Classic Eventing Nation

Who Jumped It Best? Woodside Beginner Novice Edition

Fence 9 on the Woodside Beginner Novice track sits in memory of Donald Trotter. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Woodside hosted its October Horse Trials earlier this month with rousing success and positive feedback from all competitors, and we’re taking a look back through the lens of Sherry Stewart for a fresh new edition of Who Jumped It Best! This one comes from the Beginner Novice division; vote at the bottom of this post for the pair you feel presents the best overall picture. Eternal EN karma and bragging rights to the winner!

Check out full results from Woodside’s Fall Horse Trials here.

Jacqueline Gilmartin and Citizen Jane. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Kelly Schwisow and Tahoe’s Prize DF. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Naomi Boness and Change of Luck. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Jennifer Wang and Coronet Star. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Anwyn Cunha and Kikis Express. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Suzanna Brock and Ms. J Zeigh. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Katherine Jackman and Prada. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Tina Barclay and Manning. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Marissa Nielsen and Poncho. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Ky Pierce and Mandalorian. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Strides for Equality Equestrians Awards Deonte Sewell, Miz Valdez PSBE3D Grants

Strides for Equality Equestrians is pleased to announce that competition grants for the Peterson & Smith Barnstaple Educational Three Day have been awarded to riders Deonte Sewell and Mia Valdez.

The PSBE3D happens November 14-20 and is a week long educational and competitive experience focused on developing the skills needed for long format and upper level Eventing. Deonte and Mia will learn details of how to successfully be prepared for and participate in these events from elite trainers, coaches, grooms, and judges. It is an immersive and action-packed week.

Strides for Equality Equestrians is pleased to offer these two riders this opportunity through helpful donations from our members and through the USEA Foundation. These grants fully fund the costs of this educational week for our two recipients who will share their experiences on social media and in other press outlets.

For more information on Strides for Equality Equestrians (SEE) and the programs it offers please go to www.stridesforequality.org or visit our page on Facebook and Instagram. Follow our scholarship recipients past and present on the SEE Ever So Sweet Scholarship Facebook and Instagram pages as well.

To donate, please visit our donate page on our website or go to the USEA Foundation webpage and select Strides for Equality Equestrians in the drop down menu. You can also participate in an online auction through the end of the month here.

SEE the Change! Be an Ally!

Tuesday News & Notes from Ocala Horse Properties

You can’t always be away winning five-stars in the family Price — sometimes, you’ve got to wrangle the, um, greener ones on their way to future success, as demonstrated by better half of the Price clan, Jonelle, competing at Oasby last weekend while Tim was here at Maryland. Ah, this sport — it’s wonderful, isn’t it??

Events Open This Week

Sporting Days Farm H.T. IV (SC), Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL)

Events Closing Today

The VHT International and H.T. (VA), Galway Downs International and H.T. (CA), Rocking Horse Fall H.T., Texas Rose Fall H.T. (TX), Full Gallop Farm November H.T. (SC)

Tuesday News & Reading

Congratulations to our Maryland Pick ‘Em & Win champion! Julia B., check your email for more details on your prize. Thank you to all for playing!

Want to ride with Bettina Hoy? Don’t miss out on the MARS Bromont Rising West coast leg at Galway Downs, where U25 riders competing at FEI levels are eligible to apply for the clinic happening at the end of October. [Get those applications in!]

I love a good “equine career change” story, and I also happen to loosely know the subject of this article through the various eventing social media circles I’m in. Meet Morgan Cooper, who wound up discovering eventing after starting off in the Western world. [Change of Rein: Morgan Cooper]

We’ve all been taught that gut sounds are a good thing — but what, exactly, do they mean? In fact, gut sounds are something that veterinarians are looking for in different areas of your horse’s abdomen, using this information as indicators of health. [More on gut sounds]

Want to support Strides for Equality Equestrians? Join the nonprofit organization for an online auction, happening now through the end of the month. Lots of goodies, including lessons with top riders, a Ride iQ membership, and much more are up for grabs. [SEE the auction]

Sponsor Corner

Our favorite Ocala Horse Properties find this week might be *just* out of my price range (and never fear, Ocala Horse Properties’ portfolio includes farms of all sizes and budgets!), but what a gorgeous property! I am 100% visualizing myself here as we speak…

Tuesday Video Break

I love this video all about the journey of Willinga Park Clifford and Hazel Shannon:

Weekend Winners: Pine Hill & Poplar Place

Of course, attention has been turned to Maryland this past weekend. But, with a few other recognized events running this past weekend, let’s take a look at what eventers got up to in Texas at the Pine Hill Fall HT, and in Georgia at Poplar Place Farm.

