Classic Eventing Nation

A Mixed Bag: Riders React to Guiseppe della Chiesa’s Championship Cross Country Course

The straight route out of the water is directly out the other side and over a stiff challenge of angled brushes on a curving three-stride line. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

With 88 riders in total, a consensus wouldn’t be expected, but opinions of Guiseppe della Chiesa’s cross country course are all over the board. Some applaud it, others dislike it, but everyone respects its significance. EN’s Tilly Berendt has followed the Mad Hatter down a rabbit hole of comparative research of the track, which she’ll share in a forthcoming course preview, but in the meantime, check out what the riders have to say:

USA

Boyd Martin: “It’s a pretty testing course, and World Equestrian Games — there’s always a lot of pressure. I think it’s a proper, what they call it a four-star that feels like a five-star course over nine minutes, fifty [seconds]. But like you said, I’m on a veteran. And he’s done bigger and badder and longer courses. So I’ve got some comfort knowing that he’s dealt with harder fences. But any jump you can make a mistake and it can all go wrong, as I found out at Tryon.

Tamie Smith: “I think it suits him perfectly. It’s a very riders type course — the horses need to be fast, but they need to be rideable. And he’s all those things, and he’s smart, and he’s brave, so I’m looking forward to getting out there.”

Lauren Kieffer: “It suits him. The jumps are big and it’s a proper championship track, and I think everybody expected that and planned for it. [Vermiculus is] very seasoned at this point, but hey anything can happen it’s cross country day, but I’m very confident in the horse I’m sitting on.

Will Coleman: “It’s a really intense track. So my job is to go out there and bring back some good feedback for the other guys. It’s a it’s a kind of a mongrel track, especially in the beginning, you’re just kind of weaving up and down these Pratoni hills. He’s not the most blood, but he’s a real fighter, and I think he’ll hopefully bring that same kind of Bulldog like attitude to the cross country.

Ariel Grald: “There’s plenty to do but the hills and the sort of terrain actually will suit him. So I’m excited to give it a crack and go as fast as we can and have a good round.”

GERMANY

Michael Jung: “I’m not so happy about the cross country because when you see and when you know the cross country place, it’s just a beautiful place. But it’s — he didn’t use the whole course, so he make it very twisty, many turns where you have to slow down and it’s difficult to find a really nice rhythm on this high level. So it makes it much more complicated. This is a very beautiful cross country place, but I didn’t like how he used to track. It’s very twisty and it’s not really to get a nice feeling around there, but maybe in the end is better to gallop, better to ride than I saw. But it’s just sad that he didn’t use the part [in the back] so you can have a really nice, open gallop.”

Julia Krajewski: “There’s a lot to jump out there, which will hopefully suit us, but of course it’s a proper test. It’s technical. It’s everything you want from a championship course. It offers quite some options, which you can take but they will spend too much time. I’m third to go [on the team], so I can watch quite a few and probably decide a few things then.”

From 24AB, the direct route goes to a beefy brush corner in the water at 24CD. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

GREAT BRITAIN

Laura Collett: “We need to know our alphabet. It’s a proper championship track and yeah, I mean, I came here in 2005 for the Pony European, so I kind of knew roughly what to expect. Sadly it’s not gonna be a dressage competition. But yeah, I think from start to finish it’s full on. There was a lot of head scratching about, you know, when we first walked in, actually what the direct route was. There’s so many options. So that takes a lot of thought to figure it out.”

Yasmin Ingham: “It’s very clever. And it’s fun to have strong combinations — they come out throughout all the way until home really, so you’re definitely never off the hook. Mine can get quite strong, so I’m hoping that by the second hill he might not be trying to pull my arms out. So that’s that’s the hopeful. But no, I’m looking forward to writing it and I’m very pleased to be sat on my hands.”

Oliver Townend: “It looks like a very tough place to ride around in terms of the terrain. You’re always climbing up a hill, and a few places that you’d like to go a little faster he’s got a combination that you have to slow down for, so it’s gonna be an interesting day. A few too many things for my liking for cross country, it’s more like a show jumping course around a field but at the same time, very, very happy to be here. I always enjoy Giuseppe’s courses and technical questions.”

Tom McEwen: “The thinking rider will come out on top, I think, tomorrow whether it’s regarding horses, how they’re feeling underneath you, or how the course could change because even now [with all the] people that seemed to be walking the course, like walking up the water coming out the first water, I mean that bank is already broken up. I mean, it’s one of the first shows for a long time where there’s actually been eighty- eighty-plus horses in the class. So yeah, it’s gonna be by three-quarters of the day, it’s gonna look different I would have thought.”

NEW ZEALAND

Jonelle Price: “I think time is probably gonna be the biggest factor. You know, you’ve got to remember we’ve got such a high caliber field of horses here that I think, you know, no matter what you’ve built, they’re gonna make light work of it. You know, the British team — they’re the best in the world, those horses, and they’re all experienced five-star horses and this is nowhere near five-star track. So I think some of the horses are going to make light work of it. But you know, suddenly the hills and a lot of congested jump efforts will see the clock coming.”

Tim Price: “It’s a funny course because it’s perched on the side of a hill and it’s got all sorts of portable jumps stuck everywhere. So you know, I’ve just come from Burghley, which is one of the biggest, most beautiful courses in the world as we know, and it feels like it’s a little bit of a downgrade, but that doesn’t mean it’s any less difficult. The time is going to be extremely tight, that’s my forecast, and that’s gonna put a lot of added pressure on all the riders. Especially they’re trying to look after their teams.”

Amanda Pottinger: “I think I think it’ll cause a lot of problems but I think it’s probably cuz some of us are used to five-stars now. It’s a shame there isn’t a bit more galloping space.”

AUSTRALIA

Andrew Hoy: The terrain that Giuseppe has put in I think is good. There’s a section in the middle that I just won’t go too quickly across where we’re running across the across the hill on [an angle sideways]. For me, that’s something that I just want to take a little bit of time with to make sure that I have a good and healthy horse when I finish.”

CANADA

Holly Jacks: “It is absolutely beautiful. I think they’ve done a great job of asking proper championship questions, but they’ve put options out though that still ask the same questions in an easier manner to get everybody home.”

Dana Cooke: “It’s tough. It’s definitely not going to be a dressage show. Yeah, it’s there’s a there’s a lot to do out there. The combinations, I think, you know, he’s really used the terrain quite well on the camber of the ground. And so there’s there’s definitely going to be some, some tricky questions out there.”

Riders will do a wide, swooping turn back over an open trakehner at 23.

Karin Donckers (BEL): “A big course as always. I rode here last year in autumn also with Fletcha. It’s especially I think the ups and the downs in a 10 minute course. You have to ride clever from the first moment till the last moment. But it’s definitely will be no dressage competition. That’s for sure.”

Esteban Benitez Vallei (ESP):  “The [cross country is] very hard and long with the with the hills and so on — it’s gonna it’s not gonna be easy, and it’s not gonna be a dressage competition. But we have to feel how the horse is in that moment for every combination. Like the last combination of the water is a drop down and then a corner — it’s not [an] impossible combination, but I know that the horses will be very, very tired. We’ll say how, how much is rains. Luckily I am at the beginning of the of the class so the ground will be okay for me, especially on the number [the Pratoni slide]. I think after 30-40 horses it’s going to be very, very difficult in there.”

Astier Nicolas (FRA): “It’s not any more advanced [than you’d expect]. You can see that [where] a lot of the fences are pretty forgiving and pretty small or medium sized. But there are a few combinations that could do the job. It’s a bit twisty surprisingly with all the big cross country ground they have — [there is] never really a good place to gallop.”

Korntawat Samran (THA): “It’s very technical and goes up and down [hills] all the time. We just have to be careful with that. Our horses been prepared well, so I think the fitness will not be the problem for us.”

Fouaad Mriza (IND): “I would say it’s, it’s tricky. There’s a there’s a lot of alternatives, a lot of options. You can definitely get home, depending on what route you choose, but I think it’s about how much risk you want to take. If you really want to go there and give it a good shout or if you want to go in there  and just bring it home.”

Sam Watson (IRE): “I think I’d be I think we’ll be surprised by how many make the time could be could be over 50 and up towards 20 which will make it a very competitive cutting edge competition. And that might force more mistakes later on in the competition when people see that actually, you’ve got to gotta go out there and perform. That’s That’s what he’s asking. There’s a lot of a lot of shoulders for glance offs, which I think is the right way to, to ask questions these days.

“We need tomorrow to be important. It is the focal point of the sport. Like for me as a rider, and for other riders, other manages, no one wants to under play the course. No one wants to be complacent. As a rider, I know there’s no risk of that, like when I’m when I’m on the horse, I’m one hundred percent focused. So all the jumps are jumpable by themselves. It reminds me a little bit of Tryon — I think the quantity is what gets you.”

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.

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The Task Ahead: Wrapping Up Dressage Social Media from Pratoni

And just like that, a full two days of World Championships dressage is in the books — and it was certainly one for the ages! Now we look ahead to Giuseppe della Chiesa’s cross country course tomorrow, which includes two “throwback” original fences from the 1998 World Championships held at this venue. Plenty of views of the course walks and more in our social media wrap — let’s jump right in!

