Classic Eventing Nation

Sunday Links from Etalon Equine Genetics

Guys, we do serious journalism here at EN. We professional reporters are never called out via live stream commentators whilst lying in the grass at an event, nor do we ever forget who just won very important internationals, and above all, we never have any difficulty remembering riders names over their horses. We also have never once asked a question during a press conference that had already been answered, or had these so called “blooper” moments we’ve so often heard of during our incredibly professional interviews.

Alas, no, that’s all a lie, and we very frequently tend to lose track of the single brain cell we collectively share as a reporting team (top secret tip from EN HQ: the collective brain cell is held by Chinch; that’s why he is everywhere). In this fashion, we love sharing moments like this one from Team USA’s PanAms competitors that remind everyone how human we all are–from reporters to riders, sometimes we just don’t do words good.

It’s been super cool hearing all the updates from Loch Moy this weekend as our US Eventing Team for the Pan American Games gets together for their last outing before shipping down to Santiago, Chile! Sydney Elliot and QC Diamantaire, Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake, Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C, Sharon White and Claus 63, and traveling alternates Tamie Smith and Kynan have all gathered for one last public training session with Team USA Chef d’Equipe Bobby Costello, artfully followed and reported on this weekend by our own Sally Spickard. You can catch up with their progress here!

U.S. Weekend Action

Apple Knoll Farm H.T. (Millis, MA) [Website] [Volunteer] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

Middle Tennessee Pony Club H.T. (Nashville, TN) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times][Volunteer] [Scoring]

WindRidge Farm Fall H.T. (Mooresboro, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

Woodside Fall International (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Major International Events

Military Boekelo CCIO4* Website | Entries | Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

Links to Start Your Sunday:

Everything You Need to Know for the Show Jumping Seminar at the 2023 USEA Annual Meeting & Convention

Celebrity Sighting: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s daughter just got her first tack trunk

A special stable will come back to life in a reversal of fortune: Welcome back, Essex Equestrian Center

Horse riding shown to have positive effect on urban populations

Sponsor Corner: Did you know you can predict how fast your horse will be based on their genetics? Etalon Dx can tell you your horse’s genetic speed type:

🏇 Sprint: may accel in short distances with quick bursts of speed
🏇 Endurance: may accel at longer distances
🏇 Mid-distance: may have multi-distance capabilities

Morning Viewing: If you missed XC day at Boekelo yesterday, 1) I wouldn’t blame you, fellow Americans, because I tried staying up and that was going to be a “no” from me, and 2) don’t you fret, because the streams are all on FEI’s Youtube channel! Catch up with the rounds that caused the incredible leaderboard switcharoos, and see what all the excitement is about! You can also read up on Tilly’s boots-on-the-ground report for some expert commentary here.

Primed and Ready: Catching Up with Team USA Ahead of the Pan American Games

Sharon White and Claus 63. Photo by Kira Topeka for Erin Gilmore Photography.

The U.S. team selected for the 2023 Pan American Games had a chance to get one final run under their belts this weekend at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD), putting the finishing touches on their preparation for their trip to Santiago, Chile at the end of October.

If you’re in need of a refresher, here is your U.S. team for Santiago:

  • Sydney Elliott (Benton, La.) and QC Diamantaire, a 2010 Oldenburg gelding owned by Carol Stephens
  • Liz Halliday (Ocala, Fla.) and Miks Master C, a 2012 Swedish Warmblood gelding owned by Debby Palmer and the Ocala Horse Properties, LLC
    • Direct Reserve: Cooley Nutcracker, a 2014 Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by The Nutcracker Syndicate
  • Caroline Pamukcu (Miami Beach, Fla.) and HSH Blake, a 2015 Irish Sport Horse gelding owned by Mollie Hoff, Sherrie Martin and Caroline Pamukcu
  • Sharon White (Summit Point, W.V.) and Claus 63, her own 2012 Holsteiner gelding
  • Traveling Reserve: Tamie Smith (Murrieta, Calif.) and Kynan, a 2015 KWPN gelding owned by Kynan Syndicate LLC

Liz Halliday and Miks Master C. Photo by Hannah Ljubli Erin Gilmore Photography.

This year’s Pan Ams team was named in August, about two months ahead of the Games, providing ample time for each rider to prepare both themselves and their horses. For first-time senior squad member Sharon White, this is a big boost in terms of mental prep. “I think that was a really beautiful thing to do, because now you’re under some pressure but you get the chance to practice with that,” Sharon explained. “Maybe if you’ve been on a ton of teams, that doesn’t matter but I haven’t, so it matters to me! So I was very grateful that they named it early so I could get myself right when it’s time to go.”

Now as the trip ticks closer, it’s down to the fine-tuning of details. Chef d’equipe Bobby Costello emphasized this week that his main ask of the riders was to leave this prep event with a clear idea of what “little things” they could improve in their final practice rides.

“I told the team yesterday, the last couple of medals that we’ve had either at Aachen or Pratoni, we’ve missed the gold by, such a slim amount. So I just want everybody to go away from this competition thinking about every single tiny little detail,” Bobby said. “It’s often not big things that need to change. It’s not having a second over on the time or not missing that halt or, you know, not halting one length past C. Just little tiny things that, if everybody’s aware, it can really add up and kind of save you at the end of the competition.”

Alyssa Phillips and Oskar. Photo by Samantha Haynie for Erin Gilmore Photography.

The qualification pressure for Paris is one thing this team won’t have on their shoulders, but for Bobby (and for the riders) that really means nil at this point. The fact remains: this is a championship, and this team is in it to win it.

“I think I would want them to feel as much pressure as though we’re going to get qualification because there’s no doubt that we absolutely should go and win and,” Bobby continued. “And that’s going to be the thing that we’re competing against — basically our own expectations, so I’m plenty stressed out! Because that’s just how I roll — a little bit of insecurity is good to keep everybody really sharp.”

For this Mandatory Outing, riders were able to practice their 4* dressage test (Pan Ams are run as a hybrid: 4* dressage and show jumping, and 3*-L cross country) and show jumping to height, followed by a quick spin around Ian Stark’s Intermediate cross country on Saturday. Designed on a twisting and winding track, this course gave riders a chance to test out the handiness they’ll likely need in Chile.

The equestrian competitions will be staged at the Chilean Army Riding School in San Isidro de Quillota, to the northwest of Santiago. The venue is reported to be relatively flat with one hill, and the incoming Olympic course designer, Pierre Le Goupil, has been tapped to design the course. This will provide excellent intel as to his design style; the U.S. has also scouted other venues he’s designed at this year, including the FEI Eventing European Championships at Haras du Pin.

Sydney Elliott and QC Diamantaire. Photo by Kira Topeka for Erin Gilmore Photography.

“Ian knows his work a little bit,” Bobby remarked. “So it’ll be definitely fact-finding I think. [Pierre is] not afraid of, you know, a big jump into water. I think he’s been influenced, from what I’ve heard, very much so by [2016 Olympic designer] Pierre Michelet. So we’re trying to glean what we can — David O’Connor was at the Europeans, so we got David on a conference call to let us know what his takeaways were from watching that competition. So whatever information we can get, we’ve been trying to get.”

