Classic Eventing Nation

Dressage Day Two News & Notes Presented by Zoetis

 

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There’s a common practice when walking your cross country course to envision your exact plan and how you will ride and how your horse will jump. And then, there’s what this guy is doing, which I can only assume finishes with an Olympic level high dive off the bank and down to the skinnies. Hopefully he expects to land feet first instead of a perfect swan dive, but maybe he is just doing some yoga up there.

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 be delivered straight to your inbox each day through Sunday, September 18.

FEI World Championships for Eventing: [Website] [Definite Entries] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’s Form Guide] [Timing & Scoring] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

U.S. Weekend Preview

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

The Event at Skyline (Mount Pleasant, UT): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Scoring]

Flying Cross Farm H.T. (Goshen, KY): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Marlborough H.T. (Upper Marlboro, MD): [Website] [Entry Status]

Otter Creek Fall H.T. (Wheeler, WI): [Website] [Scoring] [Volunteer]

Stone Gate Farm H.T. (Hanoverton, OH): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Tryon Fall H.T. (Mill Spring, NC): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Unionville H.T. (Unionville, PA): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Major International Events

Blenheim Palace International (Oxfordshire, England): [Website] [Schedule] [Entry Status] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream]

News From Around the Globe:

Looking for an up close and personal preview of the cross country course tomorrow? Yeah, we got you. Let’s just say, we’re proud of our efforts in the sand box, but we’re also glad that we’ve got a group of serious cross country horses on our team for the action tomorrow. [Pratoni Cross Country Preview]

Now that you’re inspired by watching dressage at Pratoni, you’ll surely realize the importance of developing the walk in your test. The walk movements are often double coefficients, and nothing is more challenging than getting a fit event horse to truly chill out and let go of tension in their backs while walking. Check out these awesome over-the-back suppling exercises that you can incorporate into your walk work today. [Supple Through The Back at The Walk]

This summer, five USEA Emerging Athlete 21 (EA21) Clinics took place across the country giving young riders the opportunity to hone in on their horsemanship skills, improve their consistency in the saddle and show ring, and create a pipeline for potential team riders by identifying and developing young talent. The USEA caught up with many of the riders from the two East Coast sessions to hear their takes on the USEA’s newest program. [EA21 Recap: East Coast Edition]

Age ain’t no thang to 34-year-old Over To You, who you might remember from your childhood stories of eventing war horses. Paired with Jeanette Brakewell, Jack was the winner of eight championship medals, and his very first was at no other venue than Pratoni in 1998. He still sports four shoes, has all his teeth, and may be liable to kick up his heels (and possibly you) when feeling fresh coming in from the field. [Over To You: Age Doesn’t Matter]

 

Amazing news from Nicola Wilson!!

Pratoni Performance of the Day from KPP: Queen Collett Throws Down the Gauntlet

Laura Collett (GBR) celebrates a personal best with London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

2022 Badminton winner Laura Collett entered the ring at FEI World Championships this afternoon as the second British team member to ride her test. Bringing forward the stunning London 52, Laura laid down what we’ve all rather come to expect at this point: a near-flawless test that scored under 20 penalty marks.

Laura’s final mark of 19.3 sets a personal best for both her and London 52 in FEI competition, so what a time to peak! “He definitely loves the crowd,” Laura debriefed to the press after her ride. “He went in that arena and he was like, ‘Yeah, everyone’s here to see me.’ And he was just a pleasure to work with.

“I think once I got the first centerline out the way, I thought, ‘Oh Carl [Hester] will be happy now,'” she continued, noting that she’d been working on the little details to work on getting that much better. “And then from then on, it just felt like he just got better and better and I could just have a lovely time basically.”

Laura scored a 25.8 in Tokyo, a mark she knew she could’ve done better with, so it feels good to have this phase done and dusted and in a spot she knew she was capable of getting to. The challenge ahead is tall, and there is still much to do, but take a moment to soak in the ride:

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 be delivered straight to your inbox each day through Sunday, September 18.

FEI World Championships for Eventing: [Website] [Definite Entries] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’s Form Guide] [Live Scoring] [Thursday Dressage Times] [Friday Dressage Times] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Enter at A: Social Media from Thursday at Pratoni

It’s that time for our customary rounds of social media from Thursday at FEI World Championships! Isn’t social media just such a great thing (sometimes)? Here’s a look at what everyone’s been up to, including a few sneak peeks of cross country and a glimpse of the famous (infamous?) “Pratoni Pants” that one acquires after walking the course…

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 be delivered straight to your inbox each day through Sunday, September 18.

FEI World Championships for Eventing: [Website] [Definite Entries] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’s Form Guide] [Live Scoring] [Friday Dressage Times] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Hazel Shannon, FEI World Championships 2022

𝗘𝗩𝗘𝗡𝗧𝗜𝗡𝗚 | We caught up with Hazel Shannon following her lovely dressage test at the FEI World Championships Pratoni – Roma 2022. 😍

Hazel, who is making her FEI World Championships debut, scored 30.3 riding WillingaPark Clifford. 👏🏻

🎥 Australian Equestrian Team / Kirsty Pasto

#ausequestrianteam #eahighperformance #championsasone #pratoni2022 #feiworldchampionships #eventingaustralia #australianeventing #eventingaus #equestrianaus #ausequestrian

Posted by Australian Equestrian Team on Thursday, September 15, 2022

Two Personal Bests Highlight Blenheim Palace Leaderboards

Germany’s Malin Hansen-Hotopp tops the 4*-L with Carlito’s Quidditch K. Photo courtesy of Blenheim Palace International.

Day one at the Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials was full of “firsts” – for the leaders of both the feature CCI4*-L class and the CCI4*-S class for eight- and nine-year-old horses, it was their debut on British soil, and they both posted their personal-best dressage scores.

Germany’s Malin Hansen-Hotopp scored 24.6 aboard Bodil Ipsen’s 10-year-old grey gelding Carlito’s Quidditch K to top the CCI4*-L by more than three marks.

The 44-year-old amateur rider said: “I am really delighted. To be overnight leader at Blenheim is just a dream and I am just so happy.

