Classic Eventing Nation

Luhmühlen CCI4*-S: Julia Krajewski Takes German Championship (Again!)

Julia Krajewski takes to the arena to try to beat herself with Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As Olympic individual gold medallist Julia Krajewski entered the arena as the final competitor of the day in Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S, the writing was already on the wall: she was the newly minted German Champion, no matter what happened. This curious bit of kismet happened because Julia’s duo of inexperienced nine-year-olds had performed so extraordinarily well yesterday — and the course had caused so many issues — that she’d been able to move up to overnight second, from fifth, with the French-bred Ero de Cantraie, and from second to first with the German Nickel 21. And so, when she was made to jump out of order on second-placed Ero to ensure she’d have time to prepare her second ride, and when she subsequently went clear with 0.4 time faults, she secured herself the title either way — it was just to be a question of which horse would take the top honours.

In the end, it was Ero — a horse who Julia told us earlier in the week rather reminds her of her Luhmühlen CCI5* winner, Samurai du Thot — who stepped into the top spot after overnight leader Nickel 21 tipped two rails and dropped down to third.

“I knew I was German Champion one horse or the other, and then I came in again and had two unlucky rails with Nickel and I was not in the lead anymore with him, but I was still German Champion, so that was a funny situation,” she says. “Both horses were really nice. With Nickel, I lost a bit of the contact before the double and he didn’t really take the bit going through the double and then I had to push him a bit. That was a bit unusual — but he’s usually a good jumper and I think being third here is everything to be proud of.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie take the German National Championship. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Quick-brained, occasionally mercurial Ero has been stepping up to the plate for Julia since they began solidifying their year-long partnership in the latter part of last season, and while he hasn’t had the same exposure to atmosphere as stablemate Nickel, who’s competed in arena eventing and ride and drive competitions, he still overcame some initial apprehension about the crowd with remarkable ease.

“We had to go in quite early, and then Ero jumped a clear round — I’m super delighted with how he went all week,” says Julia. “[He] came in today, got slightly nervous with the crowd and then really focused and jumped a very easy, nice clear round .I’m delighted; it’s only his second four-star.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Easing his worries and giving him confidence was the name of the game, and Julia’s priority for the day, even if that meant sacrificing the win.

“Bringing up young horses, I’m just trying to give them security in what they’re doing, that they feel safe, that I guide them and they learn to trust me,” she says. “Often enough, it’s doing a little bit less than you would want to do, knowing that in the long-term, it’s better to do a step less than step too many, and maybe doing it for quite some years now, being more experienced than most of the horses I ride has been quite helpful!”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For previous two-time German National Champion Julie — she won in 2018 and 2019 with Samourai du Thot — it’s all been a bit of a weird day, in the nicest of ways.

“It was somehow surreal, to know that I’d won the title so early on,” she laughs. “I could only have beat myself to it. All in all, I’m overjoyed with the way the week went and incredibly proud of my young horses. I really didn’t expect to be on the podium with both horses at the end of the week. Ero’s development in the last 12 months is absolutely amazing, and Nickel was a bit unlucky today. He, too, would have deserved the win today.”

Christoph Wähler and D’Accord 70. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This time last year, locally-based rider Christoph Wahler, who was part of the German gold medal-winning team at Pratoni last year, came to this event with new ride D’Accord 70 and very nearly medalled in this class — but for the two rails on the final day, which cost them several places on the leaderboard and left them in eighth place. Today, they put that behind them, producing one of just five clear rounds inside the time to become one of just two combinations to finish on their dressage score, proving that the son of Diarado is well on his way to becoming Mr Consistency.

“We weren’t very happy with the dressage [a 34.4 for first phase 24th], because the horse can do a better test, and I can ride a better test, but in the end we didn’t bring it into the arena,” says Christoph, who runs his family’s high-end dressage breeding stud at the Klosterhof Medingen around his eventing obligations. “Whereas Saturday was an absolute pleasure riding him across country, because he’s a naturally quick horse with a huge gallop, and he’s got a huge jump on him. Every round I ride him he gets a little bit safer, and a little bit more comfortable with going that fast.”

Christoph Wahler and D’Accord 70. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This year, coming from behind suited the pair, and an unruffled Christoph quietly observed the competition play out before cantering into the ring and making his own bid for a top placing.

“We’d already moved up a couple of ranks and then today I knew that the show jumping is usually quite difficult in Luhmuhlen, and the fact if we managed to jump a clear round we could be right up there, and we did,” he says.

Anna Lena Schaaf and Fairytale 39. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After delivering a clear round, with just 0.8 time faults, Anna Lena Schaaf found herself in an enviable position: the hard work was done, and now it was down to everyone else in the class to try to match her effort — or slip below her trying. Ultimately, so few in this class were able to keep a clean slate that she found herself climbing all the way from eighth to a final fourth place.

“This horse just leaves me speechless,” says 21-year-old Anna Lena, struggling to speak through tears of joy and the enormous emotions of the moment. “She means so much to me. The show-jumping was very challenging today and I’m so glad that we stayed clear.”

Anna Lena, who rides as part of the Warendorf training program for young riders, is already a seriously focussed and committed athlete, despite her young age: she’s previously won both the Six- and Seven-Year-Old World Championships aboard Lagona OLD, and with 16-year-old Fairytale 39, she’s truly climbed through the ranks: the mare was bred by her grandfather and was born when Anna Lena was just five years old. They’ve grown up together: Fairytale was Anna Lena’s first ride in FEI horse classes when she came off of Ponies, and that followed their even more formative start together in 80cm jumping classes. From there, they’ve made their way to two Junior and one Young Rider European Championships, winning individual gold at the Junior level in 2019 and individual silver at Young Riders in 2021. Now, a year and a half after winning on their four-star debut, they’re the bronze medallists in the German National Championships.

Anna Lena Schaaf and Fairytale 39. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That focus and drive means that she’s also highly critical of her own performances, though: “I was unhappy with my dressage, because I, myself, had two stupid mistakes, and on cross country, I was unhappy with my own riding because I didn’t find a good rhythm, but then the horse took over,” says Anna Lena. But today? She’s making up for it all by being extra happy, because “she doesn’t jump clear so often!”

Coach and fellow competitor Julia Krajewski stepped in to help an emotional Anna Lena out, and to put into words some of the abundance of feelings that come into play in a moment like this: “In my opinion, the bond between a horse and its rider can be even stronger than interpersonal relationships,” she says. “We do everything for our horses — so it’s incredibly touching when they trust us and go above and beyond.”

Nadine Marzahl and Valentine FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nadine Marzahl had begun her week as the day one dressage leader with Victoria 108, the first of her fiery daughters of the stallion Valentino, but by the time she went into cross-country, in fourth place with Victoria and eighth with Valentine FRH, the tables had started to turn for the two mares: the first, and better-placed of the two, picked up expensive time and jumping penalties at the first combination on course, while the latter nipped home, leaving a stride or two behind along the way and picking up 3.6 time penalties. That dropped Victoria down to 27th and Valentine up to fifth — and a single rail for each mare today saw them both move up a placing in the final order, with Valentine securing an impressive fourth place finish in this prestigious class.

Calvin Böckmann and The Phantom of the Opera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

22-year-old Calvin Böckmann had been one of the standout heroes of yesterday’s cross-country day: the young talent and former Pony European Champion, who rides as part of the Warendorf system for up-and-coming riders in Germany, had come to Luhmühlen last year to watch and learn from the top talents in the game on foot with his compatriots at the training base, and had dreamed then of one day, perhaps, getting the opportunity to compete in this event. And this week, he made good on that, not just showing up on the starting order with the former Sandra Auffarth ride, The Phantom of the Opera, but delivering the second fastest clear of the day yesterday, too, helping him climb from 12th to third going into the final phase.

But a medal wasn’t to be — not today, anyway, though it’s hard to imagine Calvin staying away from the top spot for too long. He and the twelve-year-old Holsteiner tipped the second fence and the seventh, dropping them two places on the leaderboard, but adding to an impressive resume that’s seen them finish outside of the top ten just twice in nine FEI runs (and then, just barely: their lowest international placing is a fourteenth!).

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

Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier has been on triple duty this week: she’s not only had two horses in this class to focus on, but also her two young children, who she and husband Kai, the team trainer for Belgium and a top-level rider in his own right for Germany, have been ferrying to and fro en masse on their bikes in increasingly creative ways through the week. And, of course, she’s been occupying a supporting role: she’s had American friends to stay at Arville, the stunning base she and Kai live and work out of in Belgium, for two weeks before Luhmühlen, and could be spotting ringside cheering on Sydney Elliott in the CCI5* and, before his retirement on cross-country yesterday, Dan Krietl in the CCI4*-S.

But business seems to suit Lara, and she and her two ten-year-old homebred mares, Hermione d’Arville and Hooney d’Arville, the latter of whom is out of her former Young Rider and World Championship partner, Nooney Blue, were thoroughly impressive throughout the week. They began in 11th and 24th place, respectively, after dressage; a speedy clear for Hermione and a slightly steadier one for Hooney saw them move up to sixth and sixteenth; and then, today, a rail for Hermione and a classy clear for Hooney secured them seventh and tenth place and closed the book on a banner week for the experienced competitor.

Young British-based Swede Sofia Sjoborg once again demonstrated the consistency of her Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z, with whom she delivered a clear inside the time across the country and tipped a rail today to complete an extraordinary climb from 43rd to eighth place, while Italy’s Emiliano Portale and the expressive galloping machine Aracne dell’Esercito Italiano (no, seriously, watch it gallop sometime if you can; it’s actually remarkable) also completed a big leap up the board, adding one rail to their 3.6 time penalties yesterday to move from initial 31st to a final ninth place.

And so we well and truly come to the end of another edition of the Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials, and five-day celebration of the love of the horse. Stay tuned for more highlights and images from this fantastic event, and in the meantime, Go Eventing.

The top ten in the Meßmer Trophy CCI4*-S, incorporating the German National Championships.

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“I’ll Never Sit On Another Horse Like Him”: Laura Collett Records Third CCI5* Win with London 52 at Luhmühlen

Laura Collett and London 52 take their third five-star win out of three starts at the level. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

By the time two-phase leaders Laura Collett and London 52 cantered into the arena with their 6.5 penalty margin in hand, Luhmühlen’s CCI5* win could have felt like a foregone conclusion — but 41 rails had already fallen throughout the previous 28 rounds, and the time had proven seriously tricky to catch, too, and so the pressure was on for the pair to try to catch their third five-star win out of three starts at the level.

But pressure? That’s something that icy-veined Laura, who’s carved a career at the top level despite hurdles including a horror fall that cost her most of her vision in one eye ten years ago, has learned to relish. She and the 14-year-old Holsteiner gelding (Landos x Vernante, by Quinar Z) delivered a foot-perfect clear round inside the time to finish on their first-phase score of 20.3 — the second-best five-star finishing score of all time.

“At the end of the day, he’s just a sensational horse that seems to know when it really matters,” says Laura, who sourced the gelding for co-owners Karen Bartlett and Keith Scott at German team trainer Peter Thomsen’s yard in 2016. “Almost the more I ride like there’s a lot of pressure on, and try and do stupid distances, he seems to realise he needs to jump a bit higher, which is luckily what he decided to do today. He’s just — he’s my absolute. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: he’s my horse of a lifetime and I will never sit on another horse like him.”

