Classic Eventing Nation

Saturday Links from Tipperary

Jordan Taylor's 'Why Not' gets a spa day. Photo from Debra Varney's Facebook Page Jordan Taylor's 'Why Not' gets a spa day. Photo from Debra Varney's Facebook Page

Happy Saturday, EN! Hopefully you’re out doing something fantastic this weekend like treating your horse to a mani-pedi from the farrier or a fabulous massage from the equine masseuse. Oh, wait, that’s the stuff we’re supposed to do with our moms this weekend. Oops! Tomorrow is Mother’s Day, so consider this your reminder to set an alarm on your iPhone to remind you to call. She won’t mind if you do so while you’re out on a hack — just tell her you’re taking her on a trail ride!

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#JFI3DE: WebsiteLive ScoresRide TimesSchedulePRO Tour RadioCCI3* Course PreviewCCI2* Course PreviewEN’s CoverageTwitterInstagram@jenniautry

U.S. Weekend Action:

King Oak Farm H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times]

Plantation Field H.T.  [Website] [Entry Status] [Scores]

WindRidge Farm H.T.  [Website] [Scores]

Mill Creek Pony Club H.T.  [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times] [Scores]

Galway Downs Spring H.T.  [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times][Scores]

Winona H.T.  [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times] [Scores]

Saturday Links:

How one man and his horse created a mobile library in Indonesia

Keep horse meat off the dinner table, Senator Menendez says

Bankrupt Chicago race track looking for buyers

Arrest in Louisiana horse abandonment case

Horse of a different color third in his racing debut

Equine Herpes Virus: Warning issued to Oregon horse owners

Saturday Video: My next event pony will be named Neon Pegasus.

Emily Beshear, Buck Davidson Lead CIC Divisions at Jersey Fresh

Emily Beshear and Shame on the Moon

Emily Beshear and Shame on the Moon. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Emily Beshear and Deep Purple Eventing’s Shame on the Moon sailed to a comfortable lead this afternoon in the CIC3* at the Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event, scoring 41.6 to give them a five point margin over second place. That’s a personal best score at this level for “Delta,” a 9-year-old Trakehner/Thoroughbred mare who is extremely talented in this phase but sometimes battles nerves due to atmosphere.

Delta was all business in the ring today, and Emily rode her beautifully in what should prove to be a good confidence building time in the sandbox in the mare’s final preparation for Bromont next month, where Emily confirmed they will aim for the mare’s second CCI3*. This pair also completed the Dutta Corp Fair Hill International last fall.

Caroline Martin and Quantum Solace. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Caroline Martin and Quantum Solace. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Lauren Kieffer is sitting in second place in this division — in fact, she’s sitting in second place in three of the four divisions at Jersey Fresh — after scoring 46.4 with Landmark’s Monte Carlo, a 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Jacqueline Mars. We’ve predicted “Patrick” to clinch the win this weekend in his first CIC3*.

Kurt Martin and his own Delux Z delivered a consistent test, scoring 50.7 to sit in third place after dressage. This horse was a star at the two-star level and has struggled a bit in his move up to the Advanced/CIC3* level this spring, and we’re sending all the EN karma to Kurt and this lovely 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding for a good go around John Williams’ cross country course tomorrow.

Buck Davidson and Copper Beach. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Buck Davidson and Copper Beach. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Caroline Martin and Quantum Solace scored 51.1 to sit in fourth place in what will be their final preparation for the Tattersalls CIC3* in Ireland for their first overseas competition later this month. “Nacho,” an Argentinian Sport Horse gelding owned by Caroline and Sherrie Martin, will then go on to Bramham with Caroline to compete in the under 25 CCI3* competition during the second week in June.

The CIC2* horses were the last to go today, and Buck Davidson and Copper Beach scored 40.2 to lead the class. “Sean,” a 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Carl and Cassie Segal and Sherrie Martin, won the CCI3* at this event last year, and he’s in the CIC2* this weekend as a tune up for Tattersalls CCI3*, where he’ll do battle against some very big names.

Lauren Kieffer and Takine de la Barbais

Lauren Kieffer and Takine de la Barbais. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Lauren Kieffer is also enjoying prime real estate on the leaderboard in this division, sitting in second place on 44.6 with Takine de la Barbais, an 8-year-old Selle Francais mare owned by Jacqueline Mars. This is yet another lovely young horse in Lauren’s string and a relatively new ride for her, as the mare was imported just before Christmas last year after being campaigned to the two-star level by by Antoine Percheron in France.