“I had a problem around six months ago in that he was bucking during the canter, so around two months ago I started cantering him a lot before going into the arena and that has helped him a lot. Today he was just a bit nervous but paying attention.

“We have a new German dressage trainer for eventers and she has helped me so much – I saw the test she rode at the world championships for six-year-olds, and she rode every movement for a 10, which inspired me to do the same. It’s a dream for me to be at Blenheim as I’m not a real professional and have not been in England before. I was a reserve for the FEI World Championships in Pratoni del Vivaro, Italy, this week, but the horse is still young and Blenheim was always my first choice – it’s a great place.”

In second are Britain’s Sarah Bullimore and Corouet, who have re-routed to Blenheim after an early run-out across country at Burghley. The individual bronze medallists at the 2021 European Championships scored 27.8.

Third is another German rider, the vastly experienced Dirk Schrade, with a mark of 29 on Casino 80.

Irish-based American Gillian Beale King is in first place in the CCI4*-S with Richard Ames’ nine-year-old Derena Super Star – another eye-catching grey gelding. The pair scored 27.6 and hold the lead narrowly from Sarah Bullimore, who is in second with the mare Evita AP on 27.8.

Gillian, who mostly show jumped before taking a job riding for Richard and Tanja Ames at their Belline Estate in Co Kilkenny 18 months ago, has an pedigree fit for a Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials run by The Jockey Club, however. Her maternal grandfather Major Jeremy Beale won Burghley in 1965, while her paternal grandfather Hunter King rode steeplechasers in the USA.

Gillian, 30, said: “Derena Super Star is just a wonderful horse and lived up to his name today. We went in there and he just put his best foot forward for me, from step one all the way to the end. It has just been a bit of a process with him and for it to all culminate today in such a fabulous manner was really special. Hard work really does pay off.

“This is the first time I’ve competed in the UK – I moved over to Ireland last April. It’s a bit of a different game over here and I’ve been working really hard. It really does take a village and everyone in my village knows who they are – it takes every one of us to put our all into it. It is not just me and the horse who have to deliver today but the grooms and everyone else. It takes months and months of hard work to be in this position and I’m not taking it lightly.

“Blenheim is just stunning. As an American who has been showjumping for the past decade, Blenheim is something you just dream of, so to actually be here I have to pinch myself – it’s just magical. To be on British soil is very special. I have loads of family in the UK who are coming later in the week to watch, so it will be lovely to see everyone on ‘home’ soil.”

American rider Gillian Beale King sits atop the 4*-S on a personal best with Derena Super Star. Photo courtesy of Blenheim Palace International.

Third behind Gillian and Sarah is Selina Milnes, who scored 28.4 on Cooley Snapchat.

Looking to the other North American riders competing at Blenheim, Kimmy Cecere and Landmark’s Monaco currently sit 14th in the CCI4*-L on a score of 33.8. Grace Taylor with Game Changer are in 18th on a 34.7. Canadian representative Jamie Kellock is also in the 4*-L with Summer Bay and they’ll take a score of 42.4 into cross country on Saturday. We have yet to see Valerie Pride with Favian as well as Gillian Beale King with Rebeliant, both of whom will ride their tests tomorrow. In the 4*-S, Kathryn Robinson will ride for Canada tomorrow aboard Cloud K.

Reflecting on day one, Ian Renton, The Jockey Club’s Managing Director for Cheltenham and the West Region, said: “We had our first year last year and were very much novices coming into it but thought we could bring in our experience of running an event. It’s lovely to be involved with one of the most prestigious three-day events in the country.

“There are so many great synergies between equine events, whether that be eventing or racing and we have seen that over the past 18 months we have been involved. Blenheim Palace is such an iconic location in the UK.

“We have a relaxed and friendly atmosphere and to see the dressage, show jumping and cross country against the backdrop of Blenheim Palace is such a wonderful view. We have some fantastic trade stands, significantly more than in 2021, and for those that enjoy shopping there is something for everyone at every level. With children’s activities such as BMX and plenty of space to walk your dog, there really is something for everyone.

“To commemorate the sad passing of Queen Elizabeth II, we are holding a two-minute silence on each of the four days followed by a rendition of God Save The King. On Saturday and Sunday, Laura Wright will be here to sing God Save The King.

“All the riders are wearing black armbands. We want to recognise we are in national mourning and give everyone in attendance the chance to pay their respects – you couldn’t have heard a pin drop during the silence today and the respect shown to Her Late Majesty has been fantastic.

“It has been described that after the country, the Commonwealth and the people. The Queen’s next great love was racing and horses. The Queen was Patron of The Jockey Club and not only had a love of racing but was unbelievably knowledgeable about racing and breeding. The Royal Studs were active throughout her life and she was devoted to the horse.”

Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials continues tomorrow with the second day of dressage, which starts at 9 a.m. BST.

Blenheim Palace International (Oxfordshire, England): [Website] [Schedule] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream]

Take a look at some more social media from Thursday at Blenheim Palace — and don’t forget you can tune in live all weekend long at no cost on the event’s website here!

“The Main Thing is Keeping Him Happy”: Laura Collett and London 52 Lead First Day of Dressage at Pratoni

Laura Collett and London 52 just keep getting better and better, breaking the elusive 20 barrier to take the lead at Pratoni. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just a matter of hours after British individual rider Yasmin Ingham soared into the lead at Pratoni — and into the top five tests ever produced at a World Championships — another high-flying Brit came along to go one better. And was anyone surprised, really, to see Badminton winners Laura Collett and London 52 deliver the goods in this phase? The 13-year-old Holsteiner, who’s owned by Karen Bartlett and Keith Scott alongside Laura herself, has firmly established himself as one of the sport’s outliers in dressage, consistently delivering leading scores in the hottest of company. Today, he excelled even his own lofty standards, dancing his way to an exceptional 19.3 – Laura’s best-ever international result and the third best-ever test at a World Championships. That also boosted the British team, who are the reigning champions, into gold medal position.

