Classic Eventing Nation

Meet Hayley Frielick, the U.S.-Based Kiwi Eventer Heading for the Maryland 5 Star

Hayley Frielick and Dunedin Black Watch. Photo by snapshotaustralia.

In July, 29 year-old New Zealander Hayley Frielick bought a one-way ticket to the United States. She traveled across the world from Australia with two horses to base herself in America, quitting her job as an analyst for a bank before the move. She is currently based at Dom and Jimmie Schramm’s farm in Pennsylvania. With her Australian thoroughbred Dunedin Black Watch, she will compete at the upcoming Maryland 5 Star.

Hayley’s parents are from South Africa, and she was born in America but competes for New Zealand. She grew up in Australia but also spent several years living in Scotland, so she is no stranger to moving around the globe. She has competed at the Adelaide 5 Star, but Maryland will be her first 5 star outside of the southern hemisphere.

I met Hayley ten years ago during a brief working student stint I did with Australian eventer Jade Findlay. I was just a kid and I admired how she rode and the way she trained her horses. Fast forward to 2022, and she has come to America to train and campaign her horses. The motivations for the move, she told me, were both necessity and a hunger to improve.

“Really, we were just looking for dry land!” Hayley jokes, describing what pushed her to relocate halfway around the globe. Over the last couple of years, New South Wales, where Hayley lived in Australia, has suffered from severe flooding. Farms have been under water for days at a time, and several events have had to cancel.

Photo by Britt Grovenor Photography.

Hayley has wanted to compete at a foreign five-star for a few years, and after missing out on the chance to run Kentucky two years ago because of COVID, she was hungry to get to a big overseas event. The last straw was the fact that the Adelaide 5 star was announced to not be occurring this year, and has moved from its initial date in November to next April.

In June, Hayley looked into the possibility of coming to America. The problem was that there was a scarcity of flights. “I tried to book flights for my horses, and the agent I spoke with told me that they could leave on a flight in two weeks, but after that, he wasn’t sure when the next flights would be.” It was much earlier than she had planned, but Hayley did not want to miss out on a chance to move, so she put her horses on that flight.

“The journey was crazy. The horses flew from Melbourne to Hanoi to Doha to Luxembourg, and then finally to Chicago.” Luckily, they had ample time to recover once reaching the States, and Hayley joined them in July. She brought over Dunedin Black Watch (aka “Nelson”) and a five year-old homebred called Dunedin My Goodness, who is related to her former five-star horses My Happiness and Class Action LP.

Hayley and co-owner Katie Robertson found “Nelson” in the Australian outback. “He was actually part of a 2-for-1 deal,” Hayley laughs. “We went out there to look at another horse, and Katie said, actually, I really like that black one, let’s get him too.” Taking that chance paid off, and now the horse is headed to his first 5 star.

Since arriving, she has run the horse at the Great Meadow and Unionville CCI-short events to prepare for Maryland. Maryland will be his first five-star. “The track should really suit him,” Hayley explains, noting that having a full thoroughbred should be an advantage at the hilly venue. “He has the biggest heart, and he’s quick,” she notes, adding that she is really excited to have the opportunity to compete another horse at five-star.

“I’m not sure what my longer-term plan is,” Hayley admits, adding that it will depend a bit on how Maryland goes. “Right now, we are focusing on Maryland, and after that we will figure everything else out.” She hopes to go to Florida for the winter months, and may aim for Kentucky in the spring. “I am a U.S. citizen, because I was born here, so that gives me a lot of flexibility,” Hayley points out.

She has the option of staying here in the long-term, which she says she is seriously considering. She is open for business, and enjoys teaching both locally and doing clinics. “There are so many opportunities in America,” she adds, “so I am hoping to have a crack at it.”

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

 

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The nominations for this year’s FEI Awards are live, and we’re delighted to see two members of the eventing family in contention! Kerryn Edmans, groom to Tim and Jonelle Price, is up for the Cavalor Best Groom Prize, while 20-year-old British 5* rider Alice Casburn is nominated for the Longines Rising Star prize. Give them your vote here!

National Holiday: It’s Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Read more about how Native Americans have been intertwined with horses here.

US Weekend Action:

Morven Park Fall International CCI4*-L (Leesburg, VA): [Website] [Results]

Heritage Park H.T. (Olathe, KS): [Website] [Results]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. (South Royalton, VT): [Website] [Results]

Middle Tennessee Pony Club H.T. (Nashville, TN): [Website] [Results]

Ocala Fall H.T. (Ocala, FL): [Website] [Results]

Radnor Hunt H.T. (Malvern, PA): [Website] [Results]

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

Woodside Fall H.T. (Woodside, CA): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring] [Volunteer]

UK Weekend Results:

Swalcliffe Park (2): [Results]

Askham Bryan College: [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

There’s a name you might not recognise on the Maryland 5 Star entry list — that of New Zealand’s Hayley Frielick. But this girl’s got a serious story, and once you read it, you’ll definitely be cheering her on as she tackles the event with her horse, Dunedin Black Watch. [Meet her here]

Short girls, unite! It often feels like the horse world has been wholly designed to cater to long-legged ladies, and to be fair, as a 5’7 gal, I’ve definitely benefited from that. But if you’re short of leg, you deserve to have breeches that fit without bunching, too. (Although you do get a more comfortable ride on planes, so you win there). [An ode to the shorties]

If you’re a Fairfax and Favor fan, you may have wondered where the iconic boots came from. The answer? Two chaps in their 20s, who had a long-time friendship, a deep appreciation for all things country, and a failed bouncy castle company idea behind them. [From zero to heroes]

And finally, after watching Alyssa Phillips make her team debut at Boekelo, it’s time to get to know the girl behind the performances. At just 25 years old, she’s living the dream with her three beautiful horses and a longtime training partnership with Jennie Brannigan. [Chasing the dream]

The FutureTrack Follow:

 

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Want to follow a rider on his way to the top, and get plenty of robust motivation along the way? Then you need to follow Italy’s Pietro Grandis, who recently left his longtime role as Michael Jung’s stable jockey to pursue his goals.

Morning Viewing:

How incredible is this archive footage of the US Olympic team in training for the 1948 Olympics?

Tamie Smith and Solaguayre California Claim Morven Park International CCI4*-L Honors

Tamie Smith adds to her collection of accolades with a win in the 4*-L at Morven with Julianne Guariglia’s Solaguayre California. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

California-based FEI World Championships team silver medalist Tamie Smith made her inaugural visit to the Morven Park Fall International CCI & Horse Trials a winning one, topping the CCI4*-L aboard Solaguayre California on Sunday in Leesburg, VA.

Smith and Solaguayre California, owned by Julianne Guariglia and David Guariglia, came into Sunday’s show jumping phase in the lead on a score of 29.7, and a clear effort over the Chris Barnard-designed track cemented their victory. Will Coleman on Hyperion Stud’s Chin Tonic HS and Mia Farley aboard David O’Connor’s Phelps both also held their post-cross-country positions, with Coleman adding just 0.4 time penalties to his score to finish in second place on a 32.6. As one of only three double-clear efforts during the cross-country phase, Farley and Phelps finished on their dressage score of 34.4 to take third.

Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

“I’m thrilled with [Solaguayre California]. To end on a sub-30 score is a brilliant result, so I’m very happy,” said Smith. “I loved it [here at Morven Park]. It’s such an amazing venue. We need to hype this up and make it be exactly what it already is, a super unique and special venue for our country. I’m so glad I came.”

