Classic Eventing Nation

2024 Dutta Corp. USEA Young Event Horse West Coast Championships To Bring Together Fascinating Eventing Prospects

Andrea Baxter and Camelot PJ. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography

From a warmblood bred by an animal science program at a junior college that usually breeds Quarter Horses to a sibling of a top-three finisher at Badminton in England to the oldest son out of a mare that died in a trailer accident that made international news, it will be a unique, talented, and special group of horses at the 2024 Dutta Corp. USEA Young Event Horse (YEH) West Coast Championships.

One week after That’s Me Z and Tommy Greengard, the 2022 winner of the 5-year-old championship, represented the United States in the FEI WBFSH Eventing World Breeding Championships at Le Lion D’Angers in France, Twin Rivers Ranch in Paso Robles, California, will once again host the West Coast’s championship classes for 4- and 5-year-olds that culminate the year’s YEH Program on October 25-26, along with a Last Chance Qualifier on October 24.

The YEH championships have become a significant step on the ladder that some of the top American eventing prospects are climbing on their way to the highest levels of the sport. With their victory in 2022, “Z” (Take A Chance On Me Z x Venetia) and Greengard secured the prestigious Holekamp/Turner YEH Lion d’Angers Grant as the highest-scoring 5-year-old out of both the East Coast and West Coast championships.

“Both personally as a rider and as a member of the YEH committee, I’ve seen the incredible value that being part of the YEH championships means for their development, and I’m talking about all horses in the standings, not just the ones that place high,” said Andrea Baxter, who has competed in YEH competitions since 2007. “Getting the young horses on a stage that they don’t otherwise get to do and putting the limelight on them, they get such a good experience out of it. It gives everybody a focused goal. It’s teaching the horses to stay in a nice, forward rhythm and pick off the jumps in a confident, rhythmical style that will set them up for future success.”

The Baxter family that has owned and operated Twin Rivers since 2001 has made a significant commitment to growing eventing programs for young horses on the West Coast, including hosting the West Coast championships as a standalone event starting in 2020.

Andrea won the 5-year-old West Coast championship in 2023 with Camelot PJ (Colman x Hauptstutbuch Evita), and she is currently campaigning him, as well as another of her 2023 YEH horses in The Big Easy (Mr Lincoln B x PLS Hippo Q), to top-10 finishes at the two-star level.

Andrea Baxter and MBF Dig Deep. Ride On Photo.

Others from the 2023 5-year-old West Coast championship are also making their mark as 6-year-olds in 2024. Third-place finisher LS Crown Royal (by Comte) was a recent winner at the Preliminary level at Spokane in Washington with Jordan Linstedt. Fourth-place finisher Monbeg Salt Fever (Womanizer x Eden Breeze) won at Preliminary at Archer in Wyoming and competed in the USEF/USEA Developing Horse National Championship in the CCI2*YH-S division for 6-year-olds at Morven in Virginia. Seventh-place finisher HSH Cellesto (Cellestial x Lotte) won the CCI1*-S at Spokane.

Baxter will seek to repeat in the 2024 5-year-old West Coast championship with MBF Insta and will have MBF Dig Deep in the 4-year-old championship.

MBF Dig Deep (Golddigger x Amber) posted the best 4-year-old qualifying score in the country with 88.15 in winning the qualifier at the Twin Rivers Fall International, according to the USEA’s list of horses qualified for the Dutta Corp. USEA YEH Championships.

“I’ve never been so excited about a horse as I am for Dig Deep,” Baxter said afterward. “He’s a super athlete with all the qualities to be a top horse. I bought him as another ‘easy button’ accident, but this horse is the real deal. I’m so excited.”

MBF Insta (Upsilon x Adora Silvi Mia) is one of four 2024 5-year-old West Coast championship entrants that competed in the 2023 4-year-old championship, along with Cobain PJ (Carridam PJ x Evian) ridden by Sigourney Jellins, Cupido Van de Hoge Dijken Z (Campino Gold x Cendrillon de L’herse) ridden by Allyson Hartenburg, and Crockanboy Dancer (Echonix x Ardragh Dancing Queen) ridden by Michlynn Sterling.

In addition to MBF Dig Deep coming into the USEA YEH West Coast Championships with the highest 4-year-old qualifying score, FE Kyoto (Karajan x Zara XXVI) achieved the highest 5-year-old qualifying score of 89.75 in 2024 ridden by Elsa Warble at Shepherd Ranch in California.

