity right here. And that’s not all because you can never have too much eventing, right? Head on over on our Instagram channel @goeventing for even more frolics.

Settle in for the second day, and go eventing!

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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SUMMARY OF THE DAY’S SPORT

EN’s classic full round-up will be with you shortly. Tilly is busily hammering away at her thesis report as we speak, courageously taking on the role of editing it down from 6.6 million words to something a little more digestible. Eyes on the website for it dropping just as soon as a couple of eventing nerds and a chinchilla can make that possible.

Until then, here’s a quick re-cap of what today’s dressage brought…

There were changes at the top today with a new leader courtesy of Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent and a delighted Gemma Stevens slotting into third with Jalapeno. Tom McEwen hung onto second place with JL Dublin after leading overnight. Oliver delivered the test of the competition in a very consistent showing with his exciting mare. Will he stay there? We’ll just have to wait and see, nothing’s for certain in eventing until the final pole stays put.

You’ll find the full leaderboard right here.

But the scores aren’t everything, oh no. Yes, we’ve got big hitters gunning for the win, but eventing is about so much more than that. Here’s a quick run-down of some points of note from today’s competition:

🤖 – Singable Moment (and the first 10 of the competition) – To paraphrase Brandon Flowers’ question, is ‘Walter’ human, or is he dancer? Well, it turns out that Walter is, in fact, human. If you can call making two very expensive mistakes in the double-marked flying changes but still going into second (at that point) human. But there we have it. Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo didn’t run away with the lead as was predicted. Overall, the test was undeniably beautiful, and looked to perhaps be sneaking sub-20 at a number of points, including when they scored the first 10 of the competition for their trot half-pass. Alas, those changes happened. The ones on the serpentine were great, but the ones on the straight – which were infinitely more valuable/expensive – were not there today. They scored 25.3.

👌 Capitalizing on the Co-efficients – A combination that did capitalise on those double co-efficient changes was Felix Vogg and Cartania. The trot work was strong, the walk not so much, back to solid stuff for the canter but the changes really made all the difference when it came to the overall score to propel them sub-30 and into the top-10 at the lunch break. With marks in the 7.5s and 8s for the two double-scored changes against the boards, and equally clean and established changes on the serpentine, this pair made the flying changes look effortless and oh so easy, but we all know they’re not. They scored 29.7.

😐 Tough Day at the Office – There was disappointment for Tim Price with Vitali carrying a fair bit of tension right from the off which continued throughout his test. The gelding can go sub-20 but not today. They scored 30.6.

🩰 Best Hoof Forward – From a tough day to a terrific one, Fiona Kashel was thrilled with Creevagh Silver de Haar as he danced his way into seventh place, and rightly so. Lots of great marks came in for a confident and harmonious performance that was truly a joy to watch. They scored 28.4.

🎇 Fireworks Avoided… Just – Right from the off, Lauren Innes had her hands full with Global Fision M. There was a lot of excitement going on as they came into the ring. The halt didn’t really happen. Then they went sideways. Then backwards. Lauren coaxed the gelding forwards gently though and really demonstrated sensitive riding and the value of a trusting relationship between horse and ride. The test went along sweetly enough after the initial upset and ‘Flipper’ got to show off some of his quality movement, particularly in the trot work. He let loose after the final halt and Lauren calmly stroked him down the neck to let him know she’d got his back. She asked the crowd to stay quiet on the way out. It was an impressive showing of horsemanship from Lauren when she managed to settle a very lit up horse and get on with the job at hand. Onward to tomorrow for them. They scored 48.6.

🪽 Another pair to find themselves in a tricky situation between the white boards was Emma Thomas and Icarus. The gelding came into the ring depositing poop up the center line and objected to being asked to halt. He decided backwards was better. Emma did a masterful job of encouraging the gelding to play ball and they quietly made their way through the test. Superb job that woman. More impressive, sensitive riding on show. They scored 46.9.

🤠 Go Rodeo – There was a bit of a rodeo vibe going on as Sam Watson and Ballyneety Rocketman kicked their heels up and bucked their way through the flying changes. This sweet horse wasn’t being a bad guy, rather he was trying really, really hard and looking for the answer to Sam’s questions. A learning experience for him at his first 5* but a whole lotta promise on show, for sure. They scored 40.5.

🔔 Wrong Way – Unfortunately Alex Bragg had a moment when he was riding the B test and went to circle, but today was the C test and the bell rang. A really annoying mistake from him with Ardeo Premier in what was a bit of a rollercoaster ride through the scores with an 8 for the first halt and a 1 for the final change. They scored 35.1.

🦵- Flashiest Leg – No, not Austrian Harald Ambros who literally flashed his legs at the horse inspection when he came out in lederhosen – we’ll put that one to bed, until the next trot up. We’re talking infinitely more attractive horse legs here and Daragh Byrne’s striking gelding Kilcannon Ramiro. An active hind is perhaps the more correct term for how this horse goes, but flashy leg action does the job too. He showed off all his power as he launched his way round the ring, although it did make some of the movements, particularly the changes, tricky for him. Daragh looked delighted with his pal at the end of the test and was still smiling on the way out. This was a really lovely example of a horse trying his socks off for his rider and Daragh clearly appreciated the effort. They scored 41.8.

🤨 Grumpy Guy – The grumpy guy award definitely goes to Cowling Hot Gossip. Man, that guy is in this game for the cross country. He did everything Tom Bird asked of him but he wasn’t going to smile while he did it. He wasn’t upset by anything, he absolutely knows his job and Tom rides him for what he is – an eventer who’s totally invested in the best bit. He got a huge pat at the end of his test and walked out looking very pleased with himself. They scored 45.2.

🌟 Winning at Badminton – We talk a lot about the top of the leaderboard and the winners of 5* events, but really, you’ve won if you’ve made it there and if you can do your best on the day and ride the horse you’ve got to the very best of their ability, that’s surely a win in its own right, as demonstrated by Max Warburton with his lovely gelding Deerpairc Revelry. Solid, confident, prepared. A totally comfortable showing from horse and rider. That’s winning at Badminton. They scored 32.7.

On that lovely note, I’ll bid you adieu.

Keep it locked onto EN for full reports coming your way and join me back with the live blog from tomorrow’s cross country from 11:30am local time / 6:30am EST / 12:30pm CEST.

Dressage is done. It’s the best day tomorrow. Go eventing!

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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11:29am

And so there we have it. MARS Badminton dressage is in the bag and we have ourselves a leaderboard going into tomorrow’s cross country.

1️⃣ 🇩🇪 Leading the pack is Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent who laid it all down in the dressage ring to sit on a score of 21.1, just 1.3 penalties ahead of the rest of the field.

2️⃣ 🇬🇧 Chasing the top spot is Tom McEwen and JL Dublin who showed their mettle between the white boards for a score of 22.4.

3️⃣ 🇺🇸 Rounding out the top three after the first phase is Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno on a score of 24.7.

You’ll find the full leaderboard right here.

Stay tuned – and don’t forget to hit refresh – for a summary of the day’s sport headed your way right here on the live blog and keep it locked onto the website for EN’s classic full report – coming soon.

I’ll be back live blogging tomorrow, typing ‘til I can’t type no more as I bring you all of the cross country action. It’s due to start at 11:30am local time / 6:30am EST / 12:30pm CEST. Don’t miss it!

Eyes on EN – the best day beckons – cross country day. Hooray!

Go eventing!

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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11:17am

🇳🇿 Tim Price and Vitali

Tim Price and Vitali take the lead. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

✨ Multiple 5* winner 🙋‍♂️ including at Badminton in 2017 with Xavier Faer.

World No. 4 Tim Price has achieved the elusive feat of completing at all seven of the world’s 5*s, eight including the pop-up event at Bicton in 2021.

Vitali is a seasoned 5* campaigner with six runs and six top-10 completions to his name, the best coming at Burghley last season where he was runner-up. He very nearly won Badminton last year, going into the final phase in the lead and last to jump. Alas, those poles fell. Five of them, tumbling him down the leaderboard to 8th. He kept it to one at Burghley. He’s a guy who likes to keep us guessing, right to the last second of competition.

OK, here we go. The last horse is in the ring. Will he be last to go on Sunday? Maybe.

Vitali doesn’t get off to the best start with a 5, 6.5 and 7 for the first halt. He picks his toes up as he sets off in trot though. He looks a little tense. Tim’s brave in the extended, nearly too brave, he saves it but the scores aren’t what he would have hoped. He’s trending in the 7s and 7.5s.

The halt doesn’t really show the immobility and scores two 4s and a 3. The reinback is tense also and scores a 4, 5, and 6. Tim’s not able to push in the extended walk, Vitali has soaked up all of the atmosphere and is obviously super fit to boot. They make their way tentatively through the pirouettes but score well for their accuracy.

There’s an 8 in the scores for the trot half pass, a highlight for this horse. They get into canter and the scores really do improve. Tim’s riding sympathetically and cleverly, of course. The first change is very good for two 7s and a 7.5. The second is also neat but not quite as good. The third is a little behind the marker and scores to 7s and 6.5. The final one is the best and scores a 7.5 and two 7s.

The final halt is secure for two 8s and a 7. Phew. That was a tough ride for Tim, who obviously delivered a masterclass in riding. He’s not going to threaten the top today

Tim Price and Vitali score 30.6.

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11:10am

🇳🇿 Samantha Lissington and Lord Seekonig

Samantha Lissington and Lord Seekonig. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’re down to the penultimate combination for the first phase. This is an exciting combination in this phase.

They come confidently into the ring and halt square. A good start for them with an 8 from the judge at H. The trot work is expressive and balanced with lots of flow – some 8s coming in at the early part of this test. The 10m circle is very pleasing to watch, rhythmical and accurate. There’s an 8.5 in the scores for the half pass.

The halt at C isn’t the best but the reinback is solid for two 7s and 7.5. They set off into a relaxed walk and score two 7.5s for the extended but then the tension bubbles up a little. Samantha settles everything seamlessly though. The pirouettes are very good.

The half pass in trot scores an 8.5. They get off into canter and there’s more rhythmical work on show with two 8s for the extended. The first change is quiet and scores a 6.5, 4.5 and a 5. The next one is better and scores a 7.5 from one judge and the third is nailed with 7s across the board. The final one isn’t so good. A couple of expensive mistakes there.

They come round and halt on the line really square for two 8s and a 7.5 A great end to the test. Overall this horse really looked comfortable and confident in his work and tried hard for his rider. Samantha waves to the camera on the way out with a smile. Lots of good stuff, a couple of expensive mistakes, particularly in those double-scored changes. Consistent enough for sub-30 though…

Samantha Lissington and Lord Seekonig score 29.9.

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11:03am

🇳🇿 Caroline Powell and High Time

Photo by Eventing Nation.

🏆 Last year’s champ 🙋🏼‍♀️

Seeing us out we have a trio of Kiwis 🥝🥝🥝

First of those three is none other than last year’s Badminton champ, Caroline Powell, who went with the reigning champ, Greenacres Special Cavalier, yesterday.

Today it’s high time for High Time’s time. (Go on, you know you want to say that out loud…)

Caroline’s all in with this horse after the withdrawal of last year’s winner before the dressage. They come in very neatly up the center line and halt dead square. A great start for them. They set off into a light and easy trot. The horse flexes nicely in the lateral work and really pushes forward in the extended and scores three 7s. There’s a lot to like about this work but the horses isn’t always totally happy in the contact and there’s some tension, which we see in a sneeze.

The halt is superb – two 8s and a 9 for that. The walk is definitely tentative. Caroline’s riding carefully. That will affect the scores for the extended as there’s not much of a difference, really. The pirouettes are equally careful.

They get back into trot and the horse sneezes a few times. He goes to canter but Caroline asks him to wait for the marker. The marks drop for the half pass because of that. Once they’re in canter the horse is balanced and everything is neat and tidy. The first change is tense but the second one is better. The tension’s definitely bubbling up as the test goes on. The second change on the serpentine is better again and the final one is good. They circle back round for the final halt and score an 8 for that movement, then have a couple of trot steps into the halt.

Lots of promise on show, some homework, but real potential for the future. Big pats from Caroline.

Caroline Powell and High Time score 36.7.

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10:56am

🇬🇧 Tom Rowland and Dreamliner

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair look confident as they come up the center line. The halt’s not on the line though and there’s a little step back. This is a big moving horse, really strong and powerful. A lot to handle in this phase but he looks rideable and eager to please. He’s light on his feet in the extended and scores 7.5s across the board for that. There could be a bit more bend through the body in the lateral work for the big marks and the horse clearly finds that a little more tricky. He snorts a bit.

The halt at C is OK and the horse continues to sneeze as he heads into the walk, showing a little tension. He walks nicely for Tom though and stays relaxed enough. They carefully navigate the pirouette sequence but there needs to be more bend to score bigger. They head back into trot and we get to see the lightness again, but the horse is definitely getting a little more tense as this test goes along.

They get into canter and show a really nice, rhythmical extended down the long line. The canter is this horse’s highlight and there’s 8s across the board for that. Unfortunately the first change is late and scores two 4s and a 5 but the second one is fabulous for an 8, 7.5 and 7. The next isn’t quite as good. The final one happens but kicks the boards and there are two 4s in the scores for that. The half circle back to the line scores two 8s and the final halt is solid.

There were some great highlights on show in this test and the collective marks are good – 7.5s and a 7 there. A couple of expensive mistakes but a horse which was clearly working very well for his rider.

Tom Rowland and Dreamliner score 33.1.

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10:49am

🇬🇧 Harry Meade and Cavalier Crystal

World No. 3 Harry Meade is hot from Kentucky, where he replicated his Burghley result from last season and finished 3rd and 4th. He’s a stalwart at Badminton, his local event, and has completed a massive 14 times, becoming the youngest-ever recipient of an Armada dish in 2009. He’s picked up a couple more since then! This mare was 3rd at Burghley on her debut at the level in 2023, and then 3rd again last year, when she jumped clear inside the time on cross country day and ended up finishing on her dressage score of 31.3. Harry was also 4th with his other talented mare Annaghmore Valoner. Harry sure is looking successful with the ladies. Watch this space…

Harry and ‘Nell’ come up the center line very confidently. She picks her head up in the halt and Harry gives her a minute to refocus before asking her to move off in trot. The mare is soft and supple although there’s some fussiness going on in the contact, which is a shame, really. The movement is nice and she’s pushing through from behind but the scores aren’t as up there as they perhaps could be.