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] [XC Order of Go] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Pratoni Performance of the Day from KPP: Watch Michael Jung Set Another Record

Michael Jung watches his score flash after a stunning test with fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Shocking exactly no one, it’s Germany’s Michael Jung leading the way after overtaking every Britain’s Laura Collett and her 19.3 earned yesterday with London 52. Michael and his 2022 Kentucky winner fischerChipmunk FRH scored an incredible 18.8, besting even the 14-year-old Hanoverian gelding’s 19.9 earned at the last World Championships with former rider Julia Krajewski.

Take a look, watch, learn, enjoy:

Das Ist Gut, Indeed: Magic Mike Leads the Dressage at the World Championships

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH get the job done again – and then some. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Well, here’s something nobody could have predicted: as we close the book on the first phase of competition at the 2022 FEI World Championships of Eventing at Pratoni, it’s Germany’s Michael Jung who holds the lead with fischerChipmunk FRH. A shock to bookmakers and statisticians worldwide! An unprecedented turn of events! Who’d have thunk it!

All jokes and flippancy aside, this is Michi’s world, and we’re all just living in it. And how lucky are we, really, to get to see such a tour de force at the top of his game, building superstar after superstar and consistently exceeding even his own rather flabbergasting standards?

That’s exactly what he did this afternoon. After witnessing the gauntlet-throw that was Laura Collett‘s 19.3 aboard London 52 yesterday, he wasn’t fazed — instead, he does what The Terminator does best: he rallied. Though he was rather lucky with the scores in a couple of places — the halt and rein-back, for example, in which he wasn’t quite square in front and then chucked his head while moving back but didn’t go lower than 6.5 — the test was, almost wholly, a masterclass in harmony and accuracy. When it was duly awarded with an 18.8 — and two 10s and a 9 in the harmony collective — the packed-out stands went wild. The maestro had done it again.

“I just have to say that I’m really proud of my horse — fischerChipmunk is an amazing horse,” says Michi, who smashed his own CCI5* record score this afternoon, while also delivering the second-best-ever test at a World Championships. For the man who’s won every title there is to win, including the World Championships in 2010 with the exceptional La Biosthetique Sam FBW, it’s an extraordinary feat to continue achieving above and beyond, and on a number of different horses.

“It’s just wonderful if you can compete at this high level at a championship with another horse, with another superstar — and it’s amazing how he performed in the arena,” he says. “He just brings everything inside [the ring], and you can ride like at home, so this is a great feeling. He’s so relaxed, but still powerful and concentrated that you can show everything that you trained before — and this is an amazing feeling for the rider. “

How does a rider even begin to think about marginal gains when riding a horse that’s been so exceptionally trained — first by teammate Julia Krajewski, who delivered a 19.9 with him at the 2018 World Equestrian Games, and latterly within one’s own programme?

“I think you cannot make it 100% the same and you can always be a little bit better,” says Michi. “You have always there a little mistake, and then there is better, so it’s always a bit different. But like I said, it’s a wonderful horse and he did everything right. He went like I wish, so I’m very happy. I just planned to have a nice preparation and to have a good feeling — I didn’t plan to have the result. I just look to have a great partnership and a good feeling together with my horse, and if everything works well, then we have also good results.”

Michi waves to an ebullient German front after taking the dressage lead at Pratoni. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Not only is Chipmunk one of the world’s most exceptional event horses in the first phase, he’s also in a league of his own across the country — though a couple of little blips, including a pin at Tokyo and a flag rule contravention at Aachen, prove that even the giants among us aren’t completely infallible. Still, there are few horses who are, on paper, better equipped to try to clinch the title here this weekend, even if Michi isn’t wholly in favour of the way the cross-country course has been laid.

“I’m not so happy about the cross country because when you know the cross country [course at Pratoni generally], it’s just a beautiful place,” he says. “But Giuseppe didn’t use the whole course, so he makes it very twisty, and many turns where you have to slow down, and it’s difficult to find a really nice rhythm on this high level. So it makes it much more complicated. But the course [itself] looks good. There are nice jumps, andI think he had a lot of nice alternative routes for some people or horses that are not having the best experience. If you have to change [your plan], of course you have a few options so that you still can arrive safely home. Maybe in the end it’ll be better to gallop and better to ride than I thought — but it’s just sad that he didn’t use the [back end of the course] so you can have a really nice, open gallop.”

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

 

Michi is still riding a wave of confidence from his decisive Kentucky CCI5* win with the gelding this year, which confirmed for him his conviction that he’s truly made the horse his own.

“I had a great season, especially Kentucky, which gives me very good energy and gives me a very positive feeling,” he says. “He is absolutely a superstar; he is top in the dressage, top in the cross country, top in the show jumping. So all the competitions before he went really well, just in Aachen, I did a mistake so that was not him. He was again giving a great performance there, and I’m just happy to have another superstar.”

Alex Hua Tian brings Don Geniro forward for his last hurrah. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The sole Chinese representative at this Championships, Alex Hua Tian, pulled a seventh nation into the first-phase top ten after delivering a 23.7 with his two-time Olympic partner, Don Geniro. That’s their best-ever score at this level, though only just: at last year’s Olympics, we saw them put a 23.9 on the board. Their test today is enough to put them in overnight fourth place going into tomorrow’s cross-country, behind day one leaders Laura Collett and London 52 (now second on 19.3) and Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir (third, 22).

“I’m very, very pleased, and I’m very proud of him,” says Alex, who finished eighth in Rio with the gelding but has sometimes grappled with the appearance of ‘Psycho Don’ even in this first phase. “He’s 15 now, and he seems to get hotter and fizzier as the years go by — and he’s found the traveling here quite hard. We knew that was going to be the case, so we sort of broke the journey up to get here. I perhaps haven’t been able to work him how I would have liked to have done before the test, but despite all of that, I was really proud of him in there because I felt like he went in and really tried, so I’m very pleased.”

Despite Alex’s continued enormous efforts to build China’s presence on the world stage, Pratoni was never actually the main goal for this year — particularly as neither heat nor hills tend to suit his horse.

“Yeah, I’m looking forward to Saturday,” he says with a wry laugh. “It wasn’t plan A to come here in the first place. We were supposed to be at the Asian Games this week in China, but they’ve been postponed due to COVID, so it wasn’t until May that we — Pip, Don’s owner and I — came out for a day for the test event to look at the terrain and sort of discuss whether we want to bring him or not.”

Together, they made the decision to come — but with a crucial caveat.

“This may well be his last big one, I think,” he says. “He’s getting to that stage in his life and career. We sort of decided to bring him whether we were competitive or not, so I think tomorrow will be relatively academic in terms of competitiveness. I think we’ll we’ll set off and try and have a nice round, but in real terms, I think we’ll be out there to look after him and make sure he comes home safely.”

In making that call, Alex closes the book on a partnership that has been equally immensely rewarding — but also fraught with tricky moments that have no doubt shaped who he is as a rider.

“He’s amazing, but I’m happy to admit he’s quite a hard work horse to deal with in life,” he says. “He has quite a lot of quirks, and he’s very much a horse that when the stars align, and your educated guesswork and his management is good, then everything goes well. And if you don’t quite get one thing right, the way he is personally, he sort of punishes you for it at a competition. So he’s always been a horse that suits the championships, because you can you can work your way up to a big event and put everything in place for that to happen.”

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class round out a seriously strong start for the British team. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Oliver Townend closed out an extraordinary start for the British team, who set a new record for the lowest-ever first-phase team score at a World Championships with their aggregate score of 69.2, by slotting into overnight sixth with a 24.3. That puts them just three-tenths of a penalty behind the USA’s leading pair, Tamie Smith and Mai Baum, who hold onto fifth place after a dazzling test with one expensive mistake in this morning’s session.

It was a score that may have felt slightly off the pace for a horse who’s previously posted a 21.1 at five-star, but Oliver is happy to concede that it’s an enviable enough starting point to work from.

“I was happy enough with him,” he says. “Maybe didn’t quite take me forward enough in the trot, but I felt once I was into canter, I was away, and then I thought the work was very quality.”

It’s that thrust on the flat that Oliver and his team have been working on with the now-fifteen-year-old Irish Sport Horse, who now has seven top-five finishes from seven five-star starts — plus an individual fifth place at Tokyo — to his name.

“We’re always working, and we’ve just been trying to get him more forward,” he says. “He’s a horse that is always that’s a little bit introverted — either that, or completely explosive. So I’m just trying to get him to breathe and take me a little bit more in all the paces really, and it showed up in the canter. When it shows up in the trot, obviously we can produce a better score, but for him to go in there and do a correct test is very good for him and obviously very, very good for the team. I think it’s a bit of a dream start for the Brits — so let’s hope we can keep it up.”

Belgium’s Karin Donckers and her seventeen-year-old Fletcha van’t Verahof are arguably one of the most experienced pairs in this field at Championship level, with a fifth place finish at the 2014 Normandy World Championships under their belt and a total of six Olympics and seven World Championships to Karin’s name across her career. All that mileage is being put to good use this week as they take on anchor duties — and de facto lynchpin duties — for the Belgian team, and they certainly got their campaign off to a good start between the boards. Their score of 25.8 puts them into tenth place overnight, just a tenth of a penalty behind ninth-placed Kevin McNab and Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam and two-tenths of a penalty behind joint-seventh-placed Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser and Monica Spencer and Artist.