Though plenty of horses have been starstruck by Pratoni’s atmospheric arena — and the strong winds that plagued the afternoon session — ‘Dan’ is a consummate showman, and thrives in front of his adoring fans. And boy, were they vocal in their adoration.

“He definitely loves the crowd,” laughs Laura. “He went in that arena and he was like, ‘Yeah, everyone’s here to see me,’ and he was just a pleasure to work with.”

It’s hard to imagine, sometimes, that a horse as consistent as Dan can find any way to eke out further marginal gains — but Laura has been hard at work with British dressage supremo Carl Hester, who has helped them to go from great to, perhaps, greatest.

“Obviously he was pretty good at Badminton, but there were bits that weren’t quite good enough and we’ve just been really working on those,” says Laura. “Once I got the first centerline out of the way, I thought, ‘Oh, Carl will be happy now!’ From then on, it just felt like he just got better and better, and I could just have a lovely time, basically.”

For Laura, who also won Boekelo in 2019, Pau CCI5* in 2020, and contributed to Great Britain’s team gold at last year’s Olympics, there’s a serious weight of expectation where this phase is concerned — but does icy-veined Laura still feel the pressure?

“Oh god, yeah,” she says. “I’m well aware that I’m sat on one of the very best horses in the world and people expect you to deliver — but luckily he delivered. I’m just the luckiest person to be sat on him, and he really does just keep getting better and better. He’s amazing.”

“I’m just the luckiest person to be sat on him”: Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ahead of Laura and Dan, who’s become a seriously consistent cross-country performer after an educational first couple of years at the upper levels, is a serious cross-country course — and one that Laura’s going to spend her ‘day off’ tomorrow analysing.

“Sadly, it’s not going to be a dressage competition! From start to finish, it’s full-on. There was a lot of head-scratching when we first walked it about what the direct route was in different places. There’s so many options, so that takes a lot of thought to figure out. But he’s done a lot of different types of tracks — we’re very lucky in the UK to have so many different venues to go to. It sort of reminds me of Chatsworth, with the hills, and he’s won that before, so hopefully it will suit him. He’s been on amazing form for the last two years, so I have no reason to think it won’t suit him.”

Mum’s the word: Laura celebrates with mum Tracey after her leading test. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Although last year’s Olympic trip was ostensibly an excellent one, for Laura, it was an educational experience — and everything she learned about her horse along the way has helped to define her approach to competitions with him since.

“Trusting him [made the difference], really,” she explains. “We got that wrong in Tokyo last year, and we learned a lot from that. So the main thing with him is keeping him happy and not stressing him out. If you do too much and ask too much, then he worries because he wants to try — he is a trier and he wants to do it right. And if he thinks he’s not doing it right, he gets a bit nervous. So it’s just about telling him he’s amazing, which he is!”

Tom Carlile and Darmagnac de Beliard get the better of tricky conditions to sit equal fifth overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir now sit in second place overnight on their career-best score of 22, while early morning leaders Monica Spencer and Artist, who’ve travelled 18,000km to make their Championship debut, move to third place on 25.6, followed by reigning World Champion Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo on 26.2. (Missed their stories? Head to our lunch break report for all the details!)

France’s Tom Carlile joins the top five, tying for the spot with the USA’s Will Coleman and Off The Record. His nine-year-old Darmagnac de Beliard had, perhaps, the worst conditions of the day to contend with: strong winds meant that one of the arena’s flowerpots went into orbit just as the gelding approached it in extended trot, but although his rhythm was slightly disrupted and he raised his head in shock at the sudden disturbance, he didn’t spook or break into canter, and was able to secure a 26.4 to start his week.

“The most difficult part of our sport is the dressage — but I was very, very pleased with Darmagnac,” says Tom, who finished fourth at Bramham’s CCI4*-L on the horse’s level debut in June. “He’s a real genuine, very honest, shy little horse, and he comes into an atmosphere and he gets fazed. I think the worst thing you can do is just go a bit soft on him and a bit quiet — that doesn’t reassure him. He’s just so serious, and so with me, that you can really ride him into the confidence and then he just performs.”

When the flower pot went, and its contents began their tour around the outside of the ring, Tom remained calm and rode forward into the issue and put his faith in the long relationship he has with the young talent.

“Everything was sort of shaking his emotions, but I just kept his concentration and because he has that trust in me, that kept him occupied,” says Tom. “He’s a horse that I’ve been lucky enough to have since the start — my good owners bred him, and we used to feed him in the field as a yearling. We know him inside out, and we’ve built him into the animal he is today, so he has total trust in us. He has a very shy nature, and he does get a bit tense and emotional, but he’s a lovely horse to work with and there’s so much to come. Give him two years and this test will be five marks better.”

Although the gelding is one of the most inexperienced horses in the field, with just nine FEI runs under his belt, he’s also one of the most impressive: he’s finished outside the top ten in just one of those runs, and Tom has long suspected that he might have what it takes to go all the way.

“We knew his class, but he showed it to everyone in Bramham — and now we need to keep polishing the diamond,” he says. “He’s a horse that if you leave him alone to himself, he worries — so it’s just about keeping him confident. If you have his trust, it reassures him.”

Lauren Nicholson and Vermiculus take provisional seventh place, securing a podium place for the USA overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Team USA sits in bronze medal position overnight after both its day one riders strode into the top ten: after an excellent test by Will and Off the Record this morning, second rotation rider Lauren Nicholson slotted in just behind him with an excellent 27.1 aboard a focused, expressive Vermiculus. The diminutive Anglo Arab shelved any of the intermittent naughtiness that has previously crept into some of his tests and — bar a petulant little stamp of a hind foot in the final halt — looked every inch the professional in his tour of the arena.

“I’m thrilled with him. I think everyone kind of knows that the Arab can throw in some moments — but I didn’t aggravate the Arab, and he did quite well in front of the crowd,” says Lauren. “He does love a big moment, and he’s always at his best at these big competitions, so I was happy to put down a good score for the team. That was our job: not to go in there and do anything amazing, just to try not to mess it up.”

For Lauren, simply getting it right is often enough with ‘Bug’, who is naturally compact but has plenty of movement, which is ordinarily generously rewarded.