Team rider Sydney Elliott is one who’s had the chance to ride one of Pierre’s courses, as she competed at Lignières (France) in 2021. “It is big, brushy, ditchy,” she described. “And yeah, you have to be very bold. And we studied the Europeans quite a bit. I would say, you’ve just got to attack it.”

The team will next complete one final gallop together and then head up to Cecil County, MD to practice their dressage on Wednesday of the Maryland 5 Star. This is an extra opportunity to get the horses into some atmosphere — the main stadium at Maryland is notoriously electric and “fishbowl” feeling, giving a similar boost of adrenaline to the newly-constructed stadium in Chile. From there, the horses will fly to Chile via Miami and will meet their riders early in the week of competition.

The riders all appreciated the opportunity to not only practice, but also spend some time building camaraderie with their teammates ahead of the intensity of the Games and confirming some last details.

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Samantha Haynie for Erin Gilmore Photography.

“Our plan was just to give [HSH Blake] a nice run, just make sure my warm-up is all set, that I’m happy with the pre-rides, making sure everything is in place,” the always detail-oriented Caroline Pamukcu said yesterday. “Funny enough, we also checked some other box like making sure the tack is legal, the logo wear is legal, just all the things you don’t really think about going to a team event — it’s a bit different, so we’re just crossing our T’s and dotting our I’d.”

“I think the mental part is such a big part,” Sharon White, who came away as the top-placed of the team today, said, speaking to the mental preparation that goes into it ahead of a big competition. “I think this is such a good opportunity for [Claus 63] and me to learn. Technically, it should not be difficult for him at all. It just becomes the pressure of the situation —- probably more for me than him, but he has to deal with the fact that I’m going to be more intense as a competitor. Of course you’re going to get more intense at the championships – they matter a lot and learning to deal with that and deal with it well is a big part of this game.”

For Liz Halliday, today was about going a bit slower than traditional with Ocala Horse Properties‘ and Deborah Palmer’s Miks Master C. Bobby had given instructions to the riders to tackle today’s cross country as they would prepare their horses for any other big event, as always allowing the riders to do what they knew would be best for their individual horses.

“He was really polite today,” Liz said. “I’ve been playing around with some stuff. I never really let him off the leash completely. He’s quite a different animal when you’re really pushing for time. I made a point of adding the odd stride and making him wait at some of the bigger fences.”

Sydney Elliott, competing with Carol Stephens’ QC Diamantaire, said her focus this weekend was fine-tuning her warm-up. She works with German Olympian Bettina Hoy on the flat, making the most of her time with FaceTime lessons when Bettina can’t be stateside (Sharon White also works with Bettina regularly).

“I’ve been working with Bettina quite a bit since LuhmĂźhlen, just to get some more points on the board in the dressage. And that’s been a really big thing to add her in every week.” Sydney, who relocated to Southern Pines, NC this year, also works with Bobby Costello in the show jumping and noted that since adding Bettina to her training mix, she can feel the additional dressage finessing translating over to the jumping. Two rails down yesterday weren’t exactly Sydney’s plan, so she’ll be working to hone in on putting in her best performance the next time out.

Tamie Smith and Kynan. Photo by Samantha Haynie for Erin Gilmore Photography.

Tapped as traveling reserve once more is Kentucky winner Tamie Smith, who will take Kynan — take note here, Mai Baum fans, as Tamie describes Kynan as the black stallion’s doppelgänger in personality and (we hope) talent! — to Chile should they be needed. It’s a tough challenge to be the traveling reserve, but Tamie’s nothing if not a team player. She’s well-versed in this role, and also has the extra experience as a team rider for the 2019 Pan American Games to add to the team’s depth.

“It’s always an honor to be a part of Team USA,” Tamie said. “It’s really special that this horse was selected to be the traveling reserve because he’s kind of green but he’s wise beyond his years, so I’m really excited for him and his owners that support him.”

Kynan, who was sourced by Matt Flynn and is owned by the Kynan Syndicate, just moved up to the Advanced level this year at Rebecca Farm, and Tamie will perhaps choose an end-season 4*-L should she not be needed in Chile, but those plans remain to be confirmed.

Hannah Sue Hollberg and Capitol HIM. Photo by Samantha Haynie for Erin Gilmore Photography.

Other alternates on-site this week were Liz Halliday’s Cooley Nutcracker (her direct reserve to Miks Master C and aiming for the 4*L at Morven Park next week), Alyssa Phillips with Oskar, and Hannah Sue Hollberg with Capitol H I M (entered in his first 5* at Maryland). Canadian team rider Lindsay Traisnel also competed with Bacyrouge this weekend, opting to withdraw ahead of cross country; Canada did not set out any mandatory runs for their squad, allowing their riders to choose the best prep schedule for Chile.

EN will be covering the Pan American Games remotely, thanks to live stream assistance from FEI TV and ClipMyHorse.TV. The eventing begins on October 27 and finish on October 29. Keep it locked here for much more from #Santiago2023!

#Santiago2023: [Website] [Sport Schedule] [FEI Info Hub] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

EN’s coverage of Pan American Games is sponsored by Ocala Horse Properties.

Ups, Downs, and Day-Drinking: The Boekelo Cross-Country Report

You want a party? Boekelo will give you a party! Tara Dixon and Master Smart navigate the busy main water – complete with loud music, louder people, smoking barbecues, clinking glasses, and more. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

When you think of the toughest four-stars in the world, there’s probably a few frontrunners that spring to mind: Bramham, for example, with its tough terrain and dimensionally enormous fences, is a clear leader in the field. But Boekelo? Not so much. It is, of course, one of the most atmospheric cross-country tracks in the world, with a thuddingly loud bar for every fence on course and a distinctly festival feel to the surroundings, which certainly ups the ante in terms of keeping horses focused on the task at hand — but this is the Netherlands, and so terrain is basically non-existent, and the course itself is generally a pretty easygoing one for the level, all things considered and loud bars notwithstanding.

This year, though, Boekelo has a bit of a different feel. Due to the loss of some land and build permissions, two of the former loops through the dense woodland are no more, and two much more open, galloping loops have been added in in their stead, giving the course a much more flowing rhythm. That’s a net positive, and it probably sounds like it should make the whole thing a bit easier — but actually, it encouraged designer Adrian Ditcham to build some tougher questions, and to work that bit harder at forcing riders to slow down. The result? One of the busiest, most surprising, and undeniably most influential days of cross-country we’ve ever seen at the venue.

With 110 starters to get through (two withdrew overnight, which is a pretty easy detail to lose in the shuffle when you’ve got just about every horse in Europe running over the course of a day), cross-country began much earlier than usual at 9.30 a.m. By 10.30, we’d already lost four of our top ten – Jonelle Price and Senor Crocodillo, eighth after dressage, ran out of the angled shoulder-brush at the bottom of the mound at 24B; Kevin McNab and Miss Pepperpot, fourth overnight, dropped out of the hunt after a run-out at the main water at 20B; France’s Maxime Livio and Api du Libaire retired at the water, taking themselves out of ninth place; and young German prodigy Anna Lena Schaaf, seventh overnight, hit the deck when Fairytale 39 stumbled in the main water. That latter incident was something we’d see throughout the day, as we so often do at Boekelo and despite fastidious checks of the footing — and it was a repeat of it that truly up-ended the leaderboard not long later, when overnight leaders Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 ended their day on an early, and very wet, note.

