Classic Eventing Nation

Monday Video: Can We Fangirl Over Cornelia Dorr a Little More?

Pardon us while we fangirl over our top-placing American at Burghley, Cornelia Dorr, just a little bit more. Not only was the 24-year-old and her mare, Daytona Beach 8, one of the 47% of combinations that completed the cross country clear of jumping faults, they were also only one of 8 pairs to complete it with less than 10 time penalties. Their exceptional cross country round rocketed them from 50th position after dressage up to 16th ahead of show jumping. But wait there’s more: out of the 28 combinations to jump on Sunday, Cornelia and Daytona were one of just 6 to show jump double clear. They put an exclamation point on their weekend by earning a 10th place finish, climbing 40 places in the overall standings throughout the weekend and once again proving that eventing — and Burghley in particular — is not a dressage show.

Cornelia and Daytona’s partnership has developed over the last few years. Prior to Cornelia’s ride on Daytona, the mare had been competed through the former 2* level with Sandra Auffarth.

We managed to find videos from Cornelia and Daytona’s first event together in the Open Training at the Florida Horse Park in early 2019. Take a look at the first cross country round for this superstar pair below!

Now, in 2022, Cornelia and her groom, Claire, have been working and training hard with UK-based Australian Kevin McNab since January this year. Follow along with this pair by checking out Cornelia’s Instagram here!

A Change to the Irish Roster for FEI World Championships at Pratoni

Ireland’s Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Horse Sport Ireland has announced a change to the roster of riders heading to FEI World Championships for Eventing in Italy at Pratoni del Vivaro next week. The change comes after Joseph Murphy’s horse, Calmaro, had a “setback in training”.

Acting High Performance Director for Eventing, Dag Albert, explained:

“Unfortunately Joseph’s horse has had a setback in training and so the decision has been made not to take the risk and travel him to Pratoni. He is a young horse and has had an outstanding year and we will save him for future Championships.”

Joseph Murphy and Calmaro. Photo by Abby Powell.

Taking Joseph’s spot on the roster and called up for her first Senior Championships squad is Felicity Ward, who will bring the 11-year-old Irish gelding Regal Bounty (Orestus VDL – Edge of Reason, by Senang Hati) , owned by James O’Callaghan. This pair had originally been long-listed and then named as non-traveling reserves for Pratoni. They’ve had a solid 2022 season thus far, which includes a top-15 finish in their 5* debut at Luhmühlen in June.

“We have a great reserve ready to travel, Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty who have been really consistent this year in their performances, this is an exciting opportunity for them to be part of the World Championships squad,” Dag Albert said.

The updated list of Irish riders heading to Italy — with team and individual designations yet to be announced — is:

Susie Berry with Monbeg By Design (ISH) [was Eskerhills Elixir] – 2012 gelding by Pacino (BWP) out of Eskerhills Lexis [ISH] by Puissance (ISH)[TIH]. Breeder: Fiona Molloy (Offaly). Owner: Helen Caton. Groom: Crisy Salmon

Padraig McCarthy with Fallulah (WESTF) – 2009 brown mare by Fidertanz 2 out of Devona by Di Versace. Bred by: Michael Norris, Owner: Amanda and Nicholas Boyle, Diane Brunsden, Peter Cattel and Padraig McCarthy. Groom: Jess Elliott

Austin O’Connor with Colorado Blue (SHBGB) – 2009 grey gelding by Jaguar Mail out of Rock Me Baby by Rock Kind. Bred by Mellon Stud, Owner Austin O’Connor and The Salty Syndicate Groom: Francesca Denning

Felicity Ward with Regal Bounty (ISH) – 2011 black gelding by Orestus VDL (KWPN) out of Edge of Reason (ISH) by Senang Hati (TB). Breeder: Miriam De Feu. Owner: James O’Callaghan

Sam Watson with SAP Talisman (ISH) – 2011 bay gelding by Puissance (ISH) out of Ali Row (TB) by All Royal (TB). Breeder: Rosemary Ponsonby. Owner: Hannah Watson and Julia Watson. Groom: Hannah Watson

Non-traveling Reserve:

Michael Ryan with Barnahown Corn Hill (ISH) – 2011 brown gelding by Chinook Eclipse (TB) (USA) and out of Mats Lady (UNK). Bred by Michael Lynch Co Cork. Owners: Carol and Tom Henry

Want more Pratoni news? Head over to our Ultimate Guide to FEI World Championships for Eventing, and be sure to sign up for the #Pratoni2022 Daily Digest email, which will begin delivering to your inbox daily on Tuesday, September 13.

Labor Day Weekend Winners: AECs, Park Equine Kentucky, Course Brook, Silverwood, Chattahoochee, SVPC, Bucks County

As September kicks off, the fall season is starting strong with a busy weekend across the U.S. From the American Eventing Championships in Kalispell, MT, to numerous other events running throughout Kentucky, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Georgia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, Eventers were out in full force.

Take a look at this weekend’s recap as we send a big congratulations to all of the partnerships out and about this weekend, with a special shout out to this Weekend’s Winners.

USEA American Eventing Championships (Kalispell, MT): [Website] [Final Scores] [Shannon Brinkman Photography] [Ride On Video]

$60,000 Adequan USEA Advanced Final: Helen Alliston and Ebay (32.8)
USEA Intermediate Championship: Tommy Greengard and Joshuay MBF (32.9)
Bates USEA Jr./YR Preliminary Championship: Maddie Smith and Versace (44.2)
Bates USEA Preliminary Horse Championship: Nicole Aden and Illustrator (26.8)
Bates USEA Preliminary Rider Championship: Eileen Galoostian and Ardeo Lord Lancelot (34.5)
Bates USEA Preliminary Amateur Championship: Amy Haugen and Ebenholtz (31.2)
Festival Open Preliminary: Kelly Groot and Super Nova (23.4)
Festival Open Modified: Sarah Sullivan and La Copine (26.4)
USEA Open Modified Championship: Madison Langerak and Normandy Kivalo (20.6)
Festival Open Training: Stephanie Goodman and Esmèe (23.8)
USEA Training Amateur Championship: Amber Pearson and Chosen One DF (27.6)
USEA Training Horse Championship: Tommy Greengard and Shannondale Farm (25.8)
USEA Training Jr. Championship: Lizzie Hoff and HSH Limited Edition (24.8)
USEA Training Rider Championship: Sarah Ross and Fernhill Heart Throb (28.6)
Festival Open Novice A: McLaine Mangum and Grantstown Mr. Big (32.9)
Festival Open Novice B: Teresa Harcourt and Csongor (26.4)
USEA Novice Amateur Championship: Kyla Tovar and Kilcoltrim Jacko (28.3)
USEA Novice Horse Championship: Tommy Greengard and Cappachina (26.4)
USEA Novice Jr. Championship: Olivia Keye and Oso Mighty (27.2)
USEA Novice Rider Championship: Alyssa Cairo and Paddington (25.4)
Festival Open Beginner Novice A: Louise Leslie and Cnick Cnack JJM (32.2)
Festival Open Beginner Novice B: Kelly Schwisow and Redfield Out Of The Blue (26.3)
USEA Beginner Novice Amateur Championship: Jenna McFadden and Take a Shot (28.3)
USEA Beginner Novice Horse Championship: Madeline Backus and Slew the Blues (26.6)
USEA Beginner Novice Jr. Championship: Bridget Kelly and Windover Tarragon (27.8)
USEA Beginner Novice Rider Championship: Mandy Collins and Vatino (29.2)

Park Equine Kentucky Classique H.T. (Lexington, KY): [Website] [Final Scores]