Bred and trained at Haras Solaguayre in Argentina, Solaguayre California has been partnered with Smith for two and a half years, during which time Smith has been carefully producing and bringing the now 9-year-old Holsteiner mare up through the ranks.

“It’s just really cool to be producing her because she was just barely starting to move up to Prelim when I got her,” said Smith. “It’s been really fun. It’s so awesome, especially with a mare. They take another element of trust, and she’s just got something really special and exciting about her. “I’m just grateful to David, Donna and Julie Guariglia who own her and support me. We had a little bit of a rough start. I broke my ankle when I fell off of her at the beginning of the year, and then it just seemed to shake her confidence. To end it on a win at Morven in the four long is just icing on the cake. It’s always great to have owners, but having the owners that stick by you through the ups and downs is what is really special.”

Will Coleman and Chin Tonic HS caps off a banner year for the promising Hyperion Stud-owned gelding. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

For Coleman, his partnership with the now 10-year-old Chin Tonic HS started eight years ago.

“Vicky [Castegren of Hyperion Stud] has owned this horse since he was 2 years old,” said Coleman. “We’ve had him together since the very beginning, and it’s been really cool. He’s obviously a really cool horse to develop, but all thanks to Vicky and Hyperion Stud. [Chin Tonic HS] felt very good. I would say none the worse. He had plenty of energy. I wish maybe yesterday had taken a little more out of him! He was pretty fresh.”

Coleman continued, “I’ve been coming to Morven Park for 15 or 20 years. It’s great to see this new iteration of it. It’s obviously a really special place, but I think it has a bright future – in our sport, particularly, but in all horse sports. I think for this area to hold on to their equestrian heritage is a great thing.”

Third-place finisher Farley, who hails from California, concluded, “I’ve always loved Morven. Coming from the West, it’s always been a show that I kept an eye on. Finishing third here behind Will and Tammy just feels amazing.”

Proof that diligence and intention pays off: Mia Farley collects a double clear show jumping on the Thoroughbred Phelps. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

Earning the distinction of being the highest-placed U25 rider in the CCI4* and CCI3* divisions was 21-year-old Cosby Green who topped the CCI4*-S aboard Copper Beach.

In addition to the conclusion of the CCI4*-L, Sunday also marked the final day of competition for the Preliminary, Training and Novice divisions.

Top finishers in all divisions, both international and national, received prizes from generous award sponsors Achieve Equine, Adequan, Coat Defense, Devoucoux, EquiFit, Boy-O-Boy Bridleworks and SmartPak. The Morven Park Fall International CCI & Horse Trials were also made possible thanks to generous support from additional sponsors including Taylor, Harris Insurance Services, Arden Farm, Piedmont Equine Practice and Total Equine Veterinary Associates.

Morven Park Fall International CCI4*-L (Leesburg, VA): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Erin Gilmore Photography] [Scoring]

A Happy Boy Indeed: Tim Price is On Top of the World at Boekelo

Tim Price and Happy Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And just like that, another Boekelo was over — but not without a generous helping of drama right down to the last seconds of the competition.

Just 14 of the 53 starters would deliver clears inside the time on Kris Van Gelder‘s track, and so tightly packed was the leaderboard that a rail — or a clear — would send competitors tumbling down or shooting up the leaderboard. And so when Tim Price delivered the goods — and one of eight FODs in the class — with his 2019 Seven-Year-Old World Champion Happy Boy, he was delighted — but he wasn’t thinking much further than that he’d secured himself second place. When two-phase leader Laura Collett took a late rail with Dacapo, then, it didn’t quite hit him what had happened.

“It’s not sinking in very quick,” laughs Tim, who refers to the ten-year-old as the literal and figurative dark horse of his yard. “I focused so much on jumping a good clean round, and I put the rest to one side — and Laura jumps clear round after clear round in her career on any given horse, and Dacapo is a very good jumper. So I just thought, ‘well, I’m very happy to be on the podium!’ I never thought I’d win it, but he’s a great little horse — he’s the consummate all-rounder for eventing. He’s just really nifty; he comes out and does his best in each phase.”

 

Tim Price clears the last to an enormous roar from the packed house of spectators. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The win comes just two days after the recent double bronze medallist was announced as the World Number One — followed by his wife, Jonelle, in second.

“It’s unbelievable, isn’t it? I’m such a slow starter in the year; I fumble and muck it up for half the year,” he muses. “It’s a bit like me in the mornings, really — it’s like a stretch into the year. I need until about 1pm to get going! But that was really cool, and I’m so lucky at the moment. I’ve got some nice horses, and there’s so much hard work that goes on behind the scenes. You’re training away for years and years, and I think that’s what’s really on display. It might look from the outside like we just step on and step off week after week, but like this guy, I’ve had him since he was four, and you just chip away and try to make the right decisions along the way and place them well. On days like this, you feel like you’re reaping the benefits of a lot of hard work and planning.”

Tim Price and Happy Boy celebrate a red letter week for the Price clan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim and Jonelle, who came to the UK in the early 2000s with very little to their name but a dream and a heaping helping of tenacity, have pushed through their fair share of tough times and tricky competitions — but self-belief, he says, is the key for young riders hoping to follow in their footsteps.

“Don’t think too much about the work ahead — just keep your head down and carry on quietly, and stay focused on what you want to do in the sport,” he says. “I was talking to a young rider earlier, asking me a question like that, and I think you’ve got to tell the people around you that your ambition is to get to the top. You’re not really trying to sell horses; you’re not really trying to duck and dive — but you might have to to get there. Let it be known, and the more you put that around yourself, the more it can become reality one day.”

One of the most admirable things about the Price family is the diversity of their time: rather than remaining tunnel-visioned on riding at every moment of the day, they make time for the other things that make life great, including family, holidays, and taking the time to explore the many places they travel to while competing. And that, too, is crucial to avoiding burnout, says Tim.

“You’ll get pretty floored after a bad competition, so you’ve got to build yourself up again and again. You just get good at refining the timescale to do that — two or three days and then you get going again. But really, you’ve got to live a healthy life; a fairly well-rounded life. We’re not pure athletes; to be honest, we can live a little with our lifestyles and things, and you’ve got to keep that healthy balance so you can bounce back and get enthusiastic about what’s around the corner. I think that’s what the real key is: that we love it so much that we can let that filter in very quickly.”

Amen to that, Mr. Price.

Tom McEwen takes second — or ‘equal first’ — with new ride JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I’m going to call that ‘equal first’,” jokes Tom McEwen, who finished in second place — though on the same score as the winners — with new ride JL Dublin in their first international run together. They lost out on the tiebreak by hundredths of a second after finishing yesterday’s cross-country in 10:06 — a second faster, but a second further from the 10:10 optimum time, than Tim and Happy Boy.

“He was amazing, but obviously I was getting a bit nervous on the time yesterday,” he says. “I had every opportunity, but the horse was epic.”

For Tom, there was the added weight of a different kind of pressure this week. JL Dublin is best known for his partnership with Nicola Wilson, with whom he won last year’s European Championships — among a spate of other major wins — and while Tom is struck by his good fortune at getting to deputise for her after her accident at Badminton this year, he’s eminently conscious that in happier circumstances, there would be another rider in the irons for today’s prizegiving.

“It all comes down to Nic,” he says. “She produced him, and to come here on two intermediate runs and come second — that’s all down to her, and actually, if she’d been on him, he’d have flown around and won quite comfortably. He’s phenomenal, and it’s all thanks to her and all the hard work she’s done for years and years with him. So I can only say thank you: thank you to her, and thank you to her owners for trusting me with such an incredible horse.”