After that first couple of hours of chaos, though, we seemed to find a bit of something like normalcy, and with it, a chunky swathe of clear rounds inside the time (nineteen, actually, at final count, a figure that Adrian says “is pretty much what I was looking for”.). That shock fall of Julia’s opened the door for US individual Hallie Coon to potentially take the overnight lead with her exciting CCI4*-L debutante Cute Girl, and though they ultimately bowed out of the top spot with a green run-out at the first of two skinny triple-bars at 14AB, theirs was a round brimming with class and confidence, and a testament to the new-found level of communication the pair have hit upon in the last few weeks.

Hallie Coon and Cute Girl jump into the main water. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“My ego’s a bit bruised,” admits Hallie with a smile, “but all in all, I’m not too upset, because I learned that she’s an even more mega horse than I thought she was. She felt absolutely proper, and she really dug deep for me today. I’m buzzing for next year now.”

While the pair have previously had occasional communication lapses in the getting-to-know you process, Hallie’s been thrilled to find that they’re both singing from the same hymn sheet now — something that was particularly evident in the two tough water complexes, and especially in the main water at 20AB and 21AB, where Cute Girl, like many horses today, tripped on landing from the massive drop in. But neither horse nor rider missed a beat in finding their way out.

“The second water [at 20AB was a real testament to her because she jumped in balanced, but then had a bit of a stumble, and she just pricked her ears and said ‘okay, where next?’ And that was the best part of the day for me,” says Hallie. “It feels like the beginning of a partnership now, instead of just two beings trying to adjust to each other.”

Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe take the two-phase lead at Boekelo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That 20, though, opened the door for a new overnight leader – and one of just four competitors from last night’s top ten to stay at this business end of the leaderboard. That was the flying Frenchman Nicolas Touzaint, who previously won here seventeen years ago, and his ten-year-old Diabolo Menthe. This is the Selle Français’s gelding’s third CCI4*-L; in his first, at Saumur last spring, he was third; in his second, at Lignières just over a year ago, he was second. So it’s probably no surprise at all to see him now in contention for a win on his third go-round, and even less of a surprise to have seen him execute a bold clear one second inside the 10:06 optimum time on his way to doing so. That marks his eighth FEI clear inside the time, and puts the young horse forward as a real hopeful for an Olympic call-up next year.

“My main objective is the Paris Olympics, and I feel very lucky to have two great horses, either of whom could do it and both of whom will have their qualification by the end of the year,” says Nicolas. “I’m not sure which I would choose between Diabolo Menthe and [stalwart team mount] Absolut Gold HDC, but I’m very lucky to have the two of them — they’ve both had the same development programme.”

Nicolas, who began the day in overnight third, rode at roughly the midpoint of the day, which ultimately, he says, proved a boon to his chances.

“Because I was the anchor of the team, it allowed me to see the other riders before me, which helped me,” he says. “After I’d seen a certain number of riders go through the course, I did change my plan for the number of strides I would ride in some combinations. That meant that when I was on course, everything went according to the new plan. I took a lot of pleasure in riding the course; I really felt my horse was with me, and I really enjoyed it. We were very lucky to have firm but forgiving ground, and with those conditions, I felt comfortable asking for more gallop. It was excellent ground.”

Nicolas, who was 26 when he last won here, comes back for his first serious bid since as one of France’s most reliable riders (and, notably, the only Frenchman ever to win Badminton).

“I hadn’t been riding cross-country at that level for very long when I won it the last time, and it’s been a project of mine for quite a long time to bring this horse to Boekelo, so I’m very happy to be here now,” he says with a smile.

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Perhaps we’re at risk of becoming a full-time Lara de Liedekerke-Meier fan page over here on EN, but this year, the Belgian team stalwart has been absolutely firing on all cylinders, and frankly, that kind of upward trajectory — particularly after a spell of bad luck and a knock to one’s self-belief — is something we truly love to see. As the busiest woman on site at Boekelo this week, Lara could have had one of two very different kinds of ‘day in the office’, but through sheer force of will, calculated, horse-first riding, and the thing we love to see the most, that sparkle of belief in herself, she made sure it was a very, very good one indeed.

Her first horse of the day, the ten-year-old team representative Hooney d’Arville, climbed up from 22nd place to overnight ninth, coming home clear and two seconds inside the time. That provided valuable intel for ride number two, Lara’s Aachen top-ten finisher Ducati d’Arville, who crossed the finish line bang on the optimum time, catapulting Lara from fifth to overnight second. And her third, the nine-year-old Formidable 62, who’s brimming with talent but green for her age after time out to deal with a cancer of the eye, wrapped up her day with another exciting clear, with planned time penalties. Lara told us after Ducati’s exceptional test on Thursday that she couldn’t quite dare to dream yet — but now?

“I still don’t,” she laughs. “I’m trying to stay down to earth — I know the sport long enough, and I know today I have to enjoy the moment and we will see tomorrow. With Formidable, it was the goal to get a qualifying result. When I went out there, I had a voice in my head saying ‘you can go faster, you can do anything and make a third clear inside the time’. But I knew that it was the most noisy and the most crowded when I went out with her, so I just respected her experience and gave her a nice round, whilst the others had other targets. Hooney, I wanted to make the time, which I managed and which I’m really happy about because her rideability hasn’t always been her strength, but she was really honest, and she really tried to get what I wanted from her. I think this year has been really a work in progress, and next year will probably need to be a build up to the Olympics and to see if she goes, but now if she confirmed her qualification, I think I can sleep better at night and start really to believe in her, which is something I had to keep kicking myself not to give up.”

Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Hooney d’Arville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That newfound rideability, she explains, has come from changing her style to suit her horse.

“She’s a little bit introverted, she’s a bit shy. When she went to [the Young Horse World Championships] at Le Lion, she wasn’t ready. I think maybe I stepped up too quick, and then there was always a 20. Never something bad, but always, all the time, let me down in a way — and so this year has been just a work in progress, and me adapting my riding  to her, instead of trying to adapt her to become my horse. I think I know what she wants, and she wants more support — she doesn’t want my long reins and me just saying ‘good girl, good girl!'”

And of Ducati, the gelding who she’s loved since she spontaneously bought him at an auction while she was pregnant, and with whom she finds herself just 1.2 penalties off the lead, she says, “when Hooney was fine, I was just like, ‘you’re gonna give it a go, and we will see’. I had a really bad jump at fence four because he was watching the crowd, and it was this big house and then he took off one stride early, and I was like  ‘Oh, well, that ended early!’ But he managed to stay on his legs, and I think it woke him up and woke me up as well, in a way. For sure, I didn’t want us to part company and I wanted to make the best out of our round and also our dressage, and he just felt like he was game on.”

Lara came into the main water complex with a robust plan of action in mind to avoid meeting a similar fate to many of her competitors.