Open Advanced: Elisabeth Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Nutcracker (44.9)
Open Intermediate: Kelly Ransom and Heart of Hollywood (35.0)
Open Intermediate Championship: Alexandra Baugh and MHS Fernhill Finale (45.2)
Open Preliminary: Elisabeth Halliday-Sharp and Quite Nice 11 (24.6)
Preliminary Championship: Leah Snowden and Ormolu (34.0)
Modified Championship: Emily Watson and Kilcandra Prince Dignified (33.8)
Open Modified: Camryn Holcomb and Quite Breit (28.3)
Open Training: Tate Northrop and Harrison (28.9)
Training Championship: Julia Spatt and Uptown Funk (33.1)
Training Rider: Lillian Dobat and Looks Like Lotte (30.7)
Novice Championship: Jane Musselman and Bentley’s Best (26.8)
Novice Rider A: Madeline Bletzacker and Drummer Boy (24.7)
Novice Rider B: Madeline Bletzacker and Landtino S (28.1)
Open Novice A: Lori Miller and Alien invasion (34.4)
Open Novice B: Alexandra Knowles and Exmoor Denver (29.7)
Beginner Novice Championship: Claire Rigney and Ballyerk Comet (27.8)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Ana Montalvo and Musketeer (30.0)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Abigail Walker and Galway Bay Cooley (33.8)
Open Beginner Novice: April Hays and Anteros HSH (24.1)
Beginner Novice 3-Day: Hannah Reeser and Ltl Ireland Summr Soldier (27.8)
Open Starter A: Lila Beshear and Zillions of Promises (30.0)
Open Starter B: Willa Newell and Take A Chance (34.7)

Course Brook Farm Fall H.T. (Sherborn, MA): [Website] [Final Scores]

Preliminary: Charlotte Collis and Call The Law (53.8)
Modified/Training: Madison Haney and Chesterland’s Sweet Charlotte (32.1)
Training: Isabelle Cless and Donnybrook’s Paddy Magee (30.2)
Novice A: Talia Feeney and Kristofferson (30.8)
Novice B: Bryn Lauer and Dare To Dream (30.8)
Novice C: Darrah Alexander and Captain Kismit (21.9)
Beginner Novice A: Jenna Bunce and Remember When DDD (29.4)
Beginner Novice B: Leslie Bell and Sansa (30.0)
Starter: Jillian Hoag and Dark Secret (27.0)

Silverwood Farm Fall H.T. (Camp Lake, WI): [Website] [Final Scores]<

Open Beginner Novice A: Mark Ward and Moonlight Clover (30.3)
Open Beginner Novice B: Madison Bonamarte and Keeneghan Lad (34.9)
Open Beginner Novice C: Kathryn Elliott and Duke of Wellington (35.1)
Open Novice A: Morgan Risseeuw and Havana Skye (28.3)
Open Novice B: Jordan Scroggins and C25’s Bugatti (28.1)
Open Training: Eric Dierks and Quintano (20.8)
Preliminary/Training: Erin Dierks and Frontier Force (37.0)
Starter A: Macy Herman and Sirocco (32.4)
Starter B: Brad Hall and Sandro’s Spinne (30.8)

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA): [Website] [Final Scores]

CCI Three Star – S: Conor Rollins and Prime Target (33.3)
CCI Two Star – S: Kalli Core and Mastermind (28.8)
CCI One Star: Breeana Robinette and Cape Kimberly (34.0)
Advanced: Leslie Law and Voltaire De Tre (34.8)
Open Intermediate: Leslie Law and Castle Howard Romeo (31.0)
Open Preliminary A: Candace Elizabeth Bell and Fernhill Philm Star (24.1)
Open Preliminary B: Donna Miller and Coud’Poker (31.6)
Modified Rider: Riley Lorenz and Cracker T (40.3)
Open Modified: Leslie Law and Really All Gold (26.3)
Open Training A: Lara Roberts and Fernhill Show Biz (28.3)
Open Training B: Katie Malensek and Mister Capri Jr (24.0)
Training Rider A: Livy Chambers and Fernhill Destiny (29.7)
Training Rider B: Sarah Estess and Lottery Ticket (34.7)
Novice Rider: Maggie Shuman and Zach Eyed Pea (29.4)
Open Novice: Elisabeth Chizek and Military Tradition (30.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Lizzie Brennan and Holy City (29.7)
Open Beginner Novice: Andrew Palmer and Top Shelf (28.8)

Seneca Valley PC H.T. (Poolesville, MD): [Website] [Final Scores]

Open Intermediate: Ryan Wood and Check Point (52.8)
Open Preliminary: Tiffany Wandy and CV Outlaw (38.9)
Open Modified 1: Erin Murphy and Cooley Cadence (31.0)
Open Modified 2: Kendyl Tracy and Justified (25.7)
Modified Rider: Lisa Apted and Yeats Royale (34.3)
Training Senior: Jessica Gehman and Ray Price (25.7)
Training Junior: Emma Wick and Avalon Realta (26.0)
Open Training 1: Michael Pendleton and Adorrado (30.0)
Open Training 2: Marley Stone Bourke and Superstorm Sandy (24.3)
Novice Horse: Keara Schmidt and Electric Quality (25.5)
Open Novice 1: Katherine Lorenzen and Mitford (26.1)
Open Novice 2: Krissy Smith Shellenberger and Quantum K (21.9)
Novice Junior: Iselin Byars and Bloomfield Pocket Money (27.8)
Novice Senior: Lauren Allen and FGF Bob’s Wired (31.7)
Novice Rider: Kate Wood and Prinz S.W. (23.7)
Open Beginner Novice: Michael Pendleton and Chance of Liftoff (26.9)
Beginner Novice Junior: Rivka Abelow and Vino del Porto (33.8)
Beginner Novice Senior: Kate Hill and Bijoux Bay (32.8)
TIP Intermediate: Daisy Trayford and Ermintrude (63.7)
TIP Preliminary: Tiffany Wandy and CV Outlaw (39.0)
TIP Modified: Brittany Hebets Miller and Stuck on Gold (36.0)
TIP Training: Victoria Miller and Caspers Run (31.0)
TIP Novice: Amy Boccia and Fireflly (28.0)
TIP Beginner Novice: Melissa Fox and Rogue Patriot (32.0)



Bucks County Horse Park H.T.
(Revere, PA): [Website] [Final Scores]

HT-Preliminary/Training-Open: Jennifer Brannigan and Ottakringer (40.7)
Open Training I: Ryan Wood and I’mhereallday (27.9)
Open Training II: Jennifer Brannigan and FE Flint (27.9)
Open Novice I: Ryan Wood and Ben Lomond (29.2)
Open Novice II: Caitlin Silliman and Tullibards Xcellence (23.3)
Open Novice III: Kevin Keane and Fernhill Shutterfly (27.3)
Open Beginner Novice 1: Elena Carmichael and Take Flight (32.0)
Open Beginner Novice II: Brian Kilgo-Kelly and Caspian (29.0)

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Team USA is officially en route to Italy. Photo via Max Corcoran on Facebook.

On to the next! Now that Burghley and the are AECs done and dusted, it’s all cylinders firing for the a little event called the World Championships.  At this point, we’re just a week and half away and Team USA is officially in transit. The team has been hosted at the farm of fellow eventer, Erika Nesseler, for a bit after their final mandatory outing at Great Meadow and they’ve now touched down in Vittel, France where they’ll base prior to the start of of the competition in Pratoni, Italy.