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Before heading out on course yesterday, ordinarily icy-veined Tom was nervous — after all, he’d had very few runs with the horse and only a couple of months to get to know him.

“The first three fences, I was gauging where I was at, because we’ve only done two OIs,” he says. “I was a bit nervous in the morning, but as soon as I set off, I was like, ‘no, we didn’t need to anything more than those’. He was phenomenal. At the tricky combinations he flew; I had to add at the two overs, so I made sure we balanced to the water, but to be honest, we went around in a hand canter, which is why I found getting closer to the time so difficult. He was coming out of the main arena at the end of the course and I was trying to slow him down, but all he wanted to do was carry on galloping. He’s a machine, and he’s world class — there’s not many like him. Even though we came here to do well, at the same time it was very much a learning experience, so to come out like this is fantastic.”

Laura Collett and Dacapo slip to third after a frustrating late rail. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“If you’d said we’d be third coming here, we’d all have been delighted, but obviously it’s a bit gutting dropping from first to third,” says Laura Collett, whose late rail at the tenth fence with Dacapo cost her the lead she’d held on 21.9 through the first two phases. But the week has still been a victory, in a way, for the mercurial gelding, who tends to either place or push himself right down to the bottom end of the pack with occasional naughty moments across the country. Like stablemate London 52, whose career turning point came after his confidence-boosting win here in 2019, the week has looked to be a very positive one for the 13-year-old gelding, with whom Laura has simply focused on enjoying four-star outings this year in a bid to sustain his focus and push him toward the path of least resistance. In that respect? It’s been mission very much accomplished.

“He’s had a great time and performed brilliantly,” says Laura. “He hasn’t had a wobble all year, and he’s had a bit of a funny prep coming here — he’s run in intermediates, and he’s been to Burghley and done a demo there, and things like that. He obviously just likes to have a bit of change, and the main thing is that he was brilliant on the cross-country. Any horse can have a fence down, and unfortunately, he had one today, but it doesn’t take away from how good he’s been this week.”

World Champion Yasmin Ingham closes the book on a super week with Rehy DJ after a tricky start. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Newly-crowned World Champion Yasmin Ingham had another super week, this time with the sweet, stalwart Rehy DJ, who is also owned by Banzai du Loir’s owners Sue Davies and Janette Chinn. He’s performed in his usual, reliable way despite an unfortunate incident after the first horse inspection, in which a water bowser was turned on as he walked by and he got loose, slipped, and sustained a superficial graze, which resulted in his withdrawal from the British Nations Cup team to allow an extra day of observation. That call paid off, and he’s looked at his best since, climbing from first-phase ninth place after finishing on his dressage score of 28.7.

“It’s gone from not so good to really, really good, so I’m very happy,” says Yasmin. “It wasn’t the best start to the week with our little incident, but his graze has healed up miraculously quickly thanks to the help of [team GB vet] Liz Brown and [groom] Allison and all the team here. He’s had the best of care and attention, and he’s feeling fantastic. He jumped his socks off today, and he really deserved the clear round — he tried so hard.”

‘Piglet’ is becoming something of a Mr Consistency in Yasmin’s string, and so consistency is the watchword in how she prepares him, too.

“We know how he works now, and we know what to do in the warm-up so we can get him feeling his best for the showjumping, so we stuck to our usual routine and he delivered. I’m very proud of him.”

For 25-year-old Yasmin, it’s a slightly surreal feeling to be announced into the ring as the World Champion every time she performs — but she deals with the pressure in her usual, sunny way.

“It’s a little reminder every time like, ‘oh yeah, that happened!’ But then I’m like, ‘don’t tell everyone before I jump, though, because it might go really badly!'” she laughs. “

Liz Halliday-Sharp proves she has an Olympic talent in the excellent Miks Master C. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though Liz Halliday-Sharp is still getting to know her ride of just five months, Miks Master C — “I’ve tried him in new bits for all three phases for the first time this week,” she laughs — she knew from the word ‘go’ that he was a talent of huge proportions, and he certainly proved that in spades this week. The pair initially sat in sixth place after an expressive test for 26.2, which looked expressive and fluid despite the gelding’s current tendency towards a bit too much power, and dropped down to eighth after that strength meant that Liz added 3.2 time penalties while setting up for the fences. But today, all the pieces came together, and the very fresh US-bred ten-year-old, who she rides for Ocala Horse Properties and Debbie Palmer, produced an easy clear inside the time to take fifth place.

“He’s such a fabulous horse, and we’re still figuring stuff out about him — like, today’s the first day I’ve ever jumped him in that bit in the ring in my life,” says Liz. “He was a bit strong with me in my last run, and I think he fought even harder on the last day, so I couldn’t be happier to jump double clear and finish in the 20s with him in our first long format together after just five months.”

Today was a major test for the gelding, and Liz called in the big guns to help her get the job done in training for the final day.

“I’ve kind of had him piss off with me in the ring before, so I was so thrilled with how he just fought for me the whole way. I’ve had a lot of help from Peter Wylde and Erik Duvander, and that’s been really great. I think we’re on the right path forward with him, and ready to step him up the next level next year.”

While there are still some minor mysteries to solve on the path to greatness, several major points have been confirmed for Liz this week — including that of the horse’s stamina.

“He was so fresh today — he came out like, ‘eh, I didn’t do anything yesterday!’ He was wild this morning — he’s some machine. He had three more minutes in him when I finished yesterday; I just ran out of brakes, which is why we were slow, so I need to reassess that this winter. At the moment, he changes at every show, but it feels like we’re getting closer and closer to figuring each other out — and a great week like this puts me in a good, happy place to get on the road to Maryland 5*, too!”

Ros Canter’s Izilot DHI steps up to the plate at Boekelo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Coming to Boekelo is a big ask for a horse that’s naturally starstruck and spooky, but Ros Canter‘s Izilot DHI proved that quality wins out, and watching him gain in confidence and boldness through the week has been enormously exciting. He came to the event already a considerable success in his own right, with wins in CCI4*-S classes at Burgham and Bramham under his belt this season, but as a nine-year-old making his CCI4*-L debut, he was still unproven in many ways — and taking the pressure of expectation off was a huge part of Ros’s gameplan for the week.

“We’re over the moon with the way he’s coped,” says Ros. “Just to be here on the final day is a win in itself with Isaac, but he’s proved how much he’s grown up, and it makes it really exciting for next year. I didn’t really have any intentions about where we could be placed or anything like that — I mean, we all know he’s an out-and-out winner on his day, but this was really about trying to give him an experience that he enjoyed and building for his future. He’s had two big wins this year already, and hopefully this will build him up for another four long next year — and then we’ll see where we go after that!”

Ros and Isaac began the week in exceptional style, taking third place after the first phase on a score of 25, but a smattering of time penalties yesterday pushed them to ninth. Their clear inside the time today boosted them back up the order, and they took sixth place in the final standings.