 

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This isn’t just a hat-trick of five-star wins and five-star starts for the pair — it’s also the third time they’ve won a five-star with a wire-to-wire lead. Across the three starts and wins so far, they’ve only ever added 0.4 to their dressage scores: that was at Badminton last year, where they crossed the showjumping finish line just one second over the time, but still recorded the lowest-ever finishing score at the event. Now, they hold the record at all three venues they’ve contested. That, she explains, comes down to the deep trust and partnership she’s built with the gelding over the years — the good ones, and the tricky ones, such as 2019, where they had a spate of high-profile learning mistakes, culminating in a fall late on course at Luhmühlen in the European Championships.

“It’s an awful lot that we ask the horses, to come in and do a dressage test, and then be brave and jump very skinny angled fences cross country, and come out and jump clean on the last day,” she says. “So if you don’t have the trust and the partnership there, then things are going to go wrong. It’s taken a good few years to really cement the partnership I have with him, and I think the reason that I’m so proud of him is that I know he’s not a natural cross country horse. He’s had to learn to be a cross country horse, and the way he stormed around that track yesterday, making it feel so easy, is what makes me just so unbelievably proud and why I do it. I love building a partnership with the horses, and when they come out and reward you like that after years of trying to get it right, it’s just an unbelievable feeling. From my point of view, I love spending time with the horses because I think you get to know them inside out. Obviously there’s a massive team of people behind us that make it possible for us to be able to enjoy days like today, but I think it does help build the bond and, and the horses know that we care for them — and I think that makes them try a little bit harder for us when it really matters.”

Now, with three five-star victories and an Olympic team gold under her belt, Laura’s setting her sights on ticking a few boxes and putting a few demons to bed. And then? Maybe it’s time to try to catch a few more of those titles and records.

“I’d really like to win a senior European title, so that’d be first on the on the list,” she says, looking ahead to August’s championships at Haras du Pin. “And then I’ve got a score to settle: I feel like I messed up at the Olympics and should have won an individual medal there, so I guess I’ll try and do that next year — and maybe Kentucky the year after!”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This fortuitous trip to Luhmühlen was actually never part of London 52’s plan for the season — Laura had intended to return to Badminton to defend her title, but the gelding struck into himself shortly before the event, forcing her withdrawal and a diversion to plan B. That, plus the difficulty of this year’s spring season in Britain, could have been a devastating blow to the rider — but instead, she let the puzzle pieces fall into place.

“The timing actually was pretty perfect, really, because it was far enough out that as soon as he struck into himself, the decision was made he wasn’t going to go to Badminton,” she explains. “He had ten days off, and so then it was just about working backwards from here. We only had one option of a four-star short run, and that was Bicton, and I was really pleased about that because I knew at Bicton, they always build such a good cross country track. So I thought that was perfect, with dressage and show jumping on a surface. To be honest, it’s been such a funny year, but it’s felt like with him in particular, everything’s just fallen into place. It was almost like he saw the weather forecast for Badminton and decided that maybe we’re going to try and win a different five-star instead!”

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Although Kitty King knew that the overnight leader had a rail and change in hand today, she herself did not: she went into the final phase with just a time penalty to spare, and she knew she’d have to leave all the jumps in the cups with Vendredi Biats (Winningmood x Liane Normande, by Camellia de Ruelles) to retain second place and, she hoped, put some pressure on Laura. But even with the weight of that responsibility on her shoulders, as she waited at the in-gate, she felt nothing but an overwhelming calm.

“To be honest, today I felt the least pressure I’ve ever felt with him in a show jumping arena,” she says. “He felt really great in the warm up, so that really helped. I know what a good jumper he is, and to be honest, we’ve had so much rotten luck recently, I thought, ‘no more can go wrong — so what will be, will be here, and I’ve coped with all the downs of Badminton and Burghley, so it can’t get any worse, so we’ll just go in and enjoy our round’. He really did that and he felt like he was on springs. He’s just such a game jumper — he absolutely loves it. He lives for jumping.”

Even with the gelding’s exceptional showjumping record working in her favour, though, Kitty still had to work hard to get the better of the notoriously tough course here — and in doing so, picked up a time fault.

“It wasn’t a track that particularly suits him because it’s quite gallopy; he’s better at tight turnbacks,” she explains. “So I had to break his canter up a little bit, which is why I think I got the time fault. But that was my riding rather than him — he jumped his socks off.”

This second place finish breaks a run of bad luck for Kitty and the French-bred gelding, which began at Burghley last year, where they led the dressage bit hit a late MIMclip on the course to lose their shot at the win. That luck worsened at Badminton this spring; they were placed second after the first phase, but suffered a non-injurious fall early in the course when the keen and quick gelding overbalanced over one of the widest fences on course. Now, finally getting the result their abundance of talent has richly deserved almost feels like “nearly a bit of an anticlimax, as awful as that sounds,” she laughs. “Because, obviously he was on the verge at Burghley, and at Badminton we put ourselves in a great spot.”

But, she explains, sometimes you need a little bit of luck on your side — and learning when to call it a day is crucial, too.

“To be honest, Badminton week I should have given up before we started, because it already wasn’t my week,” she says. “One of my best friends broke his neck at Cirencester and was being operated on, and my dad had a heart attack on dressage day, so I wasn’t in the right mindset for cross country. Neither of us really did anything wrong, I don’t think, other than that he jumped it a bit big. But when I fell off, I was nearly relieved. I was like, ‘Oh well, at least we’re only at minute two — we’re both fine, so we’ll go somewhere else’.  The whole morning I was umming and ahhing as to whether I should be running. I was thinking, ‘everything’s going wrong in my life at the moment, maybe it’s not the day to be tackling this’, and I probably wasn’t in the best mindset. When I was walking back to the stables, I was like, ‘we can go to Luhmühlen’. That’s always been the goal since, and I’ve been in a much better mindset with it all.  I know he’s more than capable so to come out and just to get the job done… It’s a really weird feeling. I’m obviously absolutely over the moon with the result, but in some ways it’s like, I’m so near again, and yet so far. But it’s just so nice to be able to get all the three phases right. [I’m] glad to have a little bit of luck back on our side this year. It’s a shame to always have to be up against London, but he’s so good that coming second to him is almost like a win. [London’s] just the most special horse, and mine’s pretty damn good too! “

Like Laura and London, Kitty logs her phenomenal result this weekend with a horse that hasn’t always been the most straightforward character — but time, patience, and a heaping helping of faith in what could be has helped him to flourish into a top-notch competitor.

“Froggy is very special, but he has a bit of a chequered history,” says Kitty of the gelding, owned by Diana Bown, Sally Lloyd Baker, Sally Eyre and Samantha Wilson. “He was very naughty and used to like to buck people off all the time, so he moved around to quite a few yards until I got him as a five-year-old. When we saw him in the stable, he had the most beautiful head — and then they pulled him out, and to be honest, after they trotted him up I was really quite disappointed! He dragged his feet and didn’t look very inspiring or very impressed about life. But as soon as I sat on him, there was just something really special about him, and we got on really, really well. And I think he’s only bucked me off twice, so I’ve done alright! He’s just a clown and a comedian and really, we’re all just here to amuse him.”

Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Reigning World Champion Yasmin Ingham closed the book on an excellent weekend with her long-time partner, the Sue Davies Fund and Janette Chinn’s Rehy DJ (Tinarina’s Inspector x Rehy Misty, by Big Sink Hope), who jumped a classy clear round with a time fault to retain his overnight third place. Like her two compatriots ahead of her on the podium, though, she knew that despite the influence exerted by the course, she was sitting on a horse she could rely on to get the job done.

“I have a lot of trust in Piglet,” says Yas. “He’s usually a very good jumper, and I’ve known him for a long time now, so we have a great partnership. It’s probably his strongest phase out of all the three, so it was a pleasure to go in that arena and jump in front of the crowds and try and do our best for his owners and my team. I think we did just that.”

Yas, too, extolled the virtues of a long partnership and an innate level of mutual trust, and their necessity in bringing home a great result — in this case, the gelding’s first five-star completion after an educational, rather than competitive, debut at Pau in 2020.

“I think it’s all about the bond and the partnership and the trust,” she says. “It comes from the training at home, the looking after the horses — like Laura said, getting to know them inside and out. They have to trust us when we ask them to do the jumping and the cross country and training them in the dressage. I love spending time with all the horses and getting to know them and all their quirks and the good parts and the bad parts and trying to improve them. It’s an amazing sport to be involved in.”

In her case, that partnership goes back to the horse’s formative years — and her own, too. Together, the pair have risen through the Young Rider Europeans level, taking individual fourth at Fontainebleau in 2018, to representing Great Britain at CHIO Aachen in 2022 and now, taking a podium position at this topmost level of the sport.

“I’ve had him since he was six, so I’ve had him for a long time now,” says Yas. “I’ve produced him from the very first international classes at two-star level, so I’m very proud to have brought him up through the levels and to have such a great result today, it certainly makes you appreciate the good days.”

Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British team trainer Chris Bartle was quick to bestow praise upon the trio of British women with whom he’s worked so closely for so many years — praise, he acknowledged, that they were unlucky to give themselves.

“These girls are absolutely right in appreciating what [their horses] do, and obviously, without a super horse that really trusts you as a partner, you’re not going to succeed,” he says. “But don’t underestimate the work that these guys put in to improving their own communication system with their horses; into developing the analysis; into building up the physical and mental competence, and so on. That is not to be underestimated –they’re just far too nice to say as it should be!”

Boyd Martin and Luke 140. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

All week long, Boyd Martin has been at the forefront of the considerable US contingent that made the trip to Germany, and that didn’t change today. He began his morning with his most experienced horse, the Turner family’s Tsetserleg (Windfall II x Thabana, by Buddenbrock), and although the pair tipped a rail and added 1.2 time penalties, he was full of praise for his diminutive Tokyo partner, who finished 25th.

“With Thomas, I was just thrilled the way he jumped,” he says. “We’ve had many rails over much easier courses, and I was very grateful to Peter Wylde, who came over to help us this week.”

One of the changes that Peter helped engineer for the pair was a totally revamped warm-up routine for the gelding: “We gave him his warm up for the jumping at 9:30 this morning [an hour before the start of the class], and then just did a couple of fences before we went in — and it seemed to work, as sometimes he gets a little bit nervous and worried with all the other horses. I’m just blown away by his round — show jumping has been an ongoing challenge, and I don’t think I’ve ever had him jumping so good. So I feel like there’s a bit left in the tank there, and I’ll be forever kicking myself over yesterday’s run out, but I’m hoping that we’ll be able to go to Burghley and have a redo.”

His duo of very different debutants, Fedarman B (Eurocommerce Washington x Paulien B, by Fedor) and the Luke 140 Syndicate’s Luke 140 (Landos x Omega IV, by Limbus), brought it home in fine style: though Fedarman B, or Bruno, had a rail at fence four, he was still able to climb one place to eventual eighth, and the tiny, feisty Luke delivered one of just five clears inside the time to retain his overnight fourth place.

“Bruno is just a phenomenal jumper and he’s never had a rail down with me, so I sadly picked a terrible event to have his first pole — but he’s a class jumper,” says Boyd, who rides the gelding for the Annie Goodwin Syndicate in honour of the horse’s former owner and rider, who tragically passed away at the age of 32 in a cross-country schooling accident in 2021. “I think now that we’ve got a good partnership, we could challenge him a bit more in the warm up to get him to get rid of that pole. Luke’s just a rocket; he’s just got the warrior mindset. Even at the trot up this morning he was pushing me out of the way, and I rode him earlier this morning and he tried to buck me off. In the warm up he was jumping over the standards, so I knew if I could just ride him well enough in there, he should jump clear.”

Throughout their experience at Luhmühlen, Boyd says, both horses learned a huge amount — and he learned plenty about them, too.