North American Weekend Results

USEA American Eventing Championships (Kalispell, MT): [Website] [Results]
Park Equine Kentucky Classique H.T. (Lexington, KY): [Website] [Results]
Course Brook Farm Fall H.T. (Sherborn, MA): [Website] [Results]
Silverwood Farm Fall H.T. (Camp Lake, WI): [Website] [Results]
Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA): [Website] [Results]
Seneca Valley PC H.T. (Poolesville, MD): [Website] [Results]
Bucks County Horse Park H.T. (Revere, PA): [Website]
Foshay Horse Trails (Jemseg, NB): [Website] [Results]
UK Weekend Results
Burghley:  [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]
Sapey (2): [Results]
Epworth: [Results]

Your Morning Reading List:

If a picture is worth a thousand words, then here is your 10k ‘in a nutshell’ summary of Burghley results! Have a glance at these great photos for sure, but if you want the full picture of the day then all 4880 words of Tilly’s final Burghley report sum things up quite nicely. [Burghley final top 10 in pictures: Piggy March is victorious on ‘special’ 17-year-old mare]

Let’s look back at how it all went down in Tryon. It’s been four years after all — do you remember how the last World Championships shook out? It was a come from behind win for Great Britain’s Ros Canter, who has a shot at defending her title this year. [Looking Back… Eventing at Tryon 2018]

Let’s hear it for the Beginner Novice champions! It was their time to shine this weekend at the American Eventing Championships held at Rebecca Farm. [A Lasting Impression Lands Beginner Novice Winners in the Ribbons at #AEC2022]

The Future Track Follow:

 

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Alice Casburn: she’s 20 years old, she just rode a homebred to 5th place in her first Burghley, and she’s just made our list of coolest people on the planet.

Morning Viewing: Horse & Hound’s Lucy Elder caught up with some of Burghley’s top finishers:

Farewell Montana: Rounding Up the Final Day of #AEC2022

Sunday at the USEA American Eventing Championships was all about the Beginner Novice riders, as all six divisions crowned their champions as the final competitors of the weekend at Rebecca Farm.

Here’s a look at all final scores from #AEC2022:

$60,000 Adequan USEA Advanced Final: Helen Alliston and Ebay (32.8)
USEA Intermediate Championship: Tommy Greengard and Joshuay MBF (32.9)
Bates USEA Jr./YR Preliminary Championship: Maddie Smith and Versace (44.2)
Bates USEA Preliminary Horse Championship: Nicole Aden and Illustrator (26.8)
Bates USEA Preliminary Rider Championship: Eileen Galoostian and Ardeo Lord Lancelot (34.5)
Bates USEA Preliminary Amateur Championship: Amy Haugen and Ebenholtz (31.2)
Festival Open Preliminary: Kelly Groot and Super Nova (23.4)
Festival Open Modified: Sarah Sullivan and La Copine (26.4)
USEA Open Modified Championship: Madison Langerak and Normandy Kivalo (20.6)
Festival Open Training: Stephanie Goodman and Esmèe (23.8)
USEA Training Amateur Championship: Amber Pearson and Chosen One DF (27.6)
USEA Training Horse Championship: Tommy Greengard and Shannondale Farm (25.8)
USEA Training Jr. Championship: Lizzie Hoff and HSH Limited Edition (24.8)
USEA Training Rider Championship: Sarah Ross and Fernhill Heart Throb (28.6)
Festival Open Novice A: McLaine Mangum and Grantstown Mr. Big (32.9)
Festival Open Novice B: Teresa Harcourt and Csongor (26.4)
USEA Novice Amateur Championship: Kyla Tovar and Kilcoltrim Jacko (28.3)
USEA Novice Horse Championship: Tommy Greengard and Cappachina (26.4)
USEA Novice Jr. Championship: Olivia Keye and Oso Mighty (27.2)
USEA Novice Rider Championship: Alyssa Cairo and Paddington (25.4)
Festival Open Beginner Novice A: Louise Leslie and Cnick Cnack JJM (32.2)
Festival Open Beginner Novice B: Kelly Schwisow and Redfield Out Of The Blue (26.3)
USEA Beginner Novice Amateur Championship: Jenna McFadden and Take a Shot (28.3)
USEA Beginner Novice Horse Championship: Madeline Backus and Slew the Blues (26.6)
USEA Beginner Novice Jr. Championship: Bridget Kelly and Windover Tarragon (27.8)
USEA Beginner Novice Rider Championship: Mandy Collins and Vatino (29.2)

A Lasting Impression Lands Beginner Novice Winners in the Ribbons at #AEC2022

The USEA Beginner Novice Championship took an early and fiery start to the day with ponies, horses and riders ready to leave their best round in the show jump arena, signaling the final phase on the final day of the American Eventing Championships (AEC) presented by Nutrena Feeds. The smokey skies gave way to a cloudless, picturesque backdrop as the sun shone bright on new winners through each level of this division.

USEA Beginner Novice Horse Championship

Madeline Backus aboard Brad Ray’s 9-year-old Quarter Horse Thoroughbred Slew the Blues (Slews Gold x Only Blue Crystal) took home the win in the USEA Beginner Novice Horse Championship after a stellar show jump round. A big smile for Backus and a big pat on the neck for Slew the Blues complimented the epic finish.

“I’m super proud of her—this is the first big show she’s been to and the first time she’s been in temporary stabling. She had a little meltdown the first couple of days but she’s just settled in and got to work every time I put my foot in the stirrup. I’m super impressed with her,” said Backus. “I was the first person on her back last July so she’s come along really quickly in a year and she’s just taken all the steps and keeps showing up for it.” The pair have plans to move up to the novice division this fall.

USEA Beginning Novice Junior Championship

Proudly celebrating a birthday and the first place finish in the USEA Beginner Novice Junior Championship is Bridget Kelly aboard her perky 13-year-old Connemara Quarter Horse mare named Windover Tarragon (Irish Parks Caraway finn x Del Poco Princess). An absolute ringside treat to watch in the arena, Windover Tarragon is undoubtedly a happy competitor.

“The AEC has been a long-time dream of mine. I’ve had this pony for two years, so when we first got this pony she was very stiff and just not at the level she is now so it’s been a challenging journey to bring her up—especially with the dressage. We’ve had a lot of problems with the dressage but dressage is my favorite things so I really like to work on it a lot. Getting that personal best score of ours and leaving from start to finish was just incredible. The show jumping was definitely nerve-wracking. Jumping last is a lot more stressful than it seems. It’s just an incredible feeling. I’m so happy and so proud of my pony.”

USEA Beginner Novice Amateur Championship

With a first place finish under her belt today, Jenna McFadden took the leading position of the victory gallop aboard Mackenzie Johnson’s 6-year-old Thoroughbred called Take a Shot (Grindstone x Easy Elegance). With unexpected but welcomed riding suggestions, McFadden finished on her dressage score to bring home an impressive win.

“Show jumping is definitely our hardest phase so it’s hard to leave that for last, especially when the pressure is on, but I’m very happy with how he was,” said McFadden. “I stress before [show jumping] but then I remember that I’m having fun. My trainer was going Preliminary this week so I was lucky to tag along for a course walk with Ian Stark. He definitely thought I was going Preliminary so he was telling me to ‘ride forward!’ I tried to use that same mentality, just smaller and slower, and it worked perfectly. He was fantastic.” He was better than I could have asked for for dressage and cross-country. In show jumping I had to fight for a couple of the turns but I just got scrappy and just rode like Ian Stark told me to.”

USEA Beginner Novice Rider Championship

Mandy Collins piloting Lillian Thiel’s 20-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding Vatino (Patino x Inta) celebrated a first place win today finishing on her dressage score. After what seems like a few lifetimes. Collins is in tears having the lead in today’s victory gallop aboard a horse she clearly adores.

“I grew up as a kid riding outside of Atlanta and then I went to college and started my career, and I always thought I was going to get back into it but then 10, 15 years kind of passed. A couple of years ago I had the opportunity to start riding again and I saw pictures online of this event—that I never got to go to—and I’m here, on this horse, and it feels like an immense privilege,” said Collins. “He tries so hard for me. You come back with a new mentality as an adult rider and he just always looks out for my best interest. Going into the dressage arena, I was able to feel him relax and he just gave me that confidence to go in there and try my best because he put on his game face, too. He’s 20-years-old so he’s been around the block a little bit. To feel that confidence from phase to phase to phase when I’m not sure has just been a gamer changer for my confidence and progressing with my riding.”