“In the past, he’s been quite a flighty horse; if he’s been spooked or a bit nervous, like he was at Le Lion d’Angers, then he can go quite fast in the wrong direction,” says Ros. “But he was really good on cross-country. He was definitely a bit shell-shocked at first, and he didn’t really gallop towards the crowds for the first half of the course, so we struggled to stay on the minute markers right from the beginning because he was just drawing back a bit. But the thing I was most proud of was how honest he was at the jumps, even when there was so much going on, because that’s historically what he’s struggled with. He learned a lot from it — he’s tired, mentally, because he’s never experienced anything like this. It’s been a big week for him, and he’s ready for his holiday now!”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B realise a dream for the Annie Goodwin Syndicate. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

No horse in the field has been as roundly cheered on as Boyd Martin‘s Fedarman B, who he rides for the Annie Goodwin Syndicate in honour of the eponymous late rider who produced the talented gelding to the upper levels. Each step of the way, he’s given Annie’s family and friends an enormous amount to celebrate as their horse makes his debut for Team USA: they sat in the top ten after the first day of dressage, and top fifteen after the second on their 29.8, then moved up to tenth after a clear round fifteen seconds inside the time. Today, though, was their star turn, as they delivered an impeccable clear inside the time to claim seventh place.

“We’re building a partnership, and we’re against some very, very good horses here, so to finish in the top group is something to be proud of — and I think that in our next international, we’ll be even stronger,” says Boyd sagely. “He’d be one of the best jumpers I’ve ever sat on; he’s got power, and scope, and bravery, and carefulness, and he’s just amazing quality. I’m very, very honoured and privileged to ride him and to be here in this company, and to finish on his dressage score gives us a lot to be proud of. It’s great having such a nice group around him, and Annie’s parents here, too.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

Boyd, who was part of the silver medal-winning team at the World Championships in Pratoni last month, worked closely with Erik Duvander and Peter Wylde this week, alongside his teammates — and while he’s enjoying the afterglow of that historic success, the stalwart team member is always thinking of the marginal gains for his adopted nation.

“I think all the Americans had a great trip, and we’re still just a fraction off the best in the world, but we’re getting closer. We do still have to get a little bit better — I measure myself, personally, against the likes of Tim Price, and he’s part of that group that’s still just a notch better in their riding. I think that part B [of the US rebuilding project] is just getting ahold of the best horses in the world; I think there’s a handful of riders in America that are so close, and if we keep grinding away, I think we’ll get there.”

Susie Berry and the inexperienced, hugely exciting Clever Trick. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When Ireland’s Susie Berry entered the ten-year-old Clever Trick for this event, it was with one goal in mind: give the inexperienced mare an education in the imitable atmosphere of Boekelo, and don’t worry a jot about the result along the way. But the Irish mare by Financial Reward has only gotten better and better throughout the week, capitalising upon a confident first-phase result of 31.8, which put her 28th, by adding nothing across the country yesterday and just 0.8 time penalties in today’s tough showjumping to take a final eighth place.

“She was kind of an unknown coming in,” says Susie, “but she was class in all three phases, to be honest. She’d be really green on the flat, but she was just as good in the ring as she is at home. She didn’t care about the atmosphere or anything; she just got the job done.”

The pair finished nine seconds inside the optimum time yesterday, making light work of a twisty track that flits through arguably the party of the year around the busy cross-country course.

“I knew she was fast and very good across the country, but it was the other two phases where she’d be pretty green,” says Susie, who took over the ride from fellow Irish rider Alex Donohoe over the winter. “This is actually my first four-star with her — we’ve done an Advanced and a CCI3*-L, but it was all very unknown. I’d hoped she’d perform, but I didn’t expect to be in the top ten, that’s for sure! It just felt like we were singing off the same hymn sheet this week. Going into the jumping I thought she’d be a bit tight, but she was so relaxed, and as long as I stayed relaxed with her, she felt so loose and chilled.”

Sandra Auffarth and the inexperienced but exciting Rosveel add another four-star placing to their 2022 resumé. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

2014 World Champion Sandra Auffarth dropped from sixth to ninth place after tipping a rail with the young Rosveel, but was delighted to add another placing to the Polish-bred talent’s resume after a third-place finish in the German National Championships CCI4*-S at Luhmühlen in June.

“He’s just nine years old, and every four-star he’s done he’s been clear in the cross-country — he’s so honest, and very special, I must say,” she says. “I’ve had him since a six-year-old, and he was always nice across the country, and really doing a good job with the dressage and jumping as well, so he’s really good and an exciting horse for the future.”

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

France’s young talent shone through this week, with exciting performances across the country yesterday from a number of their riders under 30 — and it was the joint-fastest of the day, Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau, who topped the bill and rounded out the top ten today. Looking no less fresh for his speedy round, which saw the pair finish 18 seconds inside the time, Chaman Dumontceau pinged his way to a one-rail round, moving up one space from eleventh as a result.

“It’s been a very good week – it’s just his second CCI4*-L, and he finished so well,” says Stephane of the ten-year-old gelding, with whom he won Lignières CCI4*-S a year ago. “He’s been very focused, so I’m so happy with him.”

Alyssa Phillips and Oskar finish off their first trip to Europe in fine style. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alyssa Phillips put a cap on her first experience competing in Europe when she posted one of the few clear rounds in this morning’s first showjumping session, boosting herself and the talented Oskar, previously produced by teammate Liz Halliday-Sharp, from 48th to 44th. The pair, who had been awarded a 20 yesterday for a circle between elements, impressed through the week on their team debut.

Janneke Boonzaaijer took the Dutch national title with her ebullient Bouncer, despite two rails and 3.2 time penalties that put her within a penalty of second-placed Beau Posthumus and Smokie. They finished 37th and 38th, respectively, in the overall leaderboard, while third-placed Adriaan Smeulders, making his return to Boekelo for the first time in two decades, finished 48th with Ekow.

The top ten after an exciting finale at the 2022 Military Boekelo CCI4*-L.

The British are back on top in the 2022 Nations Cup finale. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The British team sealed the deal with a decisive win in the finale of the Nations Cup series, which they’d led from pillar to post with the team of Laura Collett and DacapoRos Canter and Izilot DHISarah Bullimore and Evita AP (20th after three rails), and Kirsty Chabert and Opposition Heraldik Girl (46th). They finished 6.2 penalties ahead of New Zealand, while France took the bronze position.

Germany, who finished fourth overall, took the 2022 series title in a three-way race between themselves, Italy (6th), and reigning champions Sweden (8th). Their team was largely made up of up-and-coming talent helmed by former World Champion Sandra Auffarth with RosveelLibussa Lübbeke and Darcy F (31st), 2019 Young Rider European Champions Emma Brüssau and Dark Desire GS (23rd), and Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3 (33rd after cross-country but eliminated at the final horse inspection.)

The US, meanwhile, finished in fifth place after a good showing by the team was marred by a frustrating bit of bad luck saw James Alliston and Nemesis spun at the final horse inspection.

And so it ends, and we bid adieu to eventing’s greatest party, pack our passports, and head onwards to Maryland. Go Eventing.

The final team standings in Boekelo’s Nations Cup finale.

Overnight Leader Held; Three Horses Spun at Boekelo Final Inspection

James Alliston and Nemesis bid adieu to Boekelo at the final inspection after delivering an excellent pathfinding round yesterday. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boekelo, eh? You think you’ve got it sussed, and then it surprises you all over again with — and you can take your pick, here — an inflatable stage in the main arena, a final fence that saw four fallers on cross-country, a middle-aged man determinedly wearing knee-high pink socks and using a duck ringtone loudly in the media centre, and an eye-wateringly dramatic final horse inspection.