Pine Hill Fall H.T. (Bellville, TX): [Website] [Results] [Volunteer]

Open Preliminary HT: Ellen Doughty-Hume and We Were On A Break (33.9)
Open Training HT: Eva Hemb and Lexington Hall’s Bentley (29.2)
Open Novice HT A: Janine Malseed and Cooley Jet Set (31.8)
Open Novice HT B: Grace Fiore and Glenlord’s Laralie (36.4)
Open Beginner Novice HT A: Michelle Kennedy and Right Swipe (22.9)
Open Beginner Novice HT B: Lisa Kerr and Cosmic Brew (23.8)
Open Beginner Novice HT C: Julia Pinell and Castleberry’s Dirty Harry (30.3)
Open Starter HT: Emarie Graham and jarrito (29.0)

Poplar Place Farm October H.T. (Hamilton, GA): [Website] [Results]

Advanced – Combined Test (Four Star Test A): Mary Bess Davis and Imperio Magic (32.1)
Open Intermediate: Kit Ferguson and Cillbhrid Tom (43.1)
Open Preliminary: Lauren Hoover and Monbeg Capricorn (38.6)
Modified: Jane Jennings and SF Vancouver 2 (28.3)
Junior Training Rider: Sophia Brady-Owen and Extraordinary Girl (41.2)
Open Training: Sydney Schultz and Excel Star Saphira (30.4)
Senior Training Rider: Carole Schaff and Company Spending (31.0)
Junior Novice Rider: Anna Burgess and String Theory (29.4)
Open Novice: Laura Sparks and GTB Felix Felicis (27.5)
Senior Novice Rider: Mary Carol Harsch and Theodore alCoda (30.5)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider: Madison Zgutowicz and My Valentine (25.9)
Open Beginner Novice: Donna Miller and Machno Fear Dun (33.1)
Senior Beginner Novice Rider: Katharina Huenermann and Q-Star (22.8)
Introductory: Christiana Schultz and Catalina Rose (37.7)
Starter: Georgia Ranson and Brambleridge Capability Brown (24.0)

Maryland 5* Weekend Social Recap

Anyone else spending their Monday reliving the action from Maryland this weekend? I was disappointed that I wasn’t able to make it in person this year, but have been thoroughly scrolling through Instagram, Facebook, and rewatching the USEF coverage as a way to experience the event as much as possible. Is it too early to start planning a trip for next year?! In the meantime, let’s take a look at some of the highlights…

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [3* Results] [5* Results] [Form Guide] [Digital Program] [EN’s Maryland Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Monday Video: Ride Maryland XC with the 3* National Champions

Newly minted 2022 USEF CCI3*-L National Champions Elisa Wallace and Renkum Corsair had their trusty helmet cam aboard during their cross country round in the three-star division at the MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill presented by Brown Advisory on Saturday! We love this up-close-and-personal look at the three-star track, and as Elisa and “Caz” were held near the beginning of their course this video is also a neat chance to get an inside look at how a rider manages a hold on course.

The syndicate-owned 12-year-old Holsteiner x Dutch Warmblood is a relatively new partnership for Elisa, who found the gelding on a trip to England last November. Previously ridden through the three-star level by British young rider Saffron Cresswell, Caz arrived stateside in January of this year. You can catch up with their journey on Elisa’s YouTube channel.

Elisa and Caz stalked the top spot all weekend after delivering a personal best FEI dressage score at any level of 26.4 for second place after the first phase. Finishing on that score at the end of the weekend secured them their win. Watch their dressage test and their winning show jumping round below!


Elisa Wallace and Renkum Corsair Named 2022 USEF CCI3*-L Eventing National Champions

Elkton, Md. – The 2022 MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill presented by Brown Advisory came to an exciting conclusion with Sunday’s show jumping phase. Combinations rode over solid tracks designed by Ken Krome (USA) to determine the final placings in the CCI3*-L and CCI5*-L divisions. Elisa Wallace and Renkum Corsair rose to the occasion to win the 2022 USEF CCI3*-L Eventing National Championship for the USEF Combined Training Trophy.

USEF CCI3*-L Eventing National Championship

Wallace (Reddick, Fla.) and Renkum Corsair climbed to the top of the USEF CCI3*-L Eventing National Championship leaderboard with strong performances in each of the three phases. The pair started on a dressage score of 26.4 and added nothing to their score in the cross-country phase. Wallace and the Corsair Syndicate, LLC’s 2010 Holsteiner gelding closed out the competition on a high note with a double-clear show jumping round to clinch the win on their dressage score.