“He launched into the water at Aachen last year, and I had to circle to go to the corner, so this time I really was secure,” she explains. “I wanted him to pop in, and he was really listening and he was just nice to trust me and then say, ‘what’s next mummy?’ and game on. He was really fantastic, and I’m feeling privileged to ride those horses — they just gave me their best today.”

Laura Collett and Dacapo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Laura Collett and Dacapo, who finished third here last year, find themselves in the same position today — but it’s taken much of the evening for that to be confirmed for them. They were initially awarded 15 penalties for a missed flag at 24B, a skinny shoulder brush on an angle at the bottom of a steep mound, but while the fence did take a masterful bit of riding on Laura’s part to negotiate cleanly when Dacapo popped his shoulder on the approach, it was definitively within the boundaries of the flag, and ultimately, they were pulled right back up the rankings with their clear inside the time.

Felix Etzel and TSF Polartanz. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That pushed Germany’s Felix Etzel and TSF Polartanz, who’d originally been awarded overnight third, down into fourth – but Felix certainly won’t be wasting any time ruing that fact. He came here with the compact, smart little stallion having run him solely in short-format competitions since early 2019, and so a CCI4*-L debut was something of a fact-finding mission — but in every way, the Trakehner excelled on course, finishing three seconds inside the time and full of running.

“It actually took him a bit longer to get up the levels — at the beginning, he had some run outs , even at 2/3* level,” explains Felix. “So I took my time with him, because he came out a bit late in the sport — he was a six year old when I rode him the first time, so it took him a while to get confidence. Last year was the first proper four-star season; actually, I tried one time as an eight year old, and that didn’t quite work out! He really gained confidence through doing all his four-star shorts last year and this year, and so I think it was the right decision for him to give him a bit more time. But because I’ve done his last long format four years ago, I didn’t really know how it would work today, riding him for ten minutes, but he felt so fresh and was like that all the way around — even the last minutes he was really forward and  looking for the fences.”

Felix is competing as an individual for Germany this week, rather than as part of the team, which meant that he had a late draw — and plenty of time to watch the chaos unfold through the day. But, he explains, he used this to his advantage: “In the end I rode the plan I already had yesterday evening,  but for sure, it helped today to see 40 or 50 riders before, and it gave me confidence in my plan. In the beginning, I was a bit worried about riding right at the end, but it didn’t make a huge difference. I think it kind of helped me more, to be really sure with my plan.”

Now, he’s hoping to end the week on a high with the twelve-year-old, who’s also, remarkably, able to keep up a busy breeding career alongside training and competing.

“He’s licenced for the Trakehners, and for some other German studbooks, and this year, alongside competing, he got 31 mares,” says Felix. “Which is quite impressive, because the first half of the season I also rode him at many shows to prepare him for LuhmĂźhlen, and then he got picked up every day. When they ask for semen, they’d pick him up in the morning and bring him to the stud farm two kilometres away from us. It’s a lot to do for him — physically and mentally — it was usually five times a week that he got picked up every morning at 7, then training, then to the shows. But he’s still so gentle to handle. Sometimes he’s lookingM but he’s really looking for the person around him, not to go too crazy, and once you’re sat on him, he’s focussed. He doesn’t look for other horses; he’s really a special horse.”

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Unlike Felix, Ros Canter found herself leaving the startbox very early on in the day as British team pathfinder with the former Nicola Wilson ride and CCI4*-L debutant MHS Seventeen. But for her part, going out without feedback or viewing time worked beautifully, and the pair finished a smart ten seconds inside the time to move from eleventh to fifth, ahead of Switzerland’s Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean, who climbed from 15th to sixth after finishing on the optimum time exactly, and fellow Brits Selina Milnes and nine-year-old Cooley Snapchat, who go into tomorrow’s competition in seventh place, up from first-phase twentieth with a clear inside the time.

 

France’s Luc Chateau executed a similarly impressive climb, leaping up from 22nd to ninth place with the twelve-year-old Bastia de l’Ebat after adding a solitary second to the optimum time, and Tim Price and his Blenheim eight- and nine-year-olds podium finisher Jarillo stepped up from twelfth to tenth with two time penalties.

Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While that 60% clear rate hit many riders hard, two of the US’s individual competitors enjoyed particularly successful outings on Adrian Ditcham’s track. Tiana Coudray leapt from 41st to 21st place with the CCI4*-L debutant D’Artagnan, who only made his FEI competition debut last year, with an impressive and confident round that saw them add just 2.8 time penalties, while Cosby Green, who’s spent the season based with Tim and Jonelle Price, added no time penalties, but did pick up a missed flag penalty at 14B, to climb from 73rd to 57th.

Cosby Green and Jos Ufo de Quidam. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The top ten after an exciting day of cross-country at Boekelo.

Today’s major shuffle also had a knock-on effect on the team leaderboard, particularly as the first half of cross-country — arguably, the most influential half — was devoted to team riders. First-phase leaders Germany tumbled all the way to eleventh after falls for both Anna Lena Schaaf and Julia Krajewski. That leaves just Christoph Wahler and D’Accord, who climbed from 27th to tenth after delivering by far the fastest round of the day, a whopping eighteen seconds inside the time, and team pathfinders Nicolai Aldinger and Timmo, who leapt from 26th to 13th after adding just 1.6 time penalties, in the hunt, and Germany’s competition as a team effectively over. Switzerland, too, will have to count one of their eliminations, worth 1000 points, after both Robin Godel and Roxane Gonfard failed to complete.

Christoph Wahler and D’Accord are the fastest of the day, moving into eleventh place and giving the Germans something more to celebrate. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That, plus some trouble for the Brits, who added jumping penalties from Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ, Caroline Harris and D. Day, keeping them in overnight second, opened the door for formerly third-placed France to step into the top spot. They hold the lead by a reasonable margin, too: thanks to excellent efforts from Nicolas Touzaint, Karim Florent Laghouag and Embrun de Reno, who added just 0.8 time penalties, and Jean Lou Bigot and Utrillo du Halage, who added nothing, they go into showjumping on an aggregate score of 97.8, which is 9.4 penalties, or two rails plus three seconds, in hand over the Brits. That’s even with the early loss of Maxime Livio and Api du Libaire, who had sat ninth overnight, but retired after a runout at the main water at 20B. In third place, less than two rails behind the Brits and three rails and change behind the leaders, is Belgium, who climbed from sixth.

Let’s talk about those Belgians for a moment, because frankly, they’ve been my favourite story of this year. After a few tough years and some rotten luck, both as a nation and for some of its key players, they’ve come out all guns blazing into 2023, and their results — and palpable confidence — only get better by the day. The proof is in the pudding: they made such a committed bid on the Nations Cup series this year, hoping to use it as a pathway to their first Olympic ticket since 2012, that they come into this final leg as the de facto winners of the series. They also don’t even actually need that qualification route anymore, either, because they earned their ticket, alongside the Dutch, at the European Championships at Haras du Pin in August. Now, though, they could also add the finale win to their list of accolades, even if that margin looks stacked against them, thanks to the excellent efforts of Lara de Liedekerke-Meier, Karin Donckers and Leipheimer van’t Verahof, and Tine Magnus and Dizzy van het Lichterveld Z, who all rallied for classy, quick clears after teammate Jarno Verwimp had to put his hand up with Kyba van de Jomaheide. A season or two, this early trouble might have derailed the team; now, we’re looking at a Belgian front that finally believes in itself, and rightly so.