Italy’s Umberto Riva and Falconn Sunheup Z. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Despite the flat, relatively undemanding terrain and forgiving ground on yesterday’s course, a sum total of thirteen horses were sent to the holding box throughout the course of this morning’s trot-up, which was held before a ground jury of president Christina Klingspor, alongside Edith Schless-Störtenbecker and Merel Schurink. Seven of those were British, and included overnight leaders Laura Collett and Dacapo, as well as Laura’s second ride, Bling, who sits 47th overnight. They were both subsequently accepted on re-presentation, as were fellow countrymen Richard Coney and Poetry in Motion (38th), Izzy Taylor and Graf Cavalier (17th), Bella Innes-Kerr and Highway (46th), William Fox-Pitt and Moonlight Charmer (19th), and Ros Canter and Izilot DHI (9th).

Joining them in the hold box were delegates from a number of other countries, too. France’s Benjamin Massié and Edition Fonroy (16th) were held and subsequently accepted on re-presentation, as were Italy’s Tosca Brambilla and Legaland Mood Swing (55th) and Umberto Riva and Falconn Sunheup Z (25th), though the latter were asked to trot a second time in their re-presentation. 53 horses and riders will go through to showjumping, following the overnight withdrawal of Sweden’s Erika Sjöstrom and Mosstown Prince (57th) and France’s Sebastien Cavaillon and Quatchina Blue Z (37th) and Fabrice Saintemarie and Cronos de Pleysse (51st).

Ireland’s Camilla Spiers and BT Angelo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Three horses were sadly eliminated from the competition after re-presenting, and all three were part of Nations Cups teams. The USA’s James Alliston and Nemesis (30th), Ireland’s Camilla Spiers and BT Angelo (13th), and Germany’s Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3 (33rd) will not continue on in the competition. That means that team USA drops from fourth to fifth going into the final phase, and Ireland drops from fifth to eighth, while Germany, whose riders all completed yesterday’s cross-country without jumping penalties, move up from sixth to fourth and remain at the forefront of the hunt for the series title, for which they’re competing against Italy — currently sixth — and Sweden, currently seventh.

Germany’s Arne Bergendahl and Luthien 3. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The showjumping will begin from 11.30 a.m. local time (10.30 a.m. BST/5.30 a.m. EST), with the top twenty-five to follow from 14.30 local time (13.30 BST/8.30 a.m. EST). You can check out the times in full here, and as always, watch along here. We’ll be back with all the news and views you need to know — and in the meantime, Go Eventing!

The final top ten, in reverse order of merit.

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries & Live Scores | Live Stream | ScheduleEN’s Coverage

Sunday Links from SmartPak

Sigh … goodbye to another season of sanctioned eventing here in Area 1! The season closed out at Hitching Post Farm in South Strafford, Vermont yesterday where riders, volunteers, and organizers alike were treated to peak fall foliage while they were out and about. ‘Tis the season now to soak up as much of the beautiful fall weather as possible before we’re all breaking ice out of buckets for months.

U.S. Weekend Action

Morven Park Fall International CCI4*-L (Leesburg, VA): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Erin Gilmore Photography] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Heritage Park H.T. (Olathe, KS): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

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

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

Ocala Fall H.T. (Ocala, FL): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Radnor Hunt H.T. (Malvern, PA): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

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

Woodside Fall H.T. (Woodside, CA): [Website] [Entries/Ride Times/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Major International Events

Military Boekelo CCIO4*-L: [Website] [Entries] [Leaderboard] [Schedule] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Links to Start Your Sunday:

Fast Facts: 2022 USEA FEH Central Championships

Protecting Your Horse From Poisonous Fall Leaves

Behind The Photo: Dutch Warmblood Gets Filmed For ‘Yellowstone’

Irish eventing fund awards €60K in bursaries to young riders

Better control tools needed for many infectious animal diseases, researchers say

Sunday Viewing from SmartPak: Over 200,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year. It could be our moms, sister, daughter, friend, or fellow rider. That’s why SmartPak is proud to partner with the Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) in support of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Ready Joyce’s story here and Go Pink with limited edition styles from SmartPak here — 30% of the purchase price of these items is donated to BCRF!

Tamie Smith Sails to Morven Park CCI4*-L Lead after Cross Country

Tamie Smith and Julianne Guariglia’s Solaguayre California step up to take the lead in the 4*-L. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

Cross-country shook up the CCI4*-L leaderboard on Saturday at the Morven Park Fall International CCI & Horse Trials, with Pratoni silver medalist Tamie Smith and Solaguayre California now sitting in the lead with a score of 29.7 heading into the third and final day.

Fellow Team USA member Will Coleman and Chin Tonic HS currently hold second place with a score of 32.2, and as one of only three double-clear efforts, Mia Farley and Phelps made the biggest leap up the leaderboard, moving from 15th to third on a score of 34.4.

“My horses were awesome,” said Smith, who has been partnered with Solaguayre California, an 11-year-old Holsteiner mare owned by Julianne Guarliglia, for a little over two years. “California was the first out, which is good practice since it throws in another element to the whole mix because you don’t get to know how the course is riding. [California] is such an athlete and just jumped around and was fast. I was super pleased with her. She’s a fighter, and she wants to do it. I think today was a lot about our partnership and her trusting me. It was awesome that she read all the jumps and jumped in.”

Will Coleman and Hyperion Stud’s Chin Tonic HS make quick work of Derek di Grazia’s “five-star prep” track. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

For the second year in a row, the track for the CCI4*-L was set by renowned course designer Derek di Grazia, and it once again posed many challenging questions across Morven Park’s varied terrain.

One rider, Joe Meyer, was taken to the hospital and is currently being monitored and treated for broken ribs and a small laceration on his liver after falling with Harbin on the 4*-L course. Harbin is reported to be ok after the fall.

“It was hard!” said Smith of the course. “It rode like a typical Derek di Grazia track where everything looks really readable and right there, and then you get out there and it’s a lot harder than it seems.”

Smith continued, “What Derek has done, which I think is masterful, is created combinations in which you’re not sure what the stride’s going to be. You can’t anticipate how they’re going to react to something like the Leaf Pit. They jump down, and you might end up too big. So, I think what’s really cool about the course is it really helps riders have to dig into that instinct of riding. I think there was a fair bit of trouble out there today.”

Friday’s frontrunners, Sharon White and Claus 63, were one of the nine combinations who ran into trouble on course, with an unfortunate fall at the Devoucoux Frog Pond eliminating them and opening the door for Coleman and Hyperion Stud’s Chin Tonic HS to move into second.

“It’s a great course,” said Coleman. “Derek has built something that’s going to help us develop five-star horses in this country. I feel like that’s something we were lacking at the four-star level. It’s really nice to have this place and a course like that for our future horses. [The questions asked] used the terrain really well and gave the horse a wonderful education.”

Mia Farley and David O’Connor’s Thoroughbred, Phelps, climbed their way up onto the podium following 4*-L cross country. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

Pratoni individual rider Ariel Grald finishes on the podium in the 2*-S with Annie Eldridge’s Diara. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

After jumping up into third place aboard David O’Connor’s Phelps, Farley expressed similar sentiments.

“I thought it rode really well for the horses that were able to see everything and understand it,” said Farley, who has been partnered with Phelps since the 9-year-old Thoroughbred gelding was 4. “There were turns to help me set him up. He was wonderful. He went around really well. He’s such an underdog. I just feel like I’ve been along for the ride with him. He’s been great to be with.”

Aboard her own BGS Calculated Chaos, Farley also earned victory in the CCI2*YH-S division, sponsored by Arden Farm, with a score of 28.5. In addition to the young horse prize money made possible by Arden Farm, Farley also received a $750 bonus, sponsored by Piedmont Equine Practice, as the top U25 athlete in the CCI2* divisions.