[Read the full Beginner Novice Recap]

Let’s hear it for all of our winners! We were with you in spirit all week and can’t wait until we’re back at AEC. Until then, safe travels home to all and #goeventing.

USEA American Eventing Championships (Kalispell, MT): [Website] [Ride Times/Live Scores] [Livestream] [Shannon Brinkman Photography] [Ride On Video]

“You Dream it Could Be You, But it Just As Easily Might Never Be”: Piggy March Takes 2022 Burghley Victory

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It takes a village: Piggy March leaves the arena with husband Tom after taking the Burghley title. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials‘ core team has seen plenty of changes this year: not only is there a new director in Martyn Johnson, who’s previously been at the helm of Burgham International in Northumberland, there’s also a new course designer — Kentucky’s Derek di Grazia, making his English debut — and, finally, a new showjumping designer in Paul Connor, who had the unenviable job of building a track today that would shake up the standings without punishing tired horses.

Of course, this isn’t Paul’s first rodeo:he took the reins at last year’s Burghley replacement at Bicton, and so was well aware of the interplay between tough terrain tests and athletic ability the following day. Still, though, he took the time to get to know Burghley’s uniquely undulating grass arena, siting his fences amongst its gentles dips and mounds in order to up the ante. And up the ante it did: just seven horse-and-rider combinations of the 28 starters would secure a clear round, and just six would do so without adding time penalties.

“The ground was perfect, and we’ve worked hard on that — but actually, when I walked on it firstly it already felt lovely,” says Paul. “The ground itself is very undulating so it’s a little bit up and a little bit down all the way here and all the way there, which is good, because you can use that to help your distances. The field was very good, with some very scopey horses, and a few unlucky poles — but again, I think that’s where the ground does a little bit and it catches the odd person like that.”

That undulating ground and tricky course meant that just one horse and rider of the eight in the morning session turned in a clear round, and though Andrew James and Celtic Morning Star‘s achievement will have given the afternoon’s top twenty some confidence, the seven other rounds made it achingly clear just how tough the task ahead would be. And just as we always say that the measure of a true Burghley is its ability to propel people up the rankings on Saturday, there’s also much to be said for the influence that a serious final-day track can play as well. Paul Connor’s piece de resistance did exactly the job it was meant to do: by the end of the competition, those scant few clear rounds saw their riders rightfully find themselves in the midst of the very best in the world.

Of course, that made for an afternoon session of showjumping that was very nearly unwatchably tense, particularly as we crept towards the business end of the proceedings. The top three after cross-country — Piggy March and Vanir KamiraTim Price and Vitali, and Jonelle Price and Classic Moet — are highly regarded for their many inimitable qualities, but it would be hard to argue that showjumping is high on the list for any, and while Vanir Kamira and Classic Moet alike had both previously managed rare clears under pressure to win Badminton, a smattering of poles between them didn’t feel like an unlikely possibility.

For 19-year-old Classic Moet, jumping in third place, that proved the case. She didn’t have a fence in hand over fourth-placed Tom Jackson and Capels Hollow Drift, who had jumped one of the best rounds of the day, and although the round started well, without the mare’s classic tip-tap skimming technique, they took the airy upright out of the first part of the treble at 8ABC, and then added another rail at ten, handing Tom a podium finish. He would move up one more place after Tim Price and Vitali, who have historically struggled in this phase but had one rail in hand to spare, took out the second fence and then the first and final parts of the treble.

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

And so, as overnight leaders Piggy March and Vanir Kamira cantered into the ring, now with two rails and a touch of time in hand, it was with the grimmest of game faces firmly in place. As the seventeen-year-old mare met each fence, she did so with her feet first, clattering her way around the course but somehow keeping the rails in situ — until she came to the first part of the double at 4, which fell with a thud. Now, she had just one in hand, and a tough time on the clock to keep half an eye on, too — but she would need neither. Pole after pole bounced in its cups, but no more fell, and Piggy March crossed the finish line as the 2022 Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials champion.

“I can’t quite believe it”: Piggy March adds Burghley champion to her resume with Vanir Kamira. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I can’t quite believe it, really, but I’m just so relieved,” she says.”I felt like I put more pressure on myself today than I normally do; I’m usually pretty… well, relaxed might be a strong word, but I definitely understand that what will be will be. Today, though, I just felt so much that this little horse deserves it as much as any horse here does. I just didn’t want to let her down. You’ve just got to go and do your thing, but I was just so desperate for her name to be up there on the plaques at Winners’ Avenue. She’s been a Burghley horse through and through — she’s been second twice, fifth, and has now won, and she’s got a total of 4.8 time penalties across all of those runs. It’s the toughest cross-country course in the world to make the time, and she’s a very special horse for that reason.”

Piggy March and Vanir Kamira: Burghley champions at last. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Now, plucky ‘Tillybean’ — the very model of an unconventional champion with an oversized heart — becomes just the third-ever mare to win this event, and the fifteenth horse in history to win both Badminton and Burghley. For Piggy, who recorded her first five-star win with the mare at Badminton in 2019, it feels every inch as surreal to follow it up at the world’s biggest event.

“It’s really what dreams are made of, and without a doubt, this’ll be one of the best days, if not the best day, along with Badminton for me,” says Piggy. “I’m just so proud; it’s a massive, massive achievement, and even out there taking the trophy pictures with the cars, I can look back on all the pictures of Oliver, of Pippa, of William, and everyone you see in the magazines. You think, ‘oh, that just looks amazing — will it ever be me?’ You believe it in your training, and you believe it going, but it can easily not be. We all know that, and it’s the same in every sport — but you just keep trying and keep believing and you just hope that someday, someone’s looking down and it’s your day. We all know that as sports people and horsepeople; you have your moments every now and then, and someone was looking down today to say it was the moment for me.”

Tom Jackson earns a career-best result with the exciting Capels Hollow Drift. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Tom Jackson is no stranger to the topmost level, nor to great success in the saddle: he rode around Badminton and Pau a number of times, with a top-ten finish to his name at the latter with Billy Cuckoo and a wealth of experience gleaned with his former Junior and Young Rider Europeans medallist Waltham Fiddlers Find. But this trip to Burghley was a first for him — and a top ten placing at the level on home soil, too, had eluded him.

He hasn’t quite had a horse like Capels Hollow Drift, though. The eleven-year-old impressed enormously at Badminton, finishing sixteenth and looking for all the world like a win might be in him one day — and when he pulled out a foot-perfect showjumping round today, he was able to rocket himself and his rider up from fourth to second place, having started the week outside the top ten.

“That horse is just class — to go around the cross-country like he did yesterday, and then to go in and jump as well as he did today,” says 29-year-old Tom. “It makes my job so easy knowing that he’s got that capability, and he always wants to do the right thing. I’m over the moon with him. He jumped really well, but not as well as he can do after yesterday’s efforts — so for him to dig as deep as he did is really pleasing.”

Though Tom hasn’t previously ridden at Burghley, his gelding’s progression throughout the season made him quietly confident that a placing could be on the cards if luck was on their side.

“I’d sort of been thinking in the back of my mind that we could be in the top five, but to be second — especially to Piggy! — almost feels like winning. We’re over the moon with how he’s gone, and how he’s come out of Badminton and stepped up this week. He’s obviously very talented, but one of his best assets is that his brain is so good. He always wants to do the right thing, and he’s always with me and concentrating. That makes my life so much easier.”

Still, though, being conscious of the realistic possibility of a great result and actually achieving it are two different things, and for Tom, a result of this magnitude is an emotional moment that heralds the next phase of his exciting career.