James Alliston and Karma. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The US made a seriously impressive climb up the leaderboard from first-phase eleventh to post-cross-country fifth, just 5.2 penalties, or a rail and three seconds, behind the fourth-placed Dutch, who stepped up from seventh. Team pathfinder James Alliston added to his personal Boekelo course form, cruising home a nippy 12 seconds inside the time to add nothing to his first-phase 35.9, which allowed him to step up from 75th to 20th overnight.

Cassie Sanger and Fernhill Zoro. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Team debutante Cassie Sanger might be just nineteen years old, but she rode with a maturity that belied her young age, heading out into the pressure cooker of cross-country – and team duties – with a focus and zeal that saw her add a scant 4.4 time penalties to her first-phase score of 35.1 and climb from 67th to 30th.

Phillip Dutton and Denim. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For Phillip Dutton, his aim with the eight-year-old Denim was twofold: to deliver the goods for the US, of course, but also to pilot the CCI4*-L debutant to a confidence-boosting, educational round that would help to set him up for a long and fruitful career to come. He managed both, easing off the gas as needed and, as such, adding 12 time penalties — but that conscientious riding could well prove to be a classic example of ‘putting money in the bank’; tomorrow, we’d love to see Denim continue his spotless long-format showjumping record, buoyed along by the energy he’s kept in reserve today. He’ll head into showjumping in 52nd place, up from 69th.

Like the Belgians, though, the US riders also had to rally in the face of disappointment for one team member: after piloting Tim and Nina Gardner’s FE Connory around the majority of the course, the gelding tripped in the water splash at fence 26AB, which resulted in a frustrating rider fall, though we’re pleased to report that Jennie is no worse for wear after her tumble.

The team standings in the Nations Cup finale going into the final phase.

Merel Blom-Hulsman and Veluwe d’Aveyron. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Former Dutch National Champion Merel Blom-Hulsman now finds herself back atop this leaderboard after a clear round with Vesuve d’Aveyron added just 4 time penalties to her score sheet, and after overnight leaders Sanne de Jong and Global Faerlie Flashy picked up 7.6 time penalties, dropping them into second place.

“It was a good ride,” says Merel, whose last international outing with the fourteen-year-old saw her retire on course at the European Championships. “Me and the horse have had a really good season until the Europeans, and you’re as good as your last competition, so it was mentally challenging, but it was a great ride. It’s actually quite funny because I get a lot of those comments, like, ‘can you imagine riding a  horse like that?’ But to be really honest, he was a young rider horse stepping up to this level. He found it, at first, quite difficult last year, so it’s good to see how he’s developed — that’s really really cool to see.”

The leaderboard in the Dutch National Championship after cross-country.

The final day at Boekelo will begin bright and early for our remaining 84 competitors with the horse inspection at 8.30 a.m. local time (7.30 a.m. BST/2.30 a.m. EST), followed by the showjumping in reverse order of merit. We’ll bring you all the news you need to know from the inspection and beyond — so as always, keep it locked on EN, and Go Eventing!

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries | Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

EN’s coverage of Boekelo is presented by Kentucky Performance Products.

Oliver Townend Soars to the Top of FEI Eventing World Athlete Rankings; Boyd Martin Moves to 3rd

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class add another five-star win to their record. Photo by Libby Law.

British athlete Oliver Townend has claimed the top spot in the FEI Eventing World Athlete Rankings with 504 points. A spot he takes from his fellow countrywoman, Rosalind Canter, who held the coveted position for just one month.

Townend’s ascent to the summit of the rankings comes as no surprise for the Olympic gold medalist, who previously held the world’s number one ranking over a year ago. He temporarily relinquished his position to New Zealand’s Tim Price, who enjoyed an 11-month reign before being surpassed by Canter.

“It is and always will be an honour to be at number one in your sport and it’s great to be back in that spot. The horses are incredible – they’re improving every day, have been so consistent and will always be my ultimate team mates. I also want to thank the massive amount of people behind me that make this happen, including the team at both yards”, Townend explained.

Townend’s career has seen him hold the top position in the FEI Eventing World Athlete Rankings for a total of 50 months, with a streak of 37 consecutive months at number one.

Rosalind Canter now stands at second place with 467 points, while American athlete Boyd Martin has made a remarkable jump from eighth to third place with 436 points. Meanwhile, Tim Price (NZL) continues to slip in the rankings, currently occupying the fourth spot with 434 points, closely followed by Tom McEwen (GBR) in fifth place with 431 points.

Great Britain’s stronghold in the top end of the Rankings is unequivocal, with three out of the top five in British hands, they also have back up and can count on Harry Meade (408 points), David Doel (393 points), William Oakden (383 points), and Laura Collet (371 points) in 6th to 9th respectively, making that a total of seven British athletes within the Top 10 rankings! Coming in tenth place is USA athlete Philipp Dutton with 367 points.

See the full ranking list here

Saturday Links from World Equestrian Brands

Photo by Abby Powell.

I can’t be the only one who feels as if they’re about to enter into some enchanted forest when hacking through a little tunnel of trees like this, right? Please tell me I’m not alone in this silly little daydream!

And don’t forget that you can enjoy some live action from Boekelo this morning! Click here for a course preview and here for how to tune in. The girls on the ground are killing it with their reels too, so make sure to follow along on EN’s Instagram as well!

U.S. Weekend Action

Apple Knoll Farm H.T. (Millis, MA) [Website] [Volunteer] [Ride Times]

Middle Tennessee Pony Club H.T. (Nashville, TN) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times][Volunteer] [Scoring]

WindRidge Farm Fall H.T. (Mooresboro, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

Woodside Fall International (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Major International Events

Military Boekelo CCIO4* [Website] [Schedule] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Links to Start Your Weekend:

2 Grooms Shot After Hours At Sacramento International

Blood changes reveal challenges of Eventing cross country courses

EC Welcomes Input on Proposed Rule Changes

Ringside Chat: Springer’s Talented String Earns Two FEI Wins At Stable View

Establish Good Ground Manners

Sponsor Corner: 20% off custom Mattes pads until 10/9! Have a crazy color combination in mind or something classic? The possibilities are endless! Design the Mattes pad of your dreams on the online configurator.

Morning Viewing: What happens when a top-level dressage rider tried to keep up with a hall of fame jockey in the gym?

Early Bird Gets the Live Feed: Watch Cross Country from Military Boekelo CCIO4*

It’s nearly go time for cross country day at Military Boekelo, the final FEI Eventing Nations Cup leg of 2023. Much is on the line for the huge 4* division this weekend, including Olympic qualification for some nations.

Tune in live at no cost thanks to the FEI YouTube channel (video embedded above, or click here if you cannot see it). You can view the full starting order here and a preview of the cross country course here. The action will get underway at 9:30 a.m. local time / 3:00 a.m. EST / 12:00 a.m. PST. Stay tuned for a full report to come at the end of the day!