Helen Alliston and Fary Prince. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Helen and James Alliston will be competing in the West Coast championships at Twin Rivers for the first time.

“We haven’t had a lot of time to show these 5-year-olds, to be honest, and it’s a nice way to expose them to a big show environment, but it’s in a friendly place that they’ve all schooled at and been to,” Helen said.

Helen will ride Fary Prince (The After Party x Farytale Cooley), who is coming off a win at the Training level at Woodside in California.

“He’s the easiest, most lovely young horse that James or I have ever worked with,” Helen said. “Everything you ask him to do he says yes with a smile on his face. He’s good at everything. We’re all kind of waiting to see a dark side because he’s too perfect right now. We’re really, really excited about him.”

For Fary Prince to be competing in California with Helen is both sentimental and full-circle because he is the oldest son of the his Farytale Cooley (Ustinov Van Elsenham x Bulana) that was ridden in England by Sophie Hulme. Hulme is originally from California and trained with the Allistons before moving to England. Hulme lost “Feyre” and two of her other horses in a tragic trailer accident on the way to their first FEI event together in Scotland in 2021.

“I am so thankful we took embryos off her and I hope that her babies and myself can make her proud and show the world what they missed,” Hulme wrote in a blog post for Glaze & Gordon.
Hulme started Fary Prince before the bay British Sport Horse gelding came from England to the United States as a 4-year-old.

“This is her oldest son, so it’s really cool that this horse is so amazing because it can carry on what could have been his mom’s legacy,” Helen Alliston said.
James’ three entries, the most in the 5-year-old championship, are Balief MBF, Berry, and Konditori. All three have different backgrounds.

Balief MBF (HHS Cornet x Lazio) was the fifth-highest-priced of 64 3-year-olds at the 2023 Goresbridge Go For Gold auction in Ireland, and James acquired the bay Irish Sport Horse mare from her previous owner after she came to the United States.

Sigourney Jellins and Cobain PJ. Ride On Photo.

James acquired Berry (Crelido x Quazimodo VD) via an Internet post by Modesto Junior College, located about an hour’s drive from the Allistons. Modesto Junior College’s animal science program has a breeding program for students. James said that Berry’s dam was a Grand Prix show jumper that was donated to the college as a broodmare after an injury ended her competitive career.

“They breed a few foals for the students to learn about reproduction in horses and looking after the foals, and then they sell the foals on,” James said. “So, that’s how I came about him, and it’s kind of a cool story. They normally breed Quarter Horses and just do one a year, I think, or something like that, but they got donated this really amazing broodmare. They got donated some semen to a 1.60-meter stallion as well, so it’s really nicely bred for show jumping.”

Berry’s name was bestowed on him by the college because his dam was called “Kiwi.”

Konditori (Womanizer x Ruby Roller) shares the same dam as the 2024 third-place finisher at Badminton, Quindiva (by Quintender) ridden by Alexander Bragg. Konditori’s sire is the sire of five-star eventers Cooley Quicksilver ridden by Liz Halliday and CHF Cooliser ridden by Tom McEwen.

Returning to judge the YEH West Coast Championships as he did in 2023 is Christian Schact from Germany, a world-renowned expert on conformation and pedigree. He will be joined in 2024 by Sally Ike from the United States, a member of the 1968 U.S. Olympic team and a licensed judge and course designer for more than 30 years.

On Thursday will be the Last Chance Qualifier judged by Wendy Wergeles. Dressage and conformation evaluations for the championships will take place on Friday, with the jumping tests on the course designed by Adri Doyal on Saturday. On Sunday, Twin Rivers will host the popular and spirited Halloween One Day H.T. and C.T. to culminate the year of eventing at Twin Rivers Ranch.

Full entries for the Dutta Corp. West Coast USEA YEH Championships can be found here.

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

A star-studded “kiss and cry” for Oliver Townend’s show jumping round with Ballaghmor Class leads us off this morning, as captured by Amy Dragoo behind the lens. That’s quite a cheering section!

Events Opening Today

Rocking Horse December H.T. (FL)

Events Closing Today

Virginia Horse Center Eventing Fall (VA); River Glen Fall H.T. (TN); Horse Trials at Majestic Oaks (FL)

News & Reading

As the competition season slows down, it’s the perfect time to focus on maximizing your horse’s downtime. In the latest episode of the USEA Podcast, Meghan O’Donoghue share tips on maintaining your horse’s physical and mental well-being during the off-season. Learn strategies to ensure they come back stronger and ready for the next challenge. Listen to the full episode here.