“We dreamt of doing this well, but actually come here and do it is something else,” he says. “We’ve been working quite hard for quite a while, and I hope that a lovely horse like him can keep progressing and get us closer to these teams.”

Pippa Funnell meets Tom Jackson at the in-gate after his round. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Tom, who’s based in the Surrey hills just forty minutes from the Billy Stud, was one of a number of riders mentored by Pippa Funnell this week, and she gave him some simple advice ahead of his round: “She said, ‘just concentrate on what you’re doing and ride like you normally do’ — and hopefully, I did that. He jumped so well for me.”

Tim Price and Vitali come up against it once again in the final phase, but slip just one spot. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

It’s hard not to feel frustrated for Tim Price, who has in Vitali an extraordinary horse with one great weakness at the moment. Like a musical theatre actor who can’t get the choreography quite in time, he’s something of a double threat and a promise — and after tipping the second fence and the first and last parts of the treble, slipping from the runner-up position he held through the week to a final third, Tim had to think of the horse’s long-term prospects to avoid the weight of disappointment that comes with another showjumping round gone awry.

“I’ve got to keep it all in perspective,” he says. “It’s easy to get distracted by the fact that you’re in a very good position, and it was a ‘must jump clear’ day to win — but for this horse, it’s his weak phase.”

That weakness has caught them out previously at the Olympics, where they took three rails, and at Luhmühlen CCI5* this summer, where they did the same — but the partnership, which began in 2021 after the horse had had two years out, is a relatively new one, and the talented but inarguably quirky gelding still has plenty of learning and growing to do as an athlete. And at Burghley? Two out of three phases ain’t too shabby, particularly when you still find yourself in a podium position come Sunday evening.

“Overall, he’s been excellent; he put out a really good performance in the dressage to be right up there, and he just excelled yesterday,” says Tim. “He was superb, but that’s bound to take its toll, especially on a horse that’s never been in this position physically before. It’s an unfortunate three rails, but he actually made a lot of very good efforts, too, so we’ll take that away as a positive and look forward to the next one. He’s class, and what he showed me yesterday has definitely got me excited about the future.”

Jonelle Price and Classic Moet: full of gumption in the final phase. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

If there are two things that run deep in the Price family camp, it’s fierce competitiveness — and pragmatism. Jonelle Price knew when she entered the arena that a clear round on Classic Moet wouldn’t come easily — after all, when the mare delivered one in 2018 to win Badminton, it was her first international showjumping clear in four years. Though it didn’t quite happen for her, with rails falling at 8A and 10, the nineteen-year-old mare and her exceptional rider only slipped one place to fourth, which even Jonelle had to concede wasn’t a bad way to finish the competition — and, potentially, the remarkable horse’s career.

“If you’d given me a top five at the start of the week, I’d have been very happy — but of course, when you’re up there in the mix you dream of a clear round and of what could be. But we’re going to have to be happy with third and fourth today,” she says. “It’s been a phenomenal week for her. She showed why she deserves to still be here, and she felt as good as ever today.”

Alice Casburn and Topspin put a long partnership to good use, finishing fifth in their Burghley debut. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

One of the great climbs of the week belonged to 20-year-old Alice Casburn, who was born just a year before Classic Moet and is the real-life embodiment of every pony novel you ever gobbled up as a child. She and Topspin only began eventing a few years ago, and the homebred Thoroughbred is out of a mare her mother, Caroline evented — and that mare, too, is out of one of her former Advanced rides. But although they’ve had an extraordinary year, with 19th place finishes at Pau last year and Badminton this year, plus an individual bronze and team gold medal at the Young Rider European Championships, and although Alice has considerable experience over much bigger showjumping courses and even Puissance classes with the gelding, she still found the nerves nearly unbearable ahead of her round.

“I was really, really nervous going in — I was quite relaxed in the lorry park, and then I came down and saw quite a few people,” says Alice, who nonetheless delivered a sparkling clear to move up to fifth after a starting position of 30th. “I said to myself, ‘you’re not here — you’re just showjumping at home!’ But then I heard the crowds cheering for everyone else and I was like, ‘no, I really am here.’ My heart started going but then I felt him spook at the plant pot going in, in his usual fashion — and that’s when I know that he’s up for it and wants to have a good crack. And that’s exactly how he jumped.”

Alice Casburn and Topspin celebrate a classy clear. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Though cheerful, ineffably cool Alice is outwardly calm — enviably so, in fact, prompting those of us in the mixed zone to discuss whether we’re too old to try to be friends with her — it’s something she’s had to work at. But that work, and an understanding of how her mind works, is what helps her to refocus and get in the zone ahead of pivotal rounds like these.”

“It never came naturally,” she says. “I saw some of my family friends earlier, and they remembered when I was crying my eyes out, refusing to go into the ring for a 70cm round. I think it’s been about blocking out social media and having a nice small bubble, and I’m kind of just in denial that I’m at places when I there. I’m riding around sort of blanking everything out and imagining that I’m at a training show. So no, I never was that brave, and then I hit the hunting field a couple of times and I got more competitive. My competitiveness and my trust in him overpower the fear. I’m still a nervous person, but it’s like my body registers it and my brain doesn’t anymore.”

Alice doesn’t hunt Spin — “I think I’d end up in Yorkshire from Norwich; he’s quite a live wire!” — but instead hunts a former eventer called Ruby, with whom “I can go with my pockets full of sweets and snacks like I’m seven, and just have a nice time.” But really, is there any nicer time than jumping a double clear to finish fifth at your first Burghley?

“I just feel in shock — when I got off I just stood there shaking for a good couple of minutes! I can’t believe it. To finish like this is phenomenal; I’m so grateful, and he’s been absolutely fantastic,” she says, grinning from ear to ear.

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats earn an excellent placing in the face of disappointment. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Kitty King took sixth place with the exceptional Vendredi Biats after a nearly perfect showjumping round that just suffered from one moment of rotten luck — rather like their excellent cross-country round yesterday, which was looking like their best ever until the gelding misread the width of the wide Fairfax and Favor rails at 19a, hitting a pin and costing Kitty her overnight lead. Had you put a gun to this reporter’s head and asked me to make a bet about her result today, I’d have confidently told you she’d jump a clear round, and it certainly looked as though it was going that way — until the very tidy jumper breathed on a rail to add four penalties.

“It’s pretty bloody frustrating and disappointing, and to be honest, I don’t really like Burghley,” says Kitty with a wry laugh. ” At least I’ve completed this time, I suppose. I’d never managed to complete before, and I really thought this was going to be our week after our start in the dressage, but nothing’s really quite gone 100% to plan. It’s disappointing, and I’m a bit fed up with it all.”

Though their week here has 90% shaken off Kitty’s Burghley demons, the disappointment of being so close to a win and then missing out is palpable — particularly on a horse that jumps with the style that ‘Froggy’ does.

“You see others going around by Braille and they don’t have a rail; he doesn’t touch anything, but touches one and it comes down,” muses Kitty. “And on cross-country he’s foot-perfect, with no hairy moments, but makes one mistake and it’s a pin. We just never quite have a bit of luck on our side. It’s not just been with us this week, but I do hope we win one at some point, because he’s more than capable of achieving it, really.”

Richard Jones and Alfies Clover take the right sort of risks to repeat their 2019 seventh place finish. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

“I didn’t think I was going to get down to the first fence,” laughs local rider Richard Jones, who recorded another seventh place finish with Alfies Clover, despite an inauspicious start. After picking up a good canter on the bell, Richard turned to the first fence and his experienced gelding spooked and sucked behind his leg — at which Richard got into the driving seat and found a committed, gusty stride to the jump.

“It was a bit similar to the round we had at Badminton — it was all a bit all over the shop,” laughs Richard, who finished in the same position here in 2019. “But we leave Alfie quite fresh, because he’s fifteen and he knows what he’s doing. He always comes out fresher on the last day, and I don’t know how that works — it takes a fairly special horse to do what he did yesterday and then come out and be bloody fresh today!”