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries | Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

EN’s coverage of Boekelo is presented by Kentucky Performance Products.

A Bold, Galloping New Look: Take a Walk Around the Boekelo Course

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries | Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

EN’s coverage of Boekelo is presented by Kentucky Performance Products.

It’s nearly time for cross-country day at the 2023 renewal of Military Boekelo, the finale of the FEI Nations Cup series, the penultimate opportunity to gain an Olympic team qualification, and a battle for glory between 112 of the world’s best horses and riders in this uniquely exciting CCIO4*-L.

Cross-country is officially set to begin at 9.30 a.m. local time (8.30 a.m. BST/5.30 a.m. EST), with Australia’s Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight first out of the box as our pathfinders. This year, Adrian Ditcham’s course has a bit of a new look – many of the well-known loops are still in situ, including the seriously tough main water, which sits at 20AB and 21AB this year, but a couple of the former paths through the twisty woods have gone by the wayside and been replaced by new, more open stretches of the track. That means that the flow of the course generally feels more galloping, and while the intensity has been slightly increased in some combinations, it’s a nice mix of tough asks and mental and physical breathers. That, in a way, is part of the challenge  – can riders make the most of those more straightforward sections while keeping their horses on the boil for the tough bits?

“As a result [of losing part of the Teesinkbos area], I had to save time elsewhere in the route, and we placed some extra unjumpables just before some obstacles to slow down the pace of the competitors,” says course designer Adrian Ditcham. “Because the forest is gone, we had to find places to take back time. It’s not our intention that too many come in within the optimum time. Slowing riders down is difficult enough given the excellent condition of the soil as a result of the good weather, but every time they have to pull the reins, it takes back a second.”

Two new obstacles have been introduced, at the final two fences — a table fence at 29 and a friendly brush-topped rolltop at 30, which replaces an ostensibly straightforward table that last year ended up being a surprise bogey fence, and was ultimately removed in the latter stages of the day.

“The longer you do this job, you learn that you can never help the riders enough,” muses Adrian.

Indeed.

Here’s the tech specs of tomorrow’s course:

Optimum time: 10:06

Official length: 5750m

Fences: 30

All the action is set to be streamed for free via the FEI TV YouTube channel, as well as through ClipMyHorse. Here’s a full look at the times, and, below, a whizzy walk-through of the course through our lens. Plus, if you still need to catch up on the action so far, check out our day one dressage report here, and our day two report here.

Here’s when our US combinations will be riding:

James Alliston and Karma (75th overnight): 10.03 a.m. (9.03 a.m. BST/4.03 a.m. Eastern)
Cassie Sanger and Fernhill Zoro (67th overnight): 10.39 a.m. (9.39 a.m. BST/4.39 a.m. Eastern)
Jennie Brannigan and FE Connory (86th overnight): 11.30 a.m. (10.30 a.m. BST/5.30 a.m. Eastern)
Phillip Dutton and Denim (68th overnight): 12.06 p.m. (11.06 a.m. BST/6.06 a.m. Eastern)
Hallie Coon and Cute Girl (2nd overnight): 13.39 p.m. (12.39 p.m. BST/7.39 a.m. Eastern)
Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan (41st overnight): 14.57 p.m. (13.57 p.m. BST/8.57 a.m. Eastern)
Cosby Green and Jos Ufo de Quidam (73rd overnight): 15.48 p.m. (14.48 p.m. BST/9.48 a.m. Eastern)

Now, let’s take a walk around the course to come, thanks to our friends at the CrossCountry App. Click here to view the map on CrossCountryApp if the embed below does not display in your browser.

“It’s Magic”: Hallie Coon is Star of the Show on Day Two of Boekelo

 

Hallie Coon and Cute Girl deliver their partnership’s personal best on the main stage. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While our leaders in the clubhouse at Boekelo, Germany’s Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21, remain unchanged at the end of day two, the day got off to a very exciting start for the US contingent – and for fans of bloody good dressage. Individual competitors Hallie Coon and the former Seven-Year-Old World Champion threw down the day’s only significant challenge to Julia’s 23.6, delivering a flowing, poetic test that earned them a 25 — a score that’s not just the second-best in the whole, enormous competition, but also the best-ever international dressage score that either horse or rider has ever produced.

That score comes as the culmination of no small amount of work. Hallie bought Cute Girl from Australia’s Kevin McNab at the beginning of last year, first getting to know her at home in the US before making the big decision to relocate to the UK at the tail end of last season, basing herself with Kevin for a full immersion into the UK and European competition scenes four years on from her 2018 stint in England, when she came over as a recipient of the Karen Stives Endowment Fund Grant. There, she trained not just with Kevin, but also with Danish dressage rider Sune Hansen, both of whom helped her to unpack the talented, occasionally tricky mare’s headspace, and now, having recently relocated to Katherine Coleman’s Wiltshire base, she’s added Team GB performance manager Dickie Waygood and dressage rider Olivia Oakley to her support arsenal.

The most important element, though? Time — and patience. Getting to know a horse that’s gone to a high level with another rider — in Cute Girl’s case, three-star with Kevin — is always a nuanced process, and one that is often peppered with as many steps back as there are forward ones while both parts of the partnership figure one another out. This year has seen plenty of the former and the latter for Hallie and the nine-year-old Holsteiner (Coventry x Caligula, by Clearway), and now, it’s all coming together into a relationship that’s blossoming out of trust and shared experiences. Their trip to Blenheim’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S saw them sit in the top ten after the first two phases, which was an exciting turning point that became an educational weekend, and now, Hallie says, it all feels like the real deal — and this is a moment that she’s going to relish.

“It doesn’t happen often,” she laughs. “It feels like everything came together today. I knew it was in her — she’s so working with me now, and I’m just so excited. There’s no anticipation, there’s no missed signals — she’s just there with me, and it’s just lovely.”

“Oh my god, this animal is a beast”: Hallie Coon and Cute Girl. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Every competition, and every schooling ride, is a chance to fine-tune their communication, and this — Cute Girl’s debut season at four-star — has given them plenty of opportunity to finesse the system.

“There’s a balance of getting her forward enough and into the hand,” explains Hallie. “Then that, for a while, resulted in her running past the rhythm that she should be in. But the rhythm that she should be in, she wasn’t strong enough for yet. In the last week, though, she’s turned into this absolute animal — you get on and you’re thinking, ‘Oh my god, this animal is a beast!’ It’s unlike anything I’ve ever felt. It’s finally like all the strength, and the power, and the collection is finally coming together, and it’s magic.”

And, she jokes, “it’s nice to maybe not have a reputation as a bad dressage rider anymore! But she’s very green still. She’s only a nine year old, so it’s very exciting for the future. The show jumping is so strong, and it’s just about getting on the same page for the cross country. Hopefully we’re working towards that.”

It’s not hard to imagine that the step up in communication that led to their exemplary test today could well have a positive follow-through effect on their cross-country performance. While they come here off the back of a tricky Blenheim — they trialled a different bitting set-up there, which resulted in a bit too much go and not enough ‘woah’ — they regrouped for an enormously positive run in the tough Open Intermediate at Little Downham, and Hallie, who has previously finished in the top ten here, thinks Boekelo could well be the making of Cute Girl as an upper-level competitor, not least because she relishes the buzz of a serious atmosphere.