With several combinations having rails over the show jumping track throughout the morning, Wallace was aware of challenges posed by the tight course in the electric atmosphere. She took confidence in Renkum Corsair’s show jumping background, which included 1.45-meter classes as a seven-year-old.

“I just pretended it was a jumper round at [the World Equestrian Center],” said Wallace. “He felt fantastic. He didn’t feel affected at all by the day before. He jumped a beautiful round, and it was quite fun to be in there. I was really ecstatic, and I couldn’t be more appreciative of my owners in the syndicate. The horse is just a really cool horse.”

The result is made more meaningful after Wallace lost her top mount, Riot Gear, to a pasture accident about a year ago. With the help of her owners, Wallace was able to regroup and look for another partner. Renkum Corsair was the horse that they found, and his and Wallace’s partnership is turning into something special.

“Renkum Corsair, or ‘Caz,’ reminds me a lot of [Riot Gear]. Just to think of this year and how I found the connection with him, I brought him over [from Europe], and it didn’t go super great in the beginning,” said Wallace of Caz. “I feel like there’s a lot more to come for him. He is just getting stronger and stronger [in dressage], then on cross-country he was a little machine out there. Even when we had the hold, he stayed relaxed and with me. He answered all the questions and had a really big heart out there. Today, he just felt at home in that ring and really gave me the confidence that I have been struggling to find, so it really means a lot.”

Jenny Caras (Buckhead, Ga.) and Sommersby climbed from 14th to the Reserve Champion spot by finishing on their dressage score of 29.9 after two double-clear jumping rounds. Caras hoped that she could finish in the top five with her and Jerry Hollis’s 2012 Holsteiner gelding, but their results exceeded her expectations.

“I just knew that I needed to go in and jump my round. My horse had every capability of jumping a clear round so I just needed to not do anything silly. That was all I could do,” said Caras. “I came to this event wanting to finish on my dressage score. That was my goal; getting as low of a score in the first phase as I could and then finish on it. We have done that now and I couldn’t be more proud of him.”

Cassie Sanger (Lakeville, Conn.) and Fernhill Zoro delivered impressive rides throughout the competition to finish third overall and win the USEF CCI3*-L Young Rider Eventing National Championship for the John H. Fritz Trophy as the highest-placed young rider combination. Sanger and Nina Sanger’s 2008 Irish Sport Horse gelding had a dressage score of 26.6, a double-clear cross-county round, and one rail down in the show jumping phase to end on a score of 30.6.

Though the CCI3*-L at MARS Maryland 5 Star at Fair Hill presented by Brown Advisory seemed like a pipedream while she was making her plans at the beginning of the season, Sanger put in the work and made the dream a reality.

“We kept ticking along and solidifying my partnerships with both of my horses, and they couldn’t have been better,” said Sanger. “Riding is a hard sport. There are things that I already wish I could’ve done better and I’m already thinking about improving upon, but it is exciting to be here.”

Alexander O’Neal (Reddick, Fla.) and Redtail Penumbra were the highest-placed young horse combination to win the USEF CCI3*-L Young Horse Eventing National Championship for the Jonathan R. Burton Trophy. O’Neal and Elinor MacPhail O’Neal’s 2015 Westphalian mare started off in 26th place with their dressage score of 32.5 and two double-clear jumping rounds helped them climb to finish seventh overall.

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Results]

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

In every aspect of the sport — from the organizers, to the day-of volunteers, to the athletes’ teams — this whole eventing thing takes a village to pull off. Some of the sometimes unsung heroes of our sport are the course builders, and their teams. Take a look at the hard-working crew above, headed by Tyson Rementer, because they’re the ones you have to thank for making Ian Stark’s course come to life.

US Weekend Results

Pine Hill Fall H.T. (Bellville, TX): [Website] [Results] [Volunteer]

Poplar Place Farm October H.T. (Hamilton, GA): [Website] [Results]

Major International Events

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [3* Results] [5* Results] [Form Guide] [Digital Program] [EN’s Maryland Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Strzegom October Festival, Poland: [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results

Bovington (2): [Results]

Oasby (2): [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Yesterday’s Maryland 5 Star finale was not without some controversy. If you watched the livestream or were there in person, you may have noticed that Lauren Nicholson looked a little confused as she waited to start her show jumping round. Turns out, she couldn’t hear the bell over the crowd and ended up starting her round late. Despite her obvious confusion in the ring and pleading her case, her time penalties were upheld. [Here’s What Lauren Had to Say]

Can’t get enough of cross country day at Maryland? Here’s another photo gallery for ‘ya. Enjoy these gorgeous shots from the very talented Amy Dragoo. [Maryland 5 Star Cross-Country Photo Gallery]