Many riders would have chosen a more conservative canter into the first after feeling that little wobble in the turn, but Richard and Alfie are long-time partners, and he knew that the gelding would be best served by a gutsy ride to get him off the ground.

“I wouldn’t have any fear moving him up,” he explains. “He’s a jumper, foremost in his brain, and while yesterday I’d have liked him to jump a foot lower in the first half of the course so he could be quicker, today I wouldn’t want to be sat on anything else. I’m over the moon with him — to be honest, I’d liked to think I could have finished in the top five, but I was a little bit slow yesterday. When the course is this way around, with the busy bit early, it takes a little bit of time to get him settled, and he jumps a little bit big to start with. But I’m delighted. It means everything to be back at Burghley.”

Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On earn a second five-star top ten. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Pippa Funnell‘s duo of very different geldings have been playing swapsies on the leaderboard all week: at the end of the first phase, she was eighth with the rangy Billy Walk On and tenth with Mr Consistent Majas Hope, and by the end of yesterday, she’d stepped up to ninth with Majas Hope and down to thirteenth with Billy Walk On. But it was the homebred Billy Walk On who would triumph, jumping out of order as the first of the afternoon session and delivering a sparkling clear that would step him back up to a final eighth place — while Majas Hope took a disappointing four rails to move down to sixteenth.

Tom Crisp and the tiny stylist Liberty and Glory take their second top-ten at five-star. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Just a fortnight ago, part-time firefighter Tom Crisp thought about withdrawing from Burghley, which was to be his first crack at five-star since Badminton in 2019, because a smattering of broken ribs accrued in a cross-country schooling fall at home left him in too much pain to ride as normal. But getting Liberty and Glory back to this level has been a serious labour of love for Tom and his family, who bred the tiny, feisty mare from a former Advanced ride of his wife, Sophie’s — there have been niggling injuries along the way, and false starts, and a pesky little pandemic that have put all those big dreams on hold. Finally, in a fit of hubris and with the memories of their sixth-place finish at Pau in 2018 in his mind, he decided to pack the lorry, and his army of children, and point his horse of a lifetime at her first Burghley.

And what a pay-off the Crisp family has had. Though ‘Lori’ was never going to trouble the leaders in the first phase, she soared up the leaderboard from 39th after dressage to fifteenth after a remarkable cross-country round that saw her add just 10.8 time penalties while pinging every jump like a pony show jumper. Today, she proved that the hard work the family and their home team has put into getting her sound and healthy has been well worthwhile, jumping in fine style — with knees well above nostrils — all the way around Paul’s track, adding nothing and climbing to ninth place.

“You can’t beat a clear round at Burghley on the final day, and to jump as well as she did — she rubbed number two and I thought, ‘oh no, come on!’ and then I don’t think she touched another one,” says a teary-eyed Tom with a smile. “She rose to the occasion and made my job easy; she’s a lovely mare, and she’s had a great event. She’s exceeded expectations; two weeks ago I didn’t even think I was coming, but it’s a magical place and it does wonderful things to you. This week, it was good to us.”

A dream come true: Tom Crisp and Liberty and Glory. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

For Tom, who’s been working away, often out of the spotlight, for many years at five-star, today’s result was an enormous and emotional milestone.

“In my mind, it almost feels like I’ve won it. You ride your own competition, don’t you? For me and her, it felt like a win: I can’t tell you the ups and downs of the last three weeks, of thinking I couldn’t ride and cancelling all my other events. It’s crazy, and to come here and jump a double clear in her first Burghley when she hasn’t had the best time has just been fantastic.”

Though Lori hasn’t always been the most straightforward of partners — a fact that’s sometimes still evident in her dressage tests — Tom knows that the fire in her belly is what makes her so good, in much the same way that the great mares above her on the leaderboard are so good because they’re unconventional.

“You can’t beat a quirky mare,” he says fondly. “When you get them on side, they love their job and they make training them and working with them so interesting and fun. They give a whole lot more, I think, than any other horse. She’s a quirky one, with a heck of a story behind her; she wasn’t easy in the beginning, and used to just lie down in the start box, or wouldn’t go past fence three, and I always said to Sophie, ‘just sell it and get something easier — we’re wasting our time!’ But we stuck with it. She’s always been a talented thing, and she moved and jumped well, but she wasn’t prepared to apply it in the beginning. She’s a crazy thing, but you need a bit of crazy to do this.”

Cornelia Dorr and Daytona Beach 8 excel themselves for top ten at Burghley. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

And speaking of quirky mares, it’s only fitting that the top ten is rounded out by one such oddball, who gained an expansive fan club — certainly among the gathered media — throughout this weekend’s jumping phases.

“There’s no other word for it — she’s just an incredible jumper, and she has such heart,” says US rider Cornelia Dorr, who executed an extraordinary climb throughout the week to move up from first-phase 50th place to a final 10th place with Daytona Beach 8 in their first-ever five-star. Though the mare often looked to have just one (admittedly very high) gear across the country yesterday, she’s extraordinarily quick-footed and catty at the combinations, and she and her 24-year-old rider exhibited such gutsiness and trust in one another that their round was a joy to watch. Today’s showjumping round, which saw them deliver one of those six clears inside the time, was also one of the most enjoyable to watch, as the mare looked to barely touch the ground before clearing each fence by generous inches.

Cornelia Dorr and Daytona Beach 8. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

For Cornelia, a good experience at her five-star debut would have been enough of a reward — but to finish in the top ten at Burghley has bolstered her faith in her system in a way that looks set to skyrocket her career.

“It’s given me so much confidence — it’s been amazing,” says Cornelia, who will now plan for a move back to the US in November after a fruitful year spent in England with Kevin McNab.

It was Kevin who first suggested that Cornelia aim the former Sandra Auffarth ride at Burghley — an idea she wasn’t convinced about at first. And even as the benefits of tackling the biggest course in the world started to take root, would Cornelia have believed it if someone had suggested she might finish in the top ten?

“Never — I’d have told them they were crazy,” she laughs. “But she has my back so much. She gives me an unreal feeling, and even though she’s a little bit tired, she’s still just so self-aware. She’s amazing; you can’t beat these good mares.”

Cornelia tops the bill of US riders, the remaining three of whom finished in the top 25: Emily Hamel and Corvett looked on springs around the tricky track, adding one rail and 1.6 time to take 20th place, while Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent tipped two and added 1.2 time to take 23rd place.

And that’s all she wrote, folks — for now, anyway. We’ll be looking back at Burghley with our analytical (and emotional) glasses on over the next couple of days, but for now, we’re signing out from what has been an unbelievable week of sport. Burghley: it’s great to have you back. Go Eventing.

The final top ten in the 2022 Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials.

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Burghley 2022: Website|Live Scores|Burghley TV|Form Guide|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram

¡Vamos a Pratoni! Highlighting Mexican Event Rider Daniela Moguel

Daniela Moguel and Cecilia. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“If we don’t do it, who else is going to do it?”

Anyone who has met Daniela Moguel knows she has a fiercely positive attitude. As the first female Mexican five-star rider ever, she specializes in breaking barriers. When I spoke to her last month about her ideas about diversifying our sport, she was quick to highlight the issues but also committed to finding solutions.

If you scroll down the list of results of any FEI event, you don’t usually come across many Mexican flags. The nationalities of most riders in the U.S. are American and Canadian (sometimes with a rogue Australian thrown in there!) despite the fact that Latinos make up almost one-fifth of the American population. Daniela would like to change this. She wants to “open the vision” to include people from different backgrounds in eventing, from the grassroots to the top of the sport.