“The judges want to like him. They always have, even when he’s been naughty — but when he’s not naughty, he just goes in very workmanlike and the changes are super easy. It’s fun once it’s done,” she laughs.

Part of the key to getting the right stuff out of Bug in the right moment is understanding that he doesn’t have any latent desire to be held hostage by a lengthy workload — and Lauren was hyper aware of that as she planned her warm-up.

“My motto with him is that it doesn’t get better after the first ten minutes, so I came down to the final warm-up as the rider before Clarke [Johnstone, who was ahead of her] was starting. A little less than two tests’ warm-up was right for him,” she says.

Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park power to a 27.4 and overnight eighth. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kiwi team rider Clarke Johnstone, for his part, ended up just three tenths of a penalty behind Lauren and Bug, posting a 27.4 with the relatively inexperienced Menlo Park, a former ride of Kevin McNab and Oliver Townend, who he bought from Tim Boland in Australia just a year ago. That also helped propel the New Zealand team to overnight second place.

“It was the test I was hoping for,” says Clarke, “but he’s very inexperienced for this level. I keep saying, ‘he’s light on experience, but he’s big on quality!’ So I knew he was capable of doing a really good test, but he’s pretty green with some of the movements. It all came together as well as I could have hoped today, though.”

Though their partnership is a young one, it’s come together quickly, and Clarke and the twelve-year-old British-bred gelding have already picked up three top ten finishes in their four FEI runs together. Clarke is hoping that the confidence boost of each successful run will have laid a great foundation for the challenges to come this weekend.

“He’s a beautiful horse, and we’ve spent a year getting to know each other — so hopefully we’re ready to tackle the challenge on Saturday,” he says.

Part of what makes Menlo Park such an attractive partner for Clarke is his wealth of personality, which has also helped the horse to settle into his first championship experience without any teething problems.

“He’s so cheeky, and he’s actually really thrived on this trip because he’s both relaxed and loves attention, and he’s a bit of a monkey, so he quite likes having people around him all the time, giving him carrots and brushing him and leading him around and stuff. He loves all that,” he says.

Clarke, who spent several years in the UK a decade ago, has been back in England since February, basing himself at Zara Tindall’s yard.

“It’s a fantastic place to live and work out of — the horses are really happy there,” he says. Now, he plans to base himself in England through the Paris Olympics with his growing string of horses.

“I’m really enjoying it this year. I lived in England for three years from 2011 to 2013 and I found it pretty tough going, but I guess I’m a lot older and wiser now, and I’m really enjoying it.”

Japan’s Yoshi Oiwa lays his claim on the top ten with Calle 44. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Japanese Olympic partnership Yoshiaki Oiwa and the fifteen-year-old Holsteiner Calle 44 (Cristo 5 x Sara IV, by Quebec) will sit in ninth place overnight on a score of 28, which bests their Tokyo score of 31.5 and just slides ahead of their last World Championships dressage score, a 28.2 earned at Tryon in 2018. They ultimately finished 20th there, but more recently, we’ve seen them working to sort out some teething problems in this and the second phase. That’s meant that the majority of the international competitions they’ve contested recently — seven of their eight FEI runs this year, in fact — have been at the three-star level. But taking the horse back down a level in terms of intensity and technicality has proven a real boon for the experienced gelding.

“Actually, I was quite happy compared to my last few shows,” says Yoshi, who is based in Germany at Dirk Schrade’s yard. “I was struggling myself, but I could do very good preparation to come here, and I think it was our best that I can do now, so I’m happy. My horse is getting older and older, so the body is getting stiff — and I feel a bit soft myself to ask more and more! So probably, that’s more my problem. I was not asking so much. But now, he did very good.”

Evelina Bertoli is best of the home nation in overnight eleventh with Fidjy des Melezes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The home nation had plenty to celebrate today as well: not only do they sit eighth in the team standings, which would be good enough for a qualifying spot at Paris if they can maintain or better it, but their final rider of the day, Evelina Bertoli, was able to deliver an excellent test aboard her Fidjy des Melezes, earning her overnight eleventh place on 29.8. For Evelina, it’s particularly special: she’s lived in Rome her entire life, and while that presents some logistical challenges in terms of her sport, it’s home — and Pratoni is effectively her home venue.

“I’m nearly 2000km from any major competition,” she says with a laugh. “But I’ve competed here many times since I was very young, and I won a bronze medal in the Junior Europeans here in 2004. It’s a special place.”

 

Today’s first day of dressage saw 44 riders deliver their tests and, after the sad withdrawal this morning of Brazil’s Ruy Fonseca and Ballypatrick SRS due to a minor injury, we’ll duplicate that number tomorrow, with another spate of individual riders and the third and fourth rotations of the sixteen teams on the roster. We’ve seen just eleven tests break the 30 barrier today, and there’s plenty of heavy hitters to come tomorrow, including Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH, Olympic gold medallists Julia Krajewski and Amande de b’Neville, US superstars Tamie Smith and Mai Baum and Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg, and Burghley and Kentucky winners Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class — and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Keep it locked onto EN for all the updates and, as always, Go Eventing.

The top ten at the end of the first day of dressage at the 2022 FEI World Championships of Eventing.

The team standings at the halfway point of the first phase.

FEI World Championships for Eventing:[Website] [Definite Entries] [Live Scoring and Times] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’S Form Guide] | Daily Digest Email | [EN’s Coverage]

 

The North American Report: United States in Bronze Position, Canada 13th After Thursday at Pratoni

Will Coleman and Off The Record. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

At the conclusion of day one, the United States is happily in bronze medal position with scores coming forward from Will Coleman and Lauren Nicholson.

Will Coleman leads the team effort in the morning session with Aachen winner Off The Record (Arkansas – Drumagoland Bay, by Ard Ohio), owned by the Off the Record Syndicate. The Ground Jury of Christina Klingspor, Peter Gray, and Christian Steiner awarded the pair a 26.4 as the best-placed Americans as it stands.

