Classic Eventing Nation

Who Jumped It Best? Stable View Oktoberfest CCI4*-S

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EN, it’s time for another round of Who Jumped It Best? This edition takes us between the picturesque pines of Stable View in Aiken, S.C. You be the judge of these seven CCI4*-S competitors as they tackle fence six, the Blanchard Table. You’ll notice this element is full height and width for the level. Choose which pair you think presents the best picture and vote for your pick in the poll below.

ETA 9/28: We apologize for the poll malfunction! We’ve reset it so that it should be collecting your votes now!

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results

Ashlynn Muechel and Emporium. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Liz Halliday Sharp and Cooley Quicksilver. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Zoe Crawford and KEC Zara. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Nilson Moreira da Silva and Rock Phantom. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Leslie Law and Lady Chatterly. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Jimmie Schramm and Eclaire. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Victoria Garland and FE Capricino. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Weekend Winners: Stable View, Twin Rivers, ESDCTA, UNH

Raise your hand if you went to a show this weekend! I’m pretty stoked, because I finally did after a couple years off and it felt fabulous! Granted I just did a schooling dressage test, but nevertheless I got back out there. Whether your name is on this list or not this week or whether you went to a schooling show or a recognized event, you’re a winner in my book as long as you went out and went eventing.

Our Unofficial Lowest Score Award this weekend goes to Boyd Martin and Long Island T in the Open Preliminary B division at ESDCTA, throwing down an impressive finishing score of 15.9. That should be a lovely confidence building weekend for this pair, who looks to have rerouted after some trouble on cross country in their most recent outings.

I want to also give a shoutout to our second unofficial lowest score this week, since it’s not often we get two sub-20s in one weekend! Congrats to Veronica Ucko and Mainely Brews for winning the Novice Rider A division, also at ESDCTA, with a 17.4.

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Results]

CCI4*-S: Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore (28.6)
CCI3*-S: Autumn Schweiss and Global Invieto DHI (27.5)
CCI2*-S: Elisabeth Halliday-Sharp and Shanroe Cooley (27.6)
Open Intermediate: Morgan McAllister and Made To Order (40.7)
Open Preliminary: Ariel Grald and Forrest Gump 124 (25.4)
Preliminary Rider: Karli Wright and The Diesel Boy (28.3)
Modified A: Josephine Irish and Wil Celtic Charlie (29.1)
Modified B: Heather Thomas and Famos 71 (25.7)
Modified C: Matthew Ulmer and Kings Carter (30.3)
Open Training: Dominic Schramm and Dawnbreaker (26.6)
Training Rider A: Marissa Griffin and Conguistador (28.2)
Training Rider B: Chasity Ross and Celtic Sapphire (23.6)
Novice Rider A: Madalyn Ellis and Fernhill Magic (23.7)
Novice Rider B: Sheila Wiese and Cooley Greystones (28.6)
Open Novice: Jane Musselman and Engapore (21.7)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Anna Burgess and String Theory (25.0)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Tiffany Stewart and Crimson Clover (27.5)
Open Beginner Novice: Waylon Roberts and Davino (22.3)

Twin Rivers Fall International (Paso Robles, Ca.): [Website] [Results]

CCI4*-S: Andrea Baxter and Indy 500 (50.0)
CCI3*-S: Tamie Smith and Mai Tanzer (32.2)
CCI2*-S: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and AEV Above Authority (34.7)
Advanced: Alexandra Macleod and Newmarket Jack (59.7)
Open Intermediate: Erin Kellerhouse and Woodford Reserve (30.9)
Open Preliminary: Auburn Excell Brady and BSP Tuxedo (28.5)
Jr. Training Rider: Catherine Bonadio and IndiGo (27.5)
Open Training A: Tamie Smith and Crafty Don (26.6)
Open Training B: Tamie Smith and Jumara MVS (28.4)
Sr. Training Rider: Ursula Behiel and MI Conquistador SE (33.4)
Jr. Novice Rider A: Dana Carbajal and Maximus de la Tombe (32.4)
Jr. Novice Rider B: Isabella Degner and Supah Heat (32.6)
Novice Horse: Suzy Hettich and Ramblin’ Man (31.2)
Open Novice: Elsie Patterson and Finnigan R-E (25.3)
Sr. Novice Amateur: Leah Yacoub Halperin and Remember Me (27.8)
Sr. Novice Rider: Holly Thompson and Atta Boy Atticus (21.7)
Jr. Beg. Novice Rider: Jenna Law and License and registration plz (29.3)
Open Beg. Novice A: Taylor Lindsten and WonderElla (27.0)
Open Beg. Novice B: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and Quinn HSR (30.00)
Sr. Beg. Novice Rider: Annie Desmond and Little Elf (26.0)
Introductory A: Laurel Meck and Trending Now DF (29.4)
Introductory B: Natalie Kraus and KeepSake (24.4)
Future Event Horse 4 Year Old: Erin Kellerhouse and Mannoury vd Watermolen (76.7)
Future Event Horse Three Year Old: Rylin Clarke and NSF Cassiopeia (79.0)
Young Event Horse 4 Year Old: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and Quinn HSR (81.8)
Young Event Horse 5 Year Old: Tamie Smith and Crafty Don (84.9)

ESDCTA New Jersey H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Resultss]

Open Intermediate: Hannah Sue Burnett and Harbour Pilot (32.5)
Open Preliminary A: Caroline Martin and King’s Especiale (27.6)
Open Preliminary B: Boyd Martin and Long Island T (15.9)
Open Training A: Hillary Moses and Excel Star Gladiator (31.1)
Open Training B: Caroline Martin and HSH Redfield Haras (27.1)
Training Rider A: Katherine Holzrichter and Idlehour Center Stage (28.9)
Training Rider B: Madison Dasti and Rowling (34.3)
Novice Rider A: Veronica Ucko and Mainely Brews (17.4)
Novice Rider B: Ty Burke and HHS Iris (22.9)
Open Novice A: Caroline Martin and HSH Best Kept Secret (26.9)
Open Novice B: Delaney Emerson and Redfield Legend (29.3)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Monica McHale and Giselle (31.0)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Ingrid Johnston and Resplendence (27.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Michael Pendleton and Spartin Martin Z (23.3)
Starter A: Samantha Potts and Gentleman’s Choice (28.0)
Starter B: Ashley Taylor and Tuff Duff (25.5)

Old Tavern H.T. at Great Meadow (The Plains, Va.): [Website] [Results]

Open Intermediate: Skyeler Voss and Argyle (45.4)
Open Preliminary 1: Arden Wildasin and Southern Sun (26.3)
Open Preliminary 2: Arden Wildasin and Tokyo Drift (31.5)
Preliminary Rider: Claudia Sarnoff and Callan Quinto (32.8)
Open Training 1: Mia Farley and BGS Calculated Chaos (28.8)
Training Rider: Isabella Beddow and Stormin Jerry (34.5)
Open Training 2: Meghan O’Donoghue and Chantilly All Quality (24.5)
Open Training 3: Lindsay Kelley and Plumes (31.0)
Open Novice 1: Mackenzie Lea and Trajan (29.3)
Open Novice 2: Carin Coker and Dans La Nuit WE (24.1)
Open Novice 3: Sean McQuillan and Fulham (29.5)
Novice Rider: Devin Handy and Connect the Dots (23.6)
Open Beginner Novice 1: Kendyl Tracy and Justified (26.9)
Open Beginner Novice 2: Kaitlin Clasing and Above the Fold (27.2)

University of New Hampshire H.T. (Durham, Nh.): [Website] [Results]