They come round to halt at C and the head comes up again. She’s beautiful and she knows it. Harry encourages her to soften before the reinback, which is very good when it happens for 7s across the board. They set off into walk and Nell stays nicely relaxed and scores two 7s for the extended. There’s a little fiddle in the first pirouette and the scores drop to a 4, 5 and 5.5. The second one is better.

The get going with the canter and Harry’s brave in the extended. It’s very strong and scores an 8 and an 8.5. There’s a couple more 8s for the canter work. The first change isn’t great and scores 4s across the board, it was late unfortunately. The second one is better and the third is OK – two 6.5s and a 6 for that one. The final one is the best and scores two 7.5s and a 6.

They come round and halt to finish and Nell looks up to appreciate the applause. She settled a bit better as the test went on and there’s an 8 for the half circle back to the line. A bit mixed, overall, but watch out for them tomorrow, for sure.

Harry Meade and Cavalier Crystal score 34.6.

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10:42am

🇮🇪 Joseph Murphy and Calmaro

Joseph Murphy and Calmaro. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have come into a big atmosphere too and there’s a little step back in the first halt. They put it behind them and set off into a lovely rhythmical trot. Unfortunately they trip over the white board slightly, Joseph’s really using the whole arena. Nevertheless, the trot work is of a very nice quality and the scores are trending in the 7s and 7.5s.

They halt at C for an 8 from the judge at C. The reinback’s not quite straight but the steps are clean for two 7s. They set off into a quiet enough walk, albeit perhaps a little tentative and then there’s a jog in the extended and the scores drop to a 4, 5 and 5.5. They navigate the pirouettes well enough.

They get into canter and we can hear the horse grinding his teeth. There’s definitely a little tension there but the horse is really trying hard for Joseph. The first change is good and clean for 7s across the board. The second isn’t quite as good and scores a 7 and two 6.5s. The third is not easy and scores 4s. The final one is very good though for two 7s.

They come round to and score an 8 for the circle back to the line and the final halt is good enough for two 7s. Lots to like here in an, overall, polished performance on a horse that was clearly feeling the atmosphere. Good job.

Joseph Murphy and Calmaro score 32.6.

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10:35am

🇬🇧 Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno

Gemma Tattersall and Jalapeno. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

🌟 5* winner 🙋🏼‍♀️

Gemma won the pop-up 5* event at Bicton in 2021 with her other Badminton ride Chilli Knight.

🌶️ Jalapeno is known as ‘Jala’ in the barn.

It won’t be easy coming in after that, with how excited the crowd is. But Gemma’s a total pro. She can deal with anything this sport throws at her.

They make their way up the center line quietly and confidently and halt square, albeit with a slight step to the left behind. Three 8s across the board for that. Great start. They set off into a balanced and uphill trot and there are a few 8s in the scores at the early part of the test. The extended is beautiful and scores an 8 from the B judge. So balanced and powerful. Lovely.

They come round to C and halt, not quite square but she corrects it. There’s an 8 and two 7s for that. The reinback’s not quite straight but scores a two 7.5s and a 7 for the quality of the steps. The walk is very relaxed and the extended pulls in two 7.5s and a 7. The pirouette is accurate, the second one a smidge better than the first.

They set off into canter a fraction early but the balance is maintained and Gemma really rides for the extended. Scores are trending in the 7s and 7.5s on the whole. The first change is clean and tidy and scores an 8 and two 7.5s. Totally on the aid. The second is slightly better for two 8s. The third is a bit muddled and the scores drop slightly. The fourth is very good and totally accurate on the marker for an 8 and two 7.5s. Lots of valuable marks there.

They come back round for a 9 in the half circle and halt for another 9 and two 8s. She’s got to be delighted with that showing. A lovely example of a horse and rider partnership. Consistent throughout. 8s across the board for the collectives.

They go into third place!

Gemma Stevens and Jalapeno score 24.7.

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10:28am

🇬🇧 Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent. Photo by Sally Spickard.

🌟 5* winning combo!

Oliver and ‘Rosie’ were last year’s Kentucky champs, where they landed =8th after putting down a 31.4 in the first phase, but a blistering Saturday saw them add just one second of cross country time and they finished in style with a clear show jumping round to ultimately taking the crown.

🌹 Cooley Rosalent is known as ‘Rosie’ in the barn.

We’re into the final session of dressage at MARS Badminton! Will there be a leaderboard shake up? Maybe…

Rosie looks fabulous as she trots round the ring waiting for the bell. Oliver’s horses both looked super fit at the first horse inspection. Interestingly, Rosie also has a nose net on.

We’re being treated to Bettina Hoy in the commentary box for this session, who’s informed us that Rosie shares bloodlines with her Ringwood Cockatoo.

They’re up the center line and halted. There was a little wobble going into the halt but when she’s there it’s great and scores two 8s. Rosie’s so supple in her trot, light on her feet and elegance, but so strong. Lots of 8s coming in at the early part of the test. Three 8s for the extended.

The 8s continue for some very strong trot work. The halt at C is excellent and scores two 9s and an 8. Oliver’s gunning for it. The reinback scores an 8.5 and an 8. They get going into walk and the quality continues. Rosie is accurate and powerful and very relaxed but active. The first pirouette is neat and deliberate for 7.5s across the board. Bettina says she’d be happy with those pirouettes, praise indeed, and the second one scores two 8s and a 7.5.

The canter work is consistent in the quality. Lots more 8s coming in here. They nail the first change for three 8s. Oliver really is presenting this test beautifully. The changes on the serpentine are also nailed. The final change is great for two 8s and an 8.5. Nailed it.

What a consistent test. Overwhelmingly in the 8s. Oliver grins. What a horse this is. Beautiful. Exciting. 8.5s across the board for the collectives.

INTO THE LEAD!!!

The crowd go wild. Oliver can’t contain himself. What a wonderful horse she is.

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent score 21.1.

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🚜 We’re heading into a short break now. Competition resumes at 3:28pm local time / 10:28am EST / 4:28pm CEST. Back in a bit! 🚜

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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9:56am

🇬🇧 Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Heraldik Girl

Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Heraldik Girl. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

🚀 Opposition Heraldik Girl is known as ‘Rocket’ in the barn. Let’s keep it under wraps between the white boards though Rocket, please.

She’s a little fizzy as she makes her way to the gap in the boards to come into the ring. The halt is great but the move off goes left showing a little unbalance. The halt gets an 8 from the B judge. They get going into an expressive trot and really show that off in the extended. The mare seems to have settled nicely now and is picking up scores in the 7s and 7.5s.

They come round to halt at C but it’s not square behind. The reinback is soft and balanced for an 8 from the B judge, 6.5 from the other two though. They get going into a fairly relaxed walk and the mare looks to be happy in her work. They navigate the pirouette sequence quietly and the first one scores a 7.5 from the judge at C.

They set off into a light and airy canter which looks rideable and balanced. The change isn’t quite on the aids but it’s accurate when it comes – 4. 6.5 and 7 comes in for that. The second change is 4s across the board, the next is a bit better and the final one is better again, although gets another mixed bag of scores with a 4, 6, and 7.

They finish up their test to a cheer from the crowd and more mixed scores – 5, 6 and 8.

This was a sweet test from the horse who tried really hard. Not everything came off how Kirsty would have liked but she gives Rocket a lovely rub down the neck as she walks out having a very good look round. It may take a minute to sort those varied scores out. I’ll update it when it does come through.

Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Heraldik Girl score 34.8.

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9:49am

🇬🇧 Fiona Kashel and Creevagh Silver de Haar

Fiona Kashel and Creevagh Silver de Haar. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We have another gloriously white horse in the ring now. This one’s by the same sire at Vanir Kamira, Piggy March’s Badminton winner.

They start off with two 7.5s and a 6 for the first halt and then get off into a balanced and flowing trot. The extended is lofty and the horse flicks his toes forward, showing pleasing expression. There’s some tail swishing going on but the horse is working nicely for Fiona and is very consistent in his movements.

Wow, the halt is brilliant. 8s all round for that. Nicola Wilson in the commentary box thinks the judges could have gone higher and I’m inclined to agree. Meanies.

The walk isn’t quite as good as the trot work initially but the pirouettes are very solid, rhythmical and some of the best we’ve seen probably. 7s and 7.5s across the board for both of them. They get going into canter and show a marked difference down the long side for the extended. There’s an 8 in the scores for the canter work. The tail swish comes back for the flying change but the first is very accurate for 7s and a 7.5. The two on the serpentine are equally good and score 7.5s and a 7. The final one is valuable and nailed. Great job.

Fiona looks delighted as she halts with an 8. The crowd are very enthusiastic for a great showing. A really lovely picture of a horse enjoying his work and very confident to boot. Sub-30 and into 5th as things stand. That makes Fiona crowd. She looks back at the board a few times. She can’t believe it. A PB. Super.

Fiona Kashel and Creevagh Silver de Haar score 28.4.

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9:42am

🇬🇧 Laura Collett and Bling

✨ Multiple 5* winner 🙋🏼‍♀️

Laura’s taken a trifecta of 5* wins, including Badminton in 2023 with her double team gold and individual bronze medal winning Olympic ride London 52.

This horse is an absolute beast and really is striking in the ring. They get off to a great start with an 8 and two 7.5s but then unfortunately there’s a break in the trot. Laura’s so experienced though and she brings things back together quickly. The scores improve to mostly 7s at the early part of their test.

Laura manages to keep the rhythm consistent for the rest of the trot and then the halt at C is excellent – two 8s and a 7.5 for that. They get off into a relaxed walk which is quiet and fluent enough. They get a bit stuck in the first pirouette but the second one is better.

They get a sweet transition into canter and the horse looks to find things a bit easier. Scores are consistently in the 7s at this stage of the test. She’s a little green in the first change and scores 4s across the board, but the second one is better for 6s and a 6.5. The next isn’t quite as good. This horse is building in confidence as she goes around which is great to see.

They finish up with a good halt and a big cheer from the crowd. Bling has a look round as she leaves the ring. She looks tired after working so hard for Laura. She seems to be a sweet mare who’s just gained valuable experience at the level.

Laura Collett and Bling score 37.8.

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9:35am

🇩🇪 Nicolai Aldinger and Timmo

Nico Aldinger and Timmo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I do love a white horse, having got one myself, but man, mine is never, ever as white as Timmo. Props to the grooms, for sure.

They come up the center line and deliver a deliberate halt for an 8 and two 7.5s. Great start for them. There’s another 8 for the collected trot and this looks to be an exciting pairing. The horse is nicely uphill and expressive in his movement. He’s really long which makes the tiny 10m circle tricky, but he navigates it well for two 7s and a 7.5.

The halt at C is excellent for two 8s and a 7.5. Very clean. The reinback is also clean and scores well – two 7.5s and a 7. They set off into walk and Nicolai works hard to keep the relaxation. It doesn’t quite come off though in the extended, although the pirouettes are very impressive. They get a smooth transition into canter and Nicolai’s brave in the extended and is rewarded for it. Quite a few 8s coming in for the canter work.

The changes are a little confused, they’re not really established yet but the horse is trying for Nicolai. There’s a bit of a loss of rhythm coming into the final change and the horse drops behind the leg slightly. They finish up with another great halt for 8s across the board and Nicolai looks very pleased.

There was so much potential on show here, with some excellent marks. Once they nail those changes, they’ll be ones to watch in this phase. They’re great on cross country, make sure to catch their round tomorrow. Big cheers as they leave the ring.

Nicolai Aldinger and Timmo score 33.9.

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9:28am

🇬🇧 Alexander Bragg and Ardeo Premier

Alex Bragg and Ardeo Premier. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex was on the podium at Badminton last year with his talented mare Quindiva. He was tied on the score for runner-up but ended up in third spot.

He smiles as he comes into the ring and no wonder – an 8 and two 7.5s for the first halt. They get going into a nice enough trot but it’s not always consistent in the rhythm which affects the marks a little. 7s and some 6.5s on the whole.

The halt isn’t really secure and the horse steps into the boards on the reinback and it scores two 5s and a 6. They set off into a relaxed enough walk and score a 7 for the extended, but there’s some anticipation through the pirouette sequence and very nearly a jig. The horse settles better once he gets going in canter.

The extended down the long side is very good and then the first change is delivered really well for two 7.5s and a 7. But then, oh no, the bell’s rung. Alex went to circle round. That’s so annoying for him. An error of course there.

Alex gets things back together and the first change on the serpentine is good but the second one is very muddled and there’s a 1 in the scores there. The final change gets a mixed back of scores with a 4, 7 and 6.5.

A rueful Alex halts to end his test. Man, we all have those moments. Some good stuff going on, particularly the changes that came good, but an unfortunate error of course means a frustrating start to Alex’s Badminton.

Alexander Bragg and Ardeo Premier score 35.1.

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9:21am

🇮🇪 Sam Watson and Ballyneety Rocketman

Sam Watson and Ballyneety Rocketman. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sam’ll be receiving his Armada dish on Sunday for five Badminton completions, which he achieved last year. It’s the gelding’s first time at the level. They make a smart entrance and get off into an active trot. There’s a little tail swishing going on and some play in the contact but the horse is moving nicely overall, with small losses of rhythm every now and then. Scores are trending around 6.5.

There’s a little work to do in the lateral work, with the quarters coming in slightly. The halt at C starts off well but then the horse steps out slightly. The reinback is sound though for two 7s. They set off into walk and ‘Rocket’ is reasonably relaxed through the extended but there’s some fizz bubbling away underneath, for sure. The first pirouette is very nice for two 7s but the second one needed a little more bend for those type of scores.