Prime Star lived up to his name, showing off his current talent and future potential at the Dutta Corp. USEA YEH East Coast 4-Year-Old Championships this weekend at the MARS Maryland 5 Star. With all the qualities of a future superstar, this promising young horse took home the top honors, impressing judges with his talent and composure. Read all about his journey to the championship and what makes him stand out from the crowd here.

British Eventing has launched the British Eventing Training Foundation, aiming to provide structured education and development opportunities for eventing riders at all levels. This new initiative will support athletes through tailored programs, helping them progress in the sport. Learn more about the foundation’s goals and what it means for the future of British eventing here.

Sponsor Corner: Kentucky Performance Products

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Video Break

Ride around the MARS Maryland 5 Star CCI3*-L cross country with Elisa Wallace and Tullymurry Fifi:

Weekend Winners: Maryland 5*, Hagyard, Ram Tap, Windermere, & Willow Draw

We’ve been soaking up the action at the Maryland 5* this weekend, either enjoying in person, or staying glued to the coverage. In addition to the big event this weekend, we also saw events running throughout the mid-West and West coast.

Congrats to all for successful outings this weekend, as the end of the season is approaching. We’re giving our Weekend Winners a shout out as always, with an extra special shout out to the winner of our Unofficial Low Score Award, Lauren Slavin and Figlio, who won the Open Beginner Novice B division at Hagyard Midsouth Three-day Event on a 21.5!

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Scoring] [EN’s Coverage]

CCI 5*: Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class (31.3)
CCI 3*: Sharon White and Jaguars Duende (29.6)
YEH 5 Year Old: Emily Bradford and Rose Traveler (88.94)
YEH 4 Year Old: Madison Temkin and Prime Star (88.76)

Hagyard Midsouth Three-day Event (KY): [Website] [Scoring]

CCI 2* Long: Sarah Ertl and Redwood Quality (31.8)
CCI 3* Short: Alexandra Kuhn and Little Hail (47.3)
Open Intermediate: Jordan Riske and MM Irish Clover (50.2)
Open Preliminary A: Alexa Thompson and Box Gambler (25.3)
Open Preliminary B: Benjamin Noonan and Street Fighter (25.3)
Open Training A: Sarah Ertl and Global Showtime (28.6)
Open Training B: Macy Clark and Bailando (26.1)
Open Training C: Laura Wilhem and Redfield Soranella (31.1)
Open Training D: Caitlin Henderson and Battle Of Ramadi (26.9)
Training 3 Day HT: Kathleen Fitzgerald and Global Pixie (34.0)
Open Novice A: Erin Pullen and The Luckdragon (28.1)
Open Novice B: Jennifer Ramsey and Docktarri (26.5)
Open Novice C: Danielle Northup and Wild Mission (28.1)
Open Novice D: Kate Sand and Miss Congeniality (27.5)
Open Novice Non Team: Madeline Bletzacker and Drummer Boy (24.7)
Novice 3 Day: Darci Burton and VS Correlli Surprise (27.0)
Open Beginner Novice A: Elliot Bizjak and N’Pressive (23.8)
Open Beginner Novice B: Lauren Slavin and Figlio (21.5)
Open Beginner Novice C: Abigail Conner and Bright Prince (27.9)
Open Beginner Novice D: Leslie van der Wal and Ballinaclough Caruso (30.6)
Open Beginner Novice Non Team: Melanie Helms and Edelweiss du theil (25.6)

Ram Tap National H.T. (CA): [Website] [Scoring]

Advanced: James Alliston and Cora (44.3)
Open Intermediate: India McEvoy and E’zara (34.4)
Open Preliminary: Luna Souchard and Moto GP (24.7)
Open Modified: Jessica Higgins and Finnegan (28.3)
Open Training: Ruth Bley and Claas (26.8)
Novice Rider: Carrie Finno and Zahara (29.4)
Open Novice: James Alliston and NSF Bye the Way (22.2)
Beginner Novice Rider Provisional Scores: Jacalyn Kaufman and Untouchable Rock (28.4)
Open Beginner Novice: Chloe Smyth and SR Myconos (24.7)
Grasshopper Provisional Scores: Charlotte Wilsey and #Iwokeuplikethis (30.6)
Open Introductory Provisional Scores: Kristin Terris and Sportsfield Cool Lady (26.3)