“You know, he counts on me, and I count on him,” says Karin sagely. “It’s amazing, that experience — for me, it’s so important to build up the bones between you, to trust between each other, and it’s so nice that I can have him for three World Championships. I really appreciate it a lot.”

That trust will be the basis of their tour around Giuseppe della Chiesa’s tough track tomorrow — and will be helped along by their trip to compete in the CCI4*-L here last year, where they finished fourth with ten time penalties.

“This is a big course as always, especially with the ups and the downs and the 10 minute course that you have to ride clever from the first moment till the last moment. It definitely will be no dressage competition, that’s for sure,” she says.

It certainly won’t. We’ll be bringing you an in-depth look at tomorrow’s challenge, plus a round-up of thoughts and opinions from many of the competitors, shortly — but suffice it to say for now that the intense, twisty, terrain-heavy track will be less a walk in the park and more a tour through a volcano. With just over a second separating our top two, and ten seconds separating third from twelfth, there’s very little margin for error — and a huge amount of potential for movement, even from the lower chunk of the leaderboard upwards.

Great Britain holds the lead going into cross-country on an aggregate score of 69.2, which sees Laura Collett, Oliver Townend, and Tom McEwen — all of whom are in the top ten — count, while Ros Canter, sitting equal fourteenth overnight, is the current drop score. They’re just 6.9 penalties — or just over 17 seconds — ahead of Germany, who’ve pulled themselves up by the bootstraps from seventh to second place today. It’s all pretty close, though: Germany has just a second in hand over the USA, who sit in bronze medal position overnight, and New Zealand is just 1.3 penalties — or just shy of three seconds — behind them.

The team standings at the end of the first phase.

Want to make sure you’re totally in the know before tomorrow? Click on through to read the three proceeding dressage reports and find out more about the competitors who’ve made their mark so far.

You can also catch up with the rest of today’s North American competitors in Shelby’s wrap-up here. And for an interesting overview? We’ve been crunching the numbers across the two days, and 88 tests, of dressage: in looking at how the tests were considered between judges, Peter Gray (CAN) gave the highest marks throughout, for an average score of 68.79% from H, and the judge at B was the harshest, averaging 67.99% from the side of the area at B. Christina Klingspor met in the middle with her average mark of 68.79%.

They disagreed the most on both Tim Price and Kazuma Tomoto where there was an 8.89-point spread. For the New Zealander, Christian Steiner (B) awarded a 69.07% compared to Peter Gray’s 77.96%. Kazuma, on the other hand, saw his highest marks from the centerline (77.78%) and lowest from B (68.89%.)

Stay tuned for more from Pratoni, and remember: when in Rome, Go Eventing.

The top ten going into tomorrow’s cross-country at Pratoni.

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] [XC Order of Go] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Piggy March’s Halo is Shining at Blenheim Palace International

Piggy March pilots the 9-year-old stallion Halo, owned by Jayne McGivern, to the 4*-S lead. Photo courtesy of Blenheim Palace International.

While Germany’s Malin Hansen-Hotopp has held on to the lead she established in the feature CCI4*-L class at Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials yesterday with Carlito’s Quidditch K, top British rider Piggy March stormed ahead in the CCI4*-S for eight- and nine-year-old horses with a brilliant performance on Jayne McGivern’s nine-year-old stallion Halo.

Piggy, who won the CCI5* at Burghley two weeks ago, scored 21.3 to give herself a two-mark lead over Hayden Hankey his own and Catherine Witt’s Heads Up.

Piggy said: “It is really exciting. I haven’t had much experience with stallions before, but he’s a really cool little horse – about 16 hands on tiptoes – but he never feels small to ride and I’m sure people would say he probably doesn’t look it. He’s very uphill and has got loads of movement and presence – he’s a much bigger horse in his personality and character.

“I was thrilled to bits with him today. It’s a big thing for these young horses, and it has gone a bit chilly today so the horses are fresh. The flags are flapping and the flowers are moving so there is quite a lot of atmosphere in there. I am chuffed with his brain; how he stayed with me and really showed himself off with loads of presence. He is a really exciting horse for the future.”

Emily King and Imposant are not far behind Hayden and Heads Up on 25.2 for third place.

Saturday is cross-country day at Blenheim Palace International Horse Trials, and Piggy discussed David Evans’ track, saying: “It’s always a very educational course for these young advanced horses. It’s an amazing occasion for them to run through the park and get all the atmosphere for their future. The crowd and the occasion is a big thing for these young horses. There are not many places they will go to that have a Saturday like Blenheim, and this will probably be the first day that they get cheers and crowds around them.

“It’s a great track and I am very interested and excited to see how my horse copes with it. It’s so beautifully built and inviting – a perfect step up to their big time in life. It’s also a fair track and offers some questions that we will have to make sure we do the right thing for.”

The passing of Her Majesty the Queen has been marked by a two-minute silence each day at Blenheim, and Piggy said: “Everyone has been in mourning. The Queen has been amazing and most of us know no different – we feel a bit lost and think, ‘What now?’

“The Queen touched so many people and was a hero to all of us. She was the most amazing woman and for us it’s amazing that she was so involved in our sport. She was such a horse, animal and countryside lover. She would love being here at Blenheim Palace as much as we all do.”

Checking in on the North American riders who did their dressage today:

  • Valerie Pride and Favian scored a 33.1 and are in 25th ahead of cross country in the massive 4*-L division
  • Gillian Beale King and Richard Ames’ Rebeliant scored a 45.5
  • Canada’s Kathryn Robinson and Cloud K scored a 31.7 in the 4*-S

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

Here’s a look at some social media from Friday at Blenheim:

U.S. Holds Bronze: Catching Up with the North American Contingent at Pratoni

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg power to a 26.2. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The United States of America is in bronze medal position at the conclusion of dressage at the FEI Eventing World Championships.

Tamie Smith is in fifth place as the best of the bunch and very much in the hunt for an individual medal with Mai Baum on a score of 24. You can read more about her day in our lunch report.

Team anchor Boyd Martin brought forward an individual mark of 26.2 with Tsetserleg TSF, who is owned by Christine Turner, Thomas Turner, and Tommie Turner, to help the U.S. stay in third place position.

“He’s such a trier, this little horse, and you know, he’s so reliable in there. He was a little bit quiet and backed off and I wish maybe I had one less ride so he was a bit more excited — but that that can backfire as well in these big championships when they get a bit nervous. All in all I was pleased, could always be better, could always be worse. 26 is a pretty good score though,” Boyd said.

“Thomas,” the 15-year-old Trakehner gelding (Windfall II – Thabana, by Buddenbrock), is a veteran campaigner for Boyd, and their partnership is rock-solid, which should play to their advantage on tomorrow’s intense track. Despite their five-star experience, Boyd said he won’t take a single fence — or the current team standing — for granted.

“[Bronze now] doesn’t mean anything. I’ve been on so many teams where I’ve been sitting pretty after the first day, and after the cross country, I think, is when the competition really starts,” he said. “I think it’s a proper, what they call it a four-star that feels like a five-star course over nine minutes, fifty [seconds]. But like you said, I’m on a veteran. And he’s done bigger and badder and longer courses. So I’ve got some comfort knowing that he’s dealt with harder fences. But any jump you can make a mistake and it can all go wrong, as I found out at Tryon.”

The time will likely already be influential, but even more so for Boyd who currently shares a three way tie for 14th place with Tim Price and Ros Canter.

Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan enjoy a magical championship debut. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Ariel Grald was the first U.S. rider in the area this morning. Competing as an individual, she and Annie Eldridge’s Leamore Master Plan gained invaluable championship experience in this weekend’s pressure cooker, but the level-headed debutant rose to the occasion to score 32.5 for 50th place.

“I’m just happy to be here and the horse has worked pretty well this week. He is a bit exuberant and gets a little nervous. He tries really hard, but dressage is not his strength, and he does worry a little bit. So my main goal was just to go in and keep him with me. And I think for the most part, he really did that,” Ariel said. “Obviously, the competitive rider in me wants to go in there and knock it out of the park, but this is not his strength, and we’re just building each time and getting a little better every year. So that’s all you can hope for.”

Ariel has been an injection of fresh talent to the top of the U.S. program, and to see her at a major championship is a huge success story for her and all her supporters. “I tried to just keep pausing and looking around and soaking it in because as a rider, it’s so easy to just sort of get laser-focused and put tunnel vision on and so I just kind of try to keep taking a breath and looking around. I just have great teammates and I’m really, really honored to be here with all of them. I’m learning a lot and enjoying it,” she said.

Holly Jacks is the best-placed Canadian aboard Candy King. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Two Canadian pairs came down the centerline today to produce the teams best two dressage scores. Holly Jacks is the top placed of them in 49th place on a score of 32.4 with Candy King, a horse who she nearly had to sell last year. Fortunately for her (and team Canada!) friends rallied to form a syndicate to let Holly keep the ride.

“I was really proud of him. He went in their and definitely felt the atmosphere a little bit and sucked back with the crowds, but as the test went on he thought about what we were doing and came back to me. He’s a young horse and exciting for the future and this was a great experience,” she said.