For Daniela, this has to start with “changing the vision and changing the stereotypes.” When you hear the words “event rider,” the image that pops into your head is likely to be one of a white woman or man. If you don’t fit that stereotype, it is hard to see yourself in the sport, much less at the top of it. “Exposure is a big part of it,” Daniela says.

“The resources are out there” to support more inclusivity in the sport, especially from a financial perspective. Daniela believes this to be true, but more organization and leadership is necessary to put these resources to work. For example, she raises the idea that professional riders could commit to discounting their clinics so that one or two riders could ride for free. That would mean that those who usually couldn’t afford to ride with a top professional might gain access to an excellent educational opportunity. And you never know—a young rider who meets a professional at a clinic may end up as their working student or full-time employee down the line. The opportunities begin when the door opens.

Daniela Moguel and Cecelia. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Daniela also spoke about how eventing in Latin America is really still a military sport. In Mexico, she became aware of the fact that the sport was largely for men only. For example, at the Pan American games, almost all of the riders are in the military, and almost all of them are men.

“As you go up the levels [of eventing in Mexico], there are fewer and fewer girls and women competing,” Daniela notes. She cites the military influence as creating a gender stereotype, and also the fact that many women go into show jumping instead of eventing because there are more opportunities in that sport. Daniela came to America from her native Mexico in 2018. She had reached a point in her country where she could not progress any higher up the levels. For a long time, in fact, she was the only woman competing at the upper levels of eventing in Mexico.

Daniela has since ridden at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event several times, as well as the 2018 World Equestrian Games in Tryon, North Carolina. Later this month, she will be contesting the World Championships in Pratoni, Italy on the horse with whom she has met all of these previous goals: Cecelia. “My preparation has gone well,” Daniela says, citing her outings in show jumping in Wellington, Florida, and a recent good finish in the River Glen CCI3S. Cecelia is 19 years old this year, so Daniela has tried to keep her fresh and not over-compete her, but she says that she has gotten the horse very fit with the hilly championship venue outside of Rome in mind.

Just a few of the shirt designs available for Daniela’s fundraising campaign!

“Let’s look at the big picture,” Daniela urges. “This is what we can give back to the sport and to the world.” Daniela hopes that her success will encourage more Latina girls to take up eventing. “Women need to have each other’s backs,” she says, “we need to encourage each other.” She notes that she had a student come into her program who said she used to want to go to the Olympics, but now she thinks that goal is too ambitious. Daniela wants everyone to have big dreams, even if it is unclear how feasible they will be. “There is no goal that is too high, you just have to work for it.”

Daniela is selling t-shirts to help fund her journey to Pratoni. Designed by Britt Gillis and Sally Spickard, they display the slogan “Mex-I-Can” in a nod to her country and her optimism. If you would like to support Daniela’s journey, please follow this link to order a shirt or this link to her GoFundMe page for the World Championships. The EN Team will certainly be cheering her on.

One Last Hurrah: The Final Land Rover Burghley Live Update Thread

Bubby Upton and Cola chase the clock on the home stretch. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

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It’s nearly time for the finale of the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials as we count down to the top 29 show jumping, which will begin at 2:30 p.m. BST / 9:30 a.m. EST.

This morning’s final horse inspection was a tense one, and three pairs were withdrawn overnight: Kate Shapland opted to withdraw Uris Cavalier, Michael Owen withdrew Bradeley Law, and Cathal Daniels withdrew Rioghan Rua.

It’s tight at the top — overnight leader does not have a pole in hand, and time has already proven to be a factor after the first session of the horses near the bottom of the standings earlier this morning. Paul Connor is today’s designer.

You can view the full order here and keep up with scores here. Show jumping goes very quickly, so these updates will likely be primarily text, but refresh this page periodically for the latest!

Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials: Website] [Scoring] [Show Jumping Times] [Live Stream] [EN’s Ultimate Guide] [EN’s Coverage]

10:28 a.m. EST: That’ll do us for a wonderful weekend celebrating the return of Land Rover Burghley. I hope you’ve enjoyed following along with us and I can’t express how thrilled I am for these riders. Many congratulations to all, and Tilly will be along later today with the final report. Until then, Go Eventing!

I’ll leave you with one last missive:

GIF via Burghley TV.

10:23 a.m. EST: What a weekend. Piggy and Vanir Kamira become the 14th pair to win Badminton and Burghley. Tom Jackson winds up in second place in an fairytale result, and our own Cornelia Dorr finishes in the TOP 10 at her very first five-star. Someone put that lady on a team.

Full results can be found here.

10:22 a.m. EST: Oh man, Piggy’s living dangerously but wow she does it! They’ve taken the Burghley title!!

10:21 a.m. EST: Piggy has 4A down and rubs the next few.

10:19 a.m. EST: Tom Jackson now moves into second place — I’d love to see a live view of his face right now — and Piggy has two rails and some time in hand as Tim lowers into third place. Let’s go Piggy!

10:18 a.m. EST: Tim has the second fence down with Vitali. He’s got a couple in hand to keep his position, and now Piggy has a bit more breathing room. Vitali has the in and out of the treble down.

10:18 a.m. EST: And now we’re into the final two. First up, Tim Price with his Tokyo partner, Vitali.

10:16 a.m. EST: Ah! Rats. Molly has two rails down and will drop into fourth, putting Tom Jackson on the podium in his very first Burghley. “We’ve dreamt of this, but to actually come and do it is another thing,” he tells Rosie Tapner. And just take a look at this finish:

GIF via Burghley TV.

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10:15 a.m. EST: And here’s Molly! Jonelle Price and Classic Moet come in, currently in third position and without a pole in hand. Molly wouldn’t be one who will necessarily guarantee a clear round, but she’s certainly got it in her.

10:13 a.m. EST: Wow, what a result for Tom! Tom will be at least fourth, improving on his top-16 finish at Badminton with a clear round. This horse is just 11, and it’s not hard to picture him on the next senior team for the Brits with these seriously consistent and improving results. If not, I know another country that would take this pair!

10:11 a.m. EST: Tom Jackson with the seriously impressive Capels Hollow Drift are now in the ring to defend their fourth position.

10:10 a.m. EST: There’s quite a tricky S-turn about midway through this track, and sadly Pencos Crown Jewel has the middle element down. She’s now added two more rails, which will drop her down a few placings. That’s still no worse than 11th for a debut, not too shabby, but she’ll have wanted to have one or all of those rails back.

10:09 a.m. EST: One rail down will drop Kitty down to seventh on a final score of 42.2, collecting her first Burghley completion — in the top 10, no less. Next in will be defending World Champ Ros Canter with the debutant horse Pencos Crown Jewel. This lady has a knack for producing a competitive result in a horse’s first five-star. Case in point? Her World Championships partner, Lordships Grafflo, who seriously impressed for a top finish in his own debut at Badminton.

10:07 a.m. EST: Love this reaction from Alice! Also a fun fact: Alice’s mother, Caroline, actually competed Topspin’s grand dam and dam — as well as the gelding himself — and eventually went on to breed Topspin and keep him in the family. Such a cool, full circle story!

GIF via Burghley TV.

10:06 a.m. EST: Well unfortunately that’s four rails and a second of time for Bubby, who will drop down out of the top 10. Next to see will be Kitty King and Vendredi Biats, who had an 11-penalty round yesterday to lose their lead but nonetheless impressed with their turn of foot. She’ll aim to finish in the top six or better with a clear round.

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10:05 a.m. EST: Bubby does not have a rail in hand to keep her spot, but she does have one to stay in the top 10. Unfortunately she’s had three down as she comes to the treble at 8.

10:04 a.m. EST: Wow! What a class round from Alice, who cements at least eighth place this weekend. What a star. Now on to another promising young superstar, Bubby Upton and Cola III. I’m not sure I could actually pick a favorite from yesterday, but Cola might be close.