Open Training A: Kate Day and Fortissimo (34.1)
Open Training B: Lanie Mourgenos and Fit & Frisky (33.2)
Open Novice A: Julie Howard and Isn’t She Sweet (34)
Open Novice B: Devon Champlain and Champagne Event (32.5)
Open Beginner Novice A: Alyssa Gibson and Pleased as Punch (35.8)
Open Beginner Novice B: Rachel Truncellito and POLPETTA (32.0)
Open Beginner Novice C: Noora Hardy and Winter’s Silence (33.0)

 

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Good morning from Switzerland, where your resident bleary-eyed roving reporter is only half human but still giddy with glee after an incredible week at the FEI European Eventing Championships. The latter half of this season feels like a real moveable feast after going hungry for such a long time, and with eighteen months of tough cancellations behind us, we’re now enjoying the spoils of a jam-packed calendar. An Olympic AND Europeans year all in one is almost too much excitement for my tiny pea brain to handle, but I’ve loved every second — not just because the incredible women of the British team swept every podium place available, but because to my mind, the real point of fighting for the Europeans this year was to ensure that developing nations don’t miss out on their chance for an educational championship experience. I’m beyond thrilled that they got their chance, and seized it with aplomb: the Swiss team’s fourth place finish on home soil, the first-ever Czech team in the history of the competition, and the extraordinary performances of the Austrian contingent all gave me such hope and joy for the future of our sport, which I truly believe can only thrive if it broadens its scope beyond the ‘Big Six’ nations. In the individual standings, too, up-and-coming eventing nations made themselves known: Finland’s week ended early due to an overnight withdrawal, but Sanna Siltakorpi’s two-phase performance with Bofey Click was competitive and exciting, and Lithuania’s Aistis Vitkauskas once again proved that he has one of the most exciting cross-country horses in the world in Commander VG. I’ll be bringing you some more of my searing hot takes (ha) in a long-winded reporter’s notebook this week — but first, I need to find myself some fondue, go stare at the Alps, edit another 2,000 photos, and prepare for the long drive north to Boekelo. What a great adventure life is.

National Holiday: It’s World Tourism Day, so I’m going to celebrate by speaking some appallingly poor French in town.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Results][EN’s Coverage]

Twin Rivers Fall International (Paso Robles, Ca.): [Website] [Results]

ESDCTA New Jersey H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Results]

Old Tavern H.T. at Great Meadow (The Plains, Va.): [Website] [Results]

University of New Hampshire H.T. (Durham, Nh.): [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Action:

Alnwick Ford: [Results]

Kelsall Hill (2): [Results]

South of England International (2): [Results]

Global Eventing Roundup:

While all eyes have been firmly fixed on the FEI European Eventing Championships in Avenches, Ireland’s Ballindenisk hosted an array of international classes up to CCI4*-L. Great Britain’s Tom Jackson took that feature class aboard the excellent Bahira M, adding nothing to their first-phase score of 33.1 to snatch the win as one of just two completing pairs. Meanwhile, the CCI4*-S went to Ireland’s Michael Ryan, who piloted Claragh Mountain to the win after delivering the fastest cross-country round of the day.

Your Monday Reading List:

When British Paralympian flashed a glimpse of a marked glove at FEI photographer Liz Gregg’s camera in Tokyo, she made a poignant stand for people with disabilities all over the world. Go behind the photo to find out more. [Behind the Photo: #WeThe15]

Fancy emulating Sarah Bullimore’s pingy, perfect clear round yesterday? Steal an exercise from her repertoire and teach your horse to stay light, balanced, and adjustable, giving you extra tools in the box for those rounds that really matter. [#SundaySchool: Sarah Bullimore’s figure-of-eight jumping exercise for focus]

We all talk about being kind to others — but are you actually being kind to yourself? In their series on building confidence in the saddle, Horse Sport considers how you can give yourself space to grow and develop as a rider by being more compassionate to yourself. [Developing Self-Compassion: Don’t be So Hard on Yourself!]

The FutureTrack Follow:

German photographer Annette Dölger can be found out and about at all the big events across the country, producing super images — and also excellent videos like this one, in which we discover that no one knows more than two lines of ‘God Save Our Queen.’

Morning Viewing:

Recap the last day at Avenches with this super roundup from our friends — and press centre table mates — at FEI TV.

The Golden Girls: British Powerhouse Women Take Europeans Gold and Entire Individual Podium

EN’s coverage of the 2021 FEI Longines European Eventing Championships is brought to you in part by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products and its wide array of supplements available for your horse.

The all-female British team — plus individual bronze medallist Sarah Bullimore — embark on their lap of honour after a clean sweep of the medals at the European Championships. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“You know,” muses Hans Meltzer, chef d’equipe of the German eventing squad for the past twenty-one years, “I know why it is that Nicola won. It’s because when Chris Bartle was training the Germans, he was always asking if he could train her as well, and she was always at his place to train.”

Does that mean that the Germans, who have been such a dominant force in our sport for so long, are claiming Great Britain’s Nicola Wilson, the newly-minted European Champion with her ten-year-old Holsteiner, JL Dublin, as an honorary member of their own ranks? Or is it yet another suggestion that the man with the Midas touch, the one pulling all the puppet strings to make this incredible spate of British victories happen, is Chris Bartle, who coached the German squad to their zenith before stepping into his role at the helm of the British squad?

Piggy March and Sarah Bullimore plant one on European Champion — and great pal — Nicola Wilson. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It certainly wouldn’t be the first time it’s been suggested that Chris is the ultimate secret weapon a squad can have, and the Brits really are in the middle of an unbelievable show of form: after winning team and individual gold at the World Equestrian Games back in 2018, they took team silver at the 2019 European Championships and then emerged from the pandemic to win team gold at the Olympics — their first since 1972 — as well as individual silver, and then team gold in last week’s CHIO Aachen nations’ cup. This week, at the rescheduled FEI European Eventing Championships in Avenches, Switzerland, they truly hammered the point home, taking not just the team gold, but all three individual podium places.

But remarkable though he is, the credit can’t go to Chris alone. It’s shared, certainly, with British team Performance Manager Dickie Waygood, and dressage trainer Ian Woodhead, certainly, but part of the magic of the British team is that it trusts its riders systems and doesn’t micromanage them. And so the exceptional three-phase effort that led Nicola to a day one dressage lead on a 20.9 with ‘Dubs’, who’s owned by the Lamberts and Deirdre Johnston, a return to the top of the podium after a clear round ten seconds inside the time yesterday, and a foot perfect showjumping round today must go to the rider herself, as well as her support team, led by head girl Ruth Asquith.

Nicola Wilson punches the air after a fault-free showjumping round secures her the title of European Champion. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Together, Nicola and her team have enjoyed a remarkable year with the still relatively inexperienced gelding, who Nicola has produced the grades after finding him as a four-year-old at the Holsteiner sales. Their series of exceptional triumphs began in June, when they took top honours in Bicton’s inaugural CCI4*-L — just his second outing at the level and a competition that caused plenty of problems on cross-country day. After a little holiday, ‘Dubs’ returned to take the win in the CCI4*-S at Hartpury, a stamina test designed to prepare horses for autumn three-days such as Burghley. Shortly thereafter, he was chosen for the British squad for Avenches — and although his form through the season has been superb and he came into this competition as one of the favourites in the field, stalwart squad member Nicola still looked shocked and awed at taking her first European title.

“It’s been a fantastic week for all of the Brits, and to finish on top is a dream come true,” she says with her trademark sunny smile, just moments after the whirlwind of jumping a sterling clear round, adding nothing to her 20.9 dressage, and getting swallowed up by a melee of hugs and tears and raucous joy from the tight-knit British side and her fellow competitors from across the continent.