“She was so bloody relaxed in this arena,” says Hallie. “Obviously, after the prep that we’ve had, you wouldn’t usually take a horse here, but I do feel like all the Boekelo questions that she’s seen she’s answered well, and I think it’s the right track for her. Maybe it’s not the choice everyone would make, but here we are!”

Hallie Coon and groom Tabby Fiorentini. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

Germany’s Felix Etzel was the only other new entrant to the top ten today; he sits in tenth place going into cross-country with the 12-year-old Trakehner stallion TSF Polartanz (Konvoi x Polarfreude II, by Heraldik xx) on a smart score of 28.4. The Warendorf rider and his compact, classy horse are absolutely ones to watch tomorrow: they took the win in Strzegom’s CCI4*-S last month in their prep run for Polartanz’s CCI4*-L debut, which will also be his first long-format run since 2019, when he finished third in the CCI3*-L at Houghton Hall in England.

Tiana Coudray and the expressive D’Artagnan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based US Olympian Tiana Coudray has an undeniable future star in the nine-year-old Holsteiner D’Artagnan (Diamant de Semilly x Cherie Nema, by Cassini II) – and D’Artagnan has had a seriously big few months in pursuit of whatever the equine equivalent of a Master’s degree is. He stepped up to CCI4*-S in July of this year at Aston le Walls, just a year after making his FEI debut, and jumped clear, before doing the same again at Burgham’s CCI4*-S a month later. Last month, we saw him step up to the big leagues in Blenheim’s eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S, where he excelled himself for an exciting top-25 finish and now, we’re getting the great joy of seeing him make his CCI4*-L debut. That began with a sweet, flowing test that earned them a 32.5 and overnight 41st place, and gave Tiana and her groom, best friend, and co-owner Annabelle James plenty to celebrate.

“It’s only been a couple of weeks since Blenheim, and I feel like he’s just come on again,” beams Tiana. “There’s not a single day I come out with him and he hasn’t improved from the day before — he breaks my heart, he’s so gorgeous! He tries so hard — he’ll give you everything he’s got. Absolutely everything.”

That deep desire to try has taken him from Novice (US Prelim) to four-star in just over a year, and it’s also the secret weapon that allowed him to make the best of the buzzy, often overwhelming atmosphere of the arena today, despite never having seen a thing like it.

“He was so good in there — so good,” says Tiana. “My biggest struggle with him for now — and there’s no way around it — is just that he’s weak and he doesn’t have the strength to hold it together. But God, he tries — and actually, out here in the warm up, I thought, ‘Oh, no, I’ve used him up. He’s got nothing left’. He was really wobbly and wiggly and tripping over his own feet, and then he went in the ring and to be fair, the adrenaline picked him up a bit more.”

The feeling, she explains, is even better than the one she had at Blenheim, where he scored a 34.9.

“He’s a lot stronger already. By the end of the test, he’s still slightly falling down the centerline. But he held himself together more in there, and give him six months or a year and it’s so exciting what he’ll do, because he’s got the temperament and he’s just such a nice boy. He’s doing it right now because he wants to so badly, but it’s not easy for him yet.”

Now, she’s looking forward to cruising around his first-ever long-format four-star track, and Boekelo’s build this year — a much more open, gallopy feel than we’ve seen here before — will be a great platform for him to learn the ropes on, she says.

“Last time I was here, it was really twisty, and he wouldn’t necessarily be a horse for twisty tracks,” she says. “He’s such a big galloping, powerful horse, so actually, I’m delighted with this year’s course. It’s much more open and galloping. There’s plenty to do, and we can’t forget how green and young he really is, but I’m really excited. I think, from what I was expecting, it’s going to suit him better, because he’s got a really good chance to run and jump. I think the only thing about it is because they have such a chance to run and jump, you then have to be on your game when you do get to a combination. You could get lulled into just having a wonderful time running and jumping, especially on a horse like him, so we just need to really make sure we’re on it when it comes to it!”

 

Cosby Green and Jos Ufo de Quidam. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The final US individual competitors, Cosby Green and Jos Ufo de Quidam, had a long wait before they got their moment to shine – they were the 110th pair of the competition to deliver their test in the main arena. But while all that hanging around might make most of us go a bit green around the gills, Cosby’s been learning an enviable skill in her season based in the UK with Tim and Jonelle Price: the art of the Kiwi-style chill-out.

“The whole experience has just really grown me in confidence — that’s something I really struggle with,” says 22-year-old Lexington native Cosby, who made the move over with three horses in March. “Just seeing them do it every other weekend; they’re just out there doing the proper thing, no big deal. I think that’s really rubbed off on me — it’s just a horse show, you do the job, you do what you know how to do and it’s no big deal. You just roll on and things happen and you just carry on.”

That newfound zen helped Cosby pilot the relatively inexperienced Jos Ufo de Quidam (Lobby des Fortes x Remonta Guinea) to a confidence-boosting, smart test, with just two small mistakes – a touch of jog in the walk, and a wobble in a flying change as one of the tents next to the arena erupted in that sporadic, loud applause we experienced yesterday afternoon. They put a 35.6 on the board, slotting them into 73rd – but just over ten penalties from the top spot – going into cross-country.

“I mean, I really wish the mark was better, but it’s his first time in a proper atmosphere like that and there’s people all around clapping, so all things considered, I’m pretty happy with it,” says Cosby. “He’s new to the level, and ours is a decently new partnership; I got him from Heather Morris, who owns him, about a year and a half ago. She competed him to 3* level and then she handed over the reins to me last April, and he just stepped up to the 4* level this year. He’s quite experienced with the 3* level, and still sorting this out.”

Basing in the UK has given Cosby the chance to educate her horses over varied, tough tracks, and Jos Ufo de Quidam’s experience at four-star so far has given him the chance to see plenty of different build styles; he stepped up to CCI4*-S at Millstreet in Ireland in June, and then ran at the same level at England’s Aston le Walls the next month, finishing just outside the top twenty with classy clears both times. His CCI4*-L debut came at Blair Castle in Scotland in August, over a track known for being arguably the most mountainous in the sport, and there he shone — their steady clear saw them finish just outside the top ten, and with lots to get excited about as they come into this much flatter, championship-style continental course.

“It looks really good out there, and it’s really suited for my horse,” says Cosby, who says that the Team Price plan is “very focused: everything has a plan, and then the plan is just to execute it!”

One thing she’s not quite got on board with while adopting the Kiwi mindset, though? “Everyone except me was wearing flip flops on our course walk today,” she laughs.

The top ten following dressage at Military Boekelo.

Sanne de Jong and Global Faerlie Flashy remain atop the Dutch National Championship leaderboard on their score of 31.9, and former winner Merel Blom-Hulsman retains her second place on 33.9 with Vesuve d’Aveyron. Stephan Hazeleger and the splashy coloured James Bond step up into third place with their 34.6.

The Dutch National Championship leaderboard at the end of the first phase.