They get off into canter and Sam’s brave down the long side for the extended. The horse is more balanced in the canter although there’s still a little of play going on in the contact. This is a young horse for the level at 11 and he’s still learning what it’s all about. He’s very expressive in the changes and actually bucks his way through them. The horse is really trying to get the right answer but can’t quite get his body to follow his brain. Although affecting the marks, it’s actually quite cute. He is a trier that’s for sure, and that’s just what you want, really.

They finish up with a smile from Sam and a pat. The test started off much better than it ended but the horse tried all the way through and this is just the beginning of his 5* career. More to come from him, for sure.

Sam Watson and Ballyneety Rocketman score 40.5.

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9:14am

🇳🇿 Taylor Mason and Centennial

Tayla Mason and Centennial. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Taylor squeaked onto the entry list at the last second to be here for her first Badminton with her homebred horse. They kick off with a 7.5, 7 and 6.5 for the first halt then progress into a powerful trot. This horse is very consistent in the way he moves, he looks forward and rideable and confident in his work. There’s a nice partnership between horse and rider on show here.

They halt square but then the horse steps back out of it – that’s 6s across the board. A bit of a shame because that could have been very high scoring. The reinback is excellent for two 7s and a 7.5. They set off into an active and powerful walk and the extended scores a 7.5 and a 7. They’re careful round the pirouettes but the horse drops behind the leg ever so slightly in the first. The second is better.

The horse anticipates the canter transition but settles once he’s allowed to go. Scores are trending in the 7s for the canter work. The first change is a little muddled and gets 4s across the board. The second is also a little tricky but the third is better. The horse is really trying very hard to do as he’s asked. The final change is very good but is quite a bit before the marker.

They come round and halt to end and overall, that was a job well done. The horse is very relaxed as he walks out of the ring, which is a success in itself. Very nice overall.

Taylor Mason and Centennial score 40.2.

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9:07am

🇮🇪 Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson

Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

This is a phenomenal cross country horse – make sure to keep an eye out for him tomorrow. He’s wearing a bonnet and nose net for the dressage today.

They come into the ring and unfortunately lose the canter rhythm momentarily just as they come through the gap in the boards. Things come back together straight away though and the early trot work is nice and balanced. Lots of 7s in the scores here.

The horse is being very obedient and really working hard for Sarah. The halt at C is very good for an 8 and the reinback is straight and true for another one. The walk is relaxed enough and they navigate the pirouettes carefully. The second one is a bit better than the first.

They get back into trot and then go into canter and push forward for the extended. ‘Jackson’ responds nicely and comes back to show a clear difference. The first change is neat and on the aids and scores a 7 from the judge at H. The first one on the serpentine is slightly early but the second one is cleaner. The valuable final change is very clean but not quite on the marker, which affects the scores.

They finish up as the sun really comes out and score an 8, 7 and 7.5 for the final halt. The crowd appreciates a solid performance this afternoon. They cheer as they make their way out and Jackson lights up. Sarah circles and smiles at her guy. Solid work. Cross country tomorrow.

Sarah Ennis and Grantstown Jackson score 35.6.

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9am

🇮🇪 Patrick Whelan and Ikoon Lan

Patrick Whelan Ikoon Lan. Photo by Irish Eventing Times.

Patrick and ‘Brutus’ get us back underway after the lunch break at Badminton.

Burtus looks impressive as he canters round the ring waiting to make his entrance. There’s a wiggle in the first halt and he steps off the center line on the way out. But once he gets going things improve and the scores shoot up to 8 for the collected trot. This horse works in a very correct way and is clean and elegant in his movement. He’s forward and expressive and there’s another 8 for the shoulder-in. He drops behind Patrick’s leg a little in the circle but Patrick pushes forward.

They score 7s across the board for the halt at C and then get off into an active walk. The horse doesn’t really take the contact forward in the extended for the biggest marks but the quality is there and he scores an 8 from the judge at C. The pirouettes are not so easy and the scores drop off there.

There’s some tail swishing going on as the horse anticipates the canter transition but he settles once he gets there. He’s working in a very nice uphill frame but every now and then he drops behind the leg for a moment. The first change is very expressive and so is the second. Lots of 7.5s coming in. The third isn’t so good and scores a 4 from the judge at H. That’s a shame because the others were solid. The final one scores 4.5, 4.5 and 7 – that’ll be reviewed.

They finish up what was overall a very good showing. Some lovely highlights and a horse who’s obviously very happy in his work.

Patrick Whelan and Ikoon Lan score 34.4.

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We’re heading into the lunch break now.
Competition resumes at 2pm local time / 9am EST / 3pm CEST.

Here’s a look at the leaderboard after this morning’s competition:

1️⃣ 🇬🇧 Tom McEwen and JL Dublin – 22.4

2️⃣ 🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo – 25.3

3️⃣ 🇬🇧 Emily King and Valmy Biats – 27.3

You’ll find the full leaderboard right here.

Back in a bit!

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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12:21am

🇬🇧 Harry Mutch and Shanbeg Cooley

Harry Mutch and Shanbeg Cooley. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry and ‘Jaeger’ get off to a solid start and the horse looks to be settled and happy in the ring. Scores trend in the 6s overall for the early trot work with some 7s in there too. They halt nicely at C for two 8s and a 7 although the reinback is sticky for two 4s. It’s great to see the judges using all of the marks available for all the movements.

They set off into a relaxed enough walk and the extended is very nice for a 7 and a 7.5. There’s a tiny jig between the two pirouettes but they navigate their way round those tight turns. They get back into a balanced trot and then strike off for the canter section of the test.

The extended canter is strong and the horse clearly fancies a gallop. Harry gently flexes his neck to help him to lighten up a little. Jaeger responds even though he’s getting strong. They manage the flying changes really well, clearly solid in those difficult movements, until the last which is sticky for two 4s, that’s expensive.

The final halt scores an 8 from the B judge which is a great way to end your Badminton test. This was a horse trying hard despite being fit and ready for cross country. Harry rode really nicely though and clearly knows how to manage all that excitement.

Harry Mutch and Shanbeg Cooley score 40.4.

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7:14am

🇳🇿 Lauren Innes and Global Fision M

Lauren Innes and Global Fision M. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s some excitement going on as they come up the center line. This horse is known to be tricky in this phase. He’s spotted the cross country fences in the arena and would much rather be jumping them. The halt doesn’t really happen – 2s and a 3 there – and it takes Lauren a hot minute to really get him going. There’s some sideways and a little backwards and then, finally, forwards.

When they do get trotting there’s a really nice quality to the movement and the extended scores 7s across the board. The halt at C also scores 7s. ‘Flipper’ seems to have settled down. He walks really nicely across the diagonal, looking as though all that palaver at the start never happened. Some jiggy jog creeps in though but Lauren really navigates those pirouettes well, all things considered. They go back into trot but Flipper wants to canter. He throws his head up to let Lauren know and eventually, she’s able to let him go.

He does settle a bit and actually comes back nicely for her after the extended, she was brave there to push for that. It’s a shame that the atmosphere gets to this horse so markedly as when he’s on side and listening, he’s actually got a great quality in his movement. He’s so powerful and flashy. The changes are obviously going to be hard, he wants to run. Tomorrow, boy, tomorrow.

They finish up with a quiet halt and then he lets loose. He dances round and Lauren takes a minute to settle him with a stroke down the neck. She clearly knows this horse inside out and they obviously have a really strong relationship. Tricky in this phase but actually with a heap of potential. Onward to tomorrow.

Lauren asks the crowd to stay quiet as she leaves the ring. There’s no scores to be had now but she obviously doesn’t want her horse to be upset unnecessarily. Sensitive riding on show. They move on to their best bits now.

Lauren Innes and Global Fision M score 48.9.

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7:07am

🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Cartania

Felix Vogg and Cartania. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

🌟 5* winner 🙋

Felix gave himself a kick-ass birthday present in 2022 when he won Luhmühlen 🥳

This pair look very focused as they come up the center line. They set off into a light and balanced trot and the mare seems to be very rideable at the beginning of the test. They score an 8 for the collected. They show a clear difference in the extended and the horse responds softly when Felix asks her to come back. She moves softly round the 10m circle and scores a 7.5 from the judge at H.

The halt is excellent and scores two 8s and a 7.5. It’s very slightly off center, that could have scored even higher, really. The reinback’s not so good and scores two 5s and a 7. They get going into walk and everything is neat and tidy. It’s 6.5s across the board for the extended. The first pirouette is very good and scores two 7s, the second not so much.

They get into canter and the mare creates an elegant picture with the same light quality as her trot. There’s an 8 in the scores here. The first change is very neat for two 8s and a 7 and the second is also good. Very established in that movement. The third change scores 7s across the board. The fourth is also very clean – no drama for them. That scores two 7.5s. Those two high change marks are doubled. There’s another 8 for the half circle back to the center line and another one for the final halt.

Some real highlights on show here and excellent flying changes that looked oh so easy, but we know they’re not. Very nice and sub-30 for those valuable double co-efficients on the changes.

Felix Vogg and Cartania score 29.7.

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7am

🇬🇧 Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy

Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nicky and ‘Bing’ come up the center line and come to an abrupt halt. They’re quick to get going into trot and settle quickly into their test. This horse is light on his feet and expressive in his movements and scores are trending in the 7s at the early stages of their test.

We can see Bing playing with the contact a little and he lifts his nose ever so slightly in the halt to have a look round. The halt is maintained but it’s not quite square. The reinback is neat though. They set off into walk and Nicky clearly has to encourage Bing to stay focused on her. He does though and they score 7s across the board for the extended. There’s a little resistance coming out of the first pirouette but the second is solid.

They set off into the canter section and Nicky pushes forward for the extended. Bing’s still playing around with the contact though and things fall apart a little at the end of the half pass and then the change is really tricky. She has to come right back to walk almost before pushing forward again. The changes on the serpentine are solid though.

They come back round to the center line to finish up their Badminton dressage. Bing looks up to acknowledge his applause. Some very nice bits, some tricky bits. But the horse stayed with his rider and tried for her. He looks pleased with himself on the way out.

Nicky Hill and MGH Bingo Boy score 40.1.

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6:53am

🇮🇪 Daragh Byrne and Kilcannon Ramiro

Daragh and Kilcannon come very straight up the center line to get their competition underway with an 8 in the scores to start. This horse has a big action with his hind end which really shows his power across the ground. The extended trot is very strong and scores two 7.5s and a 7. The trot work on the whole is very consistent and trending in the 7s.

This is clearly a horse and rider who know each other very well. Daragh’s riding very deliberately and everything seems to be very secure. Kilcannon’s relaxed in the walk and very focused on his rider. Scoresf for the extended are 6, 5.5 and 7. This big, powerful horse doesn’t find the pirouettes easy and the scores drop down, but come back up for the trot work before the canter section of the test.

There’s a lovely uphill quality to this horse’s canter. He must feel great out on cross country. Scores are trending in the 7s on the whole. Until the first change when the gelding kicks out a little and clips the board. The massive movement he naturally has makes the flying changes really difficult for him. There’s a break in the canter unfortunately which is expensive and they score a 3, 4 and 6 for the half pass.

They come round to halt and Daragh’s grinning. Lovely strokes for Kilcannon for a job well done. Despite the problems in the changes, this was a clear example of a horse trying his socks off for his rider. A really lovely partnership on show. Daragh’s still smiling on the way out.

Daragh Byrne and Kilcannon Ramiro score 41.8.

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6:46am

🇬🇧 Katie Magee and Treworra

Katie Magee and Treworra. Photo by Ed Ryder.

This pair had their first time at 5* at the very wet edition of Pau last year, so it’ll be cool to see how they take to the level in more opportune conditions.

They get off to a solid start with an 8, 7.5 and 7 for the first halt. Great work there. They get going into an expressive trot and there’s another 8 for the collected. The horse is soft and light and really uses his body nicely. Lots of 7s and 7.5s coming in and a smattering of 8s. This is really a great picture and there are two 8s for the 10m circle.

The get another 8 for the halt at C, backed up by a 7.5 and 7 and the reinback comes up good. The walk is nice and expressive and soft although the horse could perhaps have lengthened his frame more for big marks in the extended. The first pirouette very polished and there’s a 7 in the scores for that but the second doesn’t come off so well and there are 4s in there for that.

They get into canter and the quality improves along with the scores. Lots of 7.5s coming in. The horse is working very nicely for his rider and trying his best. The first change isn’t really there and scores 4s across the board. The ones on the serpentine are much better though and there are two 7s for the second one. The final one on the straight is better than the first.

They finish up with two 8s and a 7.5 for the halt – what a great way to end what’s been an impressive test. Lots to like here and buckets of potential. Katie looks delighted and the horse looks very pleased with himself. Good boy. What a great start to their Badminton.

Katie Magee and Treworra score 31.8.

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6:39am

🇬🇧 Jack Pinkney and Rehy Revelation

Jack and ‘Alex’ enter the ring looking very focused. They halt square to start and set off into trot. The horse looks like he’s having to try very hard to concentrate, but he’s listening to Jack. The trot is clean and tidy but there’s some tail action happening. Scores are trending in the 6s with a few 7s.

The halt at C is very good and maintained for 7s across the board and the reinback is soft and willing for a 7.5 from the judge at B. They get into the walk and Alex stays relaxed and is happy to amble along for Jack. The extended scores 7s across the board.

They neatly navigate the pirouettes with scores in the 6.5s on the whole for the first and a mixed bag for the second – a 4 and a 7 in there. They set off into the canter section and push down the long side for the extended. Scores are back up in the 7s until the first change. The horse really jumps it and kicks the board with his hind – 4s across the board for that one, and then the next, and the next. A little homework to do there. The final change scores two 4s and a 7 – that’ll perhaps be looked at again.

They come back around to halt on the center line and pick up a 7.5 to finish off. Overall this was a nice test with some things to work on for next time. Jack looks happy with his horse and Alex looks very relaxed as he walks out of the ring.

Jack Pinkney and Rehy Revelation score 39.9.

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6:32am

🇦🇹 Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet

Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harald and ‘Vitorio’ get us back underway for the last session before lunch and get off to a great start with an 8 for the first halt from the judge at B. You can hear the horse griding his teeth as he trots round the arena but his movement is very clean and relaxed and the scores are trending in the 7s in the early part of their test.