Jessica Phoenix and Pavarotti round out the top three in the CIC2* on a score of 44.9. “Rotti” just did the dressage at the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event last month, and Jessie confirmed he is waiting in the wings should Canada decide they want the horse for the Pan American Games. The horse won individual gold at Guadalajara in 2011, so he’s no stranger to the Pan Ams. Canadian Chef d’Equipe Clayton Fredericks confirmed today that their team won’t be named until after Bromont.

Doug Payne and Lysander. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Doug Payne and Lysander. Photo by Jenni Autry.

CIC3* show jumping is at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow morning, with CIC2* show jumping at 10:30 a.m. Both divisions will go cross country in the afternoon. You can follow along with live cross country action on PRO Tour Radio, and we’ll also be posting live updates right here on EN. Click here to see ride times. Go Eventing.

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Jersey Fresh CCI3* Cross Country Course Preview

Fence 20a Fence 20a

It’s the moment we’ve all been waiting for — cross country eve at the final selection trials for the U.S. Pan American Games team — and John Williams’ CCI3* course is going to keep things interesting until the very end at the Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event. The track is 5,640 meters long with an optimum time of 9 minutes, 54 seconds; click here to view a course map.

The grounds crew has been diligently punching the ground to provide the best possible going for the horses. Things are a bit dry and crispy here in Allentown after the area hasn’t seen any rain in about a week and a half now, but the consensus among the riders is the aeration has helped the ground immensely.

Riders have been scratching their heads about the new complex in the main arena, which has a massive table at fence 11a with a bending line to two angled brush wedges separated by one stride on the direct route. The first wedge is at 11b and the second is numbered separately, so riders who are concerned about how their horse might read the question can take a circle between the fences if needed.

Course builder Morgan Rowsell has been busy adding new elements to the track, and the new ditch and wall at fence 18 and trakehner at fence 19 are both pretty impressive as you walk up to them. Tailgating spots are sold out at the famous Jersey Shore water complex, where the CCI3* horses will come through twice. It should be beautiful weather for spectating tomorrow.

Matt Brown and Super Socks BCF will be the first out on the CCI3* course tomorrow at around 11:51 a.m. EST. PRO Tour Radio will be streaming live all day starting with the CCI2* at 8:30 a.m. EST, and we will be running live updates right here on EN so you can follow along with all the action. Click here to catch up on all of EN’s Jersey Fresh coverage. Go Eventing.

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Jersey Fresh CCI2* Cross Country Course Preview

Fence 13 Fence 13

It definitely feels like summer here at the Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event, with temperatures climbing into the mid-80s today and hardly a cloud in the sky. Temperatures are expected to cool to about the mid-70s tomorrow with cloudy skies, so it should be comfortable conditions for these horses going cross country.

The start time for CCI2* cross country has been moved up to 8:30 a.m., and this division will be the first out on John Williams’ cross country course. Morgan Rowsell has done a wonderful job as builder, and you’ll see some exciting new fences on the CCI3* course in that preview, which is coming your way next.

While all of us are wishing that Allentown would have seen some rain this past week, the grounds crew has worked tirelessly to aerate the ground, and the footing this afternoon felt better than you’d expect considering the area hasn’t had any precipitation lately.

The CCI2* course is definitely beefy, and it will be trial by fire for these two-star horses, some of which are contesting their first CCI2* this weekend and some of which are aiming for a shot on the U.S. Pan American Games team. The new complex in the main arena, which comes at fence 9 on the two-star course, is causing quite a bit of buzz amongst the riders.

Click here to see the CCI2* course map. The course is 4,900 meters long with an optimum time of 8 minutes, 55 seconds. You can preview each fence on the course below, and also be sure to check out technical delegate Jonathan Clissold’s preview of the course on CrossCountryApp here. Go Eventing.

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Friday Videos from World Equestrian Brands: Jersey Fresh Dressage Highlights

The Horse Pesterer has popped up again, this time at the Horse Park of New Jersey, just in time to catch some FEI dressage at Jersey Fresh. He’ll be uploading videos to his YouTube channel throughout the weekend, so go ahead and click that “Subscribe” button — you know you want to.

Here’s a look at some of the great dressage rides from the CCI2* and CCI3* yesterday. Stay tuned for much more from Jersey Fresh!

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Nicholson and Nereo On a Mission Heading Into Badminton Cross Country

Oliver Townend and Armada lie 3rd after dressage phase of Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials. Photo by Nico Morgan

Oliver Townend and Armada lie 3rd after dressage phase of Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials. Photo by Nico Morgan.

As always Friday afternoon saw plenty of movement at the business end of the leaderboard but no-one could topple Andrew Nicholson and Nereo from the very top (All scores are here).