Ringside with Holly is longtime dressage trainer Tom Dvorak. “I cracked a joke last year that if this horse was on the World Championship team that he would come, so as soon as I got he call I called him. It’s great not only to have his support as a coach, but as a person, too.”

 Canada made it here to Pratoni thanks to the efforts of the ‘Pratoni, Let’s Go!’ fundraising efforts, which were headlined by a major contribution from Kelly McCarthy-Maine and Shane Maine. “You finally have a horse ready for a Championship and you hear we might not send a team… to have all these people come forward to help us, you kind of keep waiting for something bad to happen because you can’t imagine how exciting it is. It’s a dream come true. I hope this horse learns a lot here, and in two years time he’ll be a fabulous horse for Paris,” she said.

It is absolutely beautiful. I think they’ve done a great job of asking proper championship questions, but they’ve put options out there that ask the same kinds of questions to get everybody home.

Mike Winter and El Mundo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Mike Winter will be the team anchor as the final rider aboard El Mundo, who is owned by Mike, his wife, Emma, and Jonathan Nelson. He’ll hold 58th position overnight on a score of 33.3, which, he admits, was higher than he had hoped.

“I just don’t think it’s fulfilled my potential or his potential rather, but you know, it’s happened,” he said. “I couldn’t be more pleased with him and our whole High Performance team, I just would like a bit more I from myself.”

The Britain-based rider has been a vocal advocate for representation and diversity within the sport — as well as promoting awareness of human rights issues outside of it. This week, he rides with a lapel pin honouring Canada’s First Nations, designed by Kwakwaka’wakw artist Curtis Wilson. It’s part of a push for a unified Canada that sees indigenous peoples enjoy the same rights and representation as their compatriots.
“I think it’s really important that sport is involved in social action and picking the causes that are important,” says Mike.”Our sport is wonderful but we’re not always engaged with diversity and equality issues. The pin I’m wearing represents the role that First Nations play in Canada. It’s important that we recognise Canada’s history of wrongs in the building of the country and how still today, that affect the human rights of those indigenous people. There are opportunities in equality — things like clean drinking, water, education, health care. I think those things need to be talked about, and being Canadian, if I can do a small bit to make people aware of then, I hope that helps.”

As a team, Canada is 14th on a score of 100.5.

To catch up with the rest of the North American riders, check out our Thursday report.

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] [XC Order of Go] [Daily Digest Email] [EN’s Coverage]

Let’s Finish This: Pratoni Friday Afternoon Dressage Live Updates

Tamie Smith and USEF’s Carly Weilminster celebrate after a smashing test. Photo by Tilly Berendt.


Alright let’s wrap this fancy prancing thing up, shall we? We have 22 more pairs lefts to complete their dressage tests at the 2022 FEI World Championships before we move on to all the running and the jumping. Among those pairs riding in this afternoon session? A few familiar names:

  • Alex Hua Tian (CHN) and Don Geniro — 2:24 p.m. local/ 8:24 a.m. EST — 23.7
  • Michael Jung (GER) and fischerChipmunk FRH — 2:48 p.m. local/ 8:48 a.m. EST — 18.8
  • Michael Winter (CAN) and El Mundo — 3:19 p.m. local/ 9:19 a.m. EST — 33.3
  • Tim Price (NZL) and Falco — 4:30 p.m. local/ 10:30 a.m. EST — 26.2
  • Boyd Martin (USA) and Tsetserleg TSF — 4:38 p.m. local/ 10:38 a.m. EST — 26.2
  • Oliver Townend (GBR) and Ballaghmor Class — 4:54 p.m. local/ 10:54 a.m. EST — 24.3

We’ve already had a leaderboard-shuffling morning with great rides from some big names including Tamie Smith, Tom McEwen, and more. You can catch up on this morning’s action with our live updates thread for the first session of the day here and a full lunchtime report (don’t forget, it’s already after 1 o’clock in Italy right now!) right here.

Our dressage finale will be underway shortly, with this session starting 2:00 p.m. local/ 8:00 a.m. EST.

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]

To use this live update thread, start from the bottom. I’ll be adding updates as they happen to the top!

11:25 a.m. EST: Well! That was exciting. At the conclusion of dressage, Michael Jung will lead the field heading into cross country. Laura Collett and Yasmin Ingham, who rode yesterday, keep the next two spots but the rest of the top ten was completely shuffled today:

The top ten going into tomorrow’s cross-country at Pratoni.

And EquiRatings has confirmed that Michi and Chip’s test is the second best dressage score in Eventing World Championships history:

Great Britain will retain the lead in the team standings with an incredible (and record breaking) sub-70 score. Germany lie in second and USA is hot on their heels in third.

Team standings going into tomorrow’s cross-country at Pratoni.

11:22 a.m. EST: Glenfy, a 17-year-old Thoroughbred, has a clean second flying change but seems to take a little spook at the judges box a few strides after! They end the day with a provisional 38.5.

11:19 a.m. EST: And we now have our final rider of this phase in the ring! Marcelo Tosi and Glenfy of Brazil will bring it home for us.

11:14 a.m. EST: Lea was the youngest event rider at the Tokyo Olympics and wowed the world with a 15th place finish with this horse. They’ve done exceptionally well here today too and have actually bested their Olympic dressage score, a 32.6, and have thrown down a 29.4 here today!

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

11:10 a.m. EST: Andrew and Vassily finish with a provisional 28.1 for 26th individually. They improve Team Australia’s score and barely knock Team France out of 5th place by 0.1! Young Lea Seigel and DSP Fighting Line are in the ring now for Austria.

11:06 a.m. EST: Vassily de Lassos was trending in the mid-20s after his trot work but seems to maybe be carrying a bit more tension in the canter. His changes are hit or miss (here’s a hit one below!) But I think they’re still going to nail down another sub-30.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

11:03 a.m. EST: We’ve got Andrew Hoy and Vassily de Lassos doing their test now. I just love this horse– he may not finish at the top of the leaderboard after dressage, but he’s still scores reliably sub-20 and has so many completions where he’s finished on or super close to his dressage score. It’s kind of insane.

10:59 a.m. EST: Ballaghmor Class had eeked up to around 27 in the walk, but his canter scores are bringing his average right back down again. They finish below 25 now, on a score of 24.3 which puts them just behind Tamie Smith in 6th individually. We get the fist pump from Oliver so you know he’s pleased with that!

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:57 a.m. EST: They’re trending just above 25 after their trot work.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:53 a.m. EST: No rest for the weary, here comes another very big test. Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class are in the ring.

10:52 a.m. EST: Daaang, you go Kazuma! He’s cracked the top ten with a provisional 25.9! That brings Team Japan into 6th place up from 10th!

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:48 a.m. EST: Japan’s final team rider, Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne JRA have started their test and are looking very strong, trending sub-30.If they keep it up, they’ll also be able to improve Japan’s team score. Boyd’s score does improve the US’s team score as well, but they we’ll stay just barely in third place behind Team Germany!

10:45 a.m. EST: Gah – c’mon Thomas! The little gelding just kicks up a bit in the last flying change and gets 5s across the board for that movement. That’s a little bit costly, but they’ve just tied Tim and Falco’s score of 26.2.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:41 a.m. EST: Boyd and Thomas are stalking the top 10. Part of the way through their walk work they’re trending 25.7. Fabulous.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:32 a.m. EST: That’s a 26.2 provisional score for Tim Price and Falco! an excellent score for this pair and put them 12 individually buuuuut it will NOT bump Team USA out of third place! It’s Thomas time now and Boyd and the little Trakehner go around the ring. Can Boyd help Team USA steal back second place from Germany and widen the margin ahead of New Zealand a bit?

10:32 a.m. EST: Falco is capable of a mid to upper twenties dressage score. If he betters Clarke’s score of 27.4 then he’ll better Team New Zealand’s score as well – they’re currently sitting in fourth behind the U.S. So far so good — they’re trending around 25 after their trot work!

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

10:30 a.m. EST: It’s the final countdown! Tim Price and Falco will be first out in this final session and looking to bring it home for Team New Zealand. Karin Donkers has seen a lot of changes to the World Championships over the years:

10:12 a.m. EST: Box Leo is one of those horses who’s very easy to picture running cross country — especially as Frida asks him to extend the canter. They end with a provisional score of 34.5 as we enter our next ring drag break. We’ll resume the very last session of the day at 10:30 a.m. EST and oh my gosh I’m so excited for this session — we’ve got Tim Price, Boyd Martin, Oliver Townend, and Andrew Hoy all coming in.

While we wait, check out the lapel pin that Mike Winter is wearing this weekend: it honors Canada’s First Nations, and was designed by Kwakwaka’wakw artist Curtis Wilson. It’s part of a push for a unified Canada that sees indigenous peoples enjoy the same rights and representation as their compatriots.

“I think it’s really important that sport is involved in social action and picking the causes that are important,” says Mike.”Our sport is wonderful but we’re not always engaged with diversity and equality issues. The pin I’m wearing represents the role that First Nations play in Canada. It’s important that we recognise Canada’s history of wrongs in the building of the country and how still today, that affect the human rights of those indigenous people. There are opportunities in equality — things like clean drinking, water, education, health care. I think those things need to be talked about, and being Canadian, if I can do a small bit to make people aware of then, I hope that helps.”