This is a really accurately ridden test so far and Harald’s leaving nothing to chance. The halt at C is excellent, soft and well maintained and another 8 in the scores there. A 7.5 in the reinback scores. Those movements were a clear highlight.

The walk is precise but not really relaxed and flowing enough for the big marks and the pirouettes are a little tentative. Scores drop into the 6s for the walk section. They get back into trot and there’s some tail swishing creeping in, showing a little tension. They strike off into canter and the horse shows that tension in the contact, swinging his head a bit. He’s listening and doing as Harald asks but it doesn’t look to be an easy ride.

The changes happen but the canter work isn’t as smooth as it could be really. He jumps through the final change a bit. They come back round to the center line and the tail’s going in circles by this point. Harald looks really pleased with his horse though. He’s got a big smile on his face and gives Vitorio a massive pat.

Some lovely highlights and a horse trying hard for his rider. He looks nicely relaxed as he walks out of the ring, still being patted. Thumbs up from Harald to the camera.

Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet score 34.9.

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🚜 We’re heading into a short break now. Competition resumes at 11:32am local time / 6:32am EST / 12:32am CEST. Back in a bit! 🚜

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6:05am

🇬🇧 Max Warburton and Deerpairc Revelry

Max Warburton and Deerpairc Revelry. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This is my pick of the horses at Badminton, he’s just gorgeous. He’s strong and powerful and a great cross country horse. They get off to a solid start with scores trending in the 7s for the early trot work. The horse looks comfortable and confident in his work.

The halt at C is almost excellent, but doesn’t get the immobility and the scores show that. The reinback scores two 6s and a 7. The horse is really trying to concentrate on Max. He scores an 8 for the extended from the judge at B. Lovely work there.

They navigate the pirouettes neatly enough and then get a smooth transition back into trot for 7s across the board. The same again for the half pass, and the canters. Very consistent work being shown here.

The horse is clearly confident in his changes and they’re true and clean for more 7s on the whole. This pair are an example of a horse and rider totally on the same page and Max is riding very accurately for every mark. A real example of riding the horse you have to the very best of their ability. That’s winning at Badminton.

A solid performance which was very pleasing to watch.

Max Warburton and Deerpairc Revelry score 32.7.

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5:58am

🇬🇧 Helen Bates and Carpe Diem

‘Demon’ gets off to a great start with two 8s and a 7 for the first halt. They get off into a expressive and flighty trot and the extended is beautiful, really pushing through and extending the frame. He’s soft and bouncy and trying so hard to focus on Helen. There’s no denying he’s noticing all the excitement going on, but she’s keeping him on side and he’s being a good boy.

The halt at C isn’t quite established but the reinback is clean and tidy. The extended walk is lovely for 7s across the board. It’s a mixed bag of scores for the first pirouette with two 6s and a 3, then they get a bit stuck in the second and score 4s across the board.

They get into the canter work and Helen pushes for the extended showing off the horse’s power. She does well to keep his concentration round the corner by the crowd. He stays with her though. His focus isn’t quite there for the changes and they prove to be expensive. That’s a pity as the horse has been trying really hard through this test to do as he’s being asked.

They come round for the final halt and his head goes up. Helen looks really pleased with his efforts and gives him a big stroke down the neck and a kind word. He was a really good boy overall and there were some really impressive highlights.

Helen Bates and Carpe Diem score 40.1.

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5:51am

🇬🇧 Tom Bird and Cowling Hot Gossip

I remember watching this pair last year in this phase and smiling, because this horse is what I believe is a true eventer at heart – 100% in it for the cross country. He does dressage. But only so he gets to go running and jumping. He does work sweetly for Tom though and is doing everything that he’s being asked, just with a bit of a grumpy face on him.

There are some very nice marks for the reinback with a 7.5 in there, but the gelding isn’t very impressed by the walk. He’s shaking his head a little back and to and then jogs at the end – 4, 4, 5 for that. The first pirouette is more circle and scores a 3, the second is a little better. The horse is happier when he gets to trot and even more happy when he gets to canter down the long side of the ring. Scores are improving. Tom really does ride this horse for what he is and it’s nice to see a rider really ‘get’ his partner. He’s supportive and understanding and they’re both doing their best.

There’s fussiness in the mouth creeping in as the test goes on, the horse is ready for tomorrow. He halts sweetly at the end though and gets a huge pat from Tom. Two 7s in the scores to end their test. Seriously, watch out for them on course tomorrow. Dressage done. Some nice highlights which were rewarded by the judges. The horse walks out so relaxed. He’s pleased with himself.

Tom Bird and Cowling Hot Gossip score 45.1.

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5:44am

🇬🇧 Aaron Millar and Friendship VDL

Aaron Millar and Friendship VDL. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This horse is for sure here for the next two days, but he looks to be settled enough as he comes into the ring. He seems to be listening to Aaron and his trot is very good, there’s an 8 in the scores for the collected. It’s a little inconsistent in places, there’s a little wobble in the shoulder-in but the quality of the movement is good. There’s an 8 for the 10m circle.

They halt at C and score two 8s and a 7. There are some real highlights on show here. The reinback is great for two 7.5s. The horse is really working so hard and really trying for his rider. They carefully navigate the walk work and the first pirouette is very good, but there’s a hesitation before he steps away from it. It’s a similar story for the second. But this horse is very composed and rideable which is great to see. They score an 9 and two 7.5s for the trot transition.

This is really shaping up to be an excellent showing from this pair. The canter is relaxed and flowing until the first change, which is a bit abrupt and scores two 4s. That’s a shame because everything else has been very confident and established on the whole. The changes are tricky though. They’ll be expensive. The final one scores 1, 1, 3 and is double marked.

They halt square to finish and score an 8, 7.5 and 7 for their final movement, which is very much more of a reflection of the test as a whole than those expensive mistakes in the changes. A little homework to do but my goodness, this is a combination to watch for the future. He was definitely trending sub-30 for much of that.

Aaron Millar and Friendship VDL score 35.9.

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5:37am

🇩🇪 Wouter De Cleene and Quintera

Wouter de Cleene and Quintera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Wouter really does take his time to make his entry after the bell. He’s totally making sure Quinter’s on her game. They’re dead straight up the center line and halt square to get their Badminton underway.

They start off with scores in the 7s and 7.5s and continue on that trend as they get into the trot work. The horse is pushing through and looks to be supple and strong in her work. They’ve had a confident start to their test and the horse is listening and trying hard. The halt at C is good enough for two 8s and a 7.5. The reinback is a little sticky and there’s a 5.5 from the judge at H, 7.5 from the B judge.

They start the walk work and the horse is still looking relaxed and happy. She’s working in a lovely frame and the pair seem to work well together. The pirouettes are not easy for her and the scores drop a little. They get going into canter and everything looks steady but they’re not pulling in the big marks. A little more softness maybe. The changes are a bit of a mixed bag, some excellent for 7.5s, some not so good. They circle back round and finish up with a very square halt for two 7s and a 7.5.

Big pat for Quintera and she picks up her head for a good look around. Some nice work on show this morning from this pair. 7s in the collective marks for them.

Wouter De Cleene and Quintera score 37.4.

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5:30am

🇬🇧 Selina Milnes and Gelmer

Selina Milnes and Gelmer. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Gelmer’s really picking up his knees as he trots round the ring before the bell. Selina takes her time on the way to making her entrance up the center line. Gelmer’s a huge, powerful horse. He’s very expressive in his movement although he’s clearly a little excited to be at Badminton. He’s got a really big action but isn’t able to take that forward and extend his frame in the extended for big marks.

They halt at C and Selina tries to correct it to make it square but it doesn’t quite come off – two 6s and a 5 for that. The reinback is very neat for two 7s and a 6.5. They get going into the walk work and we can see that Gelmer’s a little fizzy under the surface. He thinks about jiggy jogging, there’s just a hint. He finds the pirouettes a little difficult – scores for the walk are 6s and some 5s on the whole.

They get smoothly back into trot and score 7s across the board for the transition. They set off into canter and really show the scope and power of this horse in the extended canter. Very balanced. Selina sets right up for the first change, which is clean enough. He finds the ones on the serpentine difficult though. This is a lot of horse to contain in the dressage. He’s trying really hard though.

They halt to finish and Gelmer looks up to the crowd. There’s an 8 for the final halt, that’s a nice mark to end on. Lots of things to like here and an exciting horse for tomorrow.

Selina Milnes and Gelmer score 37.6.

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5:23am

🇮🇪 Georgie Goss and Feloupe

Georgie Goss and Feloupe. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Georgie and Feloupe come into the ring and get their Badminton underway. Georgie has nine finishes here in nine starts – that’s a cool achievement. Feloupe is a lovely big horse and has a powerful trot to match. He’s pushing though and is soft and elegant. So far they’re creating a very nice picture and scores are trending in the 7s.

They halt at C but not for long before they reinback neatly for a 7.5 and two 7s. They set off into a relaxed walk and clearly show the difference in the extended. They navigate the first pirouette well but there are some signs of tension creeping in. The mare is slightly playing with the bit. That affects the bend round that tight turn.

They set off into canter and again, the extended is very purposeful. The scores are back up into the 7s for the canter work. They make the first change very neatly and are rewarded with an 8 from the C judge. The second isn’t quite as good and then the third doesn’t really work for them, scores drop to two 4s and a 5 there. The fourth is very nice for 7s across the board.

They circle back round to halt at the end and Feloupe gets a big pat. That was a sweet test showing harmony between horse and rider. There’s an 8 for the half circle back to the center line. Very nice. And sub-30. Great work.

Georgie Goss and Feloupe score 29.6.

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5:16am

🇺🇸 Grace Taylor and Game Changer

Grace Taylor and Game Changer. Photo by Sally Spickard.

We’re back with Grace and ‘Sydney’ as they canter round the ring waiting for the bell.

They get a good shot up the center line and come to a sudden halt, which is square and scores an 8 and two 7s. Great start. They get into trot and the horse looks relaxed and supple and is very lofty in the extended, that was lovely. He looks to be enjoying his time in the ring and is working well with his rider.

The halt at C is very well maintained and is rewarded with two 8s and a 7.5. That was beautiful. The reinback is very neat and tidy. They set off into a nicely relaxed walk and the horse shows some swing in the extended. The transition is very good and clearly shows the difference in pace. They navigate the pirouette well, a little sticky initially but neat all the way round.

They get a good transition into trot and then go smoothly into canter. Grace pushes for the extended and the horse responds very sweetly. He’s trying hard in his work and looks very confident. The changes are clearly established and on the aids, if a little big behind. The ones on the serpentine are really very good.

They halt at the end of what’s been overall, a great test. There’s a ‘Yeah!’ in the crowd. Sydney stretches his neck down for a sniff of the Badminton turf. It really is great to see just how relaxed many of these horses are after their tests, happy to be at Badminton and not at all bothered by the atmosphere. That was a pro job overall.

Grace Taylor and Game Changer score 36.1.

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🚜 We’re heading into a short break now. Competition resumes at 10:16am local time / 5:16am EST / 11:16am CEST. Back in a bit! 🚜

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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4:49am

🇬🇧 Libby Seed and Heartbreaker Star Quality

Libby Seed and Heartbreaker Star Quality. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

‘Angel’ has a look at the first cross country fence as he makes his way round the ring waiting for the bell. Not today, but soon, Angel.

They canter into the ring and there are a few trot steps into the first halt. When they set off into trot, though, the scores improve. The gelding is moving nicely through his work and looks to be happy to do what Libby is asking. Nicola Wilson in the commentary box says the horse has a lovely expression on his face.

The halt at C is very nice – a 7.5 and 7 in the scores there. The reinback is very neat also for two 7s. They set off into walk and Angel starts to feel the sense of occasion. Libby gives him a little pat on the withers to let him know she’s got his back. The pirouettes are a little sticky.

Angel is happier to be in canter once the walk is finally done. Scores improve into the 7s in this section of the test. This really does look to be a sweet horse who tries hard in his work. He kind of guesses at the changes on the serpentine and scores 4s across the board for each, but he is trying.

They come back round to halt at the end of their test and Angel stretches his neck out. Phew, a job well enough done. Overall this was a nice picture of a partnership between horse and rider, working together to get the job done.

Libby Seed and Heartbreaker Star Quality score 36.6.

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4:42am

🇬🇧 Kate Rocher-Smith and Dassett Select

Kate Rocher and Dassett Select. Photo courtesy of Dassett Eventing.

They come dead straight up the center line and get things going with an 8 from the B judge. They get going into the trot work and everything looks neat and tidy on the whole – scores are trending in the 6.5s and 7s. The horse is clearly trying hard, but we can kind of see that when it should look a bit more effortless. But he’s listening and doing everything asked of him.

They halt at C and then the reinback is very clear and deliberate. That scores two 7s and a 6.5. They get going in the walk and it’s similar to the trot – precise and neat but not really showing all the relaxation for the bigger marks. They navigate the pirouettes very neatly.

They set off into canter and the horse shows how responsive he is in the transition from extended. He’s going along very sweetly and clearly knows his job. The changes are clean and easy but not really expressive for big marks. This guy is confident in his work, for sure. They halt at the end and he looks up at the crowd. What a good boy. He scratches his nose. Overall there was a lot to like in this test. A confident horse working very nicely with his rider. The crowd cheers her out and she waves. Nice.

Kate Rocher-Smith and Dassett Select score 33.1.

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4:35am

🇮🇪 Susie Berry and Clever Trick

Susie Berry and Clever Trick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

🦉 Clever Trick is known as ‘Owl’ in the barn.

It won’t be easy to come into the ring after a test like that but they nail it with two 8s for the first halt. Owl looks confident and she’s elegant in her trot work. It’s very flowing and easy. She shows beautiful positioning in the shoulder-in. So far so good for them. There’s an 8 in the marks for the 10m circle.

The halt at C isn’t quite there as Owl anticipates the reinback. Scores drop significantly there. They set off into a relaxed walk, but it’s not quite so soft as the trot work – the extended scores 6.5s across the board. The first pirouette is very good and scores 7, the second a little sticky. Susie has to work to get the relaxation back as they set off into trot and Owl looks to be getting a little more tense as things progress.