Dubs was one of just three horses to finish on his dressage score through the week after delivering mature, expressive, and blisteringly competitive performances in all three phases. For Nicola, who has partnered an exceptional line-up of top-level mounts, including the fan favourite Opposition Buzz and her 2017 Europeans bronze medallist Bulana, it’s the culmination of a burgeoning talent that’s been gently nurtured over the past six seasons.

“He’s been so exciting through the years, and for him to come and do his first championship and finish at the top of the podium — I really am just pinching myself! He really is a very, very special horse, and he felt class in all three phases.”

Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin keep their eyes on the prize. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nicola went into the ring without a rail in hand, even after reigning champions Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD, jumping just before them in silver medal position, knocked one, ending their chance of a three-peat and pushing them down into fifth place. When Nicola entered the ring, it was to play as much a mental game as a physical one: though the first session of showjumping for the lower half of the leaderboard proved that the course was very jumpable — and perhaps verging on too straightforward — by the latter stages of the final session, it began to wreak havoc as the pressure built. But Nicola came through the gate already attacking, and both horse and rider hunted down their strides positively and aggressively. It paid off, and as they galloped across the finish line to a deafening roar of approval from the packed stands, they secured the gold — and ensured that the individual podium was to be a fully British affair.

“I knew he could jump well, but with the pressure and the nerves, you just don’t know what’s going to happen, like a silly mistake or I let him down — but he was just phenomenal in there. He went in as cool as a cucumber, and very confident and focused, and off we went. It was a pleasure to ride him in all three phases.”

Nicola and teammate Kitty King celebrate in the heady moments after Nicola’s winning round. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The British team almost always feels uniquely like a family, even when it descends upon a non-team event: at foreign five-stars, such as Pau, you can always reliably find every British rider, and most of their grooms and owners, gathered around the arena to watch their compatriots ride their tests, and Avenches saw that dynamic taken to a whole new level. The all-female squad of four team riders and two individuals aren’t just a collective of like-minded, powerhouse women of a similar age — they’re also all genuinely great friends, and so are the people they have around them. Every day, more and more Union Jacks mysteriously appeared around the main arena as the swelling collective of Team GB owners and connections formed a jolly army of sorts, each supporting every rider as though they were their own — and likewise, every horse was immediately tended to not just by his own groom, but by the whole line-up of grooms, each supporting one another seamlessly as it all played out.

Perhaps that’s where some of the British team fairy dust is coming from: rather than forcing the World Class programme riders to change what they do and subscribe to a rigid ‘team way’ of doing things, it allows for individualised systems, and then offers unerring support to ensure those systems can run smoothly. Along the way, the set-up also encourages camaraderie and togetherness, with special care taken to ensure owners aren’t just invited along for the ride but are shown a seriously good time along the way, forming lasting friendships and solidifying their connection with the sport they love and help to fund. The whole squad, and all its interconnected parts, laugh together, cry together — and win together. Right now, it’s a squad full of people who, by and large, play very well with others, and as a result, the level of positivity and confidence in the team camp is unbeatable. And that confidence — plus the strength in depth of the top level of British riders — doesn’t look set to fizzle out anytime soon.

Piggy March and Brookfield Inocent take the European individual silver medal, adding to their team gold and ending their season on a high. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Just at the minute, we’re a strong nation, and it just goes like that in waves,” says Nicola’s teammate Piggy March, who won the individual silver medal on Brookfield Inocent after finishing on her dressage score of 23.3 and climbing from initial sixth place to her final place on the podium. It was all part of a plan that payed dividends: Piggy and the talented twelve-year-old gelding, a runner-up in his five-star debut at Pau last year, were originally selected to go to Tokyo as travelling reserves for the Olympic team, but Brookfield Inocent’s owners John and Chloe Perry and Alison Swinburne opted to pull him out of the team, preferring not to subject their horse to the stress of long-distance travel without any chance of a run. By withdrawing — painful though the decision must have been for all involved — they could focus their sights wholly and entirely on Avenches, without risking the kind of disruption to the gelding’s fitness plan, which was the downfall of World Champion Ros Canter and Allstar B, who’d had to carve their summer training regime out around the trip to Japan.

“There was lots of us fighting for Tokyo this year, and so it’s great that we’ve come out here and performed so well with the pressure as well,” she says. “But on a personal note, it’s fabulous to have so many amazing teammates that are also on fantastic horses for the future — but they’re also my friends as well, and that just makes it a really special week.”

Just as special is the trajectory — and career to come — of her newly-minted team mount, who has stepped up to fill the colossal hole left by the loss of her previous team mount, Jayne McGivern’s excellent Quarrycrest Echo.

“[Brookfield Inocent] is a fabulous horse, definitely one of the best I’ve ever ridden and one that I’m very lucky to have,” says Piggy of the former Kevin McNab ride, who finished ten seconds inside the time around yesterday’s cross-country and never looked like touching a fence today. “Throughout the week, in all three phases, he couldn’t have actually done any more — he’s been near-on perfection. I’m so proud of him, and just delighted for his owners. They’ve owned event horses for many years, and this is their first time on a championship team, so it’s been a massive excitement for them.”

Plus, muses Piggy, “I think we all think if we’re ahead of Ingrid and Michi Jung, that’s a medal in and of itself!”

Sarah Bullimore and Corouet take bronze while competing as individuals for Great Britain. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the great successes of the week was that of British individual competitor Sarah Bullimore, who has been an extraordinarily consistent and competitive campaigner over the last number of years, despite her eclectic collection of quirky horses. Her homebred, Corouet, is no different: at barely 15.2hh, he’s dwarfed by most of the fences he tackles, and his sire — the showjumping stallion Balou du Rouet — means he has an active, overly clever, occasionally argumentative brain that requires tact and a sense of humour to manage. But Sarah has proven time and time again that she has tact in spades, piloting the undeniably odd but hugely talented Reve du Rouet to a number of top-five five-star placings and quietly doing exceptional things, such as delivering a sub-20 dressage mark aboard her Europeans partner in the British Open Championship CCI4*-S at Burgham this summer. That she’s so often been stuck in the reserve spot for the British team, and so seldom selected outright, has long seemed an almost criminal oversight, and although she wasn’t part of the team itself this week, it’s been brilliant — and not at all unexpected — to watch her deliver three eye-wateringly good phases and show the British powers that be exactly what they’ve been missing out on.

Sarah’s week began with an 22.8 dressage, putting her into fifth place at the end of the first phase with the gelding. They delivered a very good cross-country performance, adding just 0.8 time penalties after blazing their way around the track, and today, the ten-year-old looked as fresh as if he was at a one-day, tossing his head joyously and pinging his way into orbit over every fence to record a clear round without a single tense moment.

“He’s just a freak of nature,” she says of her ‘mighty midget’ with a fond smile. “He’s phenomenal in all three phases — he could do pure dressage or pure showjumping; he’s totally unique. He makes it very easy to go out there and do the job.”

Pats for Corouet after a gravity-defying clear round. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sarah’s podium finish is made even more special because Corouet’s dam, Lilly Corinne, was her ride in her previous European Championships appearance at Blair Castle in 2015, and since that occasion, she’s been firmly on the hunt for another selection.

“For the last ten years, other than that, I’ve been a reserve, and so it’s taken me an awful long time to get here,” she says. “I was quite nervous yesterday morning, because I just thought, ‘don’t go and make a stupid mistake, because then it’ll take another ten years, and I don’t think I’ve got that long!’ So I was chuffed to bits with him; I couldn’t be more proud.”