“I’ve figured out they’ve both got heart and desire,” he says. “You know, that last minute or two minutes of the cross country here when you come out of last water, you’ve got that hill — and every horse I’ve ever ridden here is grunting as they go up that hill. You just don’t know how they’ll react. Both horses gritted their teeth and pinned their ears back, and they’ll benefit from this hard run. I think wherever I match them up at the end of the year, the hard push that we had yesterday gives me self-belief that they’ve got that inner warrior that you need when the going gets tough.”

For Bruno and Luke, those end of year plans could include a trip to Pau for one and Maryland for the other — but for both, this was always going to be Boyd’s choice for a debut.

“Luhmuhlen’s been on my radar for both Luke and Bruno for a long time, and I really felt like this would be just a perfect first five-star for them,” he says. “They’re green horses, and I thought the track here would be perfectly suited for them. I was thrilled with the way they went — they were really challenged yesterday and stood up to the test, and then came out and jumped very well today. I think I’m gonna have a really, really good run at the top level of the sport for many years with these two. They’re both just quality animals; I love riding them and they really enjoy the competitions.”

Sydney Elliott and QC Diamantaire. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The US had two more solid completions in Sydney Elliott and QC Diamantaire, who tipped two rails and added 1.6 time penalties, dropping them from 14th to 17th, and are still flying high off the back of a super-classy clear inside the time over yesterday’s cross-country, and Katherine Coleman, who also took two with RLE Limbo Kaiser to finish 29th.

Harry Meade and Tenareze. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade‘s week of sneaky excellence came good with an exceptional clear inside the time from the on-form Tenareze (Jaguar Mail x Utopie du Maury, by Quatar de Plape), completing their climb from first-phase eleventh place to secure the fifth place they’d held overnight. But while neither horse nor rider has put a foot wrong in any phase, finishing on their dressage score of 30.7, they came into this event — the 16-year-old Anglo Arab’s second full five-star run, and first cross-country clear at the level — flying well under the radar.

“I came out here not quite knowing what to expect from him,” says Harry, who rides the gelding for David Bernstein, Nigella Hall, and Sophie Caruth. “He’s got lots of ability, he wouldn’t necessarily be the world’s bravest horse — but I just thought, ‘okay, I’ll just try and do the best job I can’, and really, I couldn’t have wished for a better performance from him in all three phases.”

Academic horseman Harry was particularly delighted to find that his relatively inexperienced mount felt so well and capable of jumping such a tough track in fine style after yesterday’s exertions.

“I always think that the proof of the pudding of a fit horse is how they feel the next day, not just how they finish the cross country,” he says. “He felt like he hadn’t been cross country at all you know. If I had amnesia and didn’t know what he’d done the day before, I wouldn’t have thought he’d been cross country — he was great.”

That feeling gave him the confidence to ride to plan A, which involved plenty of inside lines to try to catch the elusive time.

“That was the main target — to turn inside a couple of places, as the time was tight in there. I was delighted he finished with a nice clear round; you sort of expect when you have a tough showjumping track like that, that it alters the placings, but obviously, the top five didn’t change order — but I’m delighted with him.”

Tom Jackson and Farndon. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom Jackson was one of four competitors to finish on his dressage score, and that allowed him to complete his climb from first-phase 22nd place to eventual sixth with the thirteen-year-old debutant Farndon, who he pilots for Anne and Iain Slater.

“He was awesome, and he jumped really well,” says Tom of the Dutch Warmblood gelding (Hemmingway x Silvanda, by Marlon). “I mean, he’s always wanted to be a careful horse. But a little bit like the cross country, it’s just the that rideability sometimes gets in the way — but I think we’re getting there.”

‘Getting there’, he explains, has taken “just time, and training — it’s been a sort of progressive path to get to here, and I’m over the moon that he’s delivered for us and his owners as you saying come in here.We always knew he had the potential to be very good; he’s always super brave, he moves well, he wants to be careful. But to actually go and do it is always a different thing, so I’m super happy.”

Oliver Townend and Swallow Springs. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Oliver Townend has had a week of ups and downs, with dressage scores that weren’t quite what he’d have hoped for, a green blip for the inexperienced Cooley Rosalent across the country yesterday, and rails for each of his horses today — but his two more experienced mounts were still able to secure spots in the top ten thanks to their speedy rounds yesterday across the country. 15-year-old former Andrew Nicholson ride Swallow Springs (Chillout x Kilila, by Cult Hero), who was rerouted here from Badminton, took seventh place with just one rail down to climb from initial 14th place for owner Paul Ridgeon, while third-time five-star horse Tregilder (Royal Concorde x Trewins, by Hand In Glove) tipped two to move from seventh to ninth place in the final standings.

Jérôme Robiné and Black Ice. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

German five-star debutant Jérôme Robiné, too, tipped two rails and picked up two time penalties with Dorothea Von Zedtwitz’s Black Ice (Vechta x Brookhall Lady, by Touchdown), but such was the pair’s effort across the week that they were still able to step up one place to finish in tenth.

“In the end, for me it’s a top result, being placed in my first five-star in front of a home crowd. It was really good fun,” says 25-year-old Jérôme. “It was a big course, with two doubles close to the other, and the time was tough, which is always hard for me because he has a big canter but is not that fast in his canter. He was great in the warm up, and he jumped pretty good, but then I felt he was a bit tired from yesterday. I came out of the double and held my rhythm and he got tired a bit, and so for me, next time, I have to push him again a bit. I had two down in the end, which was a bit disappointing for me. But in the end, he jumped the last two pretty good again and so I’m happy with the result — but in the first moment I was a bit disappointed.”

Jérôme’s theme of the week, though, has been development: he had originally thought of returning for the German National Championship CCI4*-S, in which he finished fifth last year with the gelding, but was encouraged by his coaches to push himself beyond his comfort zone and take the next step. Along the way, he’s proved a force to be reckoned with — and has itemised plenty of areas he wants to gain experience in and develop over his career at the top level.

“You have to grow into this level, as you did in every other level,” he says sagely. “And of course you can’t [run five-star] that often but for our first time, we are pretty happy. I think the whole German team is happy with the young riders.”

They have plenty to be happy about, certainly: we don’t often see a large German front in this class, as most focus their attentions on the CCI4*-S and championship pathways — but this week, three excellent debutantes stepped up to the plate and showed the strength in depth that the German system is creating. All three completed the competition, and two of those — Jérôme and 24-year-old Emma Brüssau, who finished 21st, are part of the robust Bundeswehr rider training programme at Wahrendorf, under the auspices of coach and Olympic individual gold medalist Julia Krajewski.

“First of all, it’s a super good event to perform at top level,” says Julia, who spent her week helping her students, as well as winning the German National Championship herself (more on this coming soon!). “It’s fair, it’s nice, but you’ve got so much atmosphere and you’ve really got to test your nerves. I’m very proud of all of them; I think all of them had a generally good weekend. You can feel here and there that maybe they made some old mistakes, like some habits came back, but that’s part of the development and it happens. Yesterday, Calvin Böckmann was up there in the four-star and had a nice press conference, and today was a bit unlucky, and then Anna Lena came up the ranks today. So that’s also a big part of the game: sometimes, you’re at the top and then it goes a bit up and down.”

“The ones like Jerome, he’s just really moving his way up,” she continues. “He’s such a precise, dedicated rider, and he really always wants to do the absolute best for his horse and for the performance. This was a top-10 five-star result, and it was about time for him. I think there’s way more to come because what he does, he does with 110%, which is really cool.”

Emma Brüssau and Dark Desire GS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“And then, I was personally very emotional for Emma [Brüssau]. It’s a horse she’s had since she did Juniors and it was bought to do Juniors, maybe Young Riders, and now it’s a five-star horse,” she explains. “She’s an amateur — she’s studying psychology, but she’s really dedicated, and has such a good head and really wants to work her way up despite not having so many horses. It’s such a big family thing for these riders, and if you go and look how everyone reacted after their cross country rounds yesterday, you can feel that there’s a really good connection between the under-twenty-fives and they really cheer each other on. It’s a really nice atmosphere — they lift each other up and there’s no bad blood, and that’s really nice to see and it makes you feel that they will make their way.”

The robust support system that Wahrendorf creates is essential, Julia explains, for keeping talented young riders in the sport after they age out — and at just 34 herself and at the top of her game, she’s able to lead by example and by proximity to their own experiences.

“I think maybe that makes it quite relatable for me, and also them to me, so they they know I’ve just been there — I’ve done Ponies, Juniors, Young Riders, I’ve had difficult first years in Seniors,” she says. “I know how it is to be at the top and at the bottom. I’m very straightforward with them. I tell them what I think — sometimes they like it, sometimes not. But I think they know they can trust me and they know it’s got some sort of substance.”

“I think the system in Germany had to grow like that, because we just don’t have as many riders,” she continues. “If you look at how many really have the chance to make their way into Seniors and how many come out in the end, I think we have a really good percentage — because we try to really find the ones that have a chance and have the motivation and possibility, and we help them along. In the end, it’s up to the individual person, but most riders will drop out of riding after young riders because you feel quite lost. We try to really pick them up and say, ‘Okay, here’s an idea, here’s a way’. You want to join, you have to work hard, you have to put your work [in] but you have to have some guidance, and that’s really helpful. That’s the nice thing about eventing. I think it is still possible even without massive finances, backing or super expensive horses early on, and we have so many examples who showed it. It’s hard work; it’s a lot.  All of them work many hours per day, per week, per year, but if you want to achieve your dreams and go for it, then you know it’s possible.”

We can think of no better way to summarise the extraordinary efforts that earned placings this week at Luhmühlen — a week of competition that’s been about dedication, partnership, and the cobbled-together family units that this travelling circus of a sport creates. Go eventing, indeed.

The final top ten in Luhmühlen’s CCI5*.

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Sunday Videos: Luhmühlen XC Highlights + Two Winning Jump Rounds

It’s the Sunday of a big three-day, which means the only activity I want to be doing is reliving all the highlights from the weekend. If you share this enthusiasm (depraved obsession?), I’ve got just the ticket for you: Luhmühlen highlights!

Let’s dive in, starting with cross country day.

Cross country day highlights:

Watch Laura Collett win the CCI5* division — her third 5* title with London 52:

Watch reigning Olympic individual gold medalist Julia Krajewski win the 4*-S division and German National Championship with Ero de Cantraie:

Miss any of our coverage of Luhmühlen this week? You can click here to catch up.

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Sabrina Glaser Takes the Overnight Lead in the CCI3*-S at Aspen Farms

Sabrina Glaser and Rather Be Cooley. Cortney Drake Photo.

A large crowd of spectators and show sponsors gathered to watch the FEI divisions show jump at Aspen Farms Horse Trials Saturday evening.

Sabrina Glaser shined over the CC3*-S show jumping track designed by Chris Barnard. She jumped double clear on both her horses in the division, and Rather Be Cooley, owned by Hildegard Johnson, (pictured above) claimed the overnight lead.

“I’m sitting on two completely different horses” Glaser said after her show jump rounds. “They couldn’t be more different if they tried; it’s interesting having the same course and having to have two very different plans.”

Rather be Cooley, a 9-year-old Belgian Warmblood gelding, has been partnered with Glaser for three years and is leading the division on his dressage score of 31.9.

“He is a brilliant jumper,” Glaser said. “We did some 1.25m Jumpers running up to this show, and he was good. That gives you a good feeling going in knowing that he likes to jump clean, and he’s still brave enough and bold enough to do the job. He’s very sensitive mentally, but he’s also one of the laziest horses I’ve ridden. I have to be careful to keep him mentally settled so he stays rideable.”