They set off into canter and the scores stay in the 6s with some 7s. The tension shows up in the changes though. The first scores two 4s and a 5 and then she pokes her nose up before the second. They’re a bit tricky. Her trot work was so confident but the excitement of the occasion has built as the test went on.

They score 7s across the board for the final halt and Owl stretches her neck out. She’s worked hard and put in a solid enough effort. A test of two halves, really.

Susie Berry and Clever Trick score 36.4.

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4:28am

🇬🇧 Rosalind Canter and Lordships Graffalo

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

✨ Multiple 5* winning combo!

World No. 5 Ros Canter took the Badminton title in 2023 with ‘Walter’ and then the pair won Burghley last season. She says Walter’s the perfect eventer – he enjoys all three phases and is equally talented in all of them. To borrow from Shakespeare, ‘Consistency, thou art a jewel’ 💎 – will it be the jewel in Walter’s Badminton crown once more? 👑

OK, here we go. Will we have a new leader? Watch this space…

‘Walter’ is in the ring.

They halt square and set the tone for their test with two 8s and an 8.5.

They set off into a springy and expressive trot – 9 for the collected. Lots of 8s and 8.5s. This horse is so supple – 8s across the board for the extended and the transition. Beautiful work on show. This is smooth, easy, seamless.

The halt at C gets a 9 from the judge at C and 7.5 from the two others. The reinback is a little rushed and scores drop to 7s. Walter is super relaxed in the walk. He swings his bum and uses his whole body and scores two 8s for the extended. Pirouettes? No worry for Walter. Two 8s for the first and two more for the second.

We get to see a little more of his expressive trot WE HAVE A 10 for the half pass!

And now Walter shows more of his quality in the canter with scores trending in the 8s. But oh, the first change is 4s – he double tapped his feet on the ground. He makes up for it with the two on the serpentine, but the fourth one scores 4s. They are expensive mistakes. The two they missed are marked double.

Where will they land? So many 8s, some 9s, a 10. But not error free… Collectives are 8s and an 8.5… Into second…

Rosalind Canter and Lordships Graffalo score 25.3.

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4:21am

🇩🇪 Christoph Wahler and D’Accord FRH

Christoph Wahler and D’Accord FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

They make a very clean entrance up the center line but the halt isn’t quite what Christoph would have wanted and has a mixed bag of scores – 5.5, 7.5. 5 for that. No matter, we move on. They get going into the trot work and things improve immediately. The horse is flowing and settled and there are lots of scores in the 7s with an 8 or two.

The halt at C is excellent and scores two 8s and a 7.5 and the reinback is dead straight for an 8 and two 7s. There’s a little something something bubbling away in the walk work and the steps are a little bouncy rather than elongated and relaxed – 5s across the board for the extended. That tension remains for the pirouettes. The horse is again much happier once he gets into trot.

They get into canter and Christoph pushes in the extended showing this horse’s scope and power. He brings him back very smoothly and the canter marks on the whole are very good. The changes are clearly established and clean and Christoph navigates them purposefully.

They come round and halt on the center line but not before pulling in another 8 for the half circle back to the line. A big pat for D’Accord, who, incidentally, has the same sire as JL Dublin, the current leader. Overall there was a lot to like in this test, with some expensive walk work. The halt and reinback were real highlights.

Christoph Wahler and D’Accord FRH score 32.4.

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4:14am

🇮🇪 Ian Cassells and Master Point

Ian Cassells and Master Point. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

This pair make a smart entrance as they come into the ring. The first halt is very solid, great start for them for two 7.5s and a 7. They create a lovely picture as they trot round, it’s positive and harmonious and the horse is very much on his rider’s side. Lots of 7s and some 8s coming in at this stage.

‘Duke’ is very soft and willing and is trying really hard. He really does work nicely for his rider. He sure knows his job, he went to go straight into the reinback at C but Ian reminded him to halt for a bit first. They set off into a very relaxed walk, it’s swinging and flowing and actually very impressive. They navigate their way quietly round the pirouettes and scores 7s on the whole for the first. There’s a little resistance in the second and the scores aren’t quite as good.

The get a smooth transition into canter and again, it’s all very quiet and easy looking. Scores are back up in the 7s with some 8s now. This is a very smart test so far. The horse looks rideable and very confident in his work. The changes are clearly solid although he kicks the board on the final change as he swung his quarters out. The horse stayed calm and collected though.

They halt at the end and Master Point has a bite of Badminton grass as he ambles out of the ring. A very relaxed horse who was confident and happy in his work throughout. A very nice start to their competition with a 5* PB for Ian.

Ian Cassells and Master Point score 30.7.

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4:07am

🇬🇧 Emma Thomas and Icarus

Emma Thomas and Icarus. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Icarus is really shining in the sunshine, he’s beautifully turned out. He decides to take a bathroom break as he comes into the ring. He was really lit up just at the last moment before they entered. That’s a tough start. The halt is not really a halt and he picks his head right up. Emma asks him forward but he goes back. She sits tight and gets him on side to set off in trot.

He’s griding his teeth as he trots round the ring but Emma seems to have settled him the best she can. He’s fussing round with the contact and is quite active in his head. Emma’s riding tactfully and gently encouraging him. The halt at C is much better than the first and they really do see the immobility. Emma came into it very quietly and rides the reinback in the same way, tactfully and quietly and very sensitively.

The walk is obviously going to be tricky with this horse. Emma’s really having to hold the horse together. There’s quite a bit of jiggy jogging but it honestly could be galloping by the looks of things so Emma’ll be taking what she can. They manage the pirouettes very well all things considered.

They set off into a quiet canter and Icarus does seem a little more settled now the walk’s over with. It’s so clear that this horse is going to be fabulous galloping cross country and he’s so ready for it to be Saturday right now.

Emma really is doing a great job of convincing Icarus to play ball. She manages to get the changes which shows that the horse is trying hard for her and is trying to listen. They come round to halt and Emma visibly gives a massive sigh of relief with a huge puff of her teeth. Phew. Superb job that woman.

Emma Thomas and Icarus score 46.8.

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4am

🇬🇧 Wills Oakden and A Class Cooley

Wills Oakden and A Class Cooley. Photo by Iain B Images.

Well the sun’s shining on Badminton as we get underway for the second day 🌞

Wills and ‘Felix’ begin their competition as they canter straight up the center line to halt square for an 8 from the judge at B. They set off into a balanced and rhythmical trot and there’s another 8 from the B judge, they’re obviously liking what they see. The horse is working quietly and consistently and the scores coming in for the early part of their test are trending in the 7s and 7.5s with a smattering of 8s.

The halt at C isn’t as good as the first one, Felix doesn’t really show the immobility there and the scores drop. The reinback is sound though. They set off into walk and the gelding stays nice and relaxed despite obviously being incredibly fit. There’s two 6s and a 7.5 for the extended.

The pirouettes are very good and score 7s, the second one earning an 8 from the judge at H. They get going into a smooth canter which has many of the same qualities as the trot – it’s fluid and rhythmical and effortless. Another 8 for the extended from the judge at B.

This all looks so easy. Felix really is confident in his work. Unfortunately the first change on the serpentine doesn’t come up – a mixed bag of scores there, 2. 6.5, 4. The other changes are much better though and are clearly established and expressive.

They come round and halt at the end of what’s been a sweet test. Quiet and accurate and very pleasing to watch. A good start to their Badminton.

Wills Oakden and A Class Cooley score 34.4.

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MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

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EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

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“She Kind of Chose Me”: Samantha Cesnik’s Unlikely Path to Badminton with Graftango

Samantha Cesnik and Graftango. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

The perfect preparation for a first Badminton for Australia’s Graftango, who carried Samantha Cesnik to equal 25th on 36.2 at MARS Badminton on Thursday, was a sun-soaked sojourn in St Tropez.

“She had a glorious winter in the South of France with my dressage coach, Brianna Burgess,” confesses Samantha, 39.

The pair arrived in France from Australia 10 days before Pau last year, and found themselves fairly literally under water.

“It was a big ask – she only had 10 days between getting off the plane and trotting up, and then it rained – proper ‘British’ mud – and she’d never seen anything like it. So it was more a baptism by water than fire!” Samantha says.

They completed, with a slow clear across country and something of a cricket score in the show jumping, and then the 14-year-old Grafenstolz mare was given “a long break”.

“Brianna brought her back into work for me and kept her going until I arrived in February. That decision paid off – we avoided the British winter, and she had a prep that was more like what she’s used to.”

Since February they have been based at Chris Burton’s former yard – now the home of the Prices – Chedington in Dorset.

“This spring has been much better. Everyone says the ground is a bit firm, but for us, it’s perfect. Even the weather feels a bit like home – warm and lovely,” says Samantha. “We’ve had a magical prep. Chedington is a brilliant facility, and luckily, we have similar micro-facilities in Australia. So it meant the horse could keep a very consistent program, which is definitely paying off now.”

Samantha has been training with former Badminton winner Sam Griffiths, a fellow Aussie, and Britain’s Nicola Wilson.

“I’ve known Sam for a long time, and I met Nicola earlier this year in Australia,” she explains. “It’s been amazing to have that kind of support on British soil. It’s really helped me hit the ground running and find my feet.”

She was “really happy” with Graftango’s dressage test at Badminton, saying: “I mean, she’s from Australia – we don’t get crowds like this! So to go in and keep it together is excellent. She’s not always the easiest to stay with, and she hasn’t necessarily put her best foot forward in dressage since arriving in the UK. But today, she gave us a little glimmer of how good she can be, and I’m really proud of her for bringing it out when it mattered. For me, being a first-timer here, it’s a big deal too. We both managed to keep a lid on it, so I’m relieved it’s over, but very pleased.”

Samantha, who spent some time at PSI in Germany and competed to a high level in dressage in Australia before “parking” that sport to concentrate fully on her eventing ambitions, got Graftango as a nine-year-old with the aim of doing some CCI3*-Ls.

“She’s a good jumping horse—not always the most careful or technical—but I needed one to help me get qualifiers and mileage,” she says. “Her breeder had competed a little, but being a breeder, sometimes you don’t always click with what you produce. They never really got along, and she was for sale for a long time. She’s a tricky mare and very particular about her people.

“After about nine months on the market, the breeder called and asked if I’d come try her. I did, and I just felt like we clicked—like she kind of chose me. Then COVID hit, which gave us time to get organised, and we started building from there.

“She’s 14 now but still pretty green. She did her first three-star about two and a half years ago. But she’s a warrior. She goes out and looks for the flags. She tries her heart out.”

Dressage at MARS Badminton continues today, and you can follow along using the link list below.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

Friday News & Notes from Stable View

King Kazu is back at it! We’ve been enjoying following Japanese Olympic rider Kazuma Tomoto as he bases primarily in Japan, having left his former home base in England to focus on supporting the Japanese program at home. He’s still competing, though, and recently took home a 1* win aboard the Japanese Racing Association’s Canero at an event in Yamanashi. Kazu and the 10-year-old Holsteiner gelding added just a handful of seconds’ worth of time on cross country to take home the top honors. Later on in the week, Kazu also competed as a part of the JRA Horse Show, an event he’s been a part of both as a competitor and an organizer for the last decade.

Major International Events

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

U.S. Weekend Preview

Tryon International Three-Day Event (NC): [Website] [Timetable] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Galway Downs Spring H.T. and Preliminary Challenge (CA): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

River Glen Spring H.T. (TN): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring]

Unionville May H.T. (PA): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Majestic Oaks Ocala H.T. (FL): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Queeny Park H.T. (MO): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring]

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

News & Reading

While more than 147,000 fans braved the rain at Churchill Downs to watch Sovereignty thunder home in the 151st Kentucky Derby, none may have had a better view than Deputy Taya Workum, who was stationed just behind the outside rail aboard her 17.3-hand Shire/Dutch Warmblood cross, Crossed Sabres. The Ohio-based mounted patrol officer—joined by her husband, fellow officer Matthew Byers on his mare, Opal—was recruited by Louisville Metro PD to help manage Derby crowds. For Sabre, who’s escorted dignitaries in Canada, presented the colors at Dressage at Devon, and dabbles in dressage and jumpers in his off hours, the Derby chaos was just another day at the office—though he did give a mighty side-eye to some suspiciously painted cement horse statues. Next stop? Crowd control at the 2026 Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event (which may or may not be less intense than outriding at the Derby). Read the full “between the ears” story here.

Mentally, we’re still on a high after following along with the USEA Intercollegiate and Interscholastic Championships at Stable View. This annual celebration of spirit, sport, and serious fun is one of the most beloved fixtures on the eventing calendar, and this year delivered in spades. From first-time teams getting their championship debut to inter-team mascot outfit swaps (yes, that happened), the camaraderie and competition were next level. Relive some of the best moments from the weekend here.

Behind every great win is a great groom, and Erin Jarboe is proof of that. Erin has worked with Will Coleman for nearly five years and was the hands-on powerhouse behind Off The Record’s (aka Timmy’s) recent win in the Cosequin Lexington CCI4*-S. A lifelong horse lover who once thought vet school was her calling, Erin pivoted to grooming and never looked back—finding a perfect match in Will’s program and in Timmy, a seasoned competitor with a serious appetite and a serious work ethic. Erin recently chatted with HorseGrooms about what it’s like to care for a 16-year-old champion, how she prepares him for top competition (spoiler: custom stretching boards are involved), and why finding the right rider to work for can make or break your career in this demanding but deeply rewarding profession. Read the interview here.

Sponsor Corner: Stable View

Photo courtesy of Stable View.

There’s a reason it’s known as the happiest horse trial all year: and the energy was undeniable at this year’s USEA Intercollegiate and Interscholastic Eventing Championships at Stable View. From color-splashed teams and mascot mayhem to fierce competition in both the tack and the spirit contests, the weekend was a celebration of community, sportsmanship, and school pride. Stable View is thrilled to announce that it will continue to host the Championships in both 2026 and 2027, this time as a standalone event dedicated exclusively to Interscholastic and Intercollegiate Team Riders, a move that reflects the growing popularity and impact of these programs.