Michael Jung and fischerWild Wave finish just off the podium after adding nothing to their first-phase score. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just off the podium in fourth place is Germany’s Michael Jung, already a three-time European Champion on three different horses — and this year’s mount, the nine-year-old fischerWild Wave, is quickly developing into a very exciting star for the future. He made his five-star debut at Luhmühlen back in June, finishing eleventh but looking considerably greener while doing so than he did this week. Now, the 17hh gelding is stronger both mentally and physically, and that showed in his performances: a four-star personal best of 23.9, the fastest clear of the day across the country, and a faultless showjumping round put him just three-tenths of a penalty off the podium and give Michi the Maestro another top-level horse to focus his ongoing campaign for world domination around.

“He’s an amazing horse, and I’m very happy about him,” says Michi. “He did three wonderful phases, and I think it was a great week.”

Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD record a very respectable fifth-place finish on their hunt for a third consecutive victory. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though Ingrid Klimke and her exceptional seventeen-year-old SAP Hale Bob OLD didn’t succeed in their quest for a third Europeans victory in a row, they certainly gave the job a jolly good go. They led the first phase on a 20.2, though they slipped back into second place on cross-country after adding 1.2 time penalties. Had they jumped clear today, they still wouldn’t have been able to claim gold, but they lost their grip on silver, too, when they tipped the third-to-last fence, pushing them down into fifth position in the final rankings. But Ingrid, who has had a tumultuous year with both horse injuries and her own serious injuries sidelining her, was pragmatic about the result and rejoiced in being back aboard her top horse.

“I was proud of my Bobby, because he did a very nice showjumping round,” she says. “Okay, there was this one rail down, but sometimes you’re lucky, sometimes you’re not. I’m very happy and pleased to be here — but I want to say one thing to the Brits. They stole our trainer [Chris Bartle!] We’ve tried to give Chris our flag, or maybe another red jacket, but it’s not allowed!”

Maxime Livio finishes sixth with Api du Libaire. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

France’s Maxime Livio was frustrated to take out the middle element of the treble with his impressive eleven-year-old Api du Libaire, which dropped them down from bronze medal position to eventual sixth — but as he looks ahead to the Paris Olympics in three years’ time, which will be particularly important as they’re on home turf, there’s a lot to be excited about.

“My first reaction, of course, is to be disappointed, because my horse was jumping really, really good,” he says. “He was so careful, and normally in a combination he’s always going a little bit too much. This time, because he was so, so careful and focused on his job, he slowed himself a bit more than what I expected, and finally I lost five centimetres in the middle of the combination. But he really surprised me today, because normally I have to slow him in the combination. I should have been more with him and helped him to be more forward today.”

An unlucky day at the office saw the French team slip from bronze position to fifth place after none of its three remaining riders jumped a clear round.

“For sure, I’m disappointed for the team,” says Maxime, who began his week in fourth place on a 21.3. “I’ve lost two medals on a little mistake, but I’m very happy because it’s the first championship for the horse, and he’s very green at that level. So hopefully after two or three next season we’ll be a little bit more together and won’t make any mistakes.”

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S prove their class yet again. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Germany’s brightest up-and-coming talent Christoph Wahler finished seventh with Carjatan S after a repeat of the classy clear round that secured them second place at Luhmühlen CCI5* back in June, and a cross-country round full of all the right kind of calculated risks and direct approaches that added just 0.8 time penalties to their first-phase score of 26.

Felix Vogg interacts with a hugely enthusiastic home crowd after his stunning clear with Cartania. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Just below them, Felix Vogg and Cartania produced a similarly stylish clear to take eighth place and best of the host nation team, which finished fourth overall after climbing from an initial ninth place through the weekend under the tutelage of Andrew Nicholson. It was a particularly special round for Felix, whose mother, Danielle Vogg, is the organiser of Avenches and has been crucial to ensuring that a European Championships could even take place this year after the initial cancellation of the competition and its eventual relocation to Switzerland after a successful bid.

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats record their second consecutive top-ten finish at a European Championships. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Rounding out the top ten is Kitty King in ninth aboard Vendredi Biats, who dropped two placings after hitting the second fence, and Izzy Taylor in tenth with the much-matured Monkeying Around, who was yet another horse to take the middle part of the treble combination.

Izzy Taylor’s 2017 Six-Year-Old World Champion competes for Britain once again. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A bit of luck and some solid performances today, with just one rail down across the team, allowed Sweden to step up from sixth place to bronze medal position behind gold medallists Great Britain and silver medallists Germany. Austria, who have been so impressive through the week, finished sixth below France, while the historic first-ever Czech team rounded out the top ten of the team rankings, giving them a solid foothold to build from and proving that they have some serious talent in their ranks.

German team jumping trainer Marcus Döhring congratulates Chris Bartle — his former colleague and now ‘rival’ — for an incredible week. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But at the end of the day, as much as this is a European Championship and, as such, a battle to put one’s flag on the pole and hear the national anthem played, every competitor is a friend — and while this week’s British team might be an exemplar of the power of friendship, that camaraderie and community could be seen and felt every day, in every way for the first time since the outbreak of the pandemic. And so we sign off — for now — from the 2021 FEI European Eventing Championships, where hugging was back in fashion and a heaping helping of communal spirit, whether between riders or among the organising committee who managed to create a wonderful week on such short notice, made the whole world go ’round. Until next time, folks, Go Eventing.

Ingrid Klimke embraces newly-minted bronze medallist Sarah Bullimore, even after a knocked rail precluded her own chances of a podium finish. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The British-dominated individual top ten in the 2021 FEI European Eventing Championships.

The final team standings after four action-packed days of competition at the European Championships.

The 2021 FEI Longines European Championships: [Website] [Schedule and Scoring] [Entries] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

European Championships Field Thins by Six at Final Horse Inspection

EN’s coverage of the 2021 FEI Longines European Eventing Championships is brought to you in part by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products and its wide array of supplements available for your horse. 

Overnight leaders Nicolas Wilson and JL Dublin remain in the hunt and will showjump this afternoon. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After a week of dazzling sunshine, this morning’s gloom and drizzle seemed a grim omen ahead of the final horse inspection, held in front of a packed grandstand and officiated over the ground jury of Andrew Bennie (NZL)Christian Landolt (SUI), and Christian Steiner (AUT). And certainly, it wasn’t all plain sailing for the 57 assembled horses and riders, who tackled a tough, twisting track yesterday that evidently took a toll on a handful of competitors.

Second-placed Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD are accepted and will continue their fight for a third consecutive European title. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Both the team and individual podiums remain intact, with Great Britain fighting for both the team and individual gold after Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin took over the top spot with their faultless round yesterday, while Germany sits in silver medal position on both podiums too, as reigning champions Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD aim for a hat trick of wins, which would make the seventeen-year-old gelding the first horse to win the championship on three occasions. And in bronze? That’s France on both counts, with Maxime Livio bolstering his nation’s hopes with the smart eleven-year-old Api du Libaire, edging the Swiss team into fourth place overnight.

Julia Schmitz and Lady Like are among the spun pairs in the final inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Several teams find themselves out of contention entirely after losing multiple members of their team prior to showjumping. Belgium is down to just Karin Donckers and Leipheimer van’t Verahof and Kris Vervaecke and Guantanamo van Alsingen after both Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Ducati d’Arville and Julia Schmitz and Lady Like were sent to the holding box. Lara opted not to represent, while Julia and Lady Like represented but were subsequently spun.