Glaser speculated on the forthcoming cross-country test: “I knew Tremaine Cooper’s courses really well. It’s taken me some time to get a feel for Morgan Rowsell’s courses. I think we’ve got work to do out there tomorrow! Rather be Cooley is quite green at this level. I’ll be trying to keep him soft while still keeping him brave. I’m going to have to trust him, believe in the schooling we’ve done at home, and hope that it will be there when we need it.”

Stephanie Goodman and Elwenda DP continue to lead the CCI2*-S. Cortney Drake Photo.

Sophie Click is second in the CCI3*-S with her 10-year-old Oldenburg gelding, Tarantino 54.

“He was good; he was adjustable,” Click said after their ride. “We were on the same page. I’m really proud of him.”

Stephanie Goodman and Elwenda DP continue to lead the CCI2*-S.

In the CCI2*-S, Stephanie Goodman and Elwenda DP, a 13-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare owned by Deanna Briggs, delivered a convincing clear round to retain their lead on 25.7.

Goodman is followed closely by Tommy Greengard, who is tied for second with two of his horses, Joshuay MB and Kremer VD Falieber, owned by Morgan Wenell. Greengard is also in tenth in the division with his Thoroughbred mare, Count Me In.

“It was so fun,” Greengard said after show jumping. “I thought all three horses jumped phenomenally well. It was especially fun to have Josh back. He jumped a very good round. I can’t complain.”

When asked which horse might break the tie tomorrow, Greengard hinted he might give the advantage to Kremer since: “Josh is coming back. So I think he’ll be a little more conservative than Kremer. I think Kremer is ready to put in a very competitive run tomorrow.”

Greengard also moved up to the lead in the Open Training division with the young horse That’s Me Z who he owns with Andrea Pfeiffer.

“He was amazing,” Greengard said. “I was proud of him. He can be a little nervous with a lot of atmosphere. But that’s one of the reasons we love coming to Aspen. He jumped so well, and he was so focused. He just completed his first Preliminary, but this is his first time competing on the grass, so that’s why we dropped him down to Training level this weekend. We’re excited to see how he does on the grass tomorrow.”

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola, leaders in Open Intermediate. Cortney Drake Photo.

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola, owned by Lovas Partners LLC, retained the lead in the Open Intermediate on their dressage score of 29, more than six points ahead of the other competitors in the division.

“She’s pretty incredible and jumped so well,” said Linstedt. “I thought she was more relaxed in the ring than she has been. I felt like I was working really hard because she was jumping so high; just staying with her was a workout. But it’s getting smoother with her. She’s still green; the over-jumping is because she tries too hard. She’ll level that out in time. She felt confident today.”

“I think the cross-country course looks fair,” said Linstedt, looking ahead to Sunday. “For her, running Intermediate she just has to get educated and understand what is being asked of her and be brave out there because she is so careful it makes her a little hard on cross-country. She is unsure sometimes but really tries hard for me. She wants to jump all the fences.”

Alyssa Schaefer and Fuego moved up from third to second in Open Intermediate after adding just one rail to their dressage score. Stephanie Goodman and Carolina Morning jumped from eighth to third in the standings, thanks to a double clear round.

Harper Padgett and Cooley Starship, the overnight leaders in Prelim Rider. Cortney Drake Photo.

Harper Padgett and Cooley Starship held tightly to their lead in Preliminary Rider, adding just .4 time faults to their dressage score.

“There’s a few things we need to work on like having a little more step and flow,” said Padgett after her show jumping round. “But I think he was really good today. He’s kind of a spooky horse. He did a good job holding it together and not letting his nerves take over.”

The Open Preliminary division saw many changes to the scoreboard after show jumping. Most notably, Amy Silvera Olsen of Silvera Sporthorses and her 14-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding, Metropolitan, jumped clear to move up from fourth to first.

Todd Trewin was the only rider not to change positions in the division. He added just one rail to his dressage score to retain the second place spot with his wife Tracey Trewin’s horse, Cooley High Society, an imported Irish horse they purchased in Florida.

“He was a little cocky today, which is good because he’s quite a good jumper,” said Trewin. “I had a little more horse than I thought I was going to have–which I like.”

Trewin has walked the cross-country course designed by Morgan Rowsell and feels optimistic for tomorrow.

Amy Silvera Olsen and Metropolitan are the new overnight leaders in Open Preliminary. Cortney Drake Photo.

“I think it’s a great course,” he said. “I’m still figuring out where I can allow him to gallop more. Being Irish and a little bit more of a Warmblood type, he doesn’t gallop like the Thoroughbreds I’m used to riding. I’m still trying to sort that out for time’s sake. I know he’ll be fine with the jumps.”

While the other divisions were show jumping in the sand ring, eight Novice and Beginner Novice divisions contested cross-country over courses designed by Morgan Rowsell.

In a large Open Novice division, Patience O’Neal and Limitless P, a 7-year-old Dutch Warmblood owned by Lauren Collins, jumped clean and inside the time over the undulating cross-country terrain to hold their lead.

“It was great!” O’Neal said of their cross-country run. “He was super. He hasn’t been out since Twin Rivers, so this was our first show back. We’re getting ready to move him up to Training level. This was going to be a tell-all if he was ready to move up or not; he showed today that he totally is! He bombed around the course like it was nothing.”

Training level cross-country will being at 8:30 a.m. on Sunday and Novice show jumping will begin at 8 a.m. Over $30,000 worth of prizes will be awarded to the top finishers at Aspen Farms Horse Trials, thanks to the show’s generous sponsors.

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The Grand Finale: Live Updates from Luhmühlen CCI5* Show Jumping

Photo by Leslie Wylie.

It’s time to find out who’s going to take the spoils at this year’s Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials! Show jumping will kick off at 4:30 a.m. EST (that’s 10:30 a.m. in Germany), and I’ll be bringing you updates here in this thread if you keep it refreshed periodically.

You can also tune in to the Horse & Country live stream here (where all the dressage and cross country is available on demand as well!).

The order of go can be found here, and scoring will be updated here for the 5*.

Longines Luhmühlen: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [How to Watch] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Form Guide]

EN’s coverage of Longines Luhmühlen is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

5:39 a.m. ET: Well that wraps up the action from the 5* at Luhmühlen, and what a weekend it was! Tilly will be along later today with the final report, and we still have the 4* to finish up in the show jumping. That division will jump after this prize giving — you can still tune in live on H&C+ here. Let’s do a bit of analysis on Marco Behrens’ track today:

Fence 3 – an airy liverpool – came down the most (8)
Fence 4 came down 7 times
Fence 5A came down 5 times

Otherwise, the rails were pretty scattered, with very nearly each fence coming down at least once.

A couple of fun facts about Laura’s score — this score of 20.3 is just barely behind the new record for 5* finishing score set by Michael Jung at Kentucky in 2022. Before that, Laura had actually held the record herself for a 21.3 finishing score at Pau in 2020 — her first 5* win.

5:37 a.m. ET: HERE WE GOOOOOOO – Laura Collett wins her third 5* aboard the INCREDIBLE London 52 and finishes on her dressage mark of 20.3. What. A. FREAKING. LEGEND.

So your final top three is ALL British — way to go ladies! — and Boyd Martin will be the best of the rest in 4th place with Luke 140, super impressive for this pair.

5:36 a.m. ET: London 52 has rubbed a couple but so far so clear…

5:34 a.m. ET: Kitty nearly has the last of the triple down and just goes barely into time — she will retain her position despite that and finishes on a 27.2 Now Laura Collett – she DOES have a rail and time in hand to keep the win in her clutches.

5:33 a.m. ET: Kitty does not have a rail in hand to stay ahead of Yas, but she will have one to stay ahead of Boyd.

5:31 a.m. ET: Yasmin goes over the time but had that .4 in hand, but she does leave the poles up despite a pretty strong right drift at the out of the triple. Yasmin will finish no worse than third on the podium. Just two more now, and we’ll start with Kitty King and Vendredi Biats. The UK will win this weekend, it’s just a matter of which leading lady will nab it!

5:30 a.m. ET: Next in, into the top 3 here, are reigning World Champion rider Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ. She does not have a rail in hand to stay ahead of Boyd.

5:30 a.m. ET: WOW! Boyd finishes JUST inside the time and collects the 4th double clear. I wager that will move up too — let’s goooooo Boydo!

5:28 a.m. ET: Luke 140 wasn’t going ANYWHERE near those liverpool rails and gives them plenty of room.

5:26 a.m. ET: Oliver is the latest to have the oxer at 6A down after just getting there a bit lacking in energy and long. He’s also had the rail at 7 down and will finish on a score of 39.1. This will make Swallow Springs the highest placed Townend horse this weekend as Tregilder drops down a few. Now we’ll see Boyd with his final horse, Luke 140, who was placed 4th ahead of show jumping.

5:26 a.m. ET: Lovely! We have our third clear round of the day with Harry and Teneraze, who finish their weekend on a score of 30.7 (their dressage score). We’ve just got five more to see, and I would wager Harry has a couple spots left to climb yet! next will be Oliver with his third and final ride, Tregilder.

5:23 a.m. ET: Well that’s another disappointing one and Muzi won’t be thrilled about that finish with 4 down and 4 seconds’ worth of time. Just Kidding just looked a little lacking in upward momentum today. Next in are British rider Harry Meade and the very impressive Tenareze, coming forward on a score of 30.7.

5:21 a.m. ET: Muzi gets off to a rough start with three rails down, including the liverpool at 3 and the oxer at 4 that seem to be bogey fences (but really, what isn’t on this course??).

5:20 a.m. ET: Highs and lows, eh? Felix will be sorely disappointed with that finish, as he and Colero add 5 rails to drop out of the top 10 and finish on a 53.3. New Zealand’s Muzi Pottinger with her superstar OTTB Just Kidding are the next to jump. Just the two clear rounds so far!

5:19 a.m. ET: Well, I spoke too soon as Colero has three down so far. He does seem to have a pretty strong distaste for this arena, after a less than pleasant experience during the prize giving last year and a mild meltdown on dressage day this year.

5:18 a.m. ET: Our 2022 winners, Swiss pair Felix Vogg and Colero, will be the next to see. This pair will need a clear round and a lot of rails from the pairs placed ahead of them to defend their win this weekend, but Felix will be doing what he can to finish on what he can control.

5:17 a.m. ET: Jerome and Black Ice get a little too far away from the oxer at 7 and have that down, as well as the final of the triple. They add a few time faults too and will finish on a 44.1. That’s another spot claimed by Tom and Farndon then.

5:15 a.m. ET: Well that was just a lovely round for Tom Jackson and Farndon, who finish on their dressage score and are the first pair this weekend to do so! Giving major vibes from Tom’s epic Badminton finish with Capel’s Hollow Drift. This pair should probably finish inside the top 10, at least, with the way this course is riding. Germany’s Jerome Robine is next in with Black Ice — another pair that really impressed on cross country yesterday.

5:14 a.m. ET: Well that won’t be the round Seppe wanted with 3 rails added, mostly with the hind end, as well as a shade of time for a final score of 50.5. British rider Tom Jackson and Farndon will be the next to see.

5:11 a.m. ET: We’ve still just seen the one clear round from Emily King and Valmy Biats, as Seppe and Kawa de la Cour Z go ahead and join the liverpool club and have it down.

5:10 a.m. ET: Sydney goes into time faults too, and adds two total rails for a finishing score of 47.4. Seppe Vilain and Kawa de la Cour Z are the next in the ring for Belgium.

5:10 a.m. ET: Sydney has that pesky plank down at 4 and will need to kick on a bit if she wants to get inside the time here.

5:09 a.m. ET: Felicity finishes her weekend on a score of 46.5 with those two disappointing rails down. Everyone moves up a spot or two as a result, and we’ll now see the U.S.’ Sydney Elliott and QC Diamantaire. Another pair who made the time yesterday!