But the fun doesn’t stop there: Stable View will still host the fan-favorite Local Charities Horse Trials the first weekend in May — open to all competitors and run as a traditional horse trials. And yes, the Alumni Cup will return in 2026 with more teams vying for bragging rights and a spot on the perpetual trophy.

Whether you’re a current team rider, an alum, or simply a fan of great eventing, Stable View is your home base for all things collegiate and community. Mark your calendars now — you won’t want to miss it! In the meantime, you can scope out Stable View’s full calendar for 2025 here.

Video Break

Don’t miss New Zealand World Championships rider Monica Spencer on the latest episode of The Jon and Rick Show!

Tryon International Update: Woods Baughman and Hopak de Greenbay Z Lead the Way in CCI4*-L

Woods Baughman and Hopak de Greenbay Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

After a few weather delays, dressage is done and dusted at the Yanmar America Tryon International, which is hosting (among other divisions) both a CCI4*-L and CCI4*-S this weekend in Mill Spring, NC. We’ve got a small-but-mighty field in the 4*-L this weekend, and leading them out of the gate into Saturday’s cross country will be Kentucky-based Woods Baughman with Manderly LLC’s Hopak de Greenbay Z. Woods and “Pako” scored a 31.1 to sneak ahead of newly-crowned FEI World #1 Boyd Martin and the Barney Rubble Syndicate’s Barney Rubble (31.3) and the Nutcracker Syndicate’s Cooley Nutcracker (31.7).

Woods Baughman and Hopak de Greenbay Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

For Woods, the past few months have been dedicated to working on the 12-year-old Zanghersheide gelding’s straightness and connection to the bridle. With the help of David O’Connor as well as Bettina Hoy, Woods says the focus has been activating Pako’s hind end to achieve that elusive connection.

“It feels like he thinks the bit is a treat and he’s trying to figure out how to get to it,” Woods joked. “He’s fairly rigid and chomps quite a bit and gets very unsettled in the bridle. He’s very relaxed, but his version of nervous is he gets uptight without raising his energy level — he just gets stiffer and stiffer. So it’s mostly been about just ignoring the front end and lining him up behind, getting him pushing through behind even if he’s not totally through [up front], just getting him bending from the base of the neck from the leg and getting him off the hand because he is very top heavy and it’s really hard for him.”

Boyd Martin and Barney Rubble sit in second on a 31.3. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Boyd Martin and Cooley Nutcracker are third on a 32.7. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Woods and Pako missed their final 4*-L MER at Morven Park last fall due to a hoof injury for Pako, so this weekend will be all about achieving that MER should Woods decide to step the horse up to the 5* level. “I’m not riding to lose, but I’ll feel it out and go as quick as he can go,” Woods said. “But I won’t be super upset for him to not make the time. I’d like to be sitting inside 30 seconds, but if he’s sitting inside [the MER maximum of] 75, I’ll be leaving happy!”

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Boyd Martin also leads the 4*-S division, which is a US Equestrian Open qualifer, with his old hand, Tsetserleg, whose plans for a potential spring Long or 5* have yet to be revealed, though he’s hinted that Luhmühlen’s CCI5* in June may be on the table. He and “Thomas”, who is owned by the Turner family, scored a 28.7 to hold the lead over second-placed Sara Kozumplik and Rock Phantom (30.9) and Sharon White with Jaguars Duende (31.2).

Sara Kozumplik and Rock Phantom. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

For US Equestrian Open hopefuls, the 4*-S division is an opportunity to make up some points on leaderboard toppers Phillip Dutton and Jessie Phoenix, neither of whom have horses in this division. A win for Boyd this weekend would represent 40 points added to his tally, which would move him to third on the points standings just 10 behind Jessie in second.

Friday, the 4*-S division will show jump while the 4*-L has a day off, and then both divisions will finish with cross country on Saturday. There will be a live feed on the Tryon website of show jumping, and you can access it for free here beginning at 2:30 p.m. ET on Friday. Cross country will kick off on Saturday with the 2*-L at 9 a.m. ET, followed by the 4*-S at 10:45 a.m. ET and the 4*-L at 12:05 p.m. ET. There is no live stream for cross country this weekend. You can view the full schedule across divisions here.

Also, a fun tip for you: both Doug Payne and Will Coleman are competing in show jumping this weekend at Tryon. Will’s got three FEI horses competing in eventing as well as Hyperion Stud’s Comme Again HS competing in the show jumping. Doug Payne has a string of horses competing in the jumpers, and you’ll be able to watch both of these dual-discipline boys duke it out under the lights on Saturday $30,000 Tryon Grand Prix. The class will begin at 8 p.m. ET and will be available on the free Tryon live stream here.

We’ll be back this weekend with a full wrap-up report with our eventual winners from both divisions, but in the meantime enjoy a photo gallery from Shannon Brinkman below.

Tryon International Three-Day Event (NC): [Website] [Timetable] [Entries/Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

It’s Called Fashun, Look It Up: The 2025 Badminton Golden Chinch Awards

At the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event a couple of weeks ago, something terrible happened: I ran out of time to be recreationally mean on the internet.

First it was Wednesday, which is prime Being Mean To People On The Internet Day, and perhaps I Wednesday-ed a bit too close to the sun, because then it was all over and I had not done a Golden Chinch round-up.

Then it was Thursday, and the weather was very hot, and I preferred the idea of riding the air-conditioned elevator in the officials’ building up and down instead of sitting in the blazing sunshine and doing actual work.

Then it was Friday, and the weather was very wet, and I preferred the idea of riding the very dry elevator in the officials’ building up and down and maybe doing a little cry instead of sitting out in the rain and doing actual work.

“You know,” said EN editor Sally, “it would be great if we could have those Golden Chinch Awards sometime.”

“Sally,” I said, both soothingly and patronisingly. “Sally, Sally, Sally. You will get them. But I cannot rush the process. I have to sit with the fashion; I have to let the clothes speak to me. Style is an art form, and I am its maestro. I am the prophet; the messenger. What I have to say will define a seasons’ worth of sartorial choices for horse lovers around the world. You mustn’t put pressure on scripture. You must let it run its own race.”

Lost in my own genius, I absentmindedly scratched an itch at the back of my neck. Ah. My shirt was on inside out.

And then, dear reader, it was Saturday, and everyone I’d started writing about had a Not Very Good Day Actually, and I thought, ‘is Matt Brown really going to find a photoshopped picture of his head on Bruce Lee’s body funny right now? No, I guess he’s probably not going to find that even a little bit funny right now.’ And I gave up.

Anyway, look, I failed you. I failed Sally. I failed myself. I failed all those riders who probably wanted to have an excuse to get me deported. And now, this week, at Badminton? I mean, it’s not Wednesday. It’s not even really Thursday anymore. But after spending the whole morning wondering if perhaps I was the person failing the hardest at doing Badminton, we then had a two-minute silence in honour of the 80th anniversary of VE Day. The mixed zone ground to a halt; the collecting ring fell to a hush, but for the occasional faint snort of a horse; the colossally buzzy grandstand was suddenly so achingly quiet that it was like the plug had been pulled on the whole world. We all crept into the recesses of our thoughts, bristling and marvelling at the extraordinary cruelty of war and the relentless courage of the ordinary people who fight against it. We thought about the scale of the loss of life; about the doomed cycle that humanity seems to repeat over and over and over again — bloodshed in exchange for imaginary borders; destruction in exchange for power. And then, in the rider’s tent, some woman’s phone rang incredibly loudly: once, twice, three times, before it finally stopped. ‘Great,’ thought I, ‘she’s declined the call.’

And then:

“SHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!! WE’RE ON A MINUTE’S SILENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I’LL CALL YOU BACK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” she bellowed, so loudly that folks at the site of Germany’s surrender to the Allies in 1945 (Luhmühlen, actually, for what it’s worth) no doubt heard her loud and clear.

So honestly, all things considered, I think I’m probably alright getting this out at kind of a weird time on Thursday night.

Without further ado, then: your Badminton Golden Chinch Awards, in which I lambast some of eventing’s best-looking and finest-dressed people. A task I am highly qualified to do.

The Golden Chinch for Saving Britain’s School Children

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Gemma Stevens comes to this year’s Badminton trot up as the plucky heroine in a heartwarming new blockbuster that nevertheless showcases the brutality of the British state school system’s chronic underfunding. Just a few years out of her teacher training degree, she’s gained plaudits and accolades for her inspiring approach to turning under-fives at a Gloucestershire boarding school into maestros at the recorder, but following a scandal involving her mispronunciation of the word ‘gravadlax’ at a parent-teacher bruncheon, she finds herself back on the job market. And then: the chance to try for the role of headmistress at a school somewhere that’s only ever referred to as ‘endz’ throughout the movie. She’s too young! She’s not experienced enough! She cares far too much about the nutritional value of school lunches! One of the students snuck out while she was in the job interview and keyed a willy into her car door and now she’s crying! They don’t even have a lacrosse team here! But somehow — somehow — she triumphs, and by the end of the film, literacy rates have skyrocketed, the Tory government has been deposed and the school can afford chairs for its classrooms again, and everyone is really, really good at playing ‘My Heart Will Go On’ on the recorder. Oooh, Matron. 

The Golden Chinch for Soft-Boi Toxic Masculinity 

Sam Watson and Ballyneety Rocketman. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ladies, we’ve all been on a date with this man, haven’t we? (Not Sam Watson, I want to be very clear. Not Sam. But the general essence and flavour of man that Sam, who is happily married and whom none of us have dated, is giving off here.) He has a butchered Audre Lorde quote on his Bumble profile (“I actually believe that none of us are free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are very different than our own, listen up men!!!” he oozes, saccharine and absolutely aware that no men are seeing his profile.) You do a cursory stalk of his social media and discover that he writes kind of shit poetry about his “suffering”, but he’s hot, so you put your rose-tinted glasses on and let those red flags just look like, well, flags.

On your first date, he brings you a bouquet of wildflowers (“I’ve brought you some seeds, too,” he says. “They’re a bee-friendly mix.”) and a bell hooks book (“I’ve taken the liberty of underlining some favourite passages for you. Perhaps we can discuss them on date two.”). On date two, you do not discuss them, because he takes you to a jazz cave in a cellar, buys you one (1) glass of gone-off Malbec, and then tries to sandpaper your back molars clean with his tastebuds. You go back to his place, regrettably, and discover that he doesn’t even have a bedframe, his bookshelf just has one sad copy of Fight Club on it, and his laptop is open to a Google search for ‘how to impress women millennial feminist’. He ghosts you two days later and then when you accidentally rematch with him six months down the line, it’s clear he has no recollection of ever having met you. Unfortunately, you still have the rash to remember him by. 

The Golden Chinch for Disruption at Casa Amor

Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tonight, a hot new bombshell enters the villa, bringing drama and excitement to a group of horny, dehydrated, and probably kind of psychologically beaten-down Islanders. Will he find love in Casa Amor, or will he go be on the next flight back to (sorry, let me check my notes here) …Hungerford?

I actually heard a rumour once that Will Rawlin was scouted for Love Island, and I guess I could probably text him and ask him if that’s true, but instead I’m going to publish it on the internet and hope that that Google AI nightmare folds it into his neat little summary paragraph whenever anyone looks him up. He can then join the exalted pantheon of event riders who’ve gone on television dating shows — a pantheon that currently only includes 5* rider Sam Ecroyd who, long before coupling up with Emily King, once appeared on an episode of Take Me Out and talked at length about showering in his socks, and yoghurt.

If I’m honest, I’m mostly just patiently waiting for someone in our extended eventing family to have a go on Naked Attraction.

The Golden Chinch for Providing Friendly and Reliable Funeral Services at a Great (?) Price

Felix Vogg and Cartania. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“We can gild it for you, you know,” says Felix Vogg — quiet, faintly sinister; his lips lifting into a slight smile on one side of his mouth; his pheromones mixed with the smell of formaldehyde —  as he shows you his expansive coffin emporium. “It’s only an extra £5000. But if they were really a ‘loved one’, what’s money, anyway? Did you even love them, really?

As you leave, much poorer than you arrived, he slips a business card into your pocket. It has no text on it — just a QR code with a little skull in the middle. It’s kind of sticky.

“I can also DJ the wake, if you want,” he says. “I’ve got some real deep-cut Avicii. Snapchat me.”

The Golden Chinch for Channelling an Apex Predator

Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Reliably, someone at every five-star trot-up brings a little bit of top-of-the-food-chain energy to proceedings. Usually, it’s a big cat thing: a leopard-print trouser; a fur collar that looks a bit like a lion’s mane; whatever.

Never, though, have I seen someone do Polar Bear That’s Three-Quarters of the Way Through Devouring an Aging Golfer, and now that I have seen it, I think it’s actually a crying shame that it’s not more prevalent. Gaspard Maksud’s last golf-inspired trot-up outfit, which featured a landscaped beret made to look like a golf course, didn’t start a new trend (regrettably, if you ask me) but I think this could.

The Golden Chinch for Being a Man in Lederhosen Who Also Comes With Two Bonus Men in Lederhosen, Which is a Great Bargain, Actually

Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I would really like to imagine that they’re all lined up to sing ‘So Long, Farewell, Auf Wiedersehen, Adieu’ to the ground jury. Luckily for Harald Ambros, it didn’t need to be ‘How Do You Solve a Problem Like the Hold Box?’

The Golden Chinch for Reliably and Constantly Making Me Lowkey Crash Out

Alice Casburn and Topspin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alice Casburn was born in… god, I can’t even say it. She was born in two thousand and two. She has never had to worry about the Millennium Bug. She’s never coexisted with Enron. Shrek came out before she was born. I’m not even sure she was conceived yet when Shrek came out. (Okay, I’ve just checked: she’s a January baby, so she had definitely been conceived at that point. Alice, I’m sorry that I made you think about your conception.) In 2001 I was trying to figure out how to hold a seance because I thought I was Kurt Cobain reincarnated and I wanted to talk to him (who was also me), and this tiny human Alice Casburn was like, an actual embryo. Alice Casburn is too young to have worn out a VHS tape of Practical Magic from watching it too many times, which is wild to me because she’s dressed exactly like Nicole Kidman in Practical Magic right around that bit where she starts banging on about the moon and her special rock. Speaking of Nicole Kidman, Alice Casburn was born after her divorce from Tom Cruise. Alice Casburn is so young that she never got to fancy prime Leonardo diCaprio in real time. Alice Casburn is so young that Leonardo DiCaprio would still date her.