When the worlds of horse nerds and computer nerds collide the result is a digital “hackathon” out of CHIO Aachen. This year’s hackathon has a special emphasis on ecological and social sustainability and participants will complete for a €10,000 prize as they seek to develop solutions to answer the overarching questions of: ‘How can the CHIO Aachen become even greener?’ ‘How can resources be saved?’ and ‘How can topics such as inclusion and accessibility be further developed?’ [Digital “hackathon” aims to boost horse show’s sustainability efforts]

It turns out you can teach an old pony new tricks. Morgan Burton and Ginger have been together since they were a seven-year-old human and weanling pony. Ginger was Morgan’s first mount for Pony Club events and now in her senior years she’s Morgan’s mount for regional dressage shows. [My Little Wonder Pony]

The FutureTrack Follow:

Speaking of course builders and designers, give David Taylor a follow in Instagram today. You’ll get some behind the scenes look at courses, plenty of eventing and dressage content, and a little dash of corgi cuteness. David and his wife Nicki run Maryland-based Elevation Dressage and Eventing and they’re the proud owners of Zoe, newly crowned Maryland Corgi Cup champion!

Morning Viewing:

And then speaking of corgis … you’re welcome:

Tim Price is King of the Hill at MARS Maryland 5 Star

Tim Price’s Coup de Coeur Dudevin digs deep again to take his first five-star win on his debut. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After a Saturday that split opinions, it’s been enormously exciting to have an action-packed afternoon of influential competition at the MARS Maryland 5 Star.

Though our top three would ultimately remain unchanged after cross-country, the short and sweet showjumping finale was jam-packed with action and excitement, with a beefy, technical course of 16 jumping efforts. Both the time and the course itself — which featured jumper-style lines including a rollback turn between fences 8 and 9, followed swiftly by a sharp square turn to a treble combination at 10abc — proved influential, and just five of the 21 starters would deliver faultless rounds.

Cross-country leader Tim Price wasn’t one of them. He came into the arena with less than a rail in hand over Tamie Smith and Danito, who had just delivered an exceptional clear, adding 0.4 time to stay just one-tenth of a penalty ahead of Oliver Townend and As Is, who had added nothing in their round. Like Tamie and Oliver before him, he cantered through the starting line on an unseasoned five-star debutant and, again like those before him, crossed the finish on a newly-established superstar. In doing so, he took his fifth five-star title — won, quite remarkably, aboard a fifth different horse.

“I’m very proud of Coup de Coeur Dudevin,” says Tim of the ten-year-old Selle Français, who he rides for breeder Jean-Louis Stauffer. “In fact, I think all three of these top horses are incredible. It’s exciting for the sport; it’s exciting for us personally; and it’s just so unexpected to have a top result like this. I came in hoping that I would have a top-five finish with this horse, but I expected there would be a couple of things that showed his lack of experience. Luckily, we were able to do that while keeping a nice, low score.”

Tim Price and Coup de Coeur Dudevin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim’s goal this week has been to educate the young horse, who was originally produced by Switzerland’s Robin Godel and, latterly, Chris Burton, before briefly joining wife Jonelle’s string last year. It was that modus operandi that allowed the rider to keep his cool coming into the pressurised final phase.

“It’s been so tight at the top through the week, starting from the dressage — and these guys have been there and got the t-shirt many times of what it’s like to be in the final few and the pressure that comes with it,” says the newly-crowned World Number One, who came here fresh off the back of a win at Boekelo with Happy Boy. “I knew there would be some flawless rounds at the top of the table, and that was kind of what kept me from falling asleep and woke me up early in the morning. I was ready for that and in a way, with my young horse at this level, I almost hid behind his lack of experience and just went into the mode of educating him and giving him a good time. But of course when you get in the ring and you know that the clear round inside the time is key, you go into performance mode. I was just really happy he dug deep for me. It’s a new depth of stamina requirement for him, and he really went into that ring and just lit up and busted himself for the job. That’s very exciting, for what a horse he’s showing me that he is, and for the future for him. To nail a victory like that, I’m just very, very proud of him.”
“It’s just to great to have such a good rider,” says owner Jean-Louis Stauffer. “We’ve known the horse from his first day, and I think we did it right in the way that we never forced him. He was never pushed to do something he couldn’t do, and he’s got this brain where he wants to get over the obstacles; he wants to be good. That’s a very good horse.”
Jean-Louis isn’t just the horse’s owner — he’s also his breeder, though he refuses to take all the credit there.
“It’s not me who made the match; that was Richard Levallois from [Haras de] Semilly,” he explains. “I went with a mare, and he asked me what I wanted from the horse. I said, ‘it must have a good force, good strength in the back’. And if you saw this horse, in the dressage he was almost kicking the ass of Tim Price to the front! He’s a very good one.”
‘Joker’ could have become part of a breeding programme in his own right, but flunked out at an early age due to some personality quirks.
“I had to have him castrated because he was very impatient — he wanted to go with the other horses. Castrating him just brought him into the team,” says Jean-Louis. “I think from the first day he was born, in the box he would make contact with you and then always be positive.”
Bringing a largely unproven ten-year-old all the way across the Atlantic Ocean for his five-star debut was always going to be a gamble, but when Tim expresses a quiet, unshakable confidence in the gelding to his owner, Jean-Louis backed the idea completely.
“Tim said, ‘I feel it’, and I said, ‘if you feel it, we’ll go.’ It’s just my way of doing it — as an owner, you shouldn’t intervene too much,” he says. “I never would have thought I’d have a horse coming to the States, and then, okay, you think that because of the expense, it’s good if they don’t come all this way just to be eliminated on the cross-country. But the rest? It’s all equal: there are horses that win, and horses that don’t win, but as long as they progress well, and as long as they do well, I think it’s good. It doesn’t mean they must win — we’re the winners today, but we’re not necessarily going to be the winners all the time!”