Oliver Townend got the afternoon sessions started after lunch and with a lovely test on Armada they broke the 40 barrier and for a little while we had full brothers Nereo and Armada in the one and two spots. Oliver was very happy with his test but nonetheless surprised still to be lying second at the end of the day, whereas Andrew revealed that he had a feeling that if anything was going to beat him and Nereo it wouldn’t be by much at all.

William Fox-PItt and Chilli Morning, in 2nd place before cross country at Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials despite several errors in their dressage test Friday.

William Fox-PItt and Chilli Morning, in 2nd place before cross country at Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials despite several errors in their dressage test Friday. Photo by Nico Morgan

The two brothers lasted at the top until William Fox-Pitt’s test on Chilli Morning, which he later admitted he didn’t think was one of his best.

Despite being “half asleep” since they arrived here William shrugged that Chilli had chosen the wrong time to wake up – his test was almost fabulous but spoilt by tension in the walk and he was late behind on both of the first changes which William attributed maybe to some lingering nerves left over from WEG, “That was very frustrating, you can’t afford to do that here and he’s a horse who’s very, very solid on his changes, it’s one of those things, they’re not machines and he did some lovely work overall, he’s feeling fantastic, it just wasn’t faultless which it needs to be.”

This is Chilli Morning’s Badminton debut despite being 15 years old — remind me to ask the Eventing Consultant —i f we have more older horses (and riders) this year than ever before?

Jock Paget brought Clifton Lush back after an 18 month layoff after injury and was tickled pink with his test, “When he gets in the arena he grows a couple of inches and things that he can’t do out there, all of sudden he can do in there, he’s pretty special like that, it’s pretty cool for him to go in and try that hard and see that he remembers his job. He’s one of my all-time favourites, he’s only a little fella but he tries harder than all the rest.”

Coming back after an 18 month layoff due to injury, Clifton Lush rises to the occasion to lie 5th overnight Friday at Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials. Photo by Nico Morgan

Coming back after an 18 month layoff due to injury, Clifton Lush rises to the occasion to lie 5th overnight Friday at Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials. Photo by Nico Morgan.

Jock’s plan is to listen to Lush out on course Saturday, “if I feel that he’s struggling for air or if I feel that he’s a bit tired in his body then I’ll give him the breaks he needs, I’ll be keeping in mind that it’s his first proper run back.” Jock had some sage advice for any of those Badminton first-timers, “Try not to get too caught up in all of it, the dressage arena is the same size we always ride in and we’ve got the same rules on the cross country and show jumping — just go and do what you do.”

Paul Tapner held up the side for the Aussies, sneaking into the top ten with a nice test on Indian Mill for 7th place overnight. All scores are here, although it always seems that they seem irrelevant as of about 8am Saturday morning! The top twenty are all within 10 penalties, and not even 30 penalties separate the entire field.

Cross country starts at 11:30 a.m. and as our superstar photographer Nico Morgan pointed out, the downside to the draw this weekend is that if Andrew Nicholson and Nereo do indeed go clear within the time (“I’m very very focused on what I’ve got to do here; last year I had a very good chance with Nereo and I made a very stupid mistake, I’ve had 12 months to think on that, I know what to do and I’ve got a very good horse so that helps and makes it much easier”) then we’ll know by lunchtime — Andrew and Nereo are due to set off at 12:14 GB time — the outcome of the day already.

For now though, hoping that the riders can get a decent night’s sleep and that the weather cooperates tomorrow. We’ll be back bringing you live tweets and live stream, thank you for visiting and Go Badminton!

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Ben Hobday and Mulry’s Error: The Horse Behind the Hype

Ben Hobday and Mulry's Error Photo by Nico Morgan

Ben Hobday and Mulry’s Error. Photo by Nico Morgan.

Wherever Ben Hobday goes there’s sure to be an entourage and a horde of fans following, and if you can’t stalk him in person you can certainly do so on social media — he has almost ten thousand loyal followers on Twitter and is a hit on Instagram and Snapchat too.

In ‘real life’ he’s down to earth, very sweet and obviously adores the horse that is his ride this weekend and making his Badminton debut after a good run at Burghley last year, Sallie Ryle’s Mulrys Error. He kindly stopped to chat after his dressage test, and after Clare Balding had finished pointing out his giant hooves to the nation and beyond on BBC!

Wishing Ben and Mulry’s Error the very best of luck this weekend, we’ll be following literally and virtually. Thanks for chatting and we hope to see you in Kentucky one day! Go Clydesdales Eventing!