DuJour means seatbelts! DuJour means crash positions! DuJour means Alice Casburn is too young to understand these references! I’m going to go moisturise. And cry. 

(As always: I’m joking. About all of it. Please don’t cancel me; I haven’t got anywhere else to go.)

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

“He’s Ecstatic to Perform”: Tom McEwen Triumphant on Day One of Badminton

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin top the day one leaderboard at Badminton. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

If the story of Thursday morning was how tough it was to get any marks at all out of the ground jury, then the story of the afternoon is surely how expansive of a lead one man was able to secure.

Morning leader Oliver Townend will have known that his 29.3 with Ballaghmor Class wouldn’t have kept him in front at the end of the day, and he’ll have known, too, that Tokyo Olympics teammate Tom McEwen would be the prime candidate to knock him out of it. 

That’s exactly what happened, and by some margin – though Tom’s test with his two-time Kentucky runner-up JL Dublin wasn’t without its surprises. The pair broke in the extended trot, earning them 3s and 4s from the ground jury, but such was the strength of the rest of their work that they still walked away with a 22.4 and the overnight lead, which they hold on a margin of 4.9 penalties. (A curious note about today’s judging, thanks to EquiRatings: this morning’s session saw combinations averaging scores 2.9 penalties worse than their 6RA, or Six Run Average, while this afternoon’s saw them average just 0.2 penalties worse.)

“It’s a shame that our highlight piece, the medium trot, broke. I let him get too long, and I went a little bit too much, too early – but you know what, he was absolutely awesome,” says Tom. “To relax and show all that power and rhythm and still come out in the extended walk as he did and do those pirouettes; he pulled together a super, super test. People aren’t doing bad tests out there [and still aren’t getting the marks], but he got a mark that he really, really deserved, even with that mistake.

“He put on a heck of a performance today,” he continues. “The ground in there is is pretty perfect, but what you can’t see from the outside is those small undulations. We’ve probably all been on the surface all winter, and actually probably now all spring, because it’s been so firm. None of us have really been on the grass that much. So it’s all those little bits of practicing — but Dubs was awesome. His changes were brilliant. His walk was excellent. His last walk was brilliant. It’s just that one mistake, and sure, you can do the ifs, buts and maybes, but how do you know? Maybe that mistake sort of woke both of us up and we made us think ‘maybe we need to go and get a few more marks!'”

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

‘Dubs’ was double-entered for both Badminton and Kentucky, and while US-based fans will have been disappointed not to see him try for the title for a third time, this slightly later spring goal allowed for an easy lead-up for the gelding. Rather than overextend him and compete him for the sake of competing him, Tom opted instead to turn the gelding away for a long winter holiday with retired stablemate Toledo de Kerser and then compete him only sparsely this spring.

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

“He’s an unbelievably talented horse, as we all know, but we’ve really been saving him,” says Tom. “He’s actually been wanting to come out [to an event]; we’ve been teasing him by taking him out jumping, and he’s like, ‘but this is just jumping!’ We took him to dressage on Sunday to go run through a test, and he’s like, ‘this isn’t the real deal.’ So he’s come here and he’s just been on it all week. He’s ecstatic to perform, and I was delighted to have an afternoon dressage with him, because the worst thing for him would have been if it was empty in the morning. If it was completely busy in there, he’d have gone up another level again. He’s a showman and he loves his job.”

Their test today marks their best-yet score at this level, though Tom admits that he’s “not much of a stats man — you can get too clued up on stats, but the thing is that the judges change every time. He’s been putting on performance after performance after performance, so I was really hoping to be up there. The judges aren’t giving out marks, and they’ve been quite consistent all day in using the range of marks and not throwing them away. I’ve done as much as I can today, and I’m very pleased with that!”

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Emily King sits in a smart second place overnight with the sixteen-year-old Valmy Biats, who posted a 27.3 after a pleasing test with some tiny bobbles in the walk work. 

“I’m so pleased with him – he went in there and he definitely held his breath a bit, so even though you’re not meant to talk to them I was like” – she drops her voice to a conspiratorial whisper – “‘good boy, Val, you’re okay!’ and giving him a scratch on his wither to try to chill him out a bit.”

Getting the French-bred gelding to find his inner zen in this phase has long been a focal point of Emily’s training with him. This spring, she’s been ticking the boxes by adopting a Wim Hof-esque immersion method: if she can put him in situations that dial up his tension, she can work on honing her methods of bringing him back to her.

“He’s a funny horse; he’s not a scatty, hot, excitable horse, it’s just quite internal – he just tries so hard and goes in and holds his breath,” she says. “I’ve been taking to lots of different places this spring to try to get him to do that, in a way, so I can then try to get him to breathe and let him know it’s alright. I’ve been trying to get him really chilled so I can get my leg on him and he’ll let me ride him, because sometimes, he’s so sensitive and full of power that if I touch my leg on him he’ll go nought to sixty. So I’ve been trying to imitate that, and it’s definitely helped.”

Today, that work paid off – mostly. 

“He trotted in and saw the cross-country fence, and I was like, ‘Val, come on, don’t start with that!’ I could feel his heart going, and I was thinking, ‘don’t try to go out of the start box now!’,” she laughs. “He felt amazing in there but just went a little bit tight, so I just had to adapt to how he was in certain places in the arena. But the fact that he did a 27, that’s because he stayed so with me in the ‘crunch’ moments, so I was very proud of him.”

Emily and ‘Val’ return to Badminton after finishing fourth here last year – a welcome end to a string of bad luck the otherwise successful five-star competitor had suffered at this fixture.

“I’m certainly less like, ‘oh, god, I’m here again; I’d better try not to mess it up again’,” she laughs. “I’ve managed one completion and I’m like, ‘wahoo!’ That definitely settles your mind, subconsciously. And I know him so well; I’ve had him for a good few years now, and I don’t know how many five-star starts we’ve had, but it’s a good few of all different types. [At this point] you just know them, and you can sort of go through the course in your head and preempt what they’re going to feel like, which I think helps a bit.”

Tom Woodward and Low Moor Lucky. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

23-year-old Tom Woodward is making not just his Badminton debut, but his five-star debut this week — and what a start he’s had with the excellent Low Moor Lucky. The pair sit in third place overnight on a 27.9 — better, even, than all but one of their four-star scores.

“It’s pretty surreal,” says an elated Tom. “We’re local, and so I used to come here every year to watch as a kid. We’d stay in the old campsite as a family, and I used to look at the jumps out there on course and think, ‘cor, how would you ever do that?’ I was probably thirteen when I decided I wanted to try and do it, and I’ve just been so incredibly lucky to have him as a partner, because he’s just immense. I can’t thank the horse enough – he’s put me on the map and allowed me to pursue a career in the sport.”

The steadily-building atmosphere in the arena might have caused some horses to back off, but for Tom and ‘Lucky’, it was a boon — particularly after the rider opted to change his warm-up plan.

“He’s actually quite a lazy horse; I normally never ride him more than once before his test, and that one ride is normally only 25 minutes,” he says. “But he was quite wild last night, and so I thought I’d do a bit with him this morning. And then [I warmed up for my test] and he was backwards! I felt like a Pony Clubber trying to move him along. I thought, ‘oh, no – maybe I’ve overcooked him.’ But he loves the crowd, he loves the atmosphere; it lifts him. It just gives him that bit more quality. And he’s never seen a crowd like that!”

While Lucky obviously thrives in the hustle and bustle of competition life, he wasn’t always an obvious champion.

“He was actually only broken in as a nine year old, and he’s called Lucky because he was given one final chance,” says Tom. “He was pretty feral, but you wouldn’t know it now – he’s Mr Cool. But he only did his first event in the September of his ten-year-old year, and I got him as an eleven year old. We did our BE100s [US Training level] and worked our way up until now. So he’s eighteen, but he’s fairly low mileage – we’ll get through this week and see what else he wants to do. If he decides one five-star is enough, then that’s fine by me – he doesn’t owe me anything.”

Lucky has been Tom’s partner through all his career milestones so far:  “I did my first-ever two-star on him back in 2019 and then we went on to do the under-18 championships, and we’ve just cracked on from there. We never bought him thinking he’d do this – we just bought him for me to learn from, and he just kept going.”

Their score means that Tom tops the list of Badminton debutants’ dressage scores in the last decade (thanks again to EquiRatings for this little tidbit!) – but did he ever expect he’d be able to make such an exciting start to his first go at the level?

“Quietly, yes,” he says with a grin. “But I didn’t tell anyone! I mean, he did a 25 last year at Blenheim, and I’ve always known how capable he is. But because we’ve learned together, I’ve been very green, and I’ve sort of felt like it’s taken me two years to actually catch up with his capabilities on the flat.” 

A period of time off for the gelding last spring ended up helping them a long in this capacity, quite unexpectedly. 

“I was fortunate enough to have two other four-star horses in my string, and I learned so much from them [in that time],” explains Tom. “They wouldn’t be as capable as he is on the flat, but I had the time to learn my craft at that level, and actually, when I got back on him, it was like going around on train tracks. If I give him the right instructions, he just does it, and he gives an amazing feel. So I quietly hoped today, and thankfully, it came off – with big thanks to my dressage trainer, Lisa White, who’s made a massive difference to us.”

Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

It doesn’t feel as though World Champion and five-time top-ten five-star finisher Yasmin Ingham ought to be a Badminton debutante, but that she is – and while being such a high-profile first-timer must come with its own unique pressures, she kept her cool in the buzzy atmosphere of the ring to produce a 29.1 with the experienced Rehy DJ. That puts them in provisional fourth place overnight, ahead of morning leaders Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class, now fifth on their 29.3. 

“He’s probably not naturally the most big-moving horse, but when he’s accurate and he does things correctly, then that’s when he’s rewarded with the mark. So I’m really pleased that the judges did reward him where he was good today,”  says Yas of ‘Piglet’, who has placed in the top ten in three of his four five-star starts. 

None of them, though, have had quite the same close-quarters buzz that Badminton’s arena offers.

“It’s such an atmosphere in there! I’ve never been here before, and it’s just electric, to be honest,” says Yas. “I’m delighted with him and how he coped, because he would react to noise and things, and obviously going in behind Tom [McEwen] was probably not ideal for me – there was quite a lot of clapping and things, and I was pleased with how he coped with that.”

Will Rawlin and Ballycoog Breaker Boy. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Will Rawlin slots into ninth place overnight, behind Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight (sixth), Kylie Roddy and SRS Kan Do (seventh), and Bubby Upton and Cola III (eighth), with Ballycoog Breaker Boy, with whom he scored a 30.6. That represents a nearly six-mark improvement over their test last year, when they finished 24th. 

“I just wanted to go out there and do what I know the horse and myself can do, and we did that,” says Will. “I’ve had very good training sessions with Tracie [Robinson] over the last couple of days. There were a few bits in there [that could be improved] – he got a bit tense in the walk, and there’s a lot of walk in that test. I was thinking, ‘oh god, just stay relaxed, come on!’ He tensed up, which he didn’t last year, so that’s maybe something to think about for the future – I might put some padded ears on him or something just to dull the atmosphere, because there definitely was a lot of it today.”

Despite those moments of tension, though, he says: “I was absolutely thrilled with him; he was really rideable. He’s a big, long horse, and I do find it difficult sometimes to get him connected and engaged in a test, but I feel like we got that today.”

Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

British-based Frenchman Gaspard Maksud rounds out the top ten overnight with Zaragoza, with whom he finished sixth at the 2022 World Championships and the same at Burghley last year.

“I’m delighted with her,” he says. “I know she can do a bit better than that, but it’s a big atmosphere, and [the crowd reacting to] Tom [Woodward] before just wound my horse up a little bit, but that’s okay! She was good; she was very serious in her work, and it’s a mistake-free test, with a couple of little things I can tune up to get it better.”

Joe Meyer and Harbin. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

The first of our US representatives, Tiana Coudray and Cancaras Girl, sit equal nineteenth overnight on a score of 34, while Ocala-based Kiwi Joe Meyer starts his first Badminton in 15 years in provisional 35th place on a 40.4 with the little ex-racehorse Harbin.

“It’d be nice to get a few more marks, because I thought he actually did really well for him,” says Joe. “He’s a hot, fizzy horse, and so the walk has always been hard for us, but he’s just got better and better. He’s a real goer.”

Tomorrow sees the first phase continue on apace with a further 41 horse and rider combinations to come. The action kicks off again at 9.00 a.m. BST/4.00 a.m. EST with Wills Oakden and A Class Cooley first in the ring, and plenty of exciting talent to follow. Highlights include 2023 champions Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, due in the ring at 9.28 a.m. BST/4.28 a.m. EST; the return of Oliver Townend with 2024 Kentucky champion Cooley Rosalent at 15.28 BST/10.28 a.m. EST; and Burghley dressage record-holders Tim Price and Vitali closing out the day at 16.17 BST/11.17 a.m. EST. You can check out the times in full here, and catch up on all today’s finer points in Cheg’s live updates archive here. Until next time: Go Eventing!

The top ten at the end of day one at Badminton.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

A Tale of Three Jacks: A Dynamic Trio Debuts at Badminton

Jack Mantel (rider edition) and Jack Daniels (horse edition). Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Why bother with three names when you can keep it simple and share one? Jack Daniels (horse) and Jack Mantel (rider) made their Badminton and five-star debut this afternoon, watched nervously by Jack Thomas-Watson (co-owner, along with Pauline Strawson whose name rather ruins the chain of Jacks, but we must acknowledge her important contribution nonetheless!). Their dressage score of 41.2 left them 37th of today’s 40 starters, but, as Jack Thomas-Watson jokes afterwards, “He can still win on that score!”