“I thought my horse tried very hard today and I’m very happy with him,” Will commented. “I thought we just squeezed every point out of it that we could. When he came out this morning, that’s sort of what was my mentality was: to see if we can ride as clean a test as we can, and leave as few penalties on the table as we can. And I think we did that. And so in that respect, I’m happy and I don’t know if there are any highlights in it, but it was clean and relatively mistake free.”

Pathfinder place comes with a great deal of responsibility for a team that is eager to qualify for the 2024 Olympics, but Will’s up to the challenge. “It’s a tough job. I’ve been first before, I’ve been last before in some instances, so I think we all have the same sort of approach that we want to go out and execute and just give our horses the best chance of coming home clear. And with as few time penalties as possible,” he said.

A championship is all about putting team above self, and the Americans have certainly prioritized that here in Pratoni. This lot has been consistent in their aims of the first phase: a good score without taking any major risks that would jeopardize their team result. Lauren Nicholson spoke of this following her test Thursday, “I was happy put down a good score for the team. That was our job not to go in there and do anything amazing. Just try not to mess it up.”

She and Ms. Jaqueline Mars’ Anglo-Arabian Vermiculus (Sazeram – Wake Me Gently) sit seventh on 27.1, an improvement from their 4*/5* average which is 29.6.

“I think everyone kind of knows the Arab can throw in some moments, but it did not aggravate the Arab and he did quite well in front of the crowd and he does love a big moment. He’s always best at a bigger competition,” she said. “The judges want to like him — they always have even when he’s been naughty, but when he’s not naughty he just goes in and is very workmanlike.”

While Lauren won’t be the first U.S. rider out on course Saturday, she has been a wealth of knowledge for the team due to her attendance of the test event here on foot in May. You can read all about her thoughts on the venue at this link.

Hawley Bennett-Awad and Jollybo lead the way for Canada. Photo by TIlly Berendt.

Canada is thirteenth in the team rankings after performances from the first two members. Hawley Bennett-Awad is the pathfinder for the Maple Leafs with her longtime partner Jollybo (Jumbo x Polly Coldunnell, by Danzig Connection). The British-bred mare owned by the Jollybo Syndicate earned a 34.8, which is just a hair above her 4*/5* average of 33.7.

“She was a good girl. You know, she’s not the flashiest horse around, but she tries her heart out,” Hawley said. “It’s unfortunate she cantered out of that first halt, but it didn’t affect her for the rest of the test. You know, she’s a little worker bee. We tried to climb our way back with the scores [after that] but it is what it is, and I don’t think it’s going to be dressage show, and if I can end somewhere near that score, by the end of the weekend, I’ll be thrilled.”

Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Karl Slezak came next with his own and Kirk Hoppner’s Fernhill Wishes (Chacoa x KEC Galway Bay, by Gildawn Diamond). Similarly to their compatriots, “Chocy” floated just north of his usual performance at this level on 37.8.

“I was pleased with him. He was very good. We’ve been working hard on all the flat work and especially the changes,” he said. “Unfortunately the changes weren’t perfect today but we got the last one which I was happy about.”

It will be a steep climb to a medal for Canada, but they’ve got a track record for such a massive effort. In 2010, the team clawed their way to team silver after starting in ninth place after dressage.

Dana Cooke and FE Mississippi. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Canada’s Dana Cooke, who is competing as an individual, was the final North American to take the centerline. The stylish FE Mississippi carried her to a penalty mark of 34.3 for 28th individually. “I wish were a little more forward but in all honesty, she went in she put a good consistent test and she think everything was clean and accurate,” she said.

It was a last minute call-up that brought her to her championship debut as she was subbed in for Colleen Loach and Vermont, but Dana prepared year-long for such a chance, even relocating to Ireland this spring in her efforts.

The remainder of the North American contingent comes forward tomorrow:

  • Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan 9:38 a.m. local/3:38 a.m. eastern
  • Holly Jacks and Candy King 10:41 a.m. local/3:41 a.m. eastern
  • Tamie Smith and Mai Baum 12 p.m. local/ 5 a.m. eastern
  • Mike Winter and El Mundo 3:19 p.m. local/9:19 a.m. eastern
  • Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF 4:38 p.m. local/10:38 a.m. eastern

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 be delivered straight to your inbox each day through Sunday, September 18.

FEI World Championships for Eventing: [Website] [Definite Entries] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’s Form Guide] [Live Scoring] [Friday Dressage Times] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

The Breeding Breakdown: Pratoni 2022 Edition

Breeding a quality event horse capable of winning (or placing competitively, or in some cases even finishing!) a modern five-star is a feat that requires skill, creativity, bravery, and a little bit of luck. Breeding one that will make it to World Championships? A whole new challenge. In her latest column, owner of Breed.Ride.Compete and bloodstock advisor at Willow Tree Warmbloods Amanda Chance breaks down some facts on this year’s World Championships field.

Note: In this column, xx = full Thoroughbred, “second sire” = the sire’s sire

PS: Want your own guide to breeding at Pratoni? Download the full guide from Breed.Ride.Compete here.

Andrew Hoy’s Vassily de Lassos is one of five horses in this year’s World Championships field sired by Jaguar Mail. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It might be FEI Eventing World Championships week in Pratoni, but if you look at the pedigrees of this edition’s entrants, you might also say that it’s looking like a bit of a family reunion.

There are a handful of sires that have multiple offspring representing them this week in Italy, with Selle Francais stallion Jaguar Mail leading the charge. He’s the sire of five horses competing at this Championship:

  • Vassily de Lassos (Andrew Hoy)
  • Colorado Blue (Austin O’Connor)
  • Ferreolus Lat (Miroslav Prihoda Jr.)
  • Box Leo (Frida Andersen)
  • Joystick (Aminda Ingulfson)

Though he was a 1.60m show jumper himself, Jaguar Mail has proven to be a very successful sire of event horses — something that perhaps is not at all surprising if you look at his pedigree.

I had the lucky privilege of meeting Jaguar Mail in the flesh, pictured here at his home in Normandy, France in 2019.

He’s 82% blood, by the full Thoroughbred stallion Hand in Glove xx, and also has a full Thoroughbred damsire in Laudanum xx. Hand in Glove xx had a remarkable career, starting out on the racetrack as a two-year-old before transitioning to a dressage career that took him all the way up to Prix St. Georges before transitioning again to a jumper career where he competed to World Cup level.