Janneke Boonzaaijer and ACSI Champ de Tailleur wait to re-present at this morning’s final horse inspection. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was a similar story for the Dutch team, whose trailblazer Jordy Wilken withdrew Burry Spirit before the inspection. Janneke Boonzaaijer‘s Tokyo mount ACSI Champ de Tailleur was also spun, leaving just Merel Blom and The Quizmaster to compete for the Netherlands after Sanne de Jong‘s elimination for technically missing a fence yesterday.

Russia, too, is down a rider after Albert Khalikov and Argolis Tokyo were spun, and sole Finnish competitor Sanna Siltakorpi withdrew Bofey Click overnight after their impressive two-phase performance put them in the top twenty.

The entirety of the top ten remains intact following the final horse inspection, and will go ahead to this afternoon’s final showjumping session with just a pole separating the top seven. Here’s how they stack up at the moment:

The top ten after a dramatic cross-country phase at the FEI European Eventing Championships.

The first session of showjumping will begin at 11 a.m. local time/10.00 a.m. BST/5.00 a.m. Eastern time, followed by the top 25 from 14.00 local time/1.00 p.m. BST/8.00 a.m. Eastern time. As usual, you can watch all the action as it happens via ClipMyHorse.TV, and keep it locked on to EN for the full report from the exciting finale of the 2021 FEI European Championships. Until then: Go Eventing!

 

The 2021 FEI Longines European Championships: [Website] [Schedule and Scoring] [Entries] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Sunday Links

U.S. Weekend Action:

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores][EN’s Coverage]

Twin Rivers Fall International (Paso Robles, Ca.): [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores] [Volunteer]

ESDCTA New Jersey H.T. (Allentown, Nj.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Old Tavern H.T. at Great Meadow (The Plains, Va.): [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

University of New Hampshire H.T. (Durham, Nh.): [Website] [Results]

Major International Events:

FEI Eventing European Championships: [Website] [Entries] [Start List & Scores] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Sunday Links:

2021 European Eventing Championships – Save of the Day

Whitney Mahloch: Dancing Between Disciplines

Rider Reflections: Area VII Champions Conquer Rainy Weather and Championship Courses

How Do Old Horses Spend Their Days?

Get 30% Off Equitana USA Tickets

Sunday Video: Check out Nicola Wilson’s leading round from yesterday’s cross country action at the FEI Eventing European Championships:

XC Leading Round Day 3 | FEI Eventing European Championship – Avenches 2021

We’re going wild for Wilson! 😍Nicola Wilson has leapt into the lead with a textbook performance for Team GB that showcased the best of sport… and the best of British! 🇬🇧With JL Dublin, Nicola dominated a tough track with pure determination and power to sit in the gold position on 20.9 pens! Will they hold on to the gold!?🥇🤝 👀#RideTheMoment #FEIEuros2021

Posted by FEI Eventing on Saturday, September 25, 2021

Autumn Schweiss and Global Invieto DHI Win Stable View Oktoberfest CCI3*-S

Eventing Nation’s coverage of Stable View Oktoberfest is presented by Kentucky Performance products. The horse that matters to you, matters to Kentucky Performance Products, and they’ve designed a time-tested line of supportive products that will help your horse live his or her best life. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products.

Autumn Schweiss and Global Invieto DHI. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Autumn Schweiss’ labors bore fruit this weekend with a win the Stable View CCI3*-S aboard Julie Schweiss’ Global Invieto DHI.

“I imported him as a coming 5-year-old. He was a bit of an orangutan when I got him. He’s just a big, leggy dressage horse, but he just has the ability to jump as well,” Autumn said.

Sitting second overnight, Autumn and the 8-year-old KWPN nearly came to grief this morning before they even stepped out on course. “We straight out rolled one of the fences over. Got stuck in it. Broke our bridle,” she said.

Their miscommunication shook out the best in both of them, and after they were both evaluated by medics and a veterinarian they tore out over Capt. Mark Phillips’ track — in another horse’s bridle no less. “We jumped a few jumps and he felt better actually. [It] sharpened him up, and then he came out here and was so clever. I mean I wouldn’t say [our round] was picture perfect, but it was quite clever. I mean everyone that was in the top five is generally a pretty fast rider, right? Yeah. And I’m like, ‘Well, here I am.’ I’ve never made time with this horse.”

While she didn’t quite make the time (by one pesky second!) her trip was still enough for the win on a finishing score of 27.5.

Allison Springer and Crystal Crescent Moon. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Allison Springer was second with Crystal Crescent Moon. Petite by some standards, Nancy Winter’s 15.3-hand Connemara Sport Horse cross thundered around the Aiken track only one second too slow, adding 0.4 time penalties for a final result of 33.1.

Joe Meyer and Buccaneer. Photo by Shelby Allen.

With three in the division, Joe Meyer’s best result was Buccaneer in third place. Owned by the rider, the 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse added 1.2 time penalties toward their finishing score of 33.4.

Overnight leaders Ellie O’Neal and Zick Zack had a confident round which was free of jumping penalties, but 16 seconds cost them the win. The additional 6.4 time penalties leave them on a respectable 33.4 points, tied with Joe Meyer, but being farther from the optimum time lands them in fourth at day’s end.

Mary Bess Davis and Imperio Magic. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Mary Bess Davis and Imperio Magic were leaderboard climbers at this weekend’s event. Dressage saw them in 22nd place, but a clear round in yesterday’s show jumping bumped them to 10th. Today’s effort gave them a leg up of an additional 5 slots. They were only 2 seconds above optimum time for a final result of 35.9.

Kim Keeton and Keysoe. Photo by Shelby Allen.

All in all, jumping penalties were few around Capt. Mark Phillips’ CCI3*-S track, but time remained the ultimate competitor. Those who could go fast were well rewarded, included Kim Keeton who was the first to come through the finish flags double clear. The veterinarian and her beloved Keysoe finished seventh. The only other competitor to go penalty-free today was Elisa Wallace and Munson Slew, who finished 10th.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Shanroe Cooley. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Surprising absolutely no one, Ocala Horse Properties’ Shanroe Cooley won the CCI2*-S from start to finish with Liz Halliday-Sharp. The freshly crowned USEA Preliminary Horse Champion has now won his last six events consecutively.

Thanks for following along with us in Aiken. Go eventing.

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

 

 

Triumph and Disaster: Nicola Wilson Regains European Championships Lead After Cross-Country

EN’s coverage of the 2021 FEI Longines European Eventing Championships is brought to you in part by Kentucky Performance Products. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products and its wide array of supplements available for your horse.

There was a palpable shift that occurred about a third of the way through cross-country day at the FEI European Championships in Avenches, Switzerland. Whereas competitors walking the course for the final time in the morning sported set jaws and grim, focused expressions as they plotted their routes through the twists and turns, the riders with late times who had ventured out on their bikes to watch particularly tricky questions ridden were sunnier, more relaxed, and even quite chatty — because Mike Etherington-Smith‘s track, which had walked as an incredibly intense championship challenge, was proving far more rideable than expected.

Just ten of our 67 competitors fell by the wayside — and just three actually fell — over the course of today’s competition. Perhaps more surprising is that seven riders managed to beat the 10:07 optimum time, which had looked well nigh impossible to catch when wheeled — but so tightly packed were our competitors after the last two days of dressage, which saw nearly 30 pairs score in the 20s, that even a smidgen of time proved costly. And the problems, when they happened, weren’t inconsequential either, with a number of heavy-hitters running into trouble on Avenches’ cleverly-designed track.