5:07 a.m. ET: Rats, Felicity have the liverpool at 3 down — that one’s come down quite a bit already today. They add another at 5A.

5:07 a.m. ET “Squirrel” looks to be a little strong again today and adds two rails to finish on a score of 46.7, dropping her a couple of places. Our next Irish pair, Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty, will be in the ring next, who did make the time on cross country yesterday and will look to finish on their starting mark today.

5:05 a.m. ET: Susie takes a bold inside turn to 6 that closes up the gap to the in and out line. She does lower 10A, the first of the triple, and finishes on a score of 44.5. Our resident Burghley winners, Pippa Funnell and MGH Grafton Street, will be the next to see. This pair added 15.6 time penalties on cross country yesterday (Pippa said he was quite strong out there, which always eats into the clock).

5:01 a.m. ET: Blast, the plank strikes again for Boyd, who had the same fence down with Tsetserleg. That’s their only fault, and they’ll finish Bruno’s 5* debut on a score of 36.4, which will drop him below Oliver and Swallow Springs. Ireland’s Susie Berry and Monbeg by Design, a 5* debutant and also Susie’s World Championships partner last year, are next in the ring.

4:58 a.m. ET: The first of the double at 6 comes down for Oliver. That line seems to be riding just a little long and gappy; it comes out of a turn away from the in-gate, which creates some distraction for some horses, and has ridden a little long on both the A and B for a few pairs, including Oliver and Swallow Springs. The one down puts him on a score of 35.7. We now have Boyd with Fedarman B, also riding out of order as Fedarman B is currently placed 9th and has a chance to move up later if he can manage a clear. “Bruno” is historically a pretty good show jumper.

4:56 a.m. ET: The penultimate fence falls for Fiona, to put her on a score of 44.7. Creevagh Silver de Haar has quite a unique style over the fences, but he’s very tidy and quick on this last day of competition. Now we’ll have Oliver riding out of order (he’s currently placed 8th) with Swallow Springs.

4:54 a.m. ET: One down at fence 3 down for David and Ferro Point to finish on a score of 44.8. We’ll next see Fiona Kashel and Creevagh Silver de Haar. This course is really rewarding a strong forward ride, though you also can’t be too keen at some of these fences coming out of turns!

4:53 a.m. ET: Next to see are British rider David Doel and Ferro Point.

4:53 a.m. ET: Gosh, this mare jumps show jumps like she does cross country: feisty and bold! A bummer of a rail at the triple, but she enthusiastically finishes the job inside the time to finish on a 45.1. Consider me obsessed, y’all.

4:49 a.m. ET: Unum de’Or has a big nap at the in gate while turning to 6A and is assessed a refusal. He’s also had the red plank down at 4. Unum de’Or is a big boy who requires a lot of putting together, and he looks to be ready to finish this phase and get on with his vacation! They finish with a good bit of time and finishes on a score of 56.2. Next to see will be Germany’s Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3, who really impressed yesterday on cross country and who you can learn a bit more about here!

4:47 a.m. ET: Two rails down for Emma and more than one rubbed but left up for a final score of 54.1 — four seconds of time additionally. France is back in the ring next with Cedric Lyard and Unum de’Or.

4:46 a.m. ET: A really nice round with 4 jump penalties and one infuriating second of time for Will and The Partner. A nice completion for this pair that they’ll be keen to build on from here. Next up are exciting young German rider Emma Brüssau and Dark Desire GS. She’s had two rails down so far, at fence 3 and 8.

4:43 a.m. ET: Florian finishes on a score of 71.5 with just those two early rails down — they settled into a much better rhythm after that. Will Rawlin and The Partner are next in, having brushed off a tense horse inspection this morning where they were temporarily held by the Ground Jury but ultimately passed.

4:41 a.m. ET: Emily turns in the first clear round of the day! Valmy Biats’ sire, Orlando, was a show jumper himself who has produced a fair amount of both eventers and pure show jumpers. A very, very nice jumper is rewarded with no faults and a finishing score of 67.6. We’ll next have France’s Florian Ganneval and Blue Bird de Beufour. They’ve had fences 1 and 4 down so far.

4:40 a.m. ET: Gireg comes in three seconds over the time allowed and lower one fence — #3 — en route to a final score of 81.3. We’ll now move to Great Britain’s Emily King and Valmy Biats. Will they be our first clear of the day?

4:38 a.m. ET: RLE Limbo Kaiser just didn’t seem to quite settle into a rhythm in there today, but this is a 5* debut for this horse, who will have gained a lot of experience this weekend. Katherine and RLE Limbo Kaiser lower fence 5B and 10B and added 4 seconds of time for a finishing score of 111.6. Next in are French pair Gireg le Coz and Caramel d’Orchis.

4:34 a.m. ET: Well that was a really nice round from Boyd and Thomas, who also have show jumping icon Peter Wylde in their corner this weekend. One down — the red plank atop fence 4, comes down to add 4 to their mark, but a solid effort nonetheless. A final score of 68.3 for them. Next in will be our next U.S. rider, Katherine Coleman and RLE Limbo Kaiser.

4:33 a.m. ET: German designer Marco Behrens, who’s designed at this venue for many years, is the designer for today’s show jumping. Oliver and Cooley Rosalent lower one rail at 6A and finish within the time allowed for a final score of 74.2. Next to see will be Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF. “Thomas” has historically struggled a bit in the show jumping, and a clear round here would help make up for the sting of an early mistake on cross country yesterday.

4:30 a.m. ET: And we are underway with our first of the day, and it’s Oliver Townend with Cooley Rosalent. This 9-year-old is our youngest horse this weekend, and she made a really nice debut at the level yesterday with one green blip that will surely get sorted with more experience.

Two Horses Held in Luhmühlen’s Final Horse Inspections

Will Rawlin and The Partner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

All 29 horses that completed yesterday’s cross-country were presented to the ground jury, comprised of president Nick BurtonDr Joachim Dimmek, and Katrin Eichinger-Kniely, and all were accepted into the final phase of the competition — eventually.

Two of those presented were asked to trot a second time: the first of those, New Zealand’s Muzi Pottinger and her seventeen-year-old Thoroughbred Just Kidding, who sit sixth overnight after coming home just one second over the optimum time, were then accepted; the second, Great Britain’s Will Rawlin and his five-star debutant The Partner, 23rd overnight after a late 20 on course, were subsequently sent to the holding box for further inspection. Upon re-presentation, and some further deliberation, they were accepted into the competition.

Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Similarly, the CCI4*-S — which only has a final horse inspection — saw one horse sent to the holding box by the ground jury of Seppo Laine and Dr Ernst Topp and the inspecting vet. That was Evelina Bertoli‘s Fidjy des Melezes, competing for Italy and sitting seventh overnight; upon reinspection, the pair were accepted to continue with their bold bid for a top placing. We’re down by one in this class, though, from yesterday’s 32 completing competitors: Ireland’s Cathal Daniels didn’t present CDS Cairnview Romulu at the inspection.

Now it’s go time for the showjumping: first up to bat is the five-star, which begins at 10.30 a.m. (9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST), followed by the prizegiving, before all attention turns to the finale of the CCI4*-S, beginning at 13.50 (12.50 p.m. BST/7.50 a.m. EST). As always, you can follow all the action via Horse & Country TV, which also has on-demand viewing available for all the completed phases thus far — and keep it locked on to EN for full reports and galleries from each class. Go Eventing!

Longines Luhmühlen: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [How to Watch] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Form Guide]

EN’s coverage of Longines Luhmühlen is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

Sunday Links from SmartPak

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt. Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Welcome to the final day of Luhmühlen! After a lovely jaunt around Mike Etherington-Smith’s technical course yesterday, it’s time for our riders to bring it all to a close. Laura Collett and London 52 lead our fleet of top 3 British riders going into show jumping, also comprised of Kitty King and Yasmin Ingham, followed by Boyd Martin and Luke 140 (our top-placed US rider) and Harry Meade and Tenareze. Make sure you keep up with all the five-star action right here on Eventing Nation!

You can follow along with the live stream on H&C+ with a subscription or a one-time viewing pass. If you choose to purchase an annual H&C+ subscription, you can save 15% if you use the code EVENTINGNATION15. Can’t watch the live stream? Fear not! We’re brining you live updates right here on the site.

EN has boots on the Luhmühlen ground, where Tilly will be bringing us ALL the news from the event. Keep up with the EN coverage and follow @goeventing for all the 5* – and 4* – content you can handle.

Longines Luhmühlen CCI5*: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [How to Watch] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Form Guide]

U.S. Weekend Preview

Aspen Farm H.T (Yelm, WA) [Website] [Volunteer] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring]

Full Gallop Farm June H.T (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Volunteer]

Honey Run H.T. (Ann Arbor, MI) [Website] [Volunteer]

Horse Park of New Jersey H.T. I (Allentown, NJ) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer]

Seneca Valley Pony Club H.T. (Poolesville, MD) [Website] [Entries] [Scoring]

Shepherd Ranch Pony Club H.T. I (Santa Ynez, CA) [Website] [Entries / Ride Times / Scoring]

Silverwood Farm Spring H.T. (Trevor, WI) [Website] [Ride Times] [Scoring]

Links to Start Your Sunday:

Experiencing the German Show System

Bruno and Boyd Ride for Annie at Luhmühlen this weekend

Lauren Billys is headed to the Central American games

The Public’s Perception of Horses in Sport

Richard Davison: ‘Why don’t we reward riders and grooms for good welfare?’

Weekly Pick from SmartPak: It’s the last day to save 30% on SmartPak apparel and footwear! The Piper, Ada, and Eliza collections are on sale with code PIPER2023. Offer expires tonight at midnight. My pick has got to be the gorgeous Eliza Lace Up Tall Boot.

Morning Viewing: Julia Krajewski currently leads the CCI4*-s in both first and second place. Watch some highlights of her round on Nickel 21!

The Luhmühlen Cross-Country Report: Laura Collett Goes for the Treble

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

And so we come to the end of cross-country day at the Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials, the world’s ‘soft-option’ five-star; one that’s just really easy and like, doesn’t even count as a five-star. (Seriously, though, where’s the sarcasm font when you need it?) Though the course here is often misjudged for not being a ‘classic’ bold galloping track like Badminton or Burghley, it’s never an easy outing — instead, it’s a very continental one, and one which values keeping horses on their feet above all else. That’s something that course designer Mike Etherington-Smith very nearly managed perfectly today: not a single horse fell in the feature CCI5* class this morning, and just one fell in this afternoon’s CCI4*-S, and that’s because this clever, technical track was designed to exert influence through run-outs and drive-bys, rather than through out-and-out, thrills and spills carnage.

Influence is certainly something it exerted in spades: of the 38 starters, 29 would go on to complete, but just 22 did so sans jumping penalties. Mike had predicted that ten to twelve horses would make the time, helped by the venue’s flat, sandy, horse-friendly going, and he was right on the money: twelve combinations did just that.

The problems were scattered evenly around the course’s major questions — and some of the less major ones, too — but it was at the very start of the day that its intensity was felt most keenly. Pathfinder Oliver Townend and the nine-year-old Cooley Rosalent suffered a run-out at the skinny first element of the Meßmer Water at 17A; second out, seasoned Olympians Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg, picked up a 20 in the fiendishly tough first water; Laura Collett and Dacapo nabbed 20 penalties at 20B, the first of two angled brushes in the main arena; France’s Gireg le Coz and his debutant Caramel d’Orchis did the same at 20C, the second of the brushes — and then, full-time accountant, part-time rider, and five-star debutant Arne Bergendahl left the startbox on his homebred Luthien 3 and delivered what we’d all waited for: a clear round, and one that was inside the time, no less. But even once the great rounds started to trickle in, the problems kept cropping up all through the morning’s cross-country.