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Buck Davidson and Ballynoe Castle RM Take Jersey Fresh CCI3* Lead

Buck Davidson and Ballynoe Castle RM. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Buck Davidson and Ballynoe Castle RM. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Buck Davidson and Ballynoe Castle RM took the CCI3* lead this morning at the Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event, scoring 41.6 to just edge Lauren Kieffer and Meadowbrook’s Scarlett’s score of 42.0 at the conclusion of dressage. It’s familiar territory for “Reggie” to be sitting in, as he’s twice finished in the top five at the CCI3* in this event, placing second in 2008 and fourth in 2012.

“He’s so relaxed, and I was a little worried myself that maybe I was too relaxed,” Buck told EN after the test. “But he just does his professional test every time. It doesn’t matter where he is — he could be at Kentucky, he could be here, he could be in the middle of 1-95 for that matter, and he just does the same test every time.” (Watch video of the test here.)

Reggie re-routed to Jersey Fresh after early trouble on cross country last month at the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, where Buck said he got the 15-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding to a bad spot coming to the big table at fence 7b, the jump out of the Frog Pond.

Phillip Dutton and I'm Sew Ready. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready. Photo by Jenni Autry.

“I jumped into the first water, and I turned, and when I went to go to the table, it was so wrong. It wasn’t like I could just lean back and kick,” Buck said. “It was completely my fault, and there’s absolutely no reason to jump Reggie around a course with 20 penalties at this point in his career, especially with that weather.”

Buck said he wasn’t worried about Reggie physically after Kentucky, but he decided it would be a good time to get him checked out at New Bolton Center by Dr. Eric Parente, who performed the horse’s wind surgery. “Dr. Parente passed him with flying colors. We did blood work, and the blood work was awesome,” Buck said. “We just need to put a pair of glasses on the rider and we’ll be fine.”

Carl and Cassie Segal, Reggie’s owners and Buck’s longtime supporters, live right down the road from Jersey Fresh, and with this being their hometown event, Buck said it made sense to re-route the horse here. “He’s a competitor, and he loves his job. That’s not how he wants to finish an event. He’s fit and well, and we’re here to try to win.”

Matt Brown and BCF Belicoso. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Matt Brown and BCF Belicoso. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Buck confirmed that he did apply for the Pan American Games with Reggie, but he said he does not expect the horse to be named to the team. “It gives the selectors options. At the end of the day, we want (the U.S.) to win, and we want to send the best horses that are at the two-star level. If you don’t apply and it turns out they could really use an experienced horse, then you can’t help your team.”

Looking ahead to tomorrow’s cross country, Buck said he loves what course designer John Williams and his crew have done with the course. “It’s so different, and it’s so much more open now. It’s not easy, but it definitely has a better feel to it. It doesn’t feel so busy now,” Buck said.

We’ll have a full preview of the cross country course coming your way next. The grounds crew has been diligently aerating the ground all morning, as the Allentown area hasn’t seen much rain in the last week. Tomorrow’s forecast is still looking dry, but punching the ground has made a huge difference in the footing, and it should be good going for the horses.

Cecily Brown all smiles after her husband Matt Brown's test with BCF Belicoso. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Cecily Brown all smiles after her husband Matt Brown’s test with BCF Belicoso. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Looking at the other influential tests from this morning, Phillip Dutton and I’m Sew Ready scored 42.4 to move into third place. That bests their dressage score of 43.1 from Carolina International, where Phillip and “Jackson,” an 11-year-old Dutch gelding owned by John and Kristine Norton, went on to win the CIC3*. This weekend is the horse’s first crack at a CCI3*.

While BCF Belicoso is the greenest of Matt Brown’s three CCI3* rides, he delivered the nicest test of the bunch this morning to move into equal sixth place on a score of 46.3. All of Matt’s horses have superhero personas, and Matt wore a Captain America shirt underneath his show clothes for the test this morning with Belicoso, a 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by the Blossom Creek Foundation.

Be sure to keep checking back to the EN homepage for all the latest news from Jersey Fresh and Badminton Horse Trials, where Samantha Clark is providing excellent coverage from England. Tomorrow is going to be a very busy, exciting day with cross country running for both events. Go Eventing!

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FEI Doles Out Fine, 6-Month Suspension for Maxime Livio

Maxime Livio and Qalao de Mers at WEG. Photo by Jenni Autry. Maxime Livio and Qalao de Mers at WEG. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Following the FEI tribunal’s decision to disqualify both Maxime Livio and the entire French team from the 2014 World Equestrian Games, a final decision on the case issued this morning penalizes Maxime with a fine and six-month suspension.