Laudanum xx was no slouch either, having also show jumped to the 1.60m level. Jaguar Mail lived up to his pedigree, competing in the 2008 Hong Kong Olympics for Team Sweden under the saddle of Peter Eriksson. Given his jumping ability and his high percentage of Thoroughbred blood, he’s been a popular stallion for eventing breeders, and well… it seems to be working.

If that isn’t enough to convince you that it is indeed possible to purpose-breed for eventing, the Trakehner stallion Birkhof’s Grafenstolz is the next most-represented stallion in the field, with four offspring:

  • Lordships Graffalo (Ros Canter)
  • Candy King (Holly Jacks)
  • Shjabrina (Mia Hastrup)
  • Absolut Gold HDC (Nicolas Touzaint)

Some of you may remember Grafenstolz from his eventing career in part because he was competed by a wee German lad (who at that time was only in his early 20’s) by the name of Michael Jung (pics or it didn’t happen). Together they won the six-year-old Young Horse World Championship title at Lion d’Angers in 2004, and Ze Terminator (was he Ze Terminator yet, back in those days?) took him up through the four-star level. Grafenstolz is a well-utilized stallion for producing eventers, and again, it’s easy to see why.

There is one more eventing stallion who shows up multiple times in the field – Yarlands Summer Song, sire of two entries.

  • Toblerone
  • Alertamalib’or

A World Championships horse himself with a 1994 silver medal and a 1998 silver medal to his credit, Yarlands Summer Song finished fourth individually at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. He was also a very good producer despite getting a later start to his stud career, siring six 5* horses. In addition to the two direct offspring here at Pratoni, Yarlands Summer Song also appears in the pedigree of one other horse: he’s the second damsire of Spanish rider Gonzalo Blasco Botin’s Sij Veux D’autize.

A few other stallions also make appearances in the pedigree of multiple horses. Jumper phenom Diamant de Semilly, who himself competed to 1.60m level show jumping, is the direct sire of two entrants (Toledo de Kerser and Viamant du Matz) and his son Pacino is the sire of two more (Ballypatrick SRS and Monbeg by Design). Diamant de Semilly is also the second sire of Mahalia (by Elvis ter Putte).

One dressage stallion is also making his mark on this group here in Pratoni (perhaps trying to add a bit of propriety and civility to all this aforementioned “insanity in the middle”) – Fidertanz is the sire of both Fallulah and Fifty Fifty. Despite being bred for dressage (and indeed he competed through Grand Prix himself) Fidertanz does have some “jump” on the dam’s side of his pedigree, something that has probably helped him be a fairly successful sire of eventers. Thus far Fallulah is his only offspring to have made it to five-star level, but he has a handful currently competing at four-star as well.

While he doesn’t have any direct offspring in this field (fair enough, he was born in 1984) I would be remiss to write any type of article about eventing families and not include Contender. Looking at the Pratoni field he is the second sire of four horses (Goliath by Chello III, Fernhill Wishes by Chacoa, fischerChipmunk by Contendro, Calle 44 by Cristo), the damsire of one horse (Canvalencia by Verdi TN), the third sire of one horse (Swiper JRA by Contenda), and second damsire of one horse (Cartania). Contender, Contender everywhere.

If we look at the mother’s side of the pedigree (this is where things always get more fun, if you ask me) we have a couple of stallions that show up in the damsire position more than once.

Rock King, who was himself an Advanced/4* level eventer, is the damsire of three horses, all three of whom are British-bred and registered with SHBGB.

  • Lordship’s Graffalo
  • Colorado Blue
  • Menlo Park

Selle Francais stallion Bayard d’Elle, who competed to 1.60m level showjumping, is the damsire of two horses.

Fidgy des Melezes
Toubleu de Rueire
Toubleau de Rueire is registered Selle Francais, and Fidgy des Melezes is registered sBs (Belgian Sporthorse – not to be confused with BWP, which is Belgian Warmblood)

The most popular type of mare family in the field is Thoroughbred, with 24 horses hailing from a Thoroughbred mare line. The most represented are family 14 and family 1, with five horses from each. The only subfamily that shows up more than once is 14-b, with Virgil and Colorado Blue.
We also see two warmblood mare families with multiple appearances.

Selle Francais 20/21, descending from the mare Camera, has two entrants in Hermione d’Arville (Camera is her 5th dam) and Darmagnac de Beliard (Camera is his 3rd dam). This has proven to be a remarkable mare family, having produced dozens of 1.60m show jumpers and several 4* and 5* horses, including 2018 Pau winner Siniani de Lathus (ridden by France’s Thibault Fournier).

Holsteiner Stamm 4847 has two horses: Imperial van de Holtakker and Meyer’s Happy.

To sum up? When you’re sitting there sipping your coffee at 5 a.m., squinting at the Pratoni live stream and muttering something to yourself about how all these dang horses look the same… well… welcome to the family reunion.

“If You Can Dream It, You Can Do It”: Pratoni Is A Fairytale for Hanne Wind Ramsgaard

Hanne Wind Ramsgaard and Amequ Torino. Photo by Shelby Allen.

No one had more fun during their dressage test at the FEI World Championships for Eventing than Danish amateur rider Hanne Wind Ramsgaard. Her megawatt smile stayed stretched ear to ear from the first movement to the last in their championship debut.

Her partner here in Pratoni, Amequ Torino, is one she knows very well as she bred him herself. He is a Danish Warmblood, by Toulouse and out of  Hanne’s former event horses, Stugaard’s Flying Colours. Hanne bred the mare when she was three, before her competitive career began, but despite being a year “behind” due to foaling she still completed at the FEI World Eventing Breeding Championships as a 6-year-old.

“You don’t ride them much when they’re three years old, so I bred a foal,” she said. “And then I went to the young horse championship on her when she was six, and that’s something about the mind because she already bred a foal, then she’s a year behind.”

Hanne Wind Ramsgaard and Amequ Torino. Photo by Shelby Allen.