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

With two wins out of two five-star starts behind them already, earned at Pau in 2020 and Badminton in 2022, Laura Collett and London 52 have come into this year’s Luhmühlen as the firm favourites — but after running into trouble at the double of brushes in the main arena with her first ride, Dacapo, Laura knew that she’d have to ride every stride of today’s tough course to get the job done.

“It was tough out there,” she says. “I had problems with my first horse and that made me realise just how tough every fence rode. I think we slightly underestimated some of the fences — there were obviously the ones that we were focused on, but it honestly felt like at every single fence around there you had to be on your A game, knowing when the fences were coming up so they didn’t surprise the horses who obviously haven’t walked the course. But yeah, it was a tough test and it rode tough from start to finish.”

But the ultra-consistent gelding took to the track as though he had, in fact, walked the course, adding another tick in another box after his stellar dressage score of 20.3 yesterday, which they added nothing to.

“That horse is sensational — I’m so lucky to ride him,” she says. “He’s a dream to ride in the dressage arena and he comes out and goes around there like a demon.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Although he’s a big, rangy German-bred horse, Laura says that ‘Dan’ “kind of rides like a pony. He’s really tall and he’s got a massive stride but he’s so adjustable.”

That adjustability wasn’t always totally secure: in his earlier four-star seasons, he had a few high-profile blips as he learned his job — and one of those came on his last trip here, when he went onto cross-country in a competitive position at the 2019 European Championships but ran into a spot of bother at what was then the final water, resulting in a rider fall. Since then, though, the two-time five-star champions and Olympic team gold medallists have gone from strength to strength — and Laura, despite her superstar status and the pressure of the spotlight, has finely honed her sense of pragmatism.

“Just learning to trust him I think is the biggest thing — a few years back, I overcomplicated things and I should just let him get on and do his job because he knows what he’s doing,” she says. “At the end of the day, I’m so happy with how he’s gone today. Tomorrow’s another day and Kitty’s horse is an amazing jumper, so the main thing is that we get him happy and rested, and hopefully he comes out and jumps like I know he can — but that horse owes me absolutely nothing. He’s done so much for my career, and hopefully he can add another five-star title to his resume, but if he doesn’t, then I’m just super proud of how he’s gone ’round today.”

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

She’s had a rubbish run of luck at her last couple of five-stars, but Kitty King and Vendredi Biats were pure class around Mike Etherington-Smith’s course today, adding nothing to their first-phase score of 26.8 to move up from third to second place, capitalising on a space made available by overnight runner-up Pippa Funnell, who went clear with her Burghley champion MGH Grafton Street, but added a steady 15.6 time penalties to drop to 16th.

“He was absolutely fantastic, and to be honest, it was a big relief to finish because we’ve had a few mishaps in our last couple of five-stars,” says Kitty, who rerouted from Badminton after an unlucky peck on landing early in the course. “He was very well-placed at Burghley after dressage and then we broke a pin, so that was very disappointing, and then he was just a bit too fresh at Badminton and jumped a log pile early on very big and stumbled on landing and we had a very frustrating fall. So to put those to bed and come around to Luhmuhlen and have such a fantastic ride was absolutely brilliant. He just felt back to his best; he was really looking for all the flags, and I couldn’t fault him at all.”

Although Kitty had the chance to learn from some of the early issues on the course, she still came out fairly early on — and she was determined to stick resolutely to the plan she’d created for ‘Froggy’. But one bit of key intel came as a great relief just before she left the start box.

“I had heard that people had been putting four strides in the first water before I went, but that was about the only feedback I had since I was so early,” she says. “But to be honest, I was glad that people were finding it long because he always jumps into water so big, so I was a bit worried he’d find it short on the three. So when I heard people going on four, once we’d done that fence I was like ‘yeah, he’s on it; he knows what he’s doing’.”

Now, she goes into tomorrow’s showjumping 6.5 penalties behind the overnight leader, giving Laura a rail and six time penalties in hand — but handily mounted on one of the best show jumpers in the field, she’s looking forward to putting the pressure on her friend. Even so, she’s not planning to get complacent about the task at hand.

“He’s an amazing jumper, but we as jockeys have to do our job as well,” she says. “So it’s easy to make a mistake and have a pole, but he’s great and I wouldn’t want to swap him for the world.”

Yasmin Ingham and Rehy DJ. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yasmin Ingham was able to step up one place to overnight with the ever-reliable Rehy DJ, who romped home clear and inside the time in his first five-star since his educational debut at Pau in 2020.

“He was amazing today,” says the reigning World Champion. “I couldn’t be happier with ‘Piglet.’ He was incredible. He helped me out a few times and he really dug deep. He moved upon all his minutes and could not be happier with him. The first water I knew was going to be a bit long because he tends to just pop in, so I kind of kicked and chucked the rein at him and he understood and he just took off and was a total pro. I’m very proud of him.”

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd Martin came to Luhmühlen well-stocked with three horses in this class, and although his day started out frustratingly, with an early 20 for the experienced Tsetserleg at the first water, it swiftly redeemed itself: his second ride, Fedarman B, did him and the Annie Goodwin Syndicate proud, jumping clear inside the time for overnight ninth place, and his final ride Luke 140 — perhaps rather the wild card of the three entries — showed exactly what he was made of as the last horse out on course today. He, too, added nothing to his first-phase score, and climbed up from ninth to fourth place going into the final day.

“I’m going to be kicking myself forever,” says Boyd ruefully, recalling his first ride of the day with Tokyo mount Tsetserleg, who ran out at the B element of the first water. “I made a horrible decision turning up tight to the first water jump, and I got a horrible distance in. He sort of clambered over it; I should’ve just kicked forward and got three strides, but I tried to hold him for four strides. We were between a rock and a hard place and ended up on a perfect three-and-a-half. I whipped around and did the option and he just coasted around the rest of the course. He’s still a champion horse, but that was definitely my mistake and I’ll be remembering that for a moment.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But with this other two rides, both aboard debutant horses, he couldn’t be more delighted.

“Bruno was an absolute star today,” he says of ninth-placed Fedarman B. “This was a huge step up for him at the five-star level. The course wasn’t riding that well by the time Bruno went ,and I was sort of half-considering an option here and there, but luckily [US chef d’equipe] Bobby Costello and Peter Wylde pulled me aside and told me to toughen up — and I’m glad they did because Bruno was a champion. He ripped around the track, all the direct lines and made the time.”

Boyd Martin and Luke 140. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And of tiny, occasionally feral, but seriously talented pony-on-steroids Luke 140, he grins, “Luke was an absolute wild man at the beginning of the course; I was half out of control at the first five or six fences, but luckily for me, Luke started to get tired and he became easier and easier to ride. He’s such a class horse; he just jumped everything beautifully and made the trip very, very well and had plenty left in the tank the end. And luckily we got the time as well, so we’re in the top group going into show jumping.”

For that, he’s got the help of a not-so-secret weapon.

“The show jumping is notoriously tough here at Luhmühlen, so I jetted over Peter Wylde, who’s been helping me earlier in the week,” he says. “I’m glad he’s here to help me warm-up and school the horses in the morning. I’m on good jumpers, but like we saw today, I’ve got to ride them well every step of the way.”

Harry Meade and Tenareze. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Meade‘s Tenareze delivered his most professional, polished top-level round yet, adding nothing to his first-phase score of 30.7, which moves them from eleventh to fifth overnight — a long-awaited result befitting the 16-year-old Anglo Arab’s not inconsiderable talent.

“I was thrilled with him; he gave me a lovely ride,” says Harry. “He gets a little bit strong, so my plan was just to start out a little bit gently and try not to touch him, and when I saw a distance from a long way, just to do nothing — otherwise he can get fighting me a little bit. But he was super. I was totally thrilled with him, I thought particularly through the first water — it was a really good strong question, and I made sure I came out wider than most so that I could then ride forward to it, a little bit like hunting, just come through over the first log in a nice positive way and then the corner’s straight in front.”

Though the gelding — who was cut late and can still be used for breeding through a supply of frozen straws — is perhaps more naturally suited to an open, galloping course, Harry worked hard to help him find his pace in his own way through Luhmühlen’s twisty track.

“He’s a good galloper, and a horse that’s suited to Luhmühlen doesn’t always have to be the biggest galloper,” he says. “They have to be adjustable. And perhaps that’s where I had to cover up a little bit for him, because he wouldn’t be the most adjustable — so it’s about just trying to get into a rhythm. I always think when you start out, once you get to the third minute, you’re on a pace and it’s very difficult to change that — so it’s all about trying to just start as you mean to go on, and then hopefully you can ignore the clock and and the rest looks after itself.”

Muzi Pottinger and Just Kidding. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Muzi Pottinger delivered a coup for Thoroughbred-lovers everywhere, piloting her Pratoni mount Just Kidding — both the smallest horse in the field at 15.2hh and the eldest at seventeen — to one of the most enjoyable rounds of the day. They came home clear and just one second over the 11:08 optimum time to move from twelfth after dressage to sixth overnight.

“He is just amazing — it makes me emotional,” says Muzi, whose mother, Tinks, was one of the great mainstays of the Kiwi team in her generation. “He’s just a phenomenal little horse. I’ve had him for 12 years now and he’s take me all around the world, and he just keeps trying. We had one early combination that was not perfect by any means; it wasn’t the plan and he just felt a little bit underprepared — but he was dead on, and then after that, he was just on it every step of the way.”

Muzi earned big cheers from the crowds at the tough first water when she and her tiny champion made a huge effort over the big drop in and tackled the corner in the water with serious gumption — which gave Muzi a chance to breathe and enjoy the rest of the course.

“He was bloody honest going into the water. That fence made me really nervous,” she says. “It was a massive jump, and I just didn’t really know how you were going to get a perfect distance — but he was just phenomenal then every step of the way. He just keeps going, and then he looks for the flags. I just could not have asked for a better partner —  he’s just so bloody honest. Like, he’s so genuine. He does not — and I mean this in the nicest way — he does not have the most talent in the world when it comes to jumping. He lands short; he’s got no stride. He’s completely at his maximum here. He’s not going to ever go and jump a 1.40 show jumping track — he doesn’t have the scope. But what he lacks in scope he has in heart. You just can’t buy that.”

Oliver Townend and Tregilder. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though Oliver Townend‘s pathfinding round with the inexperienced nine-year-old Cooley Rosalent didn’t go quite to plan, he rallied for his next two: riding midway through the line-up, he delivered a clear round with 1.2 time penalties aboard Tregilder in the gelding’s third five-star, which allowed them to retain their overnight seventh place, and as the penultimate rider out of the start box with Swallow Springs, he was clear inside the time to move up from 14th to eighth.

“It’s fantastic to be back in Luhmühlen,” he says. “It’s not a five-star like a Badminton or a Burghley, but it’s still definitely a five-star, and I think what’s so beautiful about our sport is that you can go horses for courses —  this one might suit this one, this one might suit that one.”

Of his top-placed horse, Tregilder, he says, “He’s a huge horse, a huge, tall horse, so I feel sometimes I have to balance him a little more than I’d ideally like to, but he’s honest as honest could be and he tried his heart out there. The three seconds are mine: I could have gone quicker, but I just wanted to save and save and save [his energy], and I possibly saved for two strides too many somewhere around there. But at the same time, he’s home and safe and we’re thrilled with him.”