Though the first two competitors on course picked up jumping penalties on their way to completion, it was the third out of the box — Ireland’s Sam Watson — who set a positive tone for the day to come. Though his ten-year-old Ballybolger Talisman is inarguably a serious cross-country talent, he’s also enormously inexperienced, and only made his first-ever trip out of Ireland last week for a run at CHIO Aachen. He was pulled into the Irish Europeans effort at the very last minute, after two selected horses with other riders had to be withdrawn, but nonetheless, riders, support teams, and members of the media alike looked to this round as an early indicator of what to expect, largely due to Sam’s analytical, clever cross-country riding. And what a round they offered up: though they initially finished with 15 penalties for a provisionally knocked flag, that was quickly removed, and they added just 6.8 time penalties to move 21 places up the leaderboard.

After that, blazingly fast rounds came thick and fast: French team trailblazer and 1993 European Champion Jean Lou Bigot recorded the first of the day with Utrillo du Halage, moving him from 26th to 12th on his score of 29.5, swiftly followed by another from British trailblazer Piggy March and her championship debutant Brookfield Inocent, who stepped up from sixth to fourth on 23.3. The next clear inside the time was delivered mere moments later by another Brit — this time, individual Izzy Taylor on her Burnham Market CCI4*-L winner Monkeying Around — and the fourth of the day was put forth by second British team rider Nicola Wilson and JL Dublin, who were third after dressage on their very impressive score of 20.9. When third up Kitty King and Vendredi Biats added just 0.8 time penalties to move up one place to seventh, and second individual Sarah Bullimore did the same with Corouet to hold onto fifth place, it seemed as though nothing could possibly go wrong in the Team GB camp.

Ros Canter and Allstar B give a masterclass through the corner question at 9AB before their round took an unfortunate turn later on course. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But this is real life, and this is horses, and sometimes, a Saturday full of action can take us all by surprise. As the third from last out of the start box, reigning World Champions and British team anchors Ros Canter and Allstar B had everything to play for: not just team gold, though that continued to look almost totally sewn up for the all-female team, but also their chance to fight for the individual title. They’d occupied the silver medal position after dressage, sitting on a tidy 20.6 — just 0.4 behind overnight leaders Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD. But a very fresh Hale Bob had had a couple of moments on course in which he looked marginally less rideable than usual, and that had cost them: they’d added 1.2 time penalties, which meant that if Ros could get a clear round logged with no more than two extra seconds added, they’d take over the top spot.

It all looked on track to happen, too. Super-experienced ‘Albie’ attacked the course almost in its entirety, and Ros used every ounce of her expertise to pilot the big, rangy horse economically through the courses myriad twists and turns. But then, just a handful of fences from home, disaster struck: as they cantered into fence 28AB, the Fischer Water, Albie simply cantered straight past the triple brush A element, giving him his first international cross-country jumping penalties since Burghley 2016. Ros regrouped and regathered the gelding, navigated through the water complex, and then headed out onto the long loop back to the second part of this final water — and the same thing happened again at the single triple brush heading towards the stables at 29. They would go on to complete, with the security of the British team at the forefront of their minds, but just like that, the dream was over in one of the most dramatic moments we’ve witnessed at a championship.

“I think he probably just got weary, and a bit demoralised by all the twisting and turning, with the size of horse he is,” she says. “This was a twistier track than Strzegom and places like that, and he’s a Badminton and Burghley horse, and I think the knock-on effect meant that his eyes were just running on the floor a bit and not up. He was amazing until then, but he did start to feel weary out of the second water.”

Potentially compounding this, she explains, was the fact that the pair had travelled out to Tokyo as team reserves but hadn’t run, which meant that their usual fitness routine was disrupted.

Nicola Wilson and ten-year-old JL Dublin regain their lead after a faultless clear inside the time. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Heartbreaking though Albie’s penalties were, all hope wasn’t lost in the British camp: those earlier fast clears mean that the team remains in gold medal position, while those 1.2 time penalties picked up by Ingrid allowed day one dressage leaders Nicola Wilson and her ten-year-old JL Dublin to regain their place atop the leaderboard, where they sit 0.5 penalties — or one second on tomorrow’s clock — ahead of the German supremo on their two-phase score of 20.9. Prior to her smooth, classy clear inside the time, though, Nicola admits she felt the pressure.

“It walked very difficult and intense all the way to the end of the course, I thought,” she says. “This is JL Dublin’s first championship; I’ve had him since a four-year-old, and we’ve thought an awful lot of him, but until you put that extra pressure of riding for a team on him, you don’t quite know how they’re going to cope with it.”

Despite Nicola’s  trepidation about the course — which she says had a lovely flow, despite being fast and furious — her Holsteiner gelding stepped up to the plate as he has done through this extraordinary season, which has seen him win the CCI4*-L at Bicton and the CCI4*-S at Hartpury.

“He was magical,” she beams. “Yesterday I gave him a little jump, and he was calm and cool, and then this morning when I got him out to prepare him for cross-country, the squeals were back. He knew it was his day, and I just thought, ‘good boy, Dublin.'”

Nicola was able to remain up on the clock by finding economical lines, hugging the ropes wherever possible and riding crisp, clear lines to the fences — even with a planned long route between fences 6 and 7, a meaty hedge on a turn to a wide spread fence that could be jumped as a corner, which most of the riders opted to play it safe at.

“I think I walked [the course] five or six times, just to make sure I knew where every single turn was. There was lots of little ups and downs and then fences on a turn, so I had to make sure I knew where to do my little preparation points, where to balance him and where I could really just keep motoring. I couldn’t be prouder of him; he was just super from start to finish and he gave me a fantastic ride. It was just such a buzz, and I’m so relieved it’s behind us now and it’s gone so well!”

Ingrid Klimke and SAP Hale Bob OLD slip into silver after adding 1.2 time penalties after a couple of ‘nearly’ moments. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ingrid Klimke‘s quest for her third consecutive European Championships victory, which would make SAP Hale Bob OLD the first horse ever to win three in a row, might have been slightly complicated by her 1.2 time penalties today, but she remained full of praise and admiration for the exceptional seventeen-year-old after her round, which saw the very fit gelding attack the course with grit and gumption — perhaps a fraction too much, sometimes.

“He was very bold and fast, especially in the beginning,” says Ingrid, “and at the seven minute point I was really very good under the time. Then, in the end, I found it quite twisty and turning, and I lost the last few seconds at the end, I think. I wanted to push a bit too much in the second water so he added an extra stride, to tell me  ‘no, wait, we can’t go faster than this!’ I just love him, because he’s so clever and so smart, and I really thought I could enjoy it. I didn’t have to sweat or work hard, because he was doing his job as perfect Bobby.”

France’s Maxime Livio steps up into bronze medal position after piloting the inexperienced Api du Libaire to 1.2 time penalties. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ingrid’s finishing time was matched by that of Maxime Livio and his eleven-year-old Selle Français Api du Libaire, who tackled the course with a bit of the ‘allez allez’ typical of French riders and their horses. After a shock fall two-thirds of the way around the course for second team rider Gwendolen Fer and her Pau winner Romantic Love, who sat 14th after dressage on 26.5, a high-octane clear was needed to keep France in the hunt for a medal — and Maxime managed that, contributing to the team’s overnight bronze medal position.

“I’m very happy; he’s not so experienced, and the course is not really the one he’d like because it’s turning a lot,” he says. “But in the first eight minutes he was really with me and trying his best to continue quite fast. In the water when I came back I felt the jumps were not so energetic as in the beginning, so I thought, I have to secure everything a bit from that moment to the end, especially for the team — so it was quite tense for me!”

Maxime was one of the only riders throughout the day to opt for the shorter direct route between fences six and seven, which was considered a particularly risky spot for a runout early on course — but with team and individual medals on the line, and a Gallic proclivity for riding positive distances, it wasn’t hard for the rider to make the bold choice there, particularly as his horse was so attentive from the start.