They earned a 45.1 in the first phase. “Dressage is definitely not his favorite discipline, but he was very sweet in there actually. So, yeah, I’m very pleased with him. We’re still working on it. He’s a young horse, and he’s actually doing his first five-star program ever, so I’m really pleased with him.”

Though this is her first time representing her country in a championship, Hanne is no stranger to top level competition, having gone through the five-star level with previous ride Vestervangs Arami. There’s much to be said of anyone who has the mettle for the top of the sport, but even more so for those few amateurs who climb those ranks while managing a job outside of horses. As Hanne is not rider full time, she must train in the saddle around work, where she is responsible for maintenance in schools, having trained as a carpenter. “I do maintenance work in kindergartens — fixing desks, fixing everything!” she said.

Hanne Wind Ramsgaard and Amequ Torino. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Hanne hails from Denmark, a nation without much of a robust eventing scene. She and her compatriot, Mia Hastrup, have both traveled as individuals, but without financial support from a national federation, they elected to team up and fundraise their efforts. They gathered corporate and grassroots support through their social media page.

“Eventing is not the biggest sport in Denmark, but it’s growing,” she said. “And if we want the sport to grow… we’re not coming here to win the medals. We need to show that this is actually possible. If you can dream it, you can do it.”

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 be delivered straight to your inbox each day through Sunday, September 18.

FEI World Championships for Eventing: [Website] [Definite Entries] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’s Form Guide] [Live Scoring] [Thursday Dressage Times] [Friday Dressage Times] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Pratoni At a Glance: Meet the Horses of the 2022 FEI World Championships

You’ve met the riders of the Pratoni field — now it’s time to get to grip with the horses coming forward to fight for those coveted medals and Paris Olympic qualifying berths. We’ve got your need-to-knows condensed into a handy-dandy coffee-break scroll. We won’t mind if you make yours an Aperol.

FEI World Championships for Eventing:[Website] [Definite Entries] [Live Scoring and Times] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’S Form Guide] | Daily Digest Email | [EN’s Coverage]

Thursday at Pratoni: Britain’s Rising Star Yasmin Ingham Leads the Morning Session

Yasmin Ingham and her elegant, rangy French-bred Banzai du Loir take an early lead at Pratoni. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After a drizzly start to proceedings — and a tough one, too, with some harshly-marked early tests — the first day’s morning session of dressage at the 2022 FEI World Championships blossomed into a showcase of exceptional young talent peppered with fresh faces and up-and-coming superstars. Chief among their ranks is 25-year-old Yasmin Ingham, who rides as the individual for Great Britain this week. She produced a dazzling test with the eleven-year-old Selle Français gelding Banzai du Loir (Nouma d’Auzay x Gerboise du Cochet, by Livarot), putting a score of 22 on the board that absolutely skyrocketed past the horse’s four- and five-star average of 27.

That 22 isn’t just her best-ever international score, it’s also one of the top five tests ever delivered at a World Championships. It goes into joint fourth in the all-time rankings — equal with a certain Michael Jung and La Biosthetique Sam FBW, who posted the same score in 2010 en route to becoming the World Champions.

“Honestly, it’s the first time we’ve gone in the boards at an event and he’s felt like he’s completely listening and with me, even with the crowds and the cameras and everything atmosphere-wise,” says a delighted Yaz, who pilots the rangy gelding for longtime supporters Sue Davies and Jeanette Chinn. “He didn’t really seem to flinch or bother with it. I’m just so proud of him; he’s really special horse and I still think there’s plenty more in there, which is even more exciting.”

Like many riders, Yaz found that her horse didn’t feel quite as fresh this morning as he has done in previous tests — something that’s no doubt due to the last two days of heat at the Italian venue. But that meant that Yaz was able to take risks in the ring, and her extended canter was a particular highlight of the test, with a clear, bold transition into and out of the movement.

“He maybe felt a little bit tired, so he probably could have been a little bit more sprightly — but I’d rather him do a test like that then have a little break somewhere or something like that. I just couldn’t really fault him today at all,” she says.

 

Yaz Ingham gets a hug from British chef d’equipe Chris Bartle after a superb performance. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yaz credits her trip to Kentucky CCI5* this spring, where she finished second, and the opportunity to ride through the test in the main arena at Burghley, with helping her and Banzai deliver their best-ever performance today.

“I think we’ve had more experience now in the bigger, atmospheric arenas, for example Kentucky earlier this year. Then we also had Burghley just before we came here, so we’ve been trying different techniques with the warm up and how long we work him in for, and what we do with him in those work-ins — and I think we’ve come to the bottom of that now,” says Yaz, who has worked closely with British team trainer Chris Bartle to help fine-tune the process. Their schooling regime and warm-up today put them right on the money for their test, which was unanimously put into first place by all three judges.

“He’s actually come here really settled, and I think he’s getting more used to travelling and coming to the bigger events now, so it’s becoming a little bit more normal for him. We did half an hour of work at eight o’clock this morning — just sort of long and low, with lots of simple changes and easy things so as not to stress him out, and to keep him quite happy and confident. Then I worked him for half an hour at quarter to ten, and we started to do a couple of changes and some half-passes and things and just make it a bit more difficult to get him ready for this this afternoon. The work in then was just 20 minutes before we we came and did the test. He’s quite a fit and sharp character, usually, so we do have to make sure we give him enough work so that he doesn’t go in there and just go ‘ahh!'”

Yaz, who makes her Senior squad debut this week after winning every national age title in Britain, is living out something of a fairytale this week.

“It’s so special. I mean, I’ve worked towards this since I’ve started riding,” says Yaz. “It’s always something that I’ve wanted to do, and it’s always been one of my goals and to achieve that has just been a dream come true. Obviously, the team behind the scenes is what sort of helped me get there and my owners, Sue Davies and Jeanette Chinn, and my family. All my trainers, the World Class team — there’s just an army that’s behind every rider and they’ve all helped me get here, so it’s a big moment.”