Finishing in second place in the CCI2*YH-S were Julie Wolfert and Namibia with a score of 32.4, and Sara Schulman and Cooly Chromatic’s score of 33.1 earned them the third-place prize.

Cosby Green and Copper Beach take the 4*-S victory, moving up after starting the weekend in seventh. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

Cosby Green climbed the rankings in the CCI4*-S to earn the winning title with Copper Beach, owned by Bel Mar Farm. The duo finished on a score of 45.8, followed by Julie Wolfert and SSH Playboy who placed second on a score 50.6. Bruce Davidson Jr. and Electric claimed third place on a score of 52.1

Victory in the CCI3*YH-S division, sponsored by Arden Farm, went to Lauren Nicholson aboard Landmark’s Jungle’s Gold, owned by Jacqueline Mars, as the pair finished with a score of 36.4. Woods Baughman and Kamara CFF finished in a close second with a score of 36.6, while Ryan Wood and Check Point rounded out the top three with a score of 38.5.

Pratoni individual rider Ariel Grald finishes on the podium in the 2*-S with Annie Eldridge’s Diara. Photo by Erin Gilmore Photography.

Lucienne Bellissimo had just two time faults during cross-country with Horse Scout Eventing LLC’s Dyri to capture the CCI3*-S championship, finishing with a score of 28.2, Hannah Sue Hollberg and Carsonstown finished just a fraction over the time for second place on a score of 31.0. Cosby Green and Jos UFO De Quidam’s score of 31.9 took home the third-place honors.

Tamie Smith continued her top performances for the week with Kynan, owned by the Kynan Syndicate. They led the CCI2*-S from start to finish to win the division by finishing on their dressage score of 24.4. Matthew Brown and Riverview Starboy also finished on their dressage score of 24.9 to place second, while Ariel Grald and Diara were also clear through each phase for the third-place award with a score of 27.4.

The CCI4*-L continues with the final horse inspection on Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and show jumping at 10 a.m.

Morven Park Fall International CCI4*-L (Leesburg, VA): [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Erin Gilmore Photography] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Enjoy a few social snippets from Morven Park so far:

Laura Collett Remains Boss of Boekelo After Cross-Country

Laura Collett and Dacapo maintain their first-phase lead, remaining on 21.9 after Boekelo’s cross-country day. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Today’s cross-country at Military Boekelo CCIO4*-L could be fairly described as something of a day of two halves: on the one hand, despite riders’ assertions that it walked as more difficult than in previous years, we saw 59 of 74 starters complete — an 80% completion rate — and 44 of those jump clear, giving a clear rate of 59%. The optimum time of 10:10 proved not at all difficult to catch, too, with a whopping 19 competitors catching it.

But while it was, in many respects, the ‘softer’ Boekelo we’ve become used to, it still had its challenges — and most pertinent of those today was its final fence. A reasonably wide table-profiled fence, it walked as being wholly innocuous — but throughout the day, we saw three fallers here, including second-placed Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress. Though each fall was different, as was each approach, each of the horses fell after leaving a left leg, and though officials tried to paint the top edges of the table white to make them more readable after the third fall, by the fourth, they opted simply to remove the jump altogether to keep horses and riders safe — though, as Technical Delegate Gillay Kyle was quick to remind people, that decision didn’t reinstate those four fallers.

One of those nineteen clears inside the time belonged to Laura Collett, who remains in the lead following the pivotal phase with Dacapo.

Longtime followers of Laura’s, though, will be just as familiar with the 13-year-old Dacapo for his misdemeanours as they are for his successes. He’s got plenty of major accolades under his belt, including second place at Aachen last year, but he’s also lost out on plenty more after silly runouts – an occasional habit that Laura hasn’t quite found her way to the bottom of.

“You never know what day he’s going to have, but he was amazing the whole way around,” she says. “You have absolutely no idea [when he’s going to be naughty] — it comes out of nowhere. He’s either going or he’s not, and there’s not a lot you can do about it! When he’s good he’s amazing, and he has his ears pricked and looks like he loves it, so you never quite know what’s going on in his head! When he’s like he was today, he’s mega — he never runs out.”

Dacapo certainly made Adrian Ditcham’s track look easy, coming in a hundredth of a second under the optimum time and never wavering in his approaches, even in the face of 60,000 enthusiastic partiers in close proximity to the tightly-roped track. But then, for all his quirks, Dacapo is a bit of a showman — and it’s that love of the spotlight that Laura hopes will buoy him to greatness tomorrow in the main arena where stablemate London 52 experienced the great turning point of his career.

“He’s a good jumper, but he can have a lazy rail here or there. He loves an atmosphere, though, so I’m hoping he rises to the occasion and tries a little bit harder,” says Laura. “Hopefully it’s his time to shine — he’s been in Dan’s shadow for long enough!”

Tim Price and Happy Boy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Three days into his tenure as the newly-minted World Number One, Tim Price puts himself well in contention for another international title, stepping up from equal fourth to overnight second with his 2019 Seven-Year-Old World Champion, Happy Boy. That movement came after the shock elimination of second-placed Giovanni Ugolotti, who fell at the final fence from Swirly Temptress, and the relocation within the top ten of third-placed Ros Canter and Izilot DHI, who added 4.4 time penalties to slip to ninth.

“He’s a great little horse,” says Tim, who came home three seconds inside the time with the ten-year-old Dutch-bred gelding. “He’s still getting used to this level; it’s only his second time around a course like this, but this is definitely the biggest challenge he’s seen in his career. I was really happy with him — he just kept coming and taking on all the questions.”

Though Happy Boy has previously experienced busy crowds at the Young Horse World Championships at Le Lion d’Angers, Boekelo’s atmosphere adds a whole new dimension — and something of an edge. When the long-term goal is to build a team horse for the future, though, that’s a valuable educational asset.

“I haven’t been here in about three years, and the course designer has changed in that time, so it’s pretty different. It’s a bit more gradual to get you into the technicality element of the course, and it feels a bit bigger, but the thing we get here every time is the crowds everywhere. For a young horse — and even for some of the more experienced four-star horses — they’re looking to the left and looking to the right, just clocking all these people leaning over the strings. It’s a brilliant feeling, but it’s a bit off-putting for the inexperienced ones. It’s what it’s all about, though, and it’s why we’re here — to get them used to this sort of thing.”

Tim’s round helps propel the New Zealand team into overnight second place in the Nations Cup, up one place from their post-dressage third — though still 11.1 penalties behind Great Britain, who continue to hold the lead after two phases. For the Kiwis, though, it’s all part of a recent, much-welcomed uptick in team fortunes.

“We’ve been a bit wavering over the last few years, but we got a great shot in the arm at the World Championships at Pratoni a couple of weeks ago,” says Tim. “It’s all about a bit of momentum, and then when you have someone else come into the frame that wasn’t there, you can pick them up and run with it, so it’s really exciting for the team.”

Tom McEwen pilots Nicola Wilson’s European Champion, JL Dublin, to a clear inside the time and overnight third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Another factor allowed Tim to move into second place, and after the brief frustration of Pratoni, at which he lost out on a tiebreak by being further under the optimum time than Boyd Martin, he’ll have breathed a sigh of relief to have been the victorious party this time. He and Tom McEwen both remain on 25.6 going into tomorrow’s showjumping, but as Tim was three seconds inside the time, it allowed him to inch ahead of now-third-placed Tom, who was four seconds inside the time on new ride JL Dublin.