Tamie Smith and Danito log their first clear showjumping round since 2020 at the perfect moment. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been one heck of a year for second-placed Tamie Smith, who gave it her all in her efforts to keep the Maryland title in US hands with Ruth Bley’s 15.2hh first-timer Danito. Although the diminutive 13-year-old Hanoverian is a force to be reckoned with on the flat and across the country, before this weekend, he’d not made the time in a long-format since his second-ever CCI2*-L, nor had he kept the rails up in an international since 2020. But with plenty of guts and gumption on his side — and on that of his plucky Californian rider, too — he made both things happen here, adding just 0.4 time today to his first-phase score of 29.4.

“I actually haven’t even produced a clear round on Danito at CCI4*-L — but we kind of all joked that he broke his wither this winter and it gave him another two feet over the jumps,” laughs Tamie. “But he really has come out outstanding, and he really jumped out of his skin. There was a couple of places where it definitely didn’t go to plan, but you go as quickly as you can to to Plan B. He’s such a mighty little horse and he tried his guts out, soI’m super proud of him. The ring would be difficult — it’s small and things come up quick, and so it was good to produce that result.”

The result caps off a year that’s gone from one mishap after another to something of a dream come true for Tamie.

“It hasn’t been the fairytale year that you might think,” says Tamie, who was part of last month’s silver medal-winning team at the FEI World Championships, and who also took a top ten finish at Badminton this spring with top horse Mai Baum. But earlier in the year, it didn’t look as though she’d get any of her goals for the season ticked off.
“California in my area was infected with EHV this winter. I got out of there right before that and went east, but then I promptly broke my ankle and tore all the ligaments in it. I could just see my dreams kind of fading away. I didn’t think I’d be in contention for the World Championships, but I also wouldn’t take no for an answer.”
“The first three months of 2022 was a disaster for me. My horse had broken his wither on top of everything else, so to have the fall season that I’ve had from Pratoni on has been really special. I have a huge, wonderful support team, and I know that we’re all just ecstatic about this accomplishment.”

Tamie Smith and Danito. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

Her best-ever five-star finish isn’t the only affirmation Tamie got from her result today: finding herself between two of the most prolific competitors in the world was also a particularly special feeling.

 “These guys are legends in the sport, and it’s an honor to be up here with them,” she says, nodding to Tim and third-placed Oliver. While they’ve been career winners nearly from the beginning of their careers, Tamie’s finish is a different kind of testament to resilience: she began her path to the top after working her way through college as a young single mother, making her hard-won result a beacon of hope for aspiring competitors whose lives have followed a trajectory that’s not quite linear. In a way, it feels a little bit as though she’s won — and no doubt, that moment is coming soon.
“I did say to Tim, ‘you couldn’t have had a frickin’ rail?!’,” she laughs.

Oliver Townend and As Is round out the top three with a sterling clear round inside the tough time. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Four combinations managed to finish on their dressage scores in this year’s field, and the highest-placed of those was Oliver Townend, who, like Tim, has recorded a podium finish in both runnings of this new event. Though his eleven-year-old Spanish-bred Sport Horse As Is occasionally looked a bit green in the ring, and gave the fences a fair amount of airtime as a result, they stayed on the right side of the clock to take third place, climbing from first-phase tenth through the weekend.

As Is, who was formerly campaigned by Andrew Nicholson, is owned by Sir John Peace of Caunton Stud, for whom Oliver began riding earlier this year.