“Big Jack” (Thomas-Watson, 35) and “Little Jack” (Mantel, 30) are very popular figures on the equestrian scene in Northern England. Partners in life and business, they run a large and busy yard at Belsay in Northumberland, dealing, producing and competing event horses and producing and selling hunters — and any other type of nice horse that comes along.

Jack Thomas-Watson is a Geordie lad from nearby Newcastle who, as a child, starred in a 10-part television series, “The Stables”, made at Stepney Bank Stables — where Tom McEwen’s groom Adam Short also learnt his trade. Jack Mantel grew up in Cheshire and moved to Northumberland four years ago. Both are from non-horsey families.

Yes, really.

“I was animal-obsessed, and started riding when I was three or four,” says Jack Mantel. “I always had very green ponies — my first pony was a four-year-old and I was four, too. I fell off a lot; that’s how you learn.”

They found 11-year-old Jack Daniels, a Dutch-bred son of Indorado, in a field during lockdown. They weren’t actually vain enough to name him after themselves — he was already called that, but, Jack Thomas-Watson admits, “Commentators love it.”

He continues: “We went to a local lad, Adam Gillespie, who was giving up riding and had three horses for sale. We saw them and had the three of them. I hoped Jack Daniels would be my field master’s horse [Jack Thomas-Watson is a field master for their local pack of foxhounds, the Tynedale] but unfortunately I haven’t yet been allowed to ride him. Jack [Mantel] took a liking to him, and that was that.”

I express surprise that, as a horse dealer, Big Jack hasn’t been tempted to cash in on the big, good-looking bay, and he replies: “Not yet! No — having him has opened up so many doors to go to great events. We’ve had so much fun and met so many people; he’s a great horse and we’re very lucky to have him.”

Jack Daniels first caught the eye when winning the six-year-old championships of the short-lived NEXGEN series of young event horse classes during the Covid era. Last year he finished 18th at Bramham in the CCI4*-L, and then third in the CCI4*-L at Blair Castle, proving he had the jump, gallop and stamina to progress to the next level.

Little Jack says today: “We’re both still quite green at this level. He only did his first event as a seven-year-old, and this is four years later. But he stayed with me, he really tried – we made a few big mistakes, but overall I was really happy with him. I am actually feeling a little overwhelmed!

“Jack Daniels is quite a shy character at home. He kind of keeps himself to himself,  but when he’s at an event he’s actually more relaxed — it’s a bit more like, ‘showtime!’ He’s a beautiful horse, so elegant, and when we first saw him, we thought, ‘He looks like a five-star horse.’

Big Jack sums it up in pithy fashion, saying: “First-time five-star — done, bosh! Now the big bit.”

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.

Thursday Morning at Badminton: Townend Takes Lead on Tough-Judging Day

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Thursday morning at the MARS Badminton Horse Trials often feels, for those of us in the mixed media zone, anyway, like a bit of a warm-up: we’re not firing on all cylinders quite yet, the scoring’s perhaps not wildly exciting, and by the time we get to the lunch break, we’ve often forgotten much of what was said in the very first conversations of the day. 

Unless, of course, the second rider you speak to comes marching into the interview area, proclaiming that his (very, very) shiny new riding hat is “a solar panel for a sex machine!”

So thanks for that, I guess, Oliver Townend. You did wake us up, certainly. 

It wasn’t just fashion statements and statements about fashion, though: Oliver also produced the test that would go on to hold the lead into the lunch break with the stalwart Ballaghmor Class. Though they’re typically low-to-mid-20s scorers – or as low as 20.8 here in 2018 – they began their week on a 29.3, on paper their worst-ever five-star score for a generally correct, pleasant, and flowing test. But that’s been typical of the judging here today: the ground jury of Xavier le Sauce, Robert Stevenson, and Nick Burton hasn’t been throwing marks at any competitor, but nor do they need to. The numbers across the board might look conservative – or stingy, even – but the judging itself is consistent and so far, their work is producing a tightly-packed leaderboard that’ll put the weight back onto this weekend’s cross-country, on which the fast ground might otherwise have made it less influential. 

“It doesn’t matter [if they’re scoring conservatively] if they stay the same – as long as we just get consistent judging, it’ll be good,” says Oliver. “There’s plenty on the cross-country to sort us out — 11 minutes 40 is a long way!”

More importantly, he says, “I’m happy with the horse. There’s a couple of things that could have been better, but he’s getting quite clever: he’s wild at the trot up and wild everywhere, and then he goes in and says, ‘I’ve done enough now!’ So he got a little bit lazy, a little bit quiet maybe, but I’m still happy enough.”

Moreover, the four-time five-star winner – who has never finished outside the top five in ten runs at the level, and has been second here twice – remains the horse of a lifetime for Oliver, regardless of the numbers on the board.

“He’s unreal. I know it’s the same for everyone, but if you could produce the work that he’s doing at home, he’s somehow getting better and better and still improving,” he says of the eighteen-year-old. “So it just shows, if you stay doing the same things as you’ve done all their lives, and they don’t have a change in the system… He feels better than ever and he looks better than ever.”

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

“He is what he is – you’re never going to make a London 52 or a Lordships Graffalo out of him,” says Gemma Stevens matter-of-factly about Chilli Knight, before breaking into a broad grin: “but he did his best shuffling ever in there today!”

She and her 2021 Bicton CCI5* champion go into the lunch break as one of just two pairs to slip under the 30 barrier so far – a commendable effort that puts them into second place provisionally on 29.5. 

“It’s an absolute dream to get sub-30,” she beams. “When I heard my first few scores [from the judges’ boxes], I thought, ‘well, there’s no chance – I’m going to be on a 38!’ But we rode every single blade of grass out there and he tried his heart out.” 

Gemma Stevens and Chilli Knight. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

The great villain of the day so far has been an oddly-placed camera, low down and brightly-housed at the A end of the arena, and while Chilli Knight didn’t have as extreme a reaction to it as several horses have today, he certainly noticed it. 

“I’m not going to lie – the camera is really stupid!” says Gemma. “I’m going to say that right out loud – Badminton, you need to move the camera. We said that last night [at the riders’ briefing], and they wouldn’t move it. He was spooking at it, and luckily the test doesn’t always go past it – but it’s annoying! Next year, please, we don’t need the camera.”

Kylie Roddy and SRS Kan Do. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Kylie Roddy might be the smiliest rider in eventing, but, she admits, she’s spent the off-season “miserable – but smiley inside,” she laughs. The cause of that misery? An eye-wateringly intense diet and fitness regime, which saw her spend November to March on a scant 800 calories a day [Editor’s note – please don’t do this without professional guidance, folks] before steadily and sensibly ramping her calorie intake up at the start of the season. 

“And I’ve been been going to the gym, and doing a lot of strength and conditioning work – but it’s all for the greater good, because George finds the whole job a bit easier now,” she says. “It’s all for the welfare of the horse, and we’re always trying to do what’s best for him.”

George – or SRS Kan Do – certainly repaid the favour today with a smart effort that puts the pair into an early third place on 30.1, nearly four penalties better than last year.

“I’m beyond thrilled,” says Kylie. “The first phase is always the one we get the most stressed about, and last year, I didn’t have a good first day, but we worked really hard this winter.”

That work, she continues, involved working over “about 100 raised sleepers [thick wooden planks] a day”, in a bid not just to improve his strength and fitness, but also to finally engineer a spring peak for the gelding, who has been so consistent at five-star but historically unlucky here.

“It’s of those real funny things, isn’t it? I just keep looking at Badminton and thinking, ‘if I turn up enough, hopefully the results are going to change!’” she laughs. “I don’t actually think it’s anything to do with Badminton or George, but he’s just always been an autumn campaigner; his best results have always been in the Autumn.”

So, she explains, “I didn’t give him long off this winter, and I actually kept him in work to see whether it’s actually a body conditioning type of thing rather than a seasonal thing. So I did my winter work a bit differently this winter, and we changed a few things at home that have made him a bit stronger. He works over the raised sleepers a lot, and so he’s worked smarter, not harder, hopefully for all the right reasons. The other thing is that I didn’t run him too close to Badminton, because in the spring, you’re always try to get the runs in, but he actually runs a bit better when he’s fresher, so he last ran at Thoresby [in March]. I went to Kelsall, but I didn’t run cross country, in a bid to do what I do in the autumn, even though we’re in the spring.”

Today, that freshness paid off. 

“He’s such a level horse to ride, but he was quite frisky in the stable this morning – he was trying to nibble us, and he wanted to buck in the stable. So from this morning, I thought ‘game on!’ Most horses, [the atmosphere] sends them over the edge, but with him, it gives him that added extra, which is really lovely.”

But, she laughs, there was still a touch of the old George in there, at least in the collecting ring.

“He’s a really funny horse. The changes are established but his first two changes, when you warm him up, are always incorrect. But it’s like he goes, “oh, I go from that to that… okay, I’ve got it!’ It’s like he’s piecing it all together, and then he’s got it. So I always get the first two out of the way, and I say to [dressage trainer Ian] Woodhead, ‘close your eyes, first change incoming!’ But we know that’s him, so we get them done, and then we know that after that, he’s pretty good in his changes.”

Pretty good indeed: the pair never dipped lower than a 6 in the four flying changes in their test today. 

Bubby Upton and Cola III. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

Twelve months ago, we saw 26-year-old Bubby Upton take the day one lead here aboard her longtime partner Cola III in a remarkable comeback from a badly broken back sustained the previous August. Through the long months between August and May, Bubby had to relearn to walk before she could even think about getting back on a horse, but no matter how unlikely it seemed, the thought of Badminton on the horizon remained a powerful motivator in her rehabilitation. 

Now, a year on, she’s still on the road to recovery, but this time, she was able to tackle her test with significantly less pain after another major operation at the tail end of last year.

“I landed from Maryland [CCI5*, where the pair finished fifth], and then the next day, I was straight under the knife,” she says. “To be honest with you, it was a lot tougher than I had anticipated: I thought I would just bounce back and be absolutely fine, but mentally, going straight back to square one… Obviously I didn’t have to learn to walk again and things like that, but I had zero strength, zero muscles left in me, and so it was quite demoralising, having built up everything and worked so hard to then have to literally rebuild again. It took a lot longer than we thought. It wasn’t really until February that I was strong and that we could manage to get on top of the pain.”

“But,” she continues, “it’s a lot better now, and I’m forever grateful to my incredible surgeon who has, time and time again, done amazing things for my back. Hopefully now we can manage it a bit better moving forwards. I’m back to riding  nine horses a day now, which is so nice, and the pain is less than the pain was when I was riding three or four last year. So we’re in a really good place, and I just feel so lucky to be still doing what I love and to be on track.”

Also a continuing work in progress is long-backed but game Cola’s flatwork. While their 30.2 today didn’t eclipse the 27.3 they earned last year on paper, Bubby was thrilled with the quality of work the fifteen-year-old produced in the ring. 

“I’ve never been one to focus on [the marks]. I’m thrilled with how our system keeps working and how he went – I couldn’t be more thrilled with him,” she says. “He’s become really consistent at this level now. Badminton last year was probably the first time we’ve got him into the right frame and place, and then he repeated that at Maryland and throughout the season as well. And now, he’s come out this year feeling very fit and well. He’s just amazing. Every time I go in there, he’s  the same horse, and he just loves it. So it’s a real honour to be back here on him.”

The progression is one that she credits her dressage trainer, Amy Woodhead, with directing them towards.

“Similar to last year, we’ve just been really working on the quality of the counter. He’s a long, strung-out horse, and for a long time, when we were focused on Young Riders and medaling there, getting the quality of canter wasn’t a priority,” she says. “It was  – wrongly so in hindsight – about getting the marks and winning the medals at the end of the day. I would love to go back in time and have Amy training me with him as a young horse, because now at 15, he’s getting better and better. But I would have loved to have had that when he was 10, 11, 12, at the start of my career at 4 and 5* on him.”

Alex Hua Tian and Chicko. Photo by Cealy Tetley.

For Alex Hua Tian, today marks the start of a welcome return to Badminton after a nine year hiatus – and while he rued the last-minute withdrawal of his intended second ride, the perpetually low-scoring Jilsonne van Bareelhof, his remaining ride Chicko put in a solid test to sit him well in the hunt at this early stage. Their 31.6 puts them in fifth place at the lunchbreak. 

“I’m very happy with him – he’s 15 now, and he’s spent his life at 4* and he’s ready for his crack at  Badminton,” says Alex, who finished fourth at Pau with the former Polly Stockton ride last year. “That was his first time at 5*, and I thought, actually, that he did a better test today than he did at Pau. But it’s Badminton – you don’t come here expecting to be given anything.”

In terms of the cross-country challenge to come, this weekend’s long, dimensionally impressive course also represents a step up from Pau, but it’s a step up that Alex is confident he’ll tackle with relish. 

“I think it’ll be a big week for him, but he’s got a lot of heart, so hopefully it’ll go well,” he says. In any case, he continues, the Irish Sport Horse will enjoy the journey, as he always does. 

“He is – it’s very hard to say it without sounding disparaging, because I’m not – he is just genuinely no fuss. He’s just very, very easy. You could very happily salute, get off, pull the saddle off, and he’ll just graze in the middle of the field,” says Alex. “He would have been very happy as a Pony Club pony or coming to Badminton – he just loves his job. All he wants to do is please, and he’s just one of those rare horses – it’s just, turn left, jump a fence, turn right, jump a fence. There’s nothing else really in it!”

This afternoon’s dressage gets underway momentarily, with Japan’s Ryuzo Kitajima and Feroza Nieuwmoed first up to bat at 14.15 BST/9.15 a.m. EST. You can watch along via ClipMyHorse.TV, and we’ll be running live updates and insights over on Cheg’s feed throughout the competition, too. Plus, there’s lots more long-form content to come from us here in the thick of it, so keep it locked on EN, and Go Eventing!

The top ten after Thursday morning’s session at the MARS Badminton Horse Trials.

MARS Badminton Horse Trials: [Website] [Entries] [Timetable] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [XC Maps] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of MARS Badminton Horse Trials is supported by Kentucky Performance Products. To learn more about Kentucky Performance Products’ science-backed nutritional support products, click here.