10:08 a.m. EST: That’s a fabulous finale for the Italians! Giovanni and Duke of Champions crack the top 20 individually with a score of 27.7. Team Italia goes into 9th. Frida Andersen and Box Leo of Sweden now enter at A as the last horse before the next short break.

10:05 a.m. EST: Duke of Champions lost some marks in the walk work, but made it back up with some nice changes. This is actually a fairly young partnership, as Duke of Champions just came to Giovanni’s yard last year from Kiwi rider Dan Jocelyn.

10:01 a.m. EST: Yup, I knew there would be a graphic incoming. Meanwhile, Giovanni and Duke of Champions have laid down some really lovely trot work that has trended around 26.

9:58 a.m. EST: Next up is our last pair for the home nation, Giovanni Ugolotti and Duke of Champions head down centerline.

9:57 a.m. EST: Felix’s ride now bumps Switzerland up one place in the team standings and into 8th place. They’ve joined the massive cluster of pairs who’ve scored in the low thirties, with a 31.5.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

9:51 a.m. EST: Switzerand’s Felix Vogg now joins us with Cartania II. Felix actually was able to choose which horse he wanted to ride at this Championships, as he was named to the team with both Cartania II and his Luhmühlen CCI5*-winning gelding Colero. He chose to ride this younger mare who shows lots of promise in long format events.

9:49 a.m. EST: I really like this little horse and will look forward to watching him the future — Taraje CP 21.10 just looked really happy and willing throughout that test and they’ve scored a 32.5 for now. That’s not too shabby at all for such a young horse at this level! That improves Team Spain’s score and they now take 11th place over from Ireland.

9:45 a.m. EST:Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10 now join us for Spain. Their score is hovering just round that 30 mark. Taraje CP 21.10 is a sweet-looking Anglo-Arab gelding and is just 9-years-old.

9:37 a.m. EST: Check out that toe flick! That is an EXCELLENT score for Karin and Fletcha — they’ve just cracked the top 10 with a provisional 25.8. That bumps Team Belgium up from 10th to 6th in the team standings.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

9:37 a.m. EST: We have a very experienced pair in the ring now: Karin Donkers and Fletcha van’t Verahof of Belgium. Karin herself has competed in six Olympics and seven World Championships! A sub-30 score, which this pair is capable of, could move the Belgian team up in the standings. Nicolas Touzaint and Absolut Gold HDC earned 34.4 for Team France, which will be their drop score for now, leaving them in fifth place currently.

9:29 a.m. EST: Mike and El Mundo score a 33.3 and Team Canada takes 12th place for the moment with a score of 100.5. Our final French rider Nicolas Touzaint is now in the ring with Absolut Gold HDC, who is unfortunately just a bit unsettled in the walk but nevertheless nails the halt square.

Mike Winter and El Mundo finish their test. Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

9:22 a.m. EST: El Mundo just likes to hold his head a bit behind the vertical, which will keep him from getting even better marks. They have a wonderful rhythm and I really like the look of them as a pair.

9:20 a.m. EST: UK-based Mike Winter and El Mundo now join us to anchor Team Canada! They’re trending around a 33 at the conclusion of their trot work.

9:17 a.m. EST: Austin and Colorado Blue finish up with a score of 32.2 which means Team Ireland will sit no higher than 11th place in the team standings heading into cross country. And speaking of team standing, Michi’s score puts Team Germany on 76.1 and they squeeze into second place, just ahead of the U.S. We’ll find out soon enough if Boyd and Tsetserleg can lay down a low enough score to steal second place back.

9:14 a.m. EST: I’m going to have to issue my sincerest apologies to Austin, as I’ve been leafing through Michi’s previous scores during his test. We’ve confirmed that Michi and Chip’s 18.8 is equal to their best ever dressage score at any level — they also scored an 18.8 in the CCI3*-S at Radolfzell in Germany in 2021 — and it’s a 5* PB for them.

9:11 a.m. EST: OK, we’re back and Ireland’s Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue are starting their test.

8:55 a.m. EST: WOW. Well OK then, Michi watched Laura Collett’s test yesterday and said, hold my beer stein. While he was trending just above 20 for most of the trot and walk work, fischerChipmunk FRH’s ridiculously smooth changes and beautiful canter work drop them sub-20 and INTO THE LEAD with a provisional 18.8. We’re on a ring drag break now until 9:11 a.m. EST which is great timing, because I need to recover from that test. The on-site commentator has said something about that being a personal best at the level — possibly even a World Champs record? — and I’m chuckling as I picture the EquiRatings team rushing to get a graphic out.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

8:52 a.m. EST: “If ever I rode as well as this I think I’d be crying.” Same, Lucinda, same.

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

8:49 a.m. EST: Michael and Chip finish up their trot work and it’s foot perfect so far, trending around 22 which would slot them right up there in the top three.

8:47 a.m. EST: Oooookay we are now starting our final team rider rotation and we’re starting off with a bang: here comes Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH, who anchor the German team!

8:45 a.m. EST: Solid test from Martin and Gravin van Cantos. They had been hovering around that 31 mark for most of the it, but some late changes drop them a smidge to a 33.8.

8:42 a.m. EST: Jan scores a 31.2 for now and Belgium’s Maarten Boon and Gravin van Cantos join us next.

8:35 a.m. EST: Our second Polish representative, Jan Kamiński and Jard are in the ring now and trending just around a score of 31. Our two Polish riders at this event, Jan and Małgorzata Korycka, who we saw ride yesterday, are actually an engaged couple. We love an eventing power couple!

8:30 a.m. EST: WOW. And that’s a 5* personal best for Alex and Don Geniro! They’ve earned a provisional 23.7 and knock Tamie and Mai Baum out of the top 3. Alex and Don have been such a fun partnership to watch and this is their third Championship level appearance together.

8:28 a.m. EST: Alex and Don Geniro are having a cracking test and they have the potential to crack top five. Don Geniro has his fancy feet on!

Gif via ClipMyHorse.TV

8:25 a.m. EST: Miroslav earns a 34.0 and we now welcome Alex Hua Tian and Don Geniro into the ring, China’s sole representative this weekend.

8:17 a.m. EST: Our second of pair representing the Czech Republic, Miloslav Příhoda Jr and Ferreolus Lat are in the ring now and through their trot work.

8:13 a.m. EST:Thanks to our massive form guide, I’ve just learned that Jordy is a bit of a YouTube star in his home country. So of course I went and found his channel! I can’t understand a word of it, but it looks delightful. He and Burry Spirit lose some points in their flying changes, but they’ve still bettered their 4*/5* average and earned a provisional 34.6.

8:08 a.m. EST: Jordy Wilkin and Burry Spirit, one of two individual pairs for the Netherlands are next up in the ring and trending just around 30.0 so far in his trot work.

8:07 a.m. EST: Regal Bounty is looking a bit nervous and green on the flat (which is fair! He’s 11-years-old) though Lucinda Green said he has “a cracking lovely walk” from the commentary box. Felicity is doing a great job riding him through and looks pleased with him after their salute. They’ve scored a 40 provisionally.

8:00 a.m. EST: Here we go! Our first of this session, Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty, Ireland’s individual pair are cantering around the ring and ready to kick things off.

Friday Pratoni Lunch Report: Tamie Smith Throws Down the Gauntlet, Britain Bests A World Record

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum are the best of the Americans. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Stars and stripes, baby! Tamie Smith put an American flag in bronze medal position during the Friday morning session of the FEI World Championships at Pratoni with Alex Ahearn, Ellen Aheard and Eric Markell’s Mai Baum.

A disappointing bobble in the first medium trot wasn’t the first impression Tamie was hoping for, but nothing could derail her steely determination. That combined with “Lexus’s” dreamy, correct way of going — and several nines in the canter work! — gave the pair a result of 24.

“I think he just tried a little bit too hard and you can’t fault him for that. He doesn’t have the best medium trot — I’m pretty sure that’s the best medium trot I had before I cantered, but I think he was pretty spot on everywhere else so I’m really proud of him,” she said. “I do feel like it was better than Badminton. And he’s in much better self carriage and relaxation — really most of it was all brilliant. Just unfortunate to have that one little mistake but you try to go for it, and you know, it’s a 24, so I’ll take it.”

Mai Baum is right at home in the championship environment. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pratoni is the place for dreams to be realized for Tamie and the 16-year-old German Sport Horse (Loredano 2- Ramira, by Rike), who came tantalizingly close to a major championship appearance as traveling reserves for the U.S. last year in the 2020 Olympic Games.

“Going to Tokyo last year really gave me some experience just being there. So you try to categorize it and just another horse show, but it is a team competition — it’s the World Championships, so it feels awesome. It’s been a lifelong goal of mine to be here, and to be on that horse is extra special because I think he’s one of the best in the world,” Tamie said.

With final combination Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg TSF still yet to come, the U.S. is in silver medal position (77.5) at the lunch break only 6.4 points behind Great Britain.

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Britain’s Tom McEwen suffered a misstep similar to Tamie’s in the first medium trot, but earned marks back with his strong canter work to put a 25.6 on the board for tied fourth place, shared with New Zealand’s Monica Spencer and Artist. Partnered with the Pau CCI5* winner Toledo de Kerser, Tom was the third to go for Great Britain’s powerhouse squad, putting them in gold medal position on 71.1 points — a new world record for lowest World Championship team score after dressage, overtaking Germany who held the previous record of 73.4 in Tryon.