“He really fought with me, and he was playing my game right until the end,” he says. “From the beginning, with my horse’s big stride, I said to [chef d’equipe Thierry Touzaint] that it was quite clear to me, because for me, forward strides are quite normal. I said to him, if he wanted me to be as close as possible to the time, I have to go straight everywhere. I tried to use what is the natural quality of my horse, and to answer the questions fast enough and smooth enough for him.”

Piggy March and Brookfield Inocent look full of running at the tail end of the course. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British team pathfinder Piggy March remains on her dressage score of 23.3 and steps up from sixth to fourth overnight after romping home an impressive ten seconds inside the time with championship debutant Brookfield Inocent, despite taking the British tactic of opting for the long route at 6 to 7.

“He’s made for tracks like this,” says Piggy, who finished second with the gelding on his five-star debut around another famously twisty course at Pau last year. “To be honest, he’s made for most courses! He’s a very, very good cross-country horse, and my only worry was fence six — but having heard that someone had made the time going the long route, I knew that there wouldn’t be many people sat on as fast a horse as mine is, and I knew that on his day, there’s no reason why he shouldn’t be able to get away with a long route and still do the time. If that fence was number twenty, I wouldn’t even have thought about the option, but he can be spooky at the beginning of courses, and I was just very worried about how that fence was very free, and having that big jump angling the hedge…[if he were to] jinx at the line of trees, it would be a very genuine mistake, but he’s still at that stage. As brilliant as he is, he’s a character, and so the more I walked it, the more I thought that my plan was to go long there.”

Though the gelding looked fit and well over the final fences on course, Piggy explains that the track was mentally and physically tiring for him: “He got tired enough for a horse that’s as much of a cruiser as he is. I felt like I nudged him, but that would be natural for a course where you turn back this much. The moment he got on a straight, he got into a rhythm and you did nothing, but it’s hard with all the twists and turns. It’s a very intense, one-day event course in a three-day event format.”

But, she continues, “”We had a lovely time. It makes it very easy when you’re sat on a horse that’s as wonderful as he is.”

Sarah Bullimore’s pint-sized Corouet pings his way around the tough track to sit fifth going into showjumping. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British individual Sarah Bullimore retains her fifth place position after crossing the finish line just two seconds over the optimum time with pocket-sized homebred Corouet, whose dam, Lilly Corinne, was Sarah’s partner for her previous European Championships appearance in 2015.

“He was awesome — he was just amazing,” says a delighted Sarah, who produced one of the smoothest rounds of the day aboard the big-striding 15.2hh gelding. “He made it feel like a Pony Club track; there were all those huge, wide fences, and everyone kept remarking on them while we were walking — and I was like, ‘yes, they’re actually wider than the length of my poor little horse!’ But he flew over them. Most horses cross-country, you hear them tap-tap and slightly feel their way around, but he must have been a foot above everything. He’s just amazing.”

Corouet, who Sarah describes as having something of a Napoleon complex, burst out of the startbox full of attitude, and Sarah’s 0.8 time penalties likely came from some early negotiations: “He was a little bit fresh to set off and a little bit like, ‘get off, get off,’ and I think that’s where my couple of seconds came from, but he was fabulous the whole way around,” she explains.

Like her fellow Brits, she opted for the long route at six and seven, though as an individual competitor, the decision was wholly her own.

“I didn’t like that question so early on — I just didn’t think it was that clear. Knowing him, he’d have been absolutely fine the straight way, but I just knew he would possibly shy and give himself a huge bit of hedge to jump. It’s quite a big drop on it, and I quite like my pony, so I thought I’d let him save some energy and make it a little bit clearer.”

Whatever ground they may have lost there, they made up in spades later on, choosing a sharp inside line to the rolltop at 24 and opting for swift direct routes with a ferocity that belies Sarah’s pre-round feelings about the challenge to come and the opportunity to prove, for the umpteenth time, that she’s one of Britain’s most consistent and competitive riders.

“I have to admit to feeling fairly terrified this morning of going and making a cock-up somewhere. Having spent ten years trying to get here, I didn’t want to spend another ten years just fighting to be a reserve again — I don’t think I could go that long!”

Michael Jung’s fischerWild Wave continues to show a marked maturity in his first championship. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nine-year-old fischerWild Wave‘s five-star debut at Luhmühlen this year has proven to be a pivotal part of his education under Michael Jung: after three exciting but obviously green phases there, he’s come out on superb form thus far in this, his championship debut, and his clear inside the time sees him in sixth place overnight on 23.9.

“He’s a young horse but an amazing horse, and he has a lot of talent in all three disciplines,” says Michael, who has previously won the European Champion title three times on three different horses, and finds himself less than a rail off the gold medal position going into tomorrow’s competition. “Today in the cross-country he showed how light and easy he’s galloping. He has super endurance, he has lots of scope, and he just needs, for the bigger, tougher courses, a bit more experience. They have to learn to be clever and they have to think, but he’s an amazing horse, and I’m so happy about him.”

Though Michi is hugely experienced and has piloted a plethora of different mounts at the top level, Wild Wave has taken some careful production to ensure that he stays focused, not least because of his impressive size, which could make for a difficult ride if he wasn’t quite so on the ball.

“When you go to the start or you go to the first fence he can look at the fence judges sometimes, or he can drift a bit — and he’s a big horse, not, for example, like Sam or Rocana who are more like ponies. He’s 17hh, I think, but he’s light and he’s not heavy on the jumps; he’s very good,” he says.

Kitty King and Vendredi Biats motor to 0.8 time penalties and overnight seventh. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“It’s been quite stressful in the build-up, because we were reserves for Tokyo, and you panic that you’re never going to quite make it here, and then you panic that you’re going to mess up for the team,” says an emotional Kitty King after her round with Vendredi Biats, which saw them add 0.8 time penalties to move into seventh — the same placing they finished on at the 2019 Europeans, where they rode as individuals and were the highest-placed British combination. Today, they looked even more polished than they had in that impressive performance, despite a near miss at the Flowerbox arrowheads at 10AB, where they got in too deep to the first element and then had to add a stride to the second — a manoeuvre that, once upon a time, might have tempted the spicy French gelding to nip out to the side.

“He was absolutely fabulous and spot-on everywhere, and he got me out of trouble when I made a mistake at the double of arrowheads — he was superb,” she says. “I think after such a long gallop, he just got a little bit further out from me and a little strung out, and I could have done with doing something a bit earlier. But that’s cross-country, and it’s never perfect the whole way around. We have to help each other out, and he definitely did there.”

After waiting for their moment for so long, Kitty is, more than anything, just delighted to be back on the main stage with the gelding.

“It’s just a relief to have gotten to a championship with him after building up for so long. The last time I did a three-day with him was at Luhmühlen in the Europeans in 2019, so it’s been a long time coming, and I’m just so chuffed with how he went.”

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S take calculated risks to step into eighth provisionally. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

German individual Christoph Wahler and his Luhmühlen runner-up Carjatan S made it clear from the moment they left the start box that they were there to take educated risks and make their move up the leaderboard, and they did just that: they were the first of the day — and among the only ones — to take the tricky direct route from six to seven, which they did with a style and panache that continued throughout their round. Ultimately, they’d add 0.8 time to their dressage score of 26, moving them from twelfth to ninth place as we head into the finale phase — and after they delivered the classiest showjumping round of the day at Luhmühlen back in June, their competitors will be feeling the pressure from this hugely exciting pair.

Their round today is even more impressive after Christoph’s observation after his dressage test that the course wasn’t well-suited to his gelding.