Monica Spencer makes an 18,000km journey worth it with a superb test aboard full Thoroughbred Artist. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Another rider who’s living out a dream in real time is New Zealand’s Monica Spencer, who held the lead for much of the morning with the full Thoroughbred Artist. Their score of 25.6 was the first of the day to go sub-30, and came after a mammoth journey from the Southern Hemisphere: the CCI4*-L Puhuini winners travelled for over fifty hours from New Zealand to the UK five weeks ago, where they based themselves with teammate Clarke Johnstone.

“They actually announced the team three days before my flight and the horse’s flight left,” she says. “So you kind of plan like you’re going in case you’re going — and then all of a sudden you’re going, and then it’s action!”

The magnitude and complexity of the journey required new mum Monica to leave her husband, Spence, and ten-month-old baby Gus behind, “so I’m a little more emotional than I am normally,” she says.

But what a pay-off. Their test sees them sit second provisionally — and puts team New Zealand in the lead — at this stage in Monica’s debut on a championship team, and her first experience of competing in the Northern Hemisphere. The difference, she says, is huge.

“There’s not many people at a lot of our events — we’re kind of in the middle of a farm somewhere,” she laughs. “I mean, we have some great events too. But yeah, it’s pretty cool to be on this kind of stage, for sure.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo give Britain plenty to celebrate with a competitive test for provisional third. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a jolly good morning for the Brits, who have two riders in the top three at the lunch-break — and third, provisionally, is team pathfinder and reigning World Champion Ros Canter. Her mount this week isn’t her 2018 World Championships ride, Allstar B, who was euthanised this summer after an injury at Aachen, but rather, a worthy heir apparent to his throne: the ten-year-old British-bred gelding was second on his five-star debut at Badminton this spring, and has a spate of impressive four-star wins and placings to his name over tough tracks. Though he didn’t quite catch his Badminton score of 26 today, his 26.2 puts him in an enviable position at this early stage of the game.

Like Yaz, Ros was able to bring ‘Walter’ to Burghley to run through the test in the atmospheric main arena, where the practice run also served as an exciting demonstration for spectators after the close of the competition’s dressage phase.

“I’m absolutely delighted with Walter — he’s only a ten-year-old, o coming here is a big occasion for him,” says Ros, who brings Allstar B along for the ride in the form of tail hair bracelets worn by herself and groom Sarah Charnley. “We were lucky enough to practice our tests at Burghley, and every day is still a school day for him, so we’re only just scratching the surface at this level. I truly believe that in the next few years, you’re going to see a bigger and better Walter. I’m just delighted that he went in there and was a complete professional — I don’t think he acts his age.”

Since stepping up to the upper levels, Walter has proven himself a horse who thrives in an atmosphere — and Pratoni is certainly delivering that, even on Thursday morning.

“He’s a very self confident horse,” says Ros with a smile. “He’s very happy in his own skin, and he adores attention. When I was practicing outside, Ian Woodhead, who’s our dressage trainer, said ‘don’t do a halt too close to the crowds, because they’re going to clap’ —  but he doesn’t give a monkey’s. He’s in his element when people clap; he thinks it’s all for him.”

Ros opted for a shorter warm-up today, schooling for twenty minutes first thing this morning and then doing a twenty-minute final work-in before her test, which put Walter right in his sweet spot for an excellent test.

“As soon as I went in, I knew he was with me,” she says. “We got the preparation right today, I think. And when he’s like that, he’s very easy, and he has beautiful balance, so I can sit up and he comes back to me, which is what makes him a lovely cross country horse, too.”

Will Coleman and Off The Record get Team USA’s campaign off to a great start with a 26.4. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The USA sit in bronze medal position after the first rotation of riders, thanks to an excellent test from Will Coleman and Off the Record that joins the top-five all-time dressage tests by a US rider at a World Championship. They sit fourth at the lunch break on their 26.4, which sees them just two-tenths of a penalty behind Ros Canter. It’s also one of 2021 Aachen champion ‘Timmy’s’ best-ever international tests, though Will no doubt hoped to match the 23.9 they delivered in their final run at Great Meadows CCI4*-S. But, he concedes, travelling to an event in Virginia is a very different prospect to travelling to Italy.

“We’ve had a lot of traveling, like a lot of horses, to get here, and I think that’s never easy on them,” he says. “Given everything, I thought my horse tried very hard today and I’m very happy with him. I don’t know if I would describe anything as ‘highlights’, but I thought we squeezed every point out of it we could, which, when he came out this morning, was sort of my mentality. I was like, ‘okay, it may not be our best stuff — but let’s just see if we can ride as clean a test as we can, and leave as few penalties on the table as we can.’ And I think we did that. So in that respect, I’m happy: I don’t know if there are any highlights in it, but it was clean and relatively mistake-free.”

Will once again takes on the pathfinder role for the US, a job he took at the last World Championships in 2018 — and one that comes with its own unique pressures.

“It’s a tough job,” he says. “I’ve been first before, and I’ve been last before in some instances, but I think we all have the same sort of approach that we want to go out and execute and just give our horses the best chance of coming home clear, and with as few time penalties as possible. It’s a really intense track, so my job is to go out there and bring back some good feedback for the other guys, and that’s what we’re going to try to do. He’s not the most blood but he’s a real fighter.”

Niklas Lindbäck and Focus Filiocus. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Sweden’s Niklas Lindbäck rounds out the top five after delivering an excellent test for a score of 29 with his experienced mount Focus Filiocus, who tends to average well into the 30s in this phase. The pair, who finished 35th at Tryon in 2018, come forward as the individual combination for Sweden this week — and already, they’ve exceeded their own expectations.

“Expecting is so hard, but we were hoping for this,” says Niklas. “Dressage isn’t maybe his strong point; he’s normally very stable and settled, but not going for the high marks — but we really tried here and it was actually fantastic. It’s the best feeling he’s ever given me.”

The top ten at the midway point of day one in the 2022 FEI World Championships for Eventing.

The team standings after the first rotation of riders.

FEI World Championships for Eventing:[Website] [Definite Entries] [Live Scoring and Times] [FEI TV] [ EN’s Ultimate Guide ] [EN’S Form Guide] | Daily Digest Email | [EN’s Coverage]