“I would say overall Badminton would have been a higher quality, a better frame, probably been a little bit better rhythm, but I’m really pleased with him,” he said of the 15-year-old 15-year-old Selle Français gelding (Diamant de Semilly x Ariane du Prieure II, by Papillon Rouge), who he thinks was on more of a disadvantage having the first phase on footing. “It’s always been the case that he’s — for whatever reason, he loves the grass and on the surface he can just every now and again go a little bit like this. So yeah, looking forward to next two phases on grass and with him,”

Julia Krajewski looking smart in her German Sport Army uniform with Amande de B’Néville. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Reigning Olympic gold medalist Julia Krajewski is in striking distance of an individual medal as the best of the Germans to come forward so far. Her Tokyo partner Amande de b’Neville, an 11-year-old Dutch Riding Horse mare (Sir Shutterfly – Zaramba, by BMC Kigali), owned by Svobodova Adela, looked every bit the professional, and Julia said, it was just the test she intended to have.

“I said I want to be around 25 and we managed that,” she said, and they are just a hair north of that on a penalty score of 26.

“It’s not her favorite thing to go in the white rails. It’s a very long test. Lots of twists and turns but yeah, she was she really kept herself together. she I think she did amazing extended trot extended canter. I think the flying changes were good. The halts were quite good for her.”

Competitors from all nationalities lined the arena for the Tokyo legend, but Julia is too cool a customer to be affected by outside pressures. “To be honest, actually [the pressure is] even less because I mean, before last year, people were actually waiting for me to do not good and you always had to prove yourself. And now, well, I have that in the back and I’m trying to enjoy it a bit more. But still, of course there’s pressure and you want to do well, but heaviest thing is off my shoulders since last year, to be honest,” she said.

Kevin McNab and Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam. Photo by Tilly Berendt.A five-star personal best of 25.7 puts Kevin McNab in sixth individually and the top Australian so far. The 14-year-old KWPN Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam flourished in the championship atmosphere as if he knew exactly when to put forward his best work.

“He went in then he grew a little bit, which worked for me,” Kevin said. I haven’t had a clean change from right to left today. So he saved them for in there — that it was good.”

Jonelle Price goes for a championship PB in the first phase with McClaren. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Jonelle Price delivered her best ever Championship dressage test (26.1) with McClaren for eighth place as it stands.

“It’s crazy to think that at the age of 15, I’m just getting him where I want him. With how his life journey has been, you know, he’s been a frustrating horse because I’ve felt like I’ve made progress but not been able to reflect it in the marks. And as I walked out, I really didn’t know if I was on 31 for eighth time this year, but it wasn’t until I saw the board I was able to breathe a sigh [of relief],” Jonelle said of David and Katherine Thomson’s Holsteiner (Clarimo x Toni 1, by Landjunge). “He’s a cheeky little bugger, and his body has probably developed in a less than ideal way, so trotting a straight line is quite difficult. Some things that other horses have naturally from from day one, he hasn’t had.”

OTTB power! Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture make their World Championship debut. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The last of the morning session to sneak into the top ten is ex-racehorse Bold Venture, piloted by Championship debutant Shenae Lowings. The Aussie rider, who is competing as an individual here in Pratoni, earned a 26.3.

“He’s pretty consistent in this phase. I had a few little blips in the first movement, but got ourselves back together and he executed the rest of the test really well, so I’m really happy with him. He’s not a normal Thoroughbred, he is a bit of a warmblood when it comes to dressage. You’ve got to kick him along a bit. He definitely could be affected by atmosphere, but he manages to block it out. And then as soon as the job’s done, he’s like ‘I’m done!’ and he realizes everyone’s around,” Shenae said.

We look forward to many potential game changers to come forward in our final afternoon session, including Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH, Boyd Martin and Tseterleg, and more. Keep it locked here.

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]

 

 

Nicola Wilson Discharged from Hospital

The sunny and superb Nicola Wilson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Excellent news! Nearly four and a half months after her fall at Badminton in May, British European champion Nicola Wilson has been discharged from the spinal rehabilitation unit at The James Cook University Hospital and has returned to her home and family.

“I’m so, so grateful to medical team at Badminton, who saved my life,” Nicola said in a video update from her home. “I’m so indebted to you for doing that and for putting me in the position where I am now.”

Nicola goes on to thank the staff at both Southmead Hospital as well as James Cook — her newfound family, as she puts it — for helping her navigate her rehabilitation. Her spinal injury has affected the mobility of her arms, hands, and to some extent legs, necessitating the re-learning of some functions.

“My arms, as you’ve seen in the various videos, have also been getting better, but they are much much further behind my legs,” Nicola shared. “I still can’t feel my hands. And I need my eyes to know whether I’ve got something in my hand or not. I need my eyes to know where my feet are where my arms and hands are.”

Despite the long road ahead, Nicola remains unflinchingly positive and pragmatic — at the end of the day, being home with her family has become the biggest blessing of all. “There is a lot more rehab and work to be done, but I’m so delighted to have phase one completed and behind me,” she said.

You can watch and hear more from Nicola in her video update below. We continue to wish her and her family well as she progresses in her recovery and will share more updates as they are posted. We’re all pulling for you, Nicola!

Posted by Nicola Wilson Eventing on Thursday, September 15, 2022

The Pathway to the Podium: Pratoni’s Teams — Unpacked

Chef d’equipe: Performance Pathways Manager Will Enzinger takes on the chef role. It’s a job that’s tended to move around from championship to championship – even team rider Stuart Tinney has previously worn this hat – and top-level competitor and coach Will, who cheffed in Tokyo, is forward-thinking and well-suited to the job.

Team members: 

  • Kevin McNab and Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam
  • Andrew Hoy and Vassily de Lassos
  • Shane Rose and Virgil
  • Hazel Shannon and Willingapark Clifford

Team reserve: Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture

When did they last win a medal? It’s been 16 years since Australia last won a medal at a World Championships, and on that occasion, they won two: team bronze, at Aachen in 2006, where Clayton Fredericks and Ben Along Time also took individual bronze. They also took team bronze at Gawler in 1986.

What’s their form like? Formidable. They took team silver — and an individual bronze for Andrew and Vassily — at Tokyo, and they’ve got some real cross-country bankers on their team across the board, including three-time Adelaide winners Hazel Shannon and Willingapark Clifford. It’s a team of stayers, and they can all start the week sub-30, which will put them in a serious position as they grit their teeth and work on staying on those scores.

What’s their secret weapon? A certain Mr Nelson Pessoa. The legendary Brazilian showjumper — and father of Rodrigo — has been working with the European-based Aussies for the few years to perfect their showjumping skills. Andrew Hoy based himself with Pessoa for ten days in Belgium en route to last year’s Luhmühlen Horse Trials in Germany, where he finished in the top three in the hot CCI4*-S. The team also keep in close contact with Bettina Hoy, who reviewed dressage videos and gave remote feedback throughout the constraints of the pandemic.

Chef d’equipe: Thomas Tesch.

Team members: 

  • Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line
  • Dr. Harald Ambros and Mountbatten 2
  • Katrin Khoddan-Hazrati and Oklahoma 2

Team reserve: None

When did they last win a medal? Austria has not yet medaled at World Championships.

What’s their form like? Austria brings forward a three-member team, which is notable as they’re the only country without a valuable drop score. This World Championships is about building on the hard work that Austria has put in as a developing eventing nation to produce a team completion. The Austrians earned an impressive sixth place at last season’s European Championships, which they would be delighted to replicate here. Olympic qualification may allude them in Pratoni, but Austrian eventing is certainly growing in strength and has it in their wheelhouse for a solid performance.

What’s their secret weapon? Lea Siegl. The 24-year-old put herself on not only Austrian eventing radar, but the world stage finishing 15th at the Tokyo Olympics. She’s here with the same ride, DSP Fighting Line, as the anchor of the Austrian team. They’re quick on the cross country and as the penultimate pair, they’ll have a day’s worth of viewing to help them determine how they best can shave seconds, which should boost their mid-30s dressage.

Chef d’equipe: Kai Steffen-Meier, who rides for Germany and is married to team member Lara de Liedekerke-Meier. Together, they host the Arville International Horse Trials at their fairytale property.

Team members: 

  • Karin Donckers and Fletcha van’t Verahof
  • Senne Vervaecke and Google van Alsingen
  • Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Hermione d’Arville
  • Jarno Verwimp and Mahalia

Team reserve: Maarten Boon and Gravin van Cantos

When did they last win a medal? Belgium has not yet medaled at World Championships.

What’s their form like? Belgium were disappointed not to nab a spot at Tokyo after a tense showdown with Switzerland at the 2019 Nations Cup finale, and so their form is that of a nation that’s rebuilding itself over an Olympic cycle. The goal here will be to try to get as close as possible to securing their spot for Tokyo, and get valuable mileage into their horses, and they’re splitting their focus between some serious experience — Karin Donckers and Fletcha have a huge amount of team mileage, as does Lara, though her horse is just nine years old and inexperienced. In the addition of Senne and Jarno, who’s just 21, we’re seeing a commitment to nurturing the young guns of the squad, which is a savvy way to lay foundations for the future.