“I’m highly delighted with him, and [this result] is very special for me — it’s the first time I’ve had a job since I was 21, so to deliver results for the people that are employing me for the first time this year is very special to me,” says Oliver. “There’s a lot of people behind the scenes at Caunton, and at home at Gadlas, so it’s been a very different year this year for me — but one that’s just been so, so positive.”

Oliver began riding As Is just this spring, and has had a spate of exciting results with the gelding already, including a placing at another Ian Stark-designed event at Bramham CCI4*-L in Yorkshire.

“For us to deliver the result that we thought he was capable of… you never know, he’s a new horse and it’s five-star, so anything can happen,” he says. “He went out a little bit green yesterday and a bit careful and I just thought last night, ‘well, let’s just hope he’s as careful in the show jumping tomorrow as he is on the cross-country course, and we’ll be alright’.”

This isn’t the first horse Oliver has taken on from longtime friend and mentor Andrew, from whom he’s previously inherited top horses such as Cillnabradden Evo, Swallow Springs, and Armada — but today, he knew he had a particularly stellar jumping record to live up to.

“I actually felt a little bit of pressure,” he says. “I said to Andrew Nicholson on the phone that I used to feel no pressure going into showjumping on Armada, because we all knew he used to destroy the place, but to know that you’re on such a good jumper, it was down to me to press the right buttons and get the right distances. But he was, I think, very, very special in the ring today, and it’s just hugely exciting for my team at home and the new team at Caunton that we have a horse of this caliber.”

 

Phillip Dutton and Z take fourth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It felt a little bit like 2008 at Kentucky all over again when Phillip Dutton and crossed the finish today, well inside the time and clear to boot. Though that didn’t quite clinch them the win, it did allow them to take fourth place, a healthy climb from the eleventh place slot they’d occupied after posting a 30.5 in the first phase.

“He’s a great jumper, it’s just that sometimes we lose a little bit of the rideability because of tension,” says Phillip, who was delighted to find that the experienced 14-year-old Zangersheide felt well-settled in the atmospheric main arena after a great warm-up with show jumper Lauren Hough. That was particularly necessary, because the unique arena and tough course at Maryland demanded so much of the horses while constantly testing their focus.

“It rides harder than it walks, certainly size-wise, and it’s all pretty related and a smaller arena,” says Phillip. “I mean, I think every venue is a little unique; you know, all the five-stars throughout the world. And this is unique: it’s a bit smaller, but the really good horses win anyway. The atmosphere is great.”

Even more moving than the excellent result was the memory of his late coach and mentor.

“I was a little bit emotional because my good friend Richard Picken was here last year, and Michelle Kauffman said to me, ‘it’s bringing back memories’ — so I started to flood over, but luckily I was able to pull it back together,” says Phillip. “He was a great friend, and my showjumping coach, and he had a big influence on me.”

Jennie Brannigan and FE Lifestyle step up to fifth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Jennie Brannigan put a cap on an excellent week with her duo of rides, finishing fifth on her dressage score of 31.5 with FE Lifestyle and sixteenth after a trio of rails with Twilightslastgleam, both of whom she rides for longtime owners Tim and Nina Gardner.

 

Jennie Brannigan and FE Lifestyle. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Having two rides in the class allowed her to make great use of the intel she gleaned the first time around with her second ride, FE Lifestyle — but those were just two of many rides she had this week, a decision that, in hindsight, might have been a touch too much.

“I’m exhausted,” she laughs. “Riding five horses here was probably a little ambitious! But it was a beautiful week, and this is my hometown event, so it’s been great.”

Will Coleman and DonDante. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sixth place went the way of Will Coleman and DonDante, who had a frustrating, rare rail but nevertheless climbed from 10th place after cross-country, on which they were clear inside the time yesterday.

“I’m obviously bummed about the pole, but my horse tried really hard,” says Will of the 12-year-old Irish Sport Horse, who was fifteenth here last year and seventh at Kentucky this spring. “I think he didn’t have his best stuff today — he was a little stiff from galloping up all those hills yesterday. But he gave me everything he had and just toed one, and I can’t be too upset. It is what it is, and you do what you can do. I’m very pleased, and now we’ll look to the future and try to be better.”

For DonDante, who came to Fair Hill to compete in the Young Event Horse Championships as a five-year-old, it’s a full-circle moment to come back here and finish in the top ten — and a testament to how productive the young horse pathways in the US can be.