“It was absolutely incredible the way my horse did it today, because this course doesn’t suit him perfectly,” he says. “He’s a big, rangy horse with a long stride, and for him it was hard work getting all the turns and the combinations and stuff, but he was so honest and always kept his jump. He was always looking for the next jump and I tried to support him as much as I could, because if I didn’t do a mistake then he for sure wouldn’t do one.”

Felix Vogg is best of the home side after cross-country, finishing inside the time with Cartania and helping the Swiss team to fourth place overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The host nation finds itself in a competitive fourth place overnight after excellent rounds by Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH (now 12th after adding 1.2 time penalties) and Patrick Rüegg and Fifty Fifty, who jumped a sensible clear trailblazing round for 14  time penalties and 36th place. But the start of the Swiss effort was ninth-placed Felix Vogg, son of Avenches organiser Danielle, who delivered one of the seven clears inside the time with his impressive mare Cartania, to the vocal delight of the enthusiastic audience.

“There’s no other word than amazing — for the horse and the crowd,” he says. “We had a good start, and the whole route, you could feel that she’s inexperienced but she wanted to do her job. I think these days, you need horses like this, and she just pulled from the first fence to the last fence in the same way, and you cannot describe the feeling of how the crowd was. It’s just special, and a lot of people from our home show came to build, and a lot of people who ride with me are helping here, so it’s a family competition.”

Izzy Taylor’s Monkeying Around once again proves how much he’s matured, jumping an excellent clear inside the time. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I’m delighted and relieved with him,” says Izzy Taylor of her ten-year-old Hanoverian Monkeying Around, who jumped yet another clear inside the time to round out the top ten. He’s undeniably one of the sport’s great young talents — a point he proved when winning the Six Year Old World Championship at Le Lion d’Angers in 2017 — but although he’s picked up some seriously impressive recent results, including a win in Burnham Market’s CCI4*-L last autumn, he’s also got a history of being a bit complicated and, well, rather a monkey. But you’d never have known that by watching today as he navigated the track gamely, asking his rider for extra help when he needed it but never for a moment looking as though he wanted to seek an easier way out.

“He’s still green, and like all these younger horses, the last eighteen months have been a little bit nonexistent for him,” she says. “They definitely haven’t seen people, and I think to start with, he wanted to have a look at all the people — but he was fantastic, and really genuine, and he tried his little heart out all the way around. Yes, he was green, but he was a good boy.”

Our remaining 57 horses and riders will head into showjumping from 11.00 a.m. local time/10.00 a.m. BST/5.00 a.m. Eastern time — but first, they need to contend with the final horse inspection, which takes place at 9.00 a.m. local time. After a week of blazing sunshine, tomorrow’s set to be stormy, and this evening has already been punctuated by dramatic lightning, which could add an extra challenge to the final phase. With just one rail separating the top seven, it’s going to a perfect storm no matter what the sky does — so stick around for the full story from the action-packed finale of the 2021 FEI European Championships. Go Eventing!

The top ten after a dramatic cross-country phase at the FEI European Eventing Championships.

The team standings after cross-country.

The 2021 FEI Longines European Championships: [Website] [Schedule and Scoring] [Entries] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore’s Hot Streak Continues at Stable View Oktoberfest

Eventing Nation’s coverage of Stable View Oktoberfest is presented by Kentucky Performance products. The horse that matters to you, matters to Kentucky Performance Products, and they’ve designed a time-tested line of supportive products that will help your horse live his or her best life. Click here to learn more about Kentucky Performance Products.

Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Winner winner chicken dinner x 2! Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore have just won their second consecutive CCI4*-S of the fall season — first at Great Meadow International, and now at here Stable View Oktoberfest.

“It’s a work in progress,” Phillip said of David Vos, Ann Jones, and Tom Tierney’s Irish Sport Horse. At 12, Singapore has been somewhat of a late bloomer, but 2021 is proving to be his year. “It was a little bit of a slow process. He was slow to mature, but certainly he’s coming into his own now.”

Phillip Dutton and Fernhill Singapore. Photo by Shelby Allen.

The Olympic bronze medalist led from pillar to post. A dressage score of 23.8 gave the pair breathing room for a few penalties across the jumping phases, including the 0.4 time penalties added today. Their time of 6 minutes and 18 seconds made them the fastest pair of the division — a massive accomplishment for this horse who has not always been so adjustable to benefit the time.

“It’s one thing to go faster — then you have got to be able to come back and prepare for the jumps, especially if, you know, there’s a good technical line, and that’s usually been the trouble with him. It’s the time it takes getting back the right way. So that part’s getting better. Today was a good prep for Maryland,” Phillip said.

While Phillip’s second entry, Sea of Clouds, was galloping around beautifully, they accidentally jumped an Intermediate fence, which left them with a technical elimination.

Dom Schramm and Bolytair B. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Speaking of turbo boosters, Dom Schramm motored around with Bolytair B as the second fastest of the day, a mere 2 seconds over the optimum time. The Team Bolytair B’s Dutch Warmblood earned a final score of 33.8 for second place.

Doug Payne and Quantum Leap. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Third place was awarded to Doug Payne after a confidence-inspiring round with his own and Jessica Payne’s Quantum Leap. Bred stateside by Elizabeth Callahan, the 10-year-old Holsteiner gelding picked up 5.6 time penalties to finish on a score of 39.7.

Leslie Law and Voltaire de Tre. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Leslie Law was the most well represented in this division with four entries, and he piloted all of them into the top ten. Voltaire de Tre was fourth (41), Lady Chatterly was fifth (43.1), First Class was ninth (48.3) and Typically Fernhill was tenth (51.4).

Karl Slezak and Fernhill Wishes. Photo by Shelby Allen.

Canada’s Karl Slezak piloted his Fernhill Wishes into sixth place. The Irish Sport Horse/Holsteiner had an even 10 time penalties for a three-phase result of 43.9. Clayton Fredericks is seventh with FE Stormtrooper on a score of 44.5, and Liz Halliday-Sharp is eighth with Cooley Quicksilver (46.3).

There was plenty to do across Capt. Mark Phillips’ track, but the Bobcat Meadows Oxer to Corner combination at 21 proved to be the most influential. The massive open oxers and corner accounted for two stops and two frangible pins. Despite issues peppered elsewhere, 64% of the division completed without jump penalties. Well done!

Stable View Oktoberfest 2/3/4* and H.T. (Aiken, Sc.): [Website] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Volunteer]

Photo Gallery: Twin Rivers Hosts Fall International, Youth Team Challenge

The West coast riders are also busy gearing up for the big events of the fall season, which makes for a busy weekend of eventing action at Twin Rivers in Paso Robles, Ca. We’re also getting a glimpse of Tamie Smith, who seems immune to jet lag, as she scurried back from Aachen to pilot a few of her other horses around at Twin Rivers before flying back to Europe for the upcoming Boekelo CCI4*-L. Twin is also running Future and Young Event Horse competition as well as a Youth Team Challenge, so there is a lot to keep up with. Thankfully, our friends at Ride On Video are providing a free live stream throughout the weekend — and its cross country day!

Click image to go to live stream.

Many thanks to Ride On Photo for providing some images from the action so far. Here’s a look at your FEI leaders:

CCI4*-S: Tamie Smith and Fleeceworks Royal (37.5)
CCI3*-S: Haley Turner and Shadow Inspector (28.6)
CCI2*-S: Kaylawna Smith-Cook and AEV Above Authority (34.7)

Follow along with live scoring here. Twin Rivers could still use a few volunteers for cross country today, so if you’re in the area stop by or sign up here.