Felix Vogg and Colero. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Reigning champions Felix Vogg and Colero round out the top ten after finishing well inside the optimum time to claw their way back up from a disappointing first-phase performance, which saw them post a 33.3 to sit 20th coming into this phase, while young German five-star debutant Jérôme Robiné delivered one of the most popular clears of the day — though with 4 time penalties, which dropped him three places — to take overnight eleventh.

“It felt amazing,” says Jérôme, who was one of three German riders in this class — all of whom were making their debut, and all of whom went clear.

It was the first of those, Arne Bergendahl, who Jérôme says set the tone for his own success later in the class.

“In the morning, I was pretty nervous — normally I’m not, but I saw the first three riders, all are world-class riders, and they all had little problems, so I was like, ‘how will it go?’ And then Arne came and he had a brilliant round, and I said, ‘okay, with that feeling, I’m getting out of the [rider’s viewing] tent, and I’m going to my lorry to try to calm down!'”

Jérôme Robiné and Black Ice. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Leaving the start box with a positive visual in his mind about how the course could be ridden was key — and soon, he found himself having great fun with his ebullient Black Ice as they were cheered around the course.

“I started not that fast — I think I was always a bit late behind my minute markers but I said, ‘okay, I’ll try to to hold that rhythm’,” he says. “All the coaches said to just get in a good rhythm. After the coffin and after the first water I thought, ‘now we are in it’ — and then the Meßmer Water was, again, amazing. And then I said ‘okay, now we can really go for it!’ It was just a great feeling.”

As part of the Warendorf training system for upcoming talent in Germany, Jérôme was well supported by friends, fellow competitors, and coaches — including German team trainer Peter Thomsen and Warendorf trainer Julia Krajewski.

“It’s brilliant to have a lot of people around you who have this five-star experience to give you the right advice,” he says. “They all said, ‘just ride it as a normal four-star. You can do it.’ I think that, for me, was absolutely important from the coaches and some riders I’m really close to and can ask them everything — they all came down here when we came down to do the last warm-up, and then I got a big smile on my face and everyone smiled back, and then I thought, ‘okay, we can do it today! I think it’s cool to have three young German riders back on this five-star level. There’s not so many in Germany, and now we have three young people who tried their first time and all three did a very good job, I think, and so Team Germany was pretty happy!”

Sydney Elliott and QC Diamantaire. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The USA’s Sydney Elliott was able to take advantage of the doors opened by the day’s influence, and climbed from 31st place after dressage to 14th with QC Diamantaire after delivering one of the early clears inside the time.

“To say the least, we had some pressure on us today — which was good,” says Sydney. “I love having the pressure! In the warm up he felt really good, right from the first fence so I was like, ‘I think we’ve got it, if I can do my job. He’s ready today.’ I think I walked the course about five times, just to know my minutes and my lines and where I can really get tight to the ropes.”

To ensure she could nail down the speed required to climb, Sydney called upon the intel she’d gained running the horse around similar European tracks.

“To me, I felt like the course, and especially that first water, reminded me of Aachen the last couple of years,” she says. “I just kept telling myself, ‘just ride it like Aachen, it’ll be fine’. The course really felt like Aachen in long format, soo it was great — it suited him. With him, I’m constantly pushing and I don’t have to touch the reins hardly until he gets a little bit tired, and then I just hold his hand, but that’s it. There’s no half-halting, really. I can sit up and he’s good, so I just can kick. I’m very, very fortunate — I can go fast around the turns even though he’s so big, but he can also turn on a dime, which is very beneficial.”

Sydney’s round was briefly interrupted by a hold on course, which came just after she’d cleared the first water — but this, Sydney explains, isn’t her first rodeo, and with that tough question behind her, she didn’t let the pause in proceedings — which came due to a non-catastrophic injury sustained at fence 17, the Meßmer Water, by Imogen Murray’s Roheryn Ruby — stress her out.

“We got held last year for about 45 minutes on a course, and so with the first water behind us, because we were always careful about the first water, I said, ‘we’re good, he can have a breather and then we’ll start back and be fine’.”

Katherine Coleman and RLE Limbo Kaiser. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Fellow US competitor Katherine Coleman and RLE Limbo Kaiser slipped just two places, from 27th to 29th, after picking up 20 penalties apiece at the B element of the first water, a corner in the pond, and at 23B, an angled log after an upright gate, and adding 26 time faults.

For the rest of our US contingent, though, it was a tougher day in the office: Matt Flynn fell from Wizzerd at fence two after the horse chipped in a stride on take-off, twisted in the air, and then went to his knees on landing, and Hallie Coon put her hand up after an uncharacteristic run-out at the final element of the first combination at fence 5ABC with Global ExTamie Smith, too, put her hand up with five-star first-timer Solaguayre California after jumping through the first water and the fence just beyond it at 14, and then feeling that her mare wasn’t quite right.

“California is such a star, and I was having a beautiful round, but she somehow punctured her knee on the C element of the water [complex] after jumping easily through that influential combination. After galloping away she didn’t feel right and I pulled her up,” says Tamie, who tells us that she requested transport back to the stabling area as the wound was bleeding. Solaguayre California was then taken to the local equine hospital as a precautionary measure in order to avoid any infection risk.

“It was just a freak thing that you just can’t make sense of,” says Tamie. “The important thing is it looks to be an optimistic recovery.”

Editor’s Note: Tamie updated her social media after this article was published to say that the puncture had resulted in a bone fracture, but that the outlook for “California” is positive and she is resting comfortably at the local clinic.

Sorry this has taken me some time to post, but firstly and most importantly California is doing well and is happy at a…

Posted by Next Level Eventing Tamie Smith on Saturday, June 17, 2023

Now, we have 29 competitors remaining for tomorrow morning’s final horse inspection — and then, it’ll be on to the showjumping, which is historically the toughest of the world’s five-stars. Let the games begin.

The top ten following cross-country in the Longines Luhmühlen CCI5*.

In this afternoon’s CCI4*-S, which incorporates the German National Championships, competition was similarly fierce: of the 41 starters, 31 would go on to complete — but just 22 would do so without jumping penalties. As it always does here, the time proved much harder to catch in this class, too, with just five competitors coming home inside the time — and it would be that, in conjunction with penalties and problems encountered across the course, and by even the most experience of competitors, that would cause a total shake-up of the leaderboard.

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 move into the overnight lead in the CCI4*-S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Olympic gold medallist Julia Krajewski had been delighted to find herself with two horses in the top ten after dressage, because for both Nickel 21 and Ero de Cantraie, this was something of a fact-finding mission: both horses are just nine years old, with limited experience at the level. But when problems arose for first-placed Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden, who retired after picking up 20 penalties at the first of the hugely influential double of angled brushes in the arena, third-placed Ingrid Klimke and Equistros Siena Just Do It, who suffered a rider fall at second of those angled brushes [Ingrid later shared on social media that she broke her clavicle in the fall], and fourth-placed Nadine Marzahl and Victoria 108, who picked up 20 penalties early on at the skinny brush at 5c, the door was opened for her duo of inexperienced up-and-comers to show exactly what they’re made of.

And that they did: riding early in the class, Julia first laid down the law with overnight fifth-placed Ero de Cantraie, who easily romped home exactly on the 6:33 optimum time to add nothing to his score of 30.2, which put him into the clubhouse lead for much of the class.

“Ero is quite green at the level, but he gave me a really good feeling from fence one on, really,” says Julia, who took on the ride on the French-bred horse as a green intermediate from France’s Jean Teulere. “He sometimes spends quite some time in the air, so after minute two, I felt like, ‘okay, if you want to be fast, then you really have to go from now’. But he was responding so well, and taking everything on super straight, as if he’s always done it. Then I felt, okay, I can really go for the time and he just went like a racecar. That was so cool. He feels to have quite an engine and a really good brain, and he’s super trusting by now, so I think he can really do cool things in the future.”

Julia Krajewski and Ero de Cantraie. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

By the time she left the start box for the second time on overnight second-placed Nickel 21, who she told us yesterday was initially sold on as a young rider’s horse as he didn’t necessarily appear to be an upper level horse in the making, she was in a comfortable position: whatever happened, she’d be the overnight leader, both in the class at large and in the German National Championships.

“With Nickel, I was a little bit more relaxed because, I mean, I knew I was in the lead already — but of course you want to do well on the second one,” she says. By this point, though, those high-profile issues at the top end of the leaderboard had already happened, and so she had 3.5 penalties in hand over her first ride. She ended up using 0.8 of them, delivering a classy, quick clear that belied the gelding’s relative inexperience.

“They’re quite different horses to ride, and Nickel, I always have to keep riding a bit,” says Julia. “He’s got a bit of a shorter stride than the other one, so I knew it wouldn’t be quite the same — but he’s the most honest horse I think I’ve ever had. He never thinks left or right; he just goes.”

Whichever way the competition had ended up today — and whichever way it goes tomorrow — though, Julia is mostly just delighted to have found out that both her boys have the guts, the gumption, and the raw speed to take on the upper end of the sport — and that the partnership she’s worked on cultivating with them has paid off.

“So many things they did today, they’ve never seen before — but they feel like they just trust in me, which makes me very proud and happy,” she says. “They just try to do their best. I didn’t expect that they would both be in the time, or very close to the time, but it’s quite cool because it’s always quite hard to get the time at Luhmühlen. When you do, you know you’ve got a horse that can do really well in the four-star short format — so it’s always special to make the time here.”

Calvin Böckmann and The Phantom of the Opera. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It wasn’t just a good day for Julia as a competitor — it was also an incredibly rewarding day for her as a coach. She’s long been at the helm of the German young rider training programme and is based at Warendorf, the German Federation’s training centre, where she works day in and day out with the next generation of top-level talent. Among those riders who benefit from her font of wisdom are this morning’s successful five-star debutants Jérôme Robiné and Emma Brüssau — and 22-year-old Luhmühlen first-time Calvin Böckmann, who climbed from overnight twelfth to third after whizzing home inside the time aboard the former Sandra Auffarth ride The Phantom of the Opera.

This is Calvin’s first year as a Senior competitor — last year, he came with the close-knit Warendorf crew as a spectator, and “dreamed of one day maybe getting to start here as competitor,” he says. This year, not only is he making that dream come true, he’s also establishing himself as a talent to be reckoned with on the world stage after years spent winning medals at the Pony and Junior European Championships.

“The horse has a really good gallop, so I felt I could go a long ways between the fences and could catch up a lot of time, and it worked out quite well,” says the 2015 Pony European Champion. “He’s a horse who’s super positive in cross country, you can really feel how much he loves to just work during the course. It was just amazing, and I had so much fun — he was feeling so good. But I honestly did not really expect to be sitting in this position right now!”

On training with Julia, Calvin laughs: “She’s quite strict! But I would say I’m really thankful for that, because I’m also kind of a person who really tries to improve every little percentage where it’s possible, and I think Julia’s quite the same — otherwise she wouldn’t be where she is so. Working on a daily basis at home makes quite a strong connection, so I’m just really grateful for having a trainer who was not only successful in sport, but who still is so successful and she’s just so close to that sport — just watching her first round, like watching which line she’s taking and how many strides she’s doing there, was giving me a lot of confidence.”

That strictness, though, is something that Julia stands firmly by as an essential part of her duty to the sport.

“As coaches and riders, we really have responsibility these days to shape the upcoming generation in a way that’s not only making them successful — not just good horse riders, but good horsemen and horsewomen,” she explains. “I was coached by a strict coach, which was sometimes tough, but I learned that way — and the way I’m strict is when I find it has to go more in a direction which is good for the horse. It’s about horse care; it’s about galloping them correctly; it’s about how you ride your horse, where you go, which show, is it too early? Calvin and I also have a bit of a discussion sometimes, like, he wants to go there, and I’m like, ‘no, no, you go there!’ But some things you only understand five years later or ten years later, and I think it’s a massive responsibility [of ours] to also make the sport look good, to keep it safe, and to make sure that the younger people learn it in a good way. That’s what I see as my responsibility. Of course, they do mistakes, it happens, but I try to bring them up in a way that’s hopefully safe, and educate them as good horse people.”