“It’s cool; it’s very gratifying. I really enjoy that,” says Will, remembering that first trip here with the gelding. “You know, we’ve had most of ours we’ve had since they were young, which does make it pretty rewarding, and each step you get like a little adrenaline from. Then they do their first three-star; they do their first four-star… I think that’s cool, and I think we’re just constantly trying to get better at raining them well and bringing them along confidently and happily. It’s a big part of what makes this whole game worth doing.”

Harry Meade and Superstition put a positive spin on a tricky start to the week. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Great Britain’s Harry Meade had a tricky start to the week with Superstition after a disruption to his warm-up meant that the horse was nervous and reactive to the point of explosiveness in the dressage ring, scoring an enormously uncharacteristic 37.4 to sit 21st. An easy clear inside the time yesterday, though, boosted the pair up to fifteenth — and though the relative lack of influence of Saturday’s competition precluded a higher climb, today offered a stiff enough challenge to see significant movement on the board. That meant that their clear round inside the time today was enough to catapult them to a final seventh place.

“I’m thrilled with the horse and thrilled with how he was all week,” says Harry. “Sometimes, you’ve got to make just make the best of the hand you’re dealt; we didn’t have a nice time in the build-up to the first phase, but that’s by the by. You forgive and forget.”

Harry was one of several riders to levy constructive criticism at the event, particularly for its uninfluential cross-country phase, a trend that continued on from its inaugural running.

“The cross-country, like last year, was a bit of a non-event,” he says. “I can’t fault my horse; he was absolutely beautiful, and that’s a long way to go to not even scratch the surface — he feels as though he’d be great to go to Pau in two weeks’ time! But it’s always lovely to finish on a clear showjumping round — it means everyone goes home on a high.”

Today, though, he was pleased with the influence and difficulty of the course.

“You want the jumping phases to separate the really good horses, and this was a really interesting course,” says Harry. “One to two was quite open, and actually, the terrain in the arena is more extreme than you might think, so heading down to fence five was super short. It didn’t walk short, but it rode short. Then, after the treble, you had to turn up to the square oxer — it was a big fence up a hill. It was a great course and it sorted them out — we saw such a high standard of jumping out there, and it made for a great end to the competition.”

Allie Knowles and Morswood clinch Allie’s best-ever five-star result. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Allie Knowles earned herself her best-ever five-star result, taking eighth place with the excellent Morswood after tipping just one rail late in the course. That’s her second personal best of the week: her first came in the dressage, where she earned her best five-star score, a sparkling 28.8 that put the pair into third place going into cross-country. Though their 6.4 time penalties dropped them out of contention into twelfth place, Allie was delighted to make the climb back up the order today — though already, she’s thinking about what’s next to work on.

“It was a great week, but I’m quite critical, so there was room for improvement in all three phases,” says Allie. “But that’s a could-a, should-a, would-a type of thing, and that’s my best result in a five-star. He did everything I asked, so I’m super happy overall, and I’ll be looking forward to the next opportunity to do it better! But it’s cool to know that I’m on a horse that’s so suited to doing something like Badminton in the future.”

Doug Payne and Quantum Leap secure ninth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Doug Payne and Quantum Leap might be the most seasoned pure jumpers in the ring — in fact, most of the gelding’s competition mileage this year has come at jumper shows — but Ken’s tough course was tricky to conquer even for them. They tipped the first and had a pole down at the ninth fence, positioned on a rollback turn, but were ultimately able to stay in the ninth place spot they’d occupied after cross-country, wherein they’d added 2.4 time penalties.

Hannah Sue Hollberg’s veteran competitor Harbour Pilot bows out on a high in tenth place. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Finally, the top ten was rounded out in fine style by Hannah Sue Hollberg and Harbour Pilot, who retired from competition at the impressive age of nineteen after his round, which saw him rub two poles but only slip two places.

“I’ve been riding him since 2008, so he’s been with me forever, and it’s weird to think about not competing him anymore,” says an emotional Hannah Sue, who has tackled eleven previous five-stars with the gelding. “He doesn’t feel his age at all — he feels the same as he did five, seven, ten years ago. He’s a tough horse, and I’ve tried to take care of him really well by not running him if the footing’s bad or if he’s not just right at the show.”

Hannah Sue Hollberg and Harbour Pilot. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Hannah Sue had made the decision to retire ‘William’ at the end of this event well before it started, which meant that throughout the week, she was constantly reminded that each phase was her last with him by commentary over the tannoy. That announcement was exactly how her showjumping round began, too, which made the practicalities of actually jumping the course a little tough.

“I started crying before I started, which wasn’t very helpful!” she laughs. “But I didn’t really mind — I felt like that all week, and I was just proud to be on him and finish his career like that.”