Samples taken from Maxime’s horse, Qalao de Mers, tested positive for hydroxyethylpromazine sulfoxide, a metabolite of acepromazine, following his dressage test in Normandy on Aug. 29, 2014.

From an FEI press release:

“The FEI Tribunal has imposed a six-month suspension on Livio, effective immediately from yesterday (7 May), in accordance with Article 169 of the FEI’s General Regulations and Article 10.2 of the Equine Controlled Medication Rules,” an FEI press release reads. “Livio has also been fined CHF 2,500, and will have to cover the B Sample analysis costs and contribute towards the costs of the judicial procedure.”

View the FEI Tribunal’s 14-page final decision here.

Last month’s disqualification of Maxime and his team meant that France lost its automatic qualification for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. With France having vacated its position in the team standings, Canada gained an Olympic qualification by moving up to 6th place.

[FEI Tribunal Issues Final Decision on Maxime Livio Case]

William Fox-Pitt & Chilli Morning Get Ready for Badminton Dressage

William Fox-PItt and Chilli Morning head to dressage. Photo by Samantha Clark. William Fox-PItt and Chilli Morning head to dressage. Photo by Samantha Clark.

William Fox-Pitt and Chilli Morning are just getting ready to do their dressage at Badminton and William was kind enough to chat as he walked up to the warm-up arenas. Chilli Morning was also very polite and relaxed, I had to remind myself I was walking beside a stallion through a busy three day event and not get too casual! For someone with more three day wins than anyone, and such a vast wealth of experience  William admitted that he still gets nervous which I was surprised to hear and found strangely endearing; when a fan shouted Good Luck to him as we walked past he replied “Thanks, I’ll need it!” and gave him a jaunty thumbs up.

Badminton this year, and Rolex last week have been an adjustment for William as he’s had to get used to just riding the one horse, “I’ve been very lucky to have always had two so it’s a bit different. There’s a lot of waiting, particularly riding Bay My Hero and Chilli Morning, they’re both very relaxed, user-friendly horses so I’ve been having a bit of a holiday. Once you’re on and going though, the adrenalin starts and you’re away. When you’ve got two you’ve definitely got the advantage of having lots to do and being busy so you don’t have so much time to think and mull things over, so I get it totally, give me two to ride any day!”

Chilli Morning looks a picture of health – gleaming coat and bulging muscles but still very fit, a real power pack in a beautiful package, “I think he’s on good form, he’s had a couple of good runs, he’s coming here quite fresh. He came out the WEG really well which was a relief obviously because that was quite a taxing event but he feels on good form and very relaxed so I’m hoping he stays that way. You never know, sometimes he can pretend a little bit and hide his nerves, I haven’t worked him a lot today so I hope I’m not regretting that later.”

There are three young men working for William who rode Chilli while he was in Kentucky, “I’ve got a very good team at home, they all get on with him very well, he’s easy now. I did all the work before I left and they just did some gentle canters and then because we had a week when I got back I could pick up his cantering again so I think he enjoyed my absence.”

William Fox-Pitt at Badminton Photo by Samantha Clark

William Fox-Pitt at Badminton. Photo by Samantha Clark.

William has made no secret of his appreciation of Derek Di Grazia’s courses, and compared last week’s Rolex to Badminton’s tomorrow, “I praised Derek’s course a lot, I thought it was very well thought out, very imaginative, very challenging, particularly in those circumstances and I think here circumstances are different after last year, one’s come perhaps a little bit on the backwards foot, lots of not so great pictures last year and I think Giuseppe and Hugh Thomas wanted to paint a good picture this year. There’s plenty to jump, I’d say maybe it doesn’t have the same imagination we saw in Kentucky, there was a lot of variety there.

“I think here the course is just going the reverse way so there’s a tendency to feel a little familiar with the track which is always dangerous, we’ve jumped the lake that way before but it’s difficult that way. There are a few tough fences out there, I think the Vicarage Pond is a serious fence but the long route is very doable, I’m quite surprised he left that option there and I think we’ll see a lot of combinations going the long way there because that is one of the most serious fences on the course.

“Then we have this rather strange combination near the end which is slightly different so we’ll see how that rides. I’ve got a bit of time to watch people through there but I think we’ll see it ridden in all ways. There’s plenty of variety and I hope the course should ride well for the experienced combinations and if we don’t get too much rain I think the ground will hold up well. I look forward to riding it but I have a bit of a long wait so I’ll be biting my nails!”

Off to watch William’s dressage, biting my own nails. Wishing the Fox-Pitt eventing team the very best of luck this weekend — Go Chilli!

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