Windermere Run H.T. (MO): [Website] [Scoring]

Preliminary Champ: Rebecca Hunt and Snowflake Lane (55.8)
Modified Champ: Ann Bower and San Rubin (54.0)
Open Modified: Hadley Schneider and Marvelous Mrs. Hazel (33.2)
Open Training: Charlotte Schaef and Tinraher Diamond (29.3)
Training Champ: Rayna Williams and Storm Surge (39.4)
Novice Champ: Jessica Ptak-Hooker and Mr. Flattery (29.6)
Novice Rider: Lahn Looney and Pro TIP (31.8)
Open Novice: Jennifer Selvig and Hot Shot Kid (30.3)
BNovice Champ: Renee Senter and Regina (26.6)
BNovice Rider: Kaylin Conner and Lord Riverman (32.0)
Open BNovice: Kirsten Hiles and Beatrix SWF (25.7)
Open Starter A: Amber Roberts Graham and Elegant Solution (31.6)
Open Starter B: Addison Hamlett and Just Enough (33.3)
Starter Champ: Brynn Liberda and Rumor Has It (27.3)

Willow Draw Charity Show (TX): [Website] [Scoring]

Open Training: Lynne Partridge and Milatour Parisol (23.8)
Training Rider: Barbie Violi and Crugraff (29.5)
Novice Rider: Lilian Pham and Lady (32.1)
Open Novice: Alexis Lind and Pepper Moon (22.8)
BNovice Rider: Autumn Arnone and Windchase Andromeda (34.4)
Open BNovice: Laura Young and Dash (33.7)
Open Starter Jr: Henrietta Fikes and Right to Play (38.0)
Open Starter Sr: Jenna McGowan-Terry and Break My Stride (28.3)

Monday News & Notes from Futuretrack

Many congratulations are in order to our newly-crowned champion young horses at Mondial du Lion (France) this weekend. Great Britain’s Gemma Stevens took home the 7-year-old title with the Chilli Morning clone, Chilli Morning VI, adding no penalties through the three phases to her dressage score of 26.2.

Meanwhile, the Netherlands’ Merel Blom won the 6-year-old title aboard Killer Queen, also finishing on a very competitive dressage score of 25.1.

Hallie Coon was the best of the U.S. in the 6-year-old division, finishing fifth aboard Boleybawn Oliva on a score of 33.7. Tommy Greengard was the top-placed U.S. in the 7-year-old championship, finishing 16th with That’s Me Z on a score of 37.8.

Mondial Du Lion – FEI WBFSH Eventing World Championship for Young Horses (France): [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays]

U.S. Weekend Preview

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Scores] [EN’s Coverage]

Hagyard Midsouth Three-day Event (KY): [Website] [Scores]

Ram Tap National H.T. (CA): [Website] [Scores]

Windermere Run H.T. (MO): [Website] [Scores]

Willow Draw Charity Show (TX): [Website] [EScores]

News & Reading

In an interesting twist for equine nutrition, green bananas are gaining attention as a gut superfood for horses. Rich in resistant starch, these unripe bananas help support gut health by acting as a prebiotic, feeding beneficial bacteria in the equine digestive system. Their unique composition aids in promoting a healthy microbiome, making them a valuable addition to the equine diet. To learn more about how green bananas can benefit your horse’s gut health, check out the full article on The Horse.

Killer Queen has claimed the title of World Champion for six-year-old event horses at the FEI World Breeding Eventing Championships for Young Horses. Bred by Morena Petersen, this talented Holsteiner mare showcased her exceptional abilities across all phases of the competition, making her the new star to watch in the eventing world. With this remarkable win, Killer Queen cements her place as a rising force in the sport. For more on her journey to the top, check out the full article on Buschreiter.de.

Christoph Wahler’s Carjatan S is stepping away from the spotlight of high-level sport to embrace a new role. This Holsteiner gelding, known for his incredible performances at the top of the eventing world, will now focus on breeding and supporting the next generation of equine talent. After a career filled with remarkable achievements, Carjatan S leaves behind a legacy of excellence and turns to a new chapter. For more details on his transition, read more here.