10:02 a.m. EST: Alice Casburn, at 20 our youngest rider in the field this weekend, and Topspin are next to see, coming in in eighth position.

10:01 a.m. EST: “I think I’m speechless,” an elated Cornelia Dorr says. “She’s tried so hard and I’m really happy. She jumped out of her skin in there, especially after yesterday. It was hard. I definitely had to think about it in my turns and keep refreshing the canter.”

10:00 a.m. EST: Blast! Pippa has the third fence down, which will move Richard up at least one more spot. She’s also got 7A and 7C, the in and out of the treble down. The oxer at 8 also falls. Rats!

9:59 a.m. EST: Sadly a three-rail round will drop Wills out of the top 10, bumping Richard into the mix of the top placings. Pippa’s now back with Majas Hope, on a 49.0 and with no rails in hand to keep her place.

9:56 a.m. EST: A fantastic clear and the biggest cheer of the day so far for local favorite Richard Jones and Alfies Clover! He will step ahead of Pippa and Billy Walk On and at least maintain his 11th position but is likely to wind up well into the top 10. Another impressive young rider, Wills Oakden, now tgakes the track with Oughterard Cooley. This was another seriously stellar pair to ride yesterday. He’s got the first down unfortunately.

9:53 a.m. EST: Two rails drops Tom down a handful of places with CHF Cooliser. Richard Jones and Alfies Clover, in 11th place after cross country, will be the next to see. This is going fast — our winner will be crowned soon!

9:51 a.m. EST: Three rails and two seconds of time for Tim, who was still working to get rideability from Bango today. Next in will be Tom McEwen with the absolute boss mare CHF Cooliser.

9:50 a.m. EST: This girl:

GIF via Burghley TV.

9:49 a.m. EST: Next to see on a 42.2 currently are Tim Price and Bango, our trailblazers yesterday.

9:48 a.m. EST: It’s truly a weekend for the mares as Tom also collects a clear round with Liberty and Glory. What an impressive little horse.

9:46 a.m. EST: That’s a 47.4 finishing score for Cornelia, who’s basically guaranteed to keep moving up with the way these rounds are going. We’ll see where she ends up! Next in will be Tom Crisp and the lovely mare, Liberty and Glory.

9:45 a.m. EST: Gosh, Daytona Beach is such a jumper. That’s a DOUBLE CLEAR round for Cornelia!!! I am ECSTATIC!

9:42 a.m. EST: Two rails and clear on the time of 77 seconds for Arthur. We’ll now see our highest-placed U.S. pair, Cornelia Dorr and Daytona Beach 8. This pair really impressed in their five-star debut yesterday!

9:41 a.m. EST: Coming forward on a score of 49, we’ll now see Arthur Duffort and Toronto d’Aurois.

9:40 a.m. EST: Two time and two rails for Cedric, who will hold his position for now. Clear rounds are going to be valuable today!

9:38 a.m. EST: Next in will be French rider Cedric Lyard and Unum De’Or, currently 18th on a two-phase score of 51.2.

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9:36 a.m. EST: Catching up on the two American riders who jumped in this morning’s session: Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent had two rails and added 1.2 time, and Emily Hamel had one pole down with Corvett along with 1.6 time. Meanwhile, inside the time but four rails down for Padraig and HHS Noble Call.

9:35 a.m. EST: Just those three down and some time as Sarah completes her first Burghley! You’ll recall she came over all the way from Australia to tackle this event. What a feat! Next in will be Irish Olympian Padraig McCarthy and the absolutely “noble” HHS Noble Call.

9:33 a.m. EST: And that’s the first clear of the day for Pippa! Next in will be Australian rider Sarah Clark with LV Balou Jeanz. This pair was held this morning but later accepted on re-presentation. They sadly have the first three down to start their round.

9:31 a.m. EST: And we are underway! Pippa Funnell and Billy Walk On will be the first to see.

The Best of Burghley: Your Big, Bold Cross-Country Day Social Round-Up

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There’s nothing quite like the afterglow of a great day of five-star cross-country — and if you, like us, aren’t quite ready to move on from a big, bold, brilliant Burghley yesterday, you’re in luck! Social media has been abuzz with posts from riders and spectators alike, and we’ve rounded up some of our favourites to keep us in our feelings for a little while longer:

 

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Burghley 2022: Website|Live Scores|Burghley TV|Form Guide|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram

Two Held – Including One From Top Ten – in Burghley Final Horse Inspection

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Overnight leaders Piggy March and Vanir Kamira sail through the final inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just 28 horses and riders remain in the 2022 Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials field, down from a starting line-up of 52, after an exciting and influential day of cross-country saw 21 fall by the wayside and a spate of withdrawals overnight further thinned the field by three.

British five-star debutant Kate Shapland opted to withdraw Uris Cavalier, who had completed the course with an educational 40 penalties to sit 31st overnight, while Michael Owen also pulled his experienced eighteen-year-old Bradeley Law, 21st after cross-country, from contention. Ireland is down to one rider in the field after Cathal Daniels withdrew his 2019 Europeans bronze medallist Rioghan Rua from the lineup, where she sat 17th.

Bubby Upton and Cola, seventh after cross-country, survive a trip to the holding box. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

All that, of course, meant that this morning’s final horse inspection, presided over by New Zealand’s Andrew Bennie, alongside Austria’s Katrin Eichinger-Kniely and Great Britain’s Judy Hancock, was a remarkably swift affair — but it wasn’t without its dramas.

Two horses were sent to the holding box for further inspection by veterinarian Andy Bathe. Bubby Upton‘s Cola, who climbed from eleventh to seventh place yesterday, caused a stir among the assembled crowds when he was held, and the pair earned an enormous cheer when they were subsequently accepted on re-presentation.

Australia’s Sarah Clark and LV Balou Jeanz are also accepted after being held. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Getting held when you’re in the top ten is a seriously stressful experience, but doing so when you’ve travelled across the world, alone in a plane with your horse of a lifetime and without the funds to get back home again, is truly next level. Fortunately for Australia’s Sarah Clark, who recorded a clear round and 32 time penalties yesterday to sit 20th, her plucky partner LV Balou Jeanz was accepted on her second presentation to the ground jury, and the pair will go on to complete their longtime Burghley dream in this afternoon’s final session of jumping.

Angus Smales’s ESI Pheonix is Burghley’s best shod horse. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A number of additional prizes were awarded at this second horse inspection, recognising the teams behind the scenes that help these horses to thrive at the top level. The Worshipful Company of Farriers prize for the Best Shod Horse went the way of ESI Pheonix, the ride of Great Britain’s Angus Smales, who is shod by Steven Hill.

Fraser Kirby comes forward to accept his prize with charge My Ernie and rider Helen Wilson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Freelance groom Fraser Kirby, who has three decades of experience and is working at his 22nd Burghley this week, was the winner of the Pedens Bloodstock prize for the groom of the week, in recognition of his work looking after Helen Wilson‘s My Ernie, while Ros Canter‘s groom, Sarah Charnley, who grooms alongside working as a building control surveyor, was the runner-up.

And now, our focus turns wholly to the final phase, which will be designed for the first time by Paul Connor. Here’s a look at the top ten as we head into showjumping, which sees our leader and runner up go head to head with less than a rail between them:

The first group of showjumping, featuring just eight horses and riders, will commence from 11.00 a.m. BST (6.00 a.m. EST), while the top twenty will jump in reverse order of merit from 14.30 BST (9.30 a.m. EST). You can check out the full leaderboard, with showjumping times, here. We’ll be bringing you a full report and analysis — plus live updates from the final session — right here on EN, so stay tuned, and as always: Go Eventing!

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Burghley 2022: Website|Live Scores|Burghley TV|Form Guide|EN’s Coverage|EN’s Twitter|EN’s Instagram