Tomorrow’s cross-country start time has been moved to 9.30 a.m. local time (that’s 8.30 a.m. British time/3.30 a.m. Eastern time) to accommodate for the colossal field of 112 starters, with a planned finish time — holds notwithstanding — of just after 4.00 p.m. (3.00 p.m./10.00 a.m.). That’s great news if you’re planning a duvet day with nothing on your to-do list but live-streaming, particularly as all the action is set to be streamed for free via the FEI TV YouTube channel, as well as through ClipMyHorse.

Want to follow along with the US riders in particular, and need to manage those early morning power-naps? Here’s when they’re set to leave the start box:

  • James Alliston and Karma (75th overnight): 10.03 a.m. (9.03 a.m. BST/4.03 a.m. Eastern)
  • Cassie Sanger and Fernhill Zoro (67th overnight): 10.39 a.m. (9.39 a.m. BST/4.39 a.m. Eastern)
  • Jennie Brannigan and FE Connory (86th overnight): 11.30 a.m. (10.30 a.m. BST/5.30 a.m. Eastern)
  • Phillip Dutton and Denim (68th overnight): 12.06 p.m. (11.06 a.m. BST/6.06 a.m. Eastern)
  • Hallie Coon and Cute Girl (2nd overnight): 13.39 p.m. (12.39 p.m. BST/7.39 a.m. Eastern)
  • Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan (41st overnight): 14.57 p.m. (13.57 p.m. BST/8.57 a.m. Eastern)
  • Cosby Green and Jos Ufo de Quidam (73rd overnight): 15.48 p.m. (14.48 p.m. BST/9.48 a.m. Eastern)

Our pathfinders for the day’s sport will be US-based Aussie Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight, who sit 101st after dressage on a 39 and also trailblaze for the Australian team, which currently sits just off the Nations Cup podium in fourth place. Dressage leaders Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 will head out of the startbox at 11.03 a.m. (10.03 a.m. BST/5.03 a.m. Eastern) with just 1.4 penalties, or three seconds and change, in hand over Hallie and Cute Girl. Stay tuned for a walk around Adrian Ditcham’s new-look track, stock up your Grolsch fridge (you do have a Grolsch fridge, right?) and let’s dive into a seriously mad day of cross-country together. 3, 2, 1: let’s Go Eventing!

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries | Live Scoring | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

EN’s coverage of Boekelo is presented by Kentucky Performance Products.

The Eventing Championships at Galway Downs Boosts Prize Pot to $100,000

Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Exciting news for all you West coasters — and honorary West coasters heading out for Galway Downs’ Fall International (November 1-5) in Temecula, CA: the prize pool across FEI and Challenge divisions has hit its initial goal of $100,000.

Riders will compete for the following prize monies:

  • $50,000 in the CCI4*-L
  • $21,000 in the CCI3*-L
  • $12,000 in the CCI 2*-L
  • $6,000 in the CCI1*
  • Plus, $2,500 in each Challenge division

The prize pot makes the trek for any riders based east of Area VI sweeter, and while we’re not sure yet what the final roster will look like, Dallas-based upper level rider Rebecca Brown is one making the trip.

Rebecca Brown during her last visit to Galway in 2020. Photo by MGO Photography.

The prize money is icing on the cake of what Dallas-based eventer Rebecca Brown describes as a reliably great experience for horse and rider. The fact that she’ll get to compete her new partner Trust Pommex Z in the USEF CCI2*-L National Eventing Championships is “certainly a factor in coming,” says Rebecca of her decision to drive 24 hours to Galway. “But it is more important to me in the long run that my horse get exposed to a lot of great things and that he has a great experience.”

Entries will remain open until October 17, so be sure to get them in. Galway Downs is host this year to a slew of championships and Challenge divisions: the 2023 USEF CCI2*-L and USEF CCI4*-L Eventing National Championships and the 2023 USEF Eventing Young Rider National Championships, presented by USEA. The event will also host Area VI Championships as well as Challenge divisions for Beginner Novice/Novice, Training/Novice, Modified/Training, and Prelim/Modified hybrid divisions.

The Eventing Championships at Galway Downs: [Website] [Entries]

Friday News & Notes Presented by Stable View

Park Butte on horseback! Photo by Michelle Sullivan-Brookshier

My passion for puzzling out young horses will always offer me a certain level of job security, because they all start out that way, and not everybody wants to deal with their formative years. A client who I’ve been helping with a delightful now four-year-old sent me a quote the other day about riders versus trainers, and I think it finally helped me with my equestrian identity. Becoming an excellent rider is so so hard, but becoming an amazing trainer is equally as difficult, and the two are not always the same. Start your Friday with some philosophical musings about which category you identify with by checking out the post here.

U.S. Weekend Preview

Apple Knoll Farm H.T. (Millis, MA) [Website] [Volunteer]

Middle Tennessee Pony Club H.T. (Nashville, TN) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

The Maryland Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm (Adamstown, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times][Volunteer] [Scoring]

WindRidge Farm Fall H.T. (Mooresboro, NC) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

Woodside Fall International (Woodside, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Major International Events

Military Boekelo CCIO4* [Website] [Schedule] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

News From Around the Globe:

Boekelo action day two! If you missed the report on the first day of dressage yesterday, we got you covered. In short, Julia Krajewski is basically a master at producing young horses to blow us away on the international stage again and again. [Julia Krajewski Takes Day One Lead at Boekelo]

Mare owners, listen up! A new alternative to managing your mare’s hormones and painful ovaries might be just what your looking for to help your girl feel her best. A lot of us don’t want to handle Regu-Mate, but some mares have very intense and painful cycles that prevent them from functioning at the appropriate level. Olivia Shlichting, DVM, was also annoyed with this, so she invented the Pearl Pod. The Pearl Pod consists of three elliptical plastic-coated magnets slightly over 1 inch long and half an inch wide. After the three pieces are inserted into the mare’s uterus, the north and south poles of each magnet cause the pieces to self-assemble into a ring configuration. Basically, it’s an IUD for horses. [Solving Problems with the Pearl Pod]

Pharmaceutical company Merck has recalled an additional four batches of Banamine. Merck Animal Health announced it is voluntarily recalling four additional batches of Banamine 50 mg/mL in the United States, used for injection in horses, cattle and swine due to the presence of particulate matter. These batches are in addition to the three batches of Banamine that Merck recalled in early September due to the presence of particulate matter. [More Banamine Recalled]

Cross country is a hard phase physically, but also mentally. For the rider, yes, but also horses can struggle with keeping their focus when the questions keep coming. What do you do with a horse that zones out on cross country and loses focus, and thereby becomes slightly unrideable? Get the low-down on this particular training challenge with this article. [How to Regain Control on Cross Country]

Ulcers are the bane of the existence of horse people. We have them, lots and lots of performance horses have them, and treating them is expensive and often ineffectual long term. Researches have now confirmed that some horses being treated with omeprazole, however, suffer rapid recurrence of gastric ulcers upon discontinuing treatment. Tapering the omeprazole dose when planning to discontinue this medication is unlikely to minimize rebound gastric hyperacidity. Instead, caretakers should implement management changes to further protect the horse from developing new lesions. [Rebound Gastric Hyperacidity in Horses]