While both rider and European Championship-winning horse is enormously experienced in his own right, this is their first significant competition in tandem: they’ve contested a couple of Intermediates, and used the CCI4*-S at Little Downham this month as a combined test, but have never yet run in an international. The partnership, helped along by the eleven-year-old gelding’s former rider Nicola Wilson, looked to be coming along in fine style, though.

Sarah Bullimore’s Evita AP is the best of the eight-year-olds in the field and will sit fourth overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The Boekelo field is always well-stocked with very young four-star horses, and the best of those today was Sarah Bullimore‘s eight-year-old Evita AP, who stepped up to the level just this season and was second in the prestigious eight- and nine-year-old CCI4*-S at Blenheim just last month. Though Sarah no longer has two horses in the top ten after an educational round with a 20 for the inexperienced Irish Trump, who slipped from seventh to 44th, she was delighted to secure fourth place overnight with the young mare, who also contributes to the British team effort. Their clear round, six seconds inside the time, boosts them from eighth after dressage.

“I had a fantastic ride –  my mare’s only an eight-year-old, and she was fabulous,” says Sarah. “She’s just got a great, great brain on her, and she was out there ready for the next fence with her ears forward the whole way. She had a lovely time, and I’m chuffed to bits with her. She’ll have learnt an awful lot from coming here. They don’t see these sort of crowds anywhere else – it’s quite unique.”

Yasmin Ingham’s Rehy DJ embraces the atmosphere to romp home inside the time. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though her round won’t add to the British team effort after a last-minute switch-around on Wednesday, World Champion Yasmin Ingham is still well in contention for individual honours with Rehy DJ after a faultless clear 12 seconds inside the time boosted them from ninth to fifth and proved that, despite that Wednesday incident that saw the gelding sustain a superficial graze after being spooked by a water bowser, Rehy DJ is none the worse for wear.

Sandra Auffarth and Rosveel. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Speaking of World Champions, the 2014 one put in a none too shabby show today herself. Germany’s Sandra Auffarth steps up from tenth to sixth with a faultless round aboard the nine-year-old Polish Sport Horse Rosveel, with whom she finished third in Luhmühlen’s CCI4*-S this summer. Just behind them, France’s Morgane Euriat and Baccarat d’Argonne jump from eleventh to seventh after a gutsy, attacking round that reminded spectators why exactly they were victorious in their first-ever CCI4*-L at Lignières last October, and just one second over the optimum in their second at Bramham under-25s this summer.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Miks Master C add a smattering of time but remain in the top ten after a confident, exciting round from the inexperienced horse. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz Halliday-Sharp is best of the US team, who slip from second to fourth overnight, despite dropping down two places to eighth after picking up 3.2 time penalties. But for Miks Master C‘s first time competing outside North America, and his first exposure to atmosphere, it’s an exciting milestone in the pair’s five month-long partnership.

“I was a little bit bummed to not make the time because he was quite strong, but honestly, he was fabulous,” says Liz, who pilots the gelding for stalwart owners Ocala Horse Properties and Debbie Palmer. “It was our first four-long together and he really showed he’s a world class horse. I’m excited about his future; I think it was a really good learning track for him. He’s a such a big, bold galloping horse and this is a very tight, twisting track.”

Though five months is barely any time at all in the grand scheme of an upper level partnership, Liz’s time with the gelding has been wholly focused on getting to know him and helping him to build his strength and balance – although sometimes, that strength can be a touch overenthusiastic.

“The biggest thing is he’s gotten so much stronger and fitter, and he’s suddenly realized he’s He-Man now, so he’s gotten to be a lot to hold on to — which is fine, I ride a lot of strong horses. He wants to do the job and he’s a big-striding horse. I was actually 30 seconds up on the time at the last water and I had to just thread the anchor back through the woods because I just didn’t have the control. But I do think he learned a lot; he went through the woods and was a bit strong and then he came back to me. I am quite disappointed about the time because I’m just really competitive, but I can’t fault the horse at all.”

“He’s been a bit of a different horse at every show I’ve done. This has kind of been a learning journey taking him here and finding a horse for the future. I think next year I’m going to have the horse I really know.”

Though Boekelo, with its twists and turns and smaller fences, wouldn’t be the obvious match for the big-striding, bold gelding, that’s partly why Liz wanted to aim him at the show.

“I think horses need to be able to do everything now,” she explains. “I’m trying to prime my horses up for all of the championships, and I think they need to do all the types of tracks. I think this could be a horse for me for the Olympics, but either way he’s proven to me today that he’s going to be a top five-star horse. And they need to prove they can twist and turn as well as gallop and jump.”

Ros Canter’s naturally spooky Izilot DHI steps up to the plate in a big way at Boekelo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Overnight third-placed Ros Canter moves down to ninth place after cross-country after adding 4.4 time penalties with Izilot DHI, who has been exceptional at CCI4*-S this season but hadn’t yet made the step up to this level.

“I’m absolutely delighted,” says Ros. “He’s still a very young horse; this is his first CCI4*-L, and he’s quite a sharp, spooky character, so it was a big occasion for him today. He won’t have seen anything like this, and he was a bit shy and nervous at the start, but so honest and genuine at the fences. I couldn’t be happier with him.”

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd Martin rounds out the top ten with the Annie Goodwin Syndicate’s Fedarman B, who moved up from fifteenth place after going great guns around the course and showing how exceptionally his relatively new partnership with Boyd has come along. They finished fifteen seconds inside the time though, as Boyd explains, that wasn’t because he was pushing the horse for any kind of speed.

“When I came into it, I felt like I had him very, very fit because he was sort of the backup horse for Pratoni,” says Boyd. “So I had him galloping a lot early on in preparation and so he was ready for that. He showed me at the Tryon 4* that he could do the distance. This course here is a twisty course, and he’s got so much speed; he just gave me a great ride. I feel a bit embarrassed coming in fifteen seconds under the time! But he’s very light in the mouth and I was just seeing really good shots, and I don’t have to set him up too much.”

After Boyd jumped through the final water complex with the gelding, an enormous roar went up from the sidelines — such is the strength in depth of their support side this week as they ride in honour of the late Annie Goodwin, who passed away last year following a riding accident. For Boyd, it was great to give them something wonderful to cheer about.

“I’ve really only had him for a little over a year. He’s had one rider since he was three years old and that was Annie, so I couldn’t expect to hop on and have him go for me like he did for her. This time last year, we were eliminated at Morven Park, but we’ve gelled together — and it’s been great to have the Annie Goodwin Syndicate here cheering us on. Annie’s parents are here, so it’s just a brilliant atmosphere. Team USA has such great supporters today — and like Pratoni, it’s just an awesome group of riders. I think Liz, James, and Alyssa are some of the best riders America’s got, and it’s an honor and privilege to ride for the country.”

James Alliston and Nemesis make light work of pathfinder duties for Team USA. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though he was mounted on one of the greenest horses in the field in eight-year-old NemesisJames Alliston made a fine job of taking team pathfinder duties in his Team USA debut, adding just 2 time penalties and bringing back valuable intel to his teammates. He was able to move up from 55th to 30th off the back of that great round.

“I just wanted to start out getting some good jumps, so I didn’t go blazingly fast,” says the West Coast rider, who rode for his native Great Britain until a few months ago. “He’s a fast horse, but at 4ABC, I kind of picked my way through probably in more strides that any other people. After that, he felt really good and confidence, and as I went, I sort of amped it up a little.”