Though locally based Christoph Wahler didn’t find his first phase with D’Accord 70 as inspiring as the tests he can produce with his top horse, Pratoni mount Carjatan S, with whom he was second in the five-star here in 2021, he also knew that whatever he put on the board — in this case, a 34.4 — would be something he could reliably aim to finish on with the very consistent eleven-year-old.

“He’s so good across the country, that I just have to see how it goes for everyone else later,” he said sagely while watching the five-star this morning. “If the time is easy, I can go slow with him and get it; if it’s hard, I’ll just go a little faster.”

And right he was: the time and the course alike proved tough and influential, and his Diarado son picked his way around the track handily, coming home looking wholly unhurried but with the fastest round of the day, ten seconds inside the optimum time — a handy little manoeuvre that saw them climb from 24th to fourth going into tomorrow’s final phase.

Nadine Marzahl and Valentine FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though day one leaders Nadine Marzahl and Victoria 108 slipped from fourth to 27th after picking up 20 penalties and an abundance of time faults, her second round — a nearly identical paternal half-sister in Valentine FRH — made up for a tough start to the afternoon by adding just 3.6 time penalties in an exuberant round that saw them climb from eighth to fifth, while Belgium’s Lara de Liedekerke-Meier was best of the foreign contingent, climbing from eleventh to sixth after adding 3.2 time penalties aboard her homebred Hermione d’Arville. Seventh place provisionally was awarded to another big climber: Italy’s Evelina Bertoli and the sharp, clever Fidjy des Melezes climbed from 19th after adding 3.6 time penalties, and young rider Anna Lena Schaaf — another member of the Warendorf training battalion — added 6.8 time penalties to drop from fifth to eighth with Fairytale 39. Hungary’s Imre Tóth made an underdog bid for a top placing with Zypresse 8, climbing from eighteenth to ninth with 4.4 time penalties, while the top ten was rounded out by full-time accountant and part-time eventing hero Arne Bergendahl, who returned for another spin around Luhmühlen after delivering the first clear — and the first round inside the time — in this morning’s CCI5*, this time riding his five-star mount’s uncle, Checkovich.

It wasn’t to be today for the small but mighty US contingent in this class: Dan Krietl and Carmango retired from their first European competition experience after running into trouble at the influential double of brushes in the main arena, which were responsible for faults in twelve rounds, while Hallie Coon opted to put her hand up after two run-outs at the skinny A element of the busy Meßmer water at 10ABC with the inexperienced Cute Girl.

Now, both classes will look ahead to tomorrow’s final horse inspection, which will begin at 8.30 a.m. local time (7.30 a.m. BST/2.30 a.m. EST) with the CCI5* competitors, following on at 9.15 a.m. (8.15 a.m. BST/3.15 a.m. EST) with the CCI4*-S horses.

Then, it’ll be go time for the showjumping: first up to bat is the five-star, which begins at 10.30 a.m. (9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST), followed by the prizegiving, before all attention turns to the finale of the CCI4*-S, beginning at 13.50 (12.50 p.m. BST/7.50 a.m. EST). As always, you can follow all the action via Horse & Country TV, which also has on-demand viewing available for all the completed phases thus far — and keep it locked on to EN for full reports and galleries from each class. Go Eventing.

The top ten following cross-country in the CCI4*-S, incorporating the German National Championships.

Longines Luhmühlen: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [How to Watch] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Form Guide]

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A Homebred, A First 5*, and a Family Affair for Arne Bergendahl at Luhmühlen

Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For much of German rider Arne Bergendahl’s career, making it to the pinnacle level — CCI5* — wasn’t really a part of the plan. Sure, he enjoyed riding and grew up in a family that lived and breathed horses — his family is well-respected for producing top quality show jumpers and eventers — but he wouldn’t have categorized himself as a top-level, career rider. After all, he also works full-time in an office, which leaves less time for full-time horse production than some of his professional counterparts.

But Arne made good on this goal he wasn’t sure would factor into his CV on Saturday at the Longines Luhmühlen Horse Trials, where he stamped one of the rides of the day in the CCI5* division aboard the homebred 11-year-old Westphalian mare, Luthien 3 (La Calido – Taramanga, by Templer xx).

“She’s a little bit of a crazy mare in this family!” Arne described. Earlier in the day, all you could see on Mike Etherington-Smith’s cross country was a streak of white as the mare gleefully leapt from question to question (sometimes leaving a stride out in her wake!). Her efforts were rewarded with a move from 36th after dressage (“The dressage is always complicated,” Arne admits) into the top 20 following cross country. The pair picked up just two seconds of time over the optimum time of 11 minutes.

Many eventing fans would know this equine family quite well, in fact. The family Bergendahl is represented this weekend not only by Luthien 3, but also by Arne’s 4*-S ride, Checkovich, as well as Antonia Baumgart’s Lamango and the USA’s own Dan Kreitl’s partner in the 4*, Carmango (who shares the same dam – Taramanga – as Luthien 3 and Lamango). One more fun fact about this particular mare line: the fourth foal from Taramanga is Cascamara, who currently competes at the 3* level with one Ingrid Klimke.

Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3. Photo by Alex Jeffery.

Arne works full-time for the city council of Wesel, having earned both his Bachelor’s degree and a Master’s degree from the University of Münster. This busy schedule means he must balance the riding on the odd hours, before and after work. Because of this demanding schedule, and the fact that he rides many of his family’s young horses to help bring them up, the prospect of a 5* seemed like a very uphill climb.

“I have a normal job in office,” Arne explained. “And my father is breeding. I’m riding a lot, of course, but a lot of young horses. But that’s why five-star wasn’t really all the time my aim to go there. I was several years on two- and three-star level and a three-star was almost a highlight of the year. But the last two, three years it became really good.”

Since the mare’s early eventing days, Arne has been able to cultivate a partnership with Luthien 3. The pair did move up to the 4* level in 2020 but were eliminated in their first attempt, so they opted to go back to the drawing board and gain some more experience during and beyond the pandemic. That extra time has paid off, as they’ve finished closer and closer to the top placings as they go. As with many elite horses, patience and understanding is key. “In the beginning the cross country was even a little bit complicated with her, because she has her own mind and always keeping her on line is not that easy,” Arne reflected, noting the improvements the mare has made just since 2021 to bring him now to this achievement.

A solid performance in Sunday’s show jumping for Arne and Luthien 3 will solifidy a goal that’s already been mostly accomplished: bring a homebred, self-produced horse all the way to her first (and your own!) first CCI5* event — on home soil, to boot. Add in a rare clear round inside the time on your second ride in the 4*-S, and we’ll call this a weekend to remember, no matter what.

Longines Luhmühlen: [Website] [Entries] [Timing & Scoring] [How to Watch] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage] [EN’s Form Guide]

EN’s coverage of Longines Luhmühlen is brought to you by Kentucky Performance Products and Ocala Horse Properties.

Kayla Dumler Leads Aspen Farms CCI3*-S

Kayla Dumler and her off-the-track-Thoroughbred gelding, Faramir. Cortney Drake photo.

Twelve horse and rider pairs contested the CCI3*-S dressage test under judges Helen Christie and Bea DiGrazia on a sunny afternoon at Aspen Farms Horse Trials in Yelm, WA.

Kayla Dumler and her off-the-track-Thoroughbred gelding, Faramir, (pictured above) secured the overnight lead in the CCI3*-S with a score of 30.8.

“He was stellar,” Dumler said of Faramir’s test. “He was very rideable. I couldn’t have asked for anything more.”

Dumler explained that the season leading up to this show has been a little up and down for them in performance as they have navigated changes such as Dumler being in school in Arizona.

“We’ve struggled in the past with show jumping,” she said. “But he has been jumping very well at home, so I’m looking forward to it.”

Sabrina Glaser and Rather Be Cooley, owned by Hildegard Johnson, are second in the CCI3*-S on 31.9 and Sophie Click and Tarantino 54 are third on 32.3. With close scores throughout the division, the show jumping track designed by Chris Barnard could be influential on the leaderboard tomorrow.

Stephanie Goodman and Elwenda DP, owned by Deanna Briggs, finishing their leading dressage test in the CCI2*-S. Cortney Drake photo.

In a competitive CCI2*-S division, Stephanie Goodman and Elwenda DP scored 25.7 to secure the overnight lead in the field of 24 starters. Goodman has had the ride on Elwenda DP, a 12-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare owned Deanna Briggs, for two years.

“She was excellent today,” Goodman said after their test. “We had a couple of bobbles in our walk, but other than that, I thought she was very rideable and comfortable in the ring.”

Goodman is confident going into show jumping tomorrow.

“She’s a great jumper; a good competitor,” she said. “She is still kind of green at this level, but I feel excited. It should be a fun test.”

Tommy Greengard of California is tied for second in the CCI2*-S with scores of 26.1 on two of his rides, Joshuay MBF and Kremer VD Falieberg, owned by Morgan Wenell. He also is tied for ninth with Count Me In.

“Kremer is new to the level,” Greengard said of the 8-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding. “This is his first 2-star short. He was great! He has been awesome all spring, so it’s fun that he took that into his first full court test today.”

Greengard was also thrilled with Joshuay’s dressage test.

“Joshuay is just coming back,” he said. “This weekend is his first full event since Tryon last November. He was great. He’ll hopefully have a nice prep-run here, and we’ll see what’s left for his summer plans.”

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola, owned by Lovas Partners LLC, are leading Open Intermediate. Cortney Drake photo.

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola, owned by Lovas Partners LLC, are leading the Open Intermediate on a score of 29, just ahead of Erin Grandia and Hyacinth, owned by Jessica Rosch, in second on 31.2. Alyssa Schaefer and Fuego are third on 32.8.

“Lola is always very good on the flat,” Linstedt shared. “She is absolutely wonderful to ride and lovely. She was a little sassy today, so not her very best. I think as riders we always come out of the ring knowing what we could have done a little better. She was a little distracted today, but she was wonderful to ride and tries hard. I’m so lucky to ride her.”

Kristin Joly of California and Czechers of Cellar Farm are the overnight leaders in Open Preliminary on 23.2, followed by Todd Trewin and Cooley High Society, owned by Tracey Trewin, in second and Meika Decher and Verily in third.

This is Joly’s first time competing at Aspen Farms, though she has groomed at the show before. “I was really happy with our test,” Joly said. “Czechers can be difficult on the flat, so I am very happy he was a good boy today! He was great.”

Joly also shared she’s happy with the warm weather this weekend, and she’s particularly excited to run cross-country on Sunday with Czechers on the grass, which is hard to come by in California.

In the Preliminary Rider division, Harper Padgett and her young Irish Sporthorse, Cooley Starship, scored 24.5 for the overnight lead. Madison Langerak and Normandy Kivalo are second, and Kristen Davignon and Fürst Floid are third.

“Usually he’s explosive in the ring,” Padgett said about her 7-year-old gelding. “Today was one of the good days. He was super quiet, which felt great. It was a highlight.”

Padgett is hopeful they can deliver another solid performance show jumping on Saturday, but admits that the cross-country phase is her horse’s strong suit. The pair’s goal is to work toward a 2-star later this year.

Aspen Farms Horse Trials also boasts strong turnout in the lower-level divisions, which include four distinct classes at each level. These divisions laid down competitive dressage performances in the sand and grass rings. Junior Beginner Novice will contest dressage first thing on Saturday.

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