What’s their secret weapon? The power of serious team spirit. Not only are those experienced gals here to help their younger counterparts through, but 25-year-old Senne Vervaecke and individual rider Marten Boon have a long backstory together, too: Marten used to groom for Senne’s father, Kris, and babysat a young Senne. Now, Senne coaches Marten’s son. There’s a lot to be said for the kind of deeply-rooted confidence that bonds like that can bring to the table.

Chef d’equipe: Julie Purgly, although the Brazilian team largely operates under their own steam and in their own systems.

Team members: 

  • Ruy Fonseca and Ballypatrick SRS
  • Carlos Parro and Goliath
  • Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Kilcoltrim Kit Kat
  • Marcelo Tosi and Glenfly

Team reserve: None.

When did they last win a medal? Brazil has not yet medaled at a World Championships.

What’s their form like? They finished seventh at their home Games in Rio, a respectable spot halfway down the order considering that only one of the team logged a clear cross-country round. They fared slightly worse at the 2018 WEG, finishing 15th in that strong competition. Their team features two fairly inexperienced horses, plus one very experienced horse in Glenfly, so the aim likely won’t be to try to make a competitive mark – rather, this is a building block. They’re last to go in the drawn order of teams, and so they’ll get plenty of opportunity to see how the competition is playing out and plan accordingly.

What’s their secret weapon? William Fox-Pitt, who stepped in to help coach the team a few months ago and will assist them this week.

Chef d’equipe: Rebecca Howard, who was a stalwart of the Canadian team herself, finishing tenth at the Rio Olympics on Riddle Master.

Team members: 

  • Holly Jacks and Candy King
  • Mike Winter and El Mundo
  • Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes
  • Hawley Awad and Jolly

Team reserve: Dana Cooke and FE Mississippi

When did they last win a medal? Team silver in 2010, and a gold in 1978, the famously tough championships in Lexington.

What’s their form like? Canada has had checkered performances as a team in recent years, with many citing complaints about mismanagement from the top, but early this year Equestrian Canada rolled out the rider-driven Canadian Eventing High Performance Advisory Group with the goal of revamping the country’s High Performance program. The goal this week will be consolidation and getting a team score on the board, laying a foundation that can be built upon for the future. They won’t want to miss another Olympics, and while a top seven finish might not be that easy to grab, they’ll be quietly hoping the USA nails it here so they can use the Pan-Am Games qualification route as a way to get to Paris.

What’s their secret weapon? Diversity of location. That means that each rider has their own system that works for them, so they can take confidence in that and lean on it while Equestrian Canada is in a limbo period. They’ll feel less lost at sea that way. Also of note — though not a secret weapon — is the team’s commitment to honouring Canada’s indigenous peoples, which you’ll spot in a variety of ways in their attire through the week.

Chef d’equipe: Thierry Touzaint – uncle of rider Nicolas – continues his long reign as head of the French team. He’s tasted gold now, and will want to do so again.

Team members: 

  • Nicolas Touzaint and Absolut Gold HDC
  • Astier Nicolas and Alertamalib’or
  • Tom Carlile and Darmagnac de Beliard
  • Gaspard Maksud and Zaragoza

Team reserve: Cyrielle Lefevre and Armanjo Serosah

When did they last win a medal? They took team bronze in 2018 at Tryon, and have previously won silver at Punchestown in 1970, and again at Gawler in 1986, The Hague in 1994, here at Pratoni in 1998, and at Jerez in 2002. They’ve also had a World Champion in Jean Teulere, who took gold in 2002.

What’s their form like? Quietly excellent. They always seem to get the job done at Championships, despite never being particularly highly tipped in the lead-up. They were Olympic gold medalists at the Rio Olympics in 2016, and took bronze at Tokyo last year. Their riders are young, as are their horses, but there’s plenty of experience in their ranks and some serious talent to play with. All these horses would be ready to peak at Paris in 2024, which is undoubtedly the aim — but don’t underestimate their ability to get the job done this week.

What’s their secret weapon? Youth and hunger. These guys will dig deep and get agricultural if they need to, because the world truly is their oyster and it’s all to come.

Chef d’equipe: Prof. Dr. Jens Adolphsen takes on chef duties, ably assisted by team trainer Peter Thomsen, a former team rider in his own right, who tackles his first Championships solo after shadowing long-term chef d’equipe Hans Melzer for the last eighteen months or so. Now, Hans is enjoying his retirement, and Peter’s time to shine has come with a very strong team to hand.

Team members: 

  • Sandra Auffarth and Viamant du Matz
  • Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH
  • Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S
  • Julia Krajewski and Amande de b’Neville

Team reserve: Alina Dibowski and Barbados 26

When did they last win a medal? The Germans won team gold in 2014 at Normandy and 2006 at Aachen, silver at Luhmühlen in 1982 and Lexington in 1978 (both as West Germany), and bronze at The Hague in 1994, Stockholm in 1990, and Burghley in 1974 (again as the West German team). They also have a pretty good record of getting individual gold, with two of the last three World Champions coming from

What’s their form like? Excellent, though their period of championship dominance is rather behind them. They’re still an enormous threat, and will be Great Britain’s big threat this week. Their team is formidable this week, as is their 21-year-old individual competitor. The Germans are hungry to be back on top, and they won’t let a medal slip through their fingers easily.

What’s their secret weapon? Marcus Döhring, the team’s showjumping coach, who looks like something directly out of a Jilly Cooper novel. His significance can’t be understated at this Championship: the showjumping track will be seriously influential, as it’s on an undulating grass arena and designed by a Grand Prix showjumping designer who will amp up the technicality and make the best use of the space. If it doesn’t go to plan and you need a shoulder to cry on, Herr Döhring, EN is around…

Chef d’equipe: Chris Bartle and Richard Waygood, who both joined the team in late 2016 after a disappointing Rio performance a few months prior. Since then, the team has gone from strength to strength, and it’s no suprise: Chris Bartle was previously the architect of Germany’s success, and Richard Waygood helmed the British dressage team during its extraordinary trajectory from zero to hero.

Team members: 

  • Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class
  • Laura Collett and London 52
  • Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo
  • Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser

Team reserve: Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir

When did they last win a medal? Team gold in 2018, 2010, 1994, 1986, 1982, 1970, silver in 74, 90, 2006, 2014, bronze in 2002, 1998

What’s their form like? On top of the world. The Brits currently hold team gold at the Olympics, World Championships, European Championships, Young Rider Europeans, and Junior Europeans, meaning that the Pony European team gold is the only one they don’t have in their clutches. They also have the reigning World Champion and European Champion. They come into this competition as the firm favourites to win again.

What’s their secret weapon? Pure confidence. The Brits have been on such good form for a period of several years now, and there’s an untouchable sort of confidence that comes with knowing that you really are that good. They’ll be riding that wave as they work to retain their title.

Chef d’equipe: Two-time Swedish Olympian Dag Albert, who joined Horse Sport Ireland as Eventing Team Manager just last month.

Team members: 

  • Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue
  • Padraig McCarthy and Fallulah
  • Susannah Berry and Monbeg by Design
  • Sam Watson and SAP Talisman

Team reserve: Felicity Ward and Regal Bounty

When did they last win a medal? They took team silver in 2018, as well as individual silver for Padraig McCarthy and Mr Chunky. They also won the first ever World Championships team gold at Burghley in 1966. They’ve had a couple of other individual medals in their time, too — including a silver for Sam Watson’s father John Watson at Lexington 1978, and a bronze for  Virginia Freeman-Jackson at the first World Championships in 1966.

What’s their form like? Irish riders have certainly been making great strides. Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue were thirteenth at Tokyo last year; Padraig McCarthy and Fallulah were second after cross-country at Pau (though the showjumping proved an issue there). Susie Berry has been seriously impressive, particularly at Badminton this spring, though her ride this week is inexperienced, and Sam Watson is a real banker on the cross-country. As a team, it’s something of a building process — the results aren’t consistent on the world stage, but every championship is a step towards figuring out a system that works.

What’s their secret weapon? Tracie Robinson, who has been such a significant part of the British efforts as team dressage trainer. Ian Woodhead stepped down from the role at the onset of Covid, so he could focus his attentions on his business and family in England, and Tracie is a worthy replacement: she’s coached the Brits at four Olympics and numerous other championships. Oh, and of some help? Sam Watson’s EquiRatings. The data analysis company has been able to pull performance stats that the team can use to make valuable marginal gains.

Chef d’equipe: Giacomo Della Chiesa, who himself rode at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics.

Team members: 

  • Giovanni Ugolotti and Duke of Champions
  • Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes
  • Susanna Bordone and Imperial van de Holtakkers
  • Arianna Schivo and Quefira de l’Ormeau
  • Marco Capper and Uter

Team reserve: Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes

When did they last win a medal? Italy has not yet medaled at World Championships.

What’s their form like? Italy has the honor of hosting this year’s World Championships, fielding a talented and experienced squad for Pratoni. The Italians have won medals here before – they’ve thrice won bronze as a team at previous iterations of what would typically be labeled the World Equestrian Games – but they haven’t quite managed to catch the higher podium tiers yet.