Lauren Nicholson and Landmark’s Monte Carlo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just one odd moment marred the afternoon’s sport: Lauren Nicholson, who had been sitting seventh with Landmark’s Monte Carlo, was awarded 13.2 time penalties in her one-rail round due to some confusion with the starting bell, and despite appealing to the officials, she was unable to get the penalties removed, which pushed her down to seventeenth place in the final standings.

“Patty produced a really lovely round today, but sadly his popularity resulted in confusion at the start,” writes Lauren in a post on her Instagram account. “Due to the crowds [sic] cheers, the bell was not heard by myself (and from what I understand, no one in the crowd either). Despite my multiple salutes, gestures of confusion, and asking the crowd if they had heard the bell, the clock was started and we were given a devastating 13 time penalties, knocking us from 6th place to the bottom of the field. After an extremely long discussion with the ground jury, which was headed by Christian Landolt, they decided that they would not remove the penalties. The ground jury acknowledged that it was clear that I had not heard the bell, and that I had made multiple gestures waiting for it to be rung. The head of the ground jury stated he could not have rung the bell a second time even if he wished to because it was not legal. Although, we presented them with a rule clearly showing they could ring the bell a second time at their discretion. Which he admitted to not knowing that rule but tough nuts for me.”

You can read Lauren’s post in full here.

It’s been a beautiful — and educational — week of five-star competition in the sunshine here in Maryland, and already, we’re curious and excited about how this buzzy, vibrant new event will further develop for its third renewal next year. We’ll be back with more content from the weekend that was, but for now — Go Eventing, and Go Tim Price!

The top ten at the conclusion of the 2022 MARS Maryland 5 Star.

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule ] [Drawn Order] [Scoring] [All Ride Times] [USEF Network Live Stream (North America)] [Interactive XC Course Maps] [H&C+ Live Stream (Worldwide)] [Form Guide] [Digital Program] [EN’s Maryland Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Top Ten Contender Held in MARS Maryland 5* Final Horse Inspection

Overnight leaders Tim Price and Coup de Coeur Dudevin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Phew. Is there anything more bum-clenchingly tense than a final horse inspection? Even here at the MARS Maryland 5 Star p/b Brown Advisory, in which horses have enjoyed exceptionally good going and looked to finish brilliantly yesterday, this morning’s proceedings weren’t without dramatics.

Hannah Sue Hollberg and Harbour Pilot: the sole hold of the morning, but accepted on re-presentation. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just 21 of yesterday’s 22 finishers presented to the the Ground Jury of Christian Landolt (SUI), Gretchen Butts (USA), Judy Hancock (GBR), following the overnight withdrawal of Canada’s Lisa Marie Fergusson and Honor Me. Three horses warranted a second look during the course of the morning, though just one was sent to the holding box for further investigation and a second inspection: that was Hannah Sue Hollberg‘s nineteen-year-old Harbour Pilot, who sits eighth overnight on 31.8 in what will be the final event of their long, storied partnership.

Tamie Smith and Danito. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Fortunately, we’re delighted to report that they were subsequently accepted into the competition, as were Jennie Brannigan‘s FE Lifestyle (6th on 31.5 and presented for his rider by Great Britain’s Harry Meade, who snuck a curtsey to the ground jury in there!) and Tamie Smith‘s Danito (2nd on 29.4), who were both asked to trot a second time.

Harry Meade tips a curtsey to the ground jury before presenting Jennie Brannigan’s FE Lifestyle. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Our compact, classy field of 21 heads into the showjumping finale, designed by Ken Krome, from 2.00 p.m. Eastern time (7.00 p.m. BST/11.00 a.m. Pacific). Last year, we saw an influential final phase here, and the stage is certainly set for one again: there’s less than a rail between the top five, and less than two between the top twelve. To add to the excitement, each of our top three — leaders Tim Price‘s Coup de Coeur Dudevin, second-placed Tamie Smith‘s Danito, and third-placed Oliver Townend‘s As Is — are first-time five-star horses, none of whom will have tackled a challenge like this before.

It’ll be a real nail-biter, folks, but us EN-ers have always found special ways to cope with the nerves. We’re thrilled to announce that dressage leader Woods Baughman took us up on our hoedown challenge, and you’ll get to see the results — in all their arrhythmic glory — very soon. If we committed career suicide this morning, at least we went down swinging.

Here’s a refresher of the top ten after cross-country, with the full scores available here. Go Eventing!

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Entries] [Schedule ] [Drawn Order] [Scoring] [All Ride Times] [USEF Network Live Stream (North America)] [Interactive XC Course Maps] [H&C+ Live Stream (Worldwide)] [Form Guide] [Digital Program] [EN’s Maryland Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]