Though they jumped most of the track brilliantly, they survived a near-miss moment at the last fence, which would go on to catch a number of riders and horses out throughout the day.

“It was maybe a little bit chancy coming home,” he says. “And next time, I’d start out a bit quicker!”

Alyssa Phillips and Oskar negotiate the tricky water complex. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Team USA debutantes Alyssa Phillips and Oskar moved from 24th to 48th after picking up an unlucky run-out in the final water combination, plus a further 18.4 time faults — but the exciting gelding looked to gain in confidence on his way around the track, and will have learned plenty from the experience.

Janneke Boonzaaijer, 40th after cross-country after adding 14 time penalties with her CCI4*-L debutant Bouncer, takes the lead on the hunt for the Dutch National Championship after the retirement of first-phase leaders Tim Lips and Wicro Quibus.

“I am very happy with how it went,” says Janneke, who jumped through the tough main water complex with one stirrup, putting an enormous amount of faith in her inexperienced horse in doing so. “A lot of emotions; it was really insanely beautiful. In some places it all went just fine, like on the second water. It wasn’t easy; I really had to fight, but the result is great.”

Great Britain remains in the lead in the team competition, followed by New Zealand in second, French in third, and the US in fourth. Just three teams are in contention for the series title: Germany, who currently lead the standings, sit sixth, while Sweden is eighth of ten teams and Italy is seventh.

We’ll be back bright and early with all the news from the final horse inspection, set to take place from 9.30 a.m. local time/8.30 a.m. BST/3.30 a.m. EST. Until then: Go Eventing!

The top ten after cross-country at Military Boekelo.

The team standings at the close of the second phase in the Nations Cup competition.

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries & Live Scores | Live Stream | ScheduleEN’s Coverage

A Delightful Pau Entry List to Close Out the 2022 5* Season

Caroline Martin and Islandwood Captain Jack are one of two pairs representing the U.S. entered at Pau this year. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Typically the penultimate five-star event of the season (in most years, Australia’s event in Adelaide is the latest, happening in November but this year postponed until April 2023), this year’s edition of Les Etoiles de Pau will close out the season and a 52-strong entry list has just dropped. The French five-star will take place in the South of France October 27-30.

Pau has, in recent years, produced winners that have gone on to appear on championship teams: 2019 winner Tom McEwen along with 2020 winner Laura Collett would each go on to win gold medals in Tokyo aboard their Pau partners Toledo de Kerser and London 52, respectively. 2021 winner Tim Price would be selected to represent New Zealand on this year’s FEI World Championship squad with Falco (collecting two medals in the process). With this year featuring its share of Olympic horses and riders, previous five-star winners, and re-routing World Championships horses, it’s safe to bet that the to-be-named 2022 winner could springboard in similar fashion.

Two American riders will tackle longtime Pau designer Pierre Michelet’s challenge: Caroline Martin, based in the UK for the past few months thanks to the support of the Wilton Fair Grant, will make her first overseas 5* start with the 14-year-old Irish gelding Islandwood Captain Jack. Carolina has been based with Pippa Funnell — who is also entered at Pau with 2019 Burghley winner MGH Grafton Street — for the majority of her time in the UK and says the education she’s received from the Rolex Grand Slam winner is incomparable. She and “James” are hot off some seriously competitive finishes in FEI competition overseas and are primed to have a peak weekend to cap off a successful trip.

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

Also entered for the U.S. is Katherine Coleman, who makes her first start at the 5* level since 2017 and her first with the 14-year-old RLE Limbo Kaiser, who did complete this event with Britain’s Rosa Onslow in 2020. Katherine is based full-time in the UK after packing up her bags and moving from the U.S. to England in 2012 to pursue her riding career. She’s had a handful of horses step up to this level but is still chasing that coveted first completion. Over the last decade, Katherine’s had the opportunity to work alongside riders such as Sam Watson and Lucinda Green and also helped to found ReadySupp, a SmartPak-esque supplement company based in the UK.

Other highlights from the Pau list include:

  • A handful of recent five-star winners, both horse and human: Felix Vogg and Colero (Luhmühlen 2022), Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden (Luhmühlen 2021), Pippa Funnell and MGH Grafton Street (Burghley 2019), Jonelle Price (2018 Luhmühlen, 2018 Badminton) and Grappa Nera, Tom McEwen (Pau 2019) and Bob Chaplin and Braveheart B
  • Another 5* debutant horse for 2018 World Champion and British World Championships team member Ros Canter in the 11-year-old Rehy Royal Diamond (we hear she has a knack for almost winning five-stars on her horses’ debuts…)
  •  Season cappers for two pairs who started but did not finish this year’s FEI World Championships in Italy: Nicolas Touizant (FRA) and Absolut Gold*HDC, Aistis Vitkauskas (LIT) and Commander VG

Ros Canter and Rehy Royal Diamond. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ll also see a 31-strong British contingent, a healthy list of experienced French riders looking to nab the first win for the home team since 2018, as well as riders representing Australia, Ireland, Italy, Japan, and much more.

Click here to view the full entry list as we roll full steam ahead into the finale of the fall five-star season. You’ll be able to follow along live thanks to Horse & Country. Keep an eye out here on EN for the latest from Pau!

“The Most Beautiful Boekelo”: Take a Walk Around Adrian Ditcham’s Course

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Boekelo has historically had a reputation for being one of the ‘softer’ CCI4*-L options, purely because its very flat terrain and dimensionally smaller fences don’t herald comparison to the likes of Bramham. But to underestimate Adrian Ditcham’s challenge today would be remiss: one of the things that makes Boekelo such a showpiece event is its extraordinary atmosphere, and the twisty track runs through a course-wide complex of bars, party spots, restaurants, grandstands, and very nearly nightclubs, all of which are right up against the ropes and give inexperienced horses plenty to distract their focus. It’s an exceptional educational experience for the championship horses of the future but, as Tim Price explains, “it’s a bit of a jumpers’ course — there are some things that aren’t particularly big, so your proper five-star horses might end up going a bit like the proper five-star horses did at Pratoni.” For his young horse, Happy Boy, who sits equal fourth going into cross-country, it’s perfect: “there’s lots of ground lines and obvious profiles, and he’s an honest horse, so if I give him a good placement everywhere, it should be alright.”

Newly crowned World Champion Yasmin Ingham returns for the first time since 2019, again riding her stalwart Rehy DJ — and this time, she’s one of many riders who reckons the course has been beefed up in its intensity and technical challenge.

“It looks hard enough,” she laughs. “There’s lots of skinnies, but when you think about the course, you also have to think about the atmosphere and the audience that’s there clapping and cheering. Rehy DJ has experience with atmosphere now, so he shouldn’t be too bothered about that side of things, but it’ll take some riding. I was watching the videos back from 2017, and I personally think it’s come on a lot in difficulty from that, and from 2019. I’m looking forward to getting out there!”

 

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Reigning Dutch National Champion Tim Lips, who’s currently at the forefront of the race to regain his title, praised the course as the best he’s seen in his long tenure competing here.

“For me, it’s absolutely the most beautiful I’ve seen here,” he says.

The course will run to an optimum time of 10:10 over a 5789m track, with Dutchman Thierry van Reine taking pathfinder duties at 10.45 local time (9.45 a.m. BST/4.45 a.m. EST) with ACSI Harry Belafonte. You can watch along here — and tune into EN for all the updates and reports you’ll need!


 

Military Boekelo Links: Website | Entries & Live Scores | Live Stream | ScheduleEN’s Coverage