The team for Pratoni will return two members of the Tokyo Olympic team in Susanna Bordonne and Arianne Schivo, both of whom will bring their Tokyo horses (Imperial van de Holtakkers and Quefira de L’Ormeu). Evelina Bertoli also makes her return to the senior championship squad for the first time since the 2014 WEG in Tryon. Marco Cappai, who last competed in a world championship in 2010 and also represented Italy in the 1996 Olympics, adds more breadth of experience to the team, as does 2014 WEG rider Giovanni Ugolotti. 

While this team would be a longer shot to duke it out for the podium, it’s smart not to count out the host country whose horses and riders will be the most familiar with the venue and conditions.

What’s their secret weapon? Home team advantage. There’s much to be said for the intangibles of the sport, like the roars of a patriotic crowd, and they’ll benefit from this on Saturday.

Chef d’equipe: Laurent Bousquet heads up the good ship Team Japan after a stint as France’s coach. He’s been in the role since 2016, having done a stretch from 1991 to 2004 as well.

Team members: 

  • Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne JRA
  • Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka JRA
  • Yoshiaki Oiwa and Calle 44
  • Toshiyuki Tanaka and Swiper JRA

Team reserve: None.

When did they last win a medal? Japan has not yet medaled at a World Championships.

What’s their form like? Good, but perhaps not consistent enough to really take down the big boys. But don’t think that doesn’t mean they can’t medal: they spent years honing their system with Tokyo in mind, and they’re still benefitting from that hard work now. Kazuma Tomoto was fourth individually at Tokyo last year, and could well medal here — and if everything works in their favour, they could medal as a team. It’s a fairly safe bet that they should grab their Paris qualification here, anyway, and that requires a top seven placing (or top eight, if France is within that number, as they automatically qualify for Paris as the host nation).

What’s their secret weapon? It’s not so secret, really, but it’s chef d’equipe Laurent – or, in this case, his contacts in France. He’s been instrumental in the Tokyo pathway and beyond for the team since 2016, not just by orchestrating training and competition schedules but by using his French connections to secure some exceptional horses from his fellow countrymen, including Vinci de la Vigne, originally piloted by Astier Nicolas. Other excellent horses sourced for Japanese riders include Rio gold medallist Bart L, originally ridden by Mathieu Lemoine and now ridden by Yoshi Oiwa, and Ventura de la Chaule, who moved from Nicolas Touzaint to Atsushi Negishi.

Chef d’equipe: The great Jock Paget, who’s joined by 2014 Badminton winner and former Aussie team stalwart Sam Griffiths, who hung up his boots and moved to team trainer life this year.

Team members: 

  • Monica Spencer and Artist
  • Tim Price and Falco
  • Jonelle Price and McClaren
  • Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park

Team reserve: Amanda Pottinger and Just Kidding

When did they last win a medal? 2010: that was a team bronze in Lexington. They also won team gold at WEG Stockholm in 1990 and Rome in 1998.

What’s their form like? A mixed bag of fresh faces and veteran riders received the call-up for this Championship’s Kiwi squad. They’ve been unlucky at championships in recent years, which is something of a surprise when you consider how formidable the Prices are in any given international. They improved upon a 7th place finish at the last World Championships to 5th in Tokyo last summer, but they’ll need to do at least that well to secure their spot in the next Olympic cycle.

What’s their secret weapon? 

Monica Spencer. Monica’s traveled over 18,000 kilometers for her team debut with the thoroughbred Artist. Monica and “Max” are a forced to be reckoned with back home, but Pratoni will be their first crack at challenging the likes of the field of the Northern Hemisphere. The pair have shared several wins including most notably the CCI4*-L at Puhinui where they finished on their dressage score of 25.5.

Chef d’equipe: Pedro Rey.

Team members: 

  • Gonzalo Blasco Botin and Sij Veux d’Autize
  • Esteban Benitez Valle and Milana 23
  • Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10
  • Antonio Cejudo Caro and Duque HSM

Team reserve: None.

When did they last win a medal? Spain has not yet medalled at a World Championships.

What’s their form like? As a team, they’re very much in the development stages. The results aren’t consistent enough at this stage to pose any real threat, but they have a team full of riders who are working hard to lay strong foundations and ride talented young horses (with the notable exception of 18-year-old Milana 23, but the mileage she offers Esteban this week will be put straight into practice on his young Paris prospects, including the very talented Utrera AA).

What’s their secret weapon? Trailblazing. Not in a pathfinding sense in this competition, but because the Spanish system doesn’t have roots like the ‘big six’ nations do, every championship is a chance for riders, coaches, and Spanish federation officials alike to refine and adapt what they’re doing in a collaborative way. They’ll learn a huge amount here.

Chef d’equipe: Dominik Burger

Team members: 

  • Nadja Minder and Toblerone
  • Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire
  • Felix Vogg and Cartania
  • Roben Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH

Team reserve: Patrick Rüegg and Fifty Fifty

When did they last win a medal? The Swiss haven’t yet won a medal at a World Championships, but they took team silver and individual bronze at the 1960 Olympics.

What’s their form like? The Swiss team has gone from strength to strength this season, and will hopefully peak here in Pratoni. They bring forward the advantage of individual and team gold achieved in the Nations Cup test event earlier this summer, which not only give the team a nod of confidence, but also valuable intel of the property and Giuseppe Della Chiesa’s use of it. Their red-hot form continued over the summer, as they won the Avenches Nations Cup for the home fans.

Their rising generation of talent has added to their momentum, taking them from the last country to qualify for Rio to potential threats. The 24-year-old Robin Godel won individual gold at the Avenches Nations Cup and the 32-year-old Felix Vogg won Luhmühlen over the summer — breaking a 60-year dry spell for Swiss five-star wins.

What’s their secret weapon? Andrew Nicholson. He has been a major catalyst for the Swiss since joining on as cross county coach in 2018. It’s a job he clearly adores, and the young Swiss team are flourishing under his intuitive instruction. Andrew’s mantra is ‘never change a winning team’ – and so he’s worked to support each rider’s current system and tweak the bits that need help, rather than do a total overhaul.

Chef d’equipe: British-based Fredrik Bergendorff, who has proven a solid captain for the Swedish efforts so far (and also wears a pair of chinos exceptionally well).

Team members: 

  • Malin Josefsson and Golden Midnight
  • Sofia Sjoborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z
  • Aminda Ingulfson and Joystick
  • Frida Andersen and Box Leo

Team reserve: Niklas Lindbäck and Focus Filiocus

When did they last win a medal? They’ve never medalled as a team at a World Championships, though they do have one individual medallist in their books in Paula Törnqvist, who took bronze in Rome in 1998. Their Olympic form is a different story, though a historical one, too: Sweden were the dominant force in eventing in the early 20th century, and it was at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics that eventing as a sport made its debut. They were the gold medallists there, of course, and at Antwerp in 1920, and then they took silver at Paris in 1924. They disappeared for a couple of decades from the podium but returned for silver at London 1948, gold at Helsinki 1952… and then the reign of Sweden as eventing’s most formidable team was over. Now, it’s a case of rebuilding.

What’s their form like? The Swedes have been consistent in the Nations Cup series, which is held at CCI4*-S and culminates at the CCI4*-L level at Boekelo. They’re very good at pinning down the series win, partly because they make sure to show up for as many legs as they can — and now they’re working on taking that consistency up to championship level. Their weakness at the moment is the dressage, and they’ve pulled in great help to work on this — but their team is based between the UK and Sweden, so the cohesiveness is tricky. They’ve stepped onto the podium at European Championships, which is a CCI4*-L competition, and while they probably won’t do that here, they’ll be girding their loins to try to secure that Paris qualification nice and early so they don’t have to chase their tails and try to qualify through the Nations Cups again.

What’s their secret weapon? Technology. Fred Bergendorff made the best of a bad situation in the pandemic and created a structure of virtual training, bringing in exceptional coaches to help sharpen the Swedish game and build camaraderie.

Chef d’equipe: Bobby Costello, who’s acting as interim chef until after the Championships. He rode at the top level himself, representing Team USA at the 2000 Olympics.

Team members: 

  • Will Coleman and Off The Record
  • Tamie Smith and Mai Baum
  • Lauren Kieffer and Vermiculus
  • Boyd Martin and Tseterleg

Team reserve: Ariel Grald and Leamore Master Plan

When did they last win a medal? They took team gold in 2002, and prior to that, we saw them take gold at Burghley in 1974. They’ve also won bronze at Luhmühlen in 1982 and Lexington in 1978.

What’s their form like? It’s safe to say that it’s on the up and up, despite a period of turbulence in the management sphere of the high performance camp. The US has been performing better and better on the world stage, with a team silver at Aachen last year (and a historic first-ever US individual win, taken by Will and Off The Record) and team silver at the Nations Cup finale at Boekelo, too. This feels like the strongest US team in a long time, and realistically, they really ought to take a medal this week. There’s a good case for them taking more than one, too — their riders have what it takes to fight the big boys individually. Could this be the beginning of a renaissance for US eventing? We reckon so.

What’s their secret weapon? In a strange way, it’s probably this limbo period. The US system is due a rejig, and there’s compelling reason to believe that the sort of Wild West that it finds itself in at the moment will allow riders to lay their own roots in terms of structure, coming together as a unified group with their own systems that work for them. Erik Duvander is on site coaching a couple of the riders, and everyone looks to be sticking to what has served them well as individuals, which could pay dividends and lead to a new way of doing things going forward.

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