Video Break

Ride around the 3*-L at Maryland 5 Star with Laine Ashker and Lovedance:

Thank you grandpa for giving me the strength and bravery to pilot my incredible mare around the toughest track of her life. I 👏🏽AM👏🏽SO👏🏽PROUD👏🏽. Let's finish strong tomorrow🤞🏼🤞🏼🤞🏼

Posted by Lainey Ashker on Saturday, October 19, 2024

Jaguars Duende Crowned Queen of CCI3*-L at MARS Maryland Five Star

Sharon White and Jaguars Duende. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Jaguars Duende was a climber in the CCI3*-L field of the MARS Maryland 5 Star, presented by Brown Advisory, starting the competition in ninth place and finishing in first. While the average eventing fan may have been surprised by her rise to the top, those who know her well knew she was always the one to beat. Produced and owned by Sharon White, the 8-year-old Westphalian mare is a competitor through and through.

“Her mind is extraordinary, right? Just to sit on a horse that loves the pressure and handles it and wants to win– that’s a really special thing. So she showed me that again today, and that’s just really, really unique,” Sharon said.

“Jag” (Jaguar Mail x Latina, by Lancaster) is not your typical mare. She showed just how cuddly and in-your-pocket she is at the awards ceremony, when she stood quietly, playing with her groom, Kate Servais, and allowing everyone to give her pets, while she received hugs from her rider. If you’re currently thinking to yourself, ‘well sure, my mare likes pets.’ Let me iterate how unique it is to have an 8-year-old horse that is calm enough to stand quietly after a victory gallop with nine other horses in the massive atmosphere of the Maryland 5 Star arena. Jag is clearly a winner in more ways than one.

Sharon is known to produce her horses from the ground up, a strategy that lends itself well to the building of a true partnership between horse and rider. However, it does take time and talent to source untested young horses and transform them into 5* partners.

“Even if you buy a horse that’s already going, it still takes a lot of time to form a partnership,” Sharon said. “And I think when you’ve had them as young horses and as babies, you know each other in and out, which can be really beautiful. And at the same time, it can be a double-edged sword. I know my horses that I’ve produced since they were young. I know Jag would do anything I asked her to do, so I have to be careful what I ask her, right? Because she’ll do it. That type of relationship takes time. So if you start them from the beginning, then you’ve already put the time in. And if you buy them further developed, you still have to put the time in.”

Sharon White and Jaguars Duende. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Not losing the forest for the trees is crucial to the development of these young horses. To date, Jag has performed at FEI competitions only nine times over two years. Some young horses will do that number of events in one season. Sharon says staying focused on that big picture makes all the difference.

“Sometimes it’s very hard to remember the big picture. You have to really think, ‘You know what? It’s not only the year, it’s the next four years,’” Sharon said. “I think it’s very easy to get into doing too much because everyone’s doing it, so you want to do it. But if you really think about it, she’s like a project. She’s eight years old, what do I want her to do as an eight year old? Did I want her to do a four long this fall? No, right? I want to give her body enough time to get very strong and to get her so confident.”

Sharon chose the Maryland 5 Star 3*-L to help develop Jag’s grit and endurance. “Maryland is a very unique place in that it’s a very good test of fitness. It’s a very proper course,” Sharon said. “The atmosphere is unreal and special in both the dressage and the show jumping. So it’s just such a good education for a horse. And to me, you want to not overwhelm them, right? And if you really produce them confidently, sometimes you have to be a little patient. I don’t mind being a little patient. Now I look forward to what she does next year, but it’s not about next year either. Every moment is special with them. But if you really think big term, I think that’s how you produce horses for the highest level of sport.”

Sara Schulman and Cooley Chromatic. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Sara Schulman pulled off a hat trick to hold onto her second place position all weekend long, as the leaderboard shifted around her. Finishing on the podium in the 3* at the Maryland 5 Star was a huge accomplishment for the young rider, particularly as she has produced her own Cooley Chromatic (Thorgal x Castrade) up the levels herself.

“Honestly, even more so than the results themselves, [the bigger accomplishment] is the confidence that he has gained over the years. You never know what kind of horse they’re going to turn into when they’re three. There’s so much to establish there. And with every young horse– granted, this is the first one that I’ve produced so I can’t speak to many others– but there’s always speed bumps and hurdles that you have to go through,” Sara said. “He had his antics when he was four and five years old that we took time to work through. He would refuse every way out of the water and there were just various things in the barn. The fact that we have built such a partnership like this over the years, such a trusting partnership, and have been able to take the time to work through all of that, is honestly the biggest accomplishment out of everything.”

The pressure was definitely turned up to high going into the show jumping, where the lightest tap can result in a rail down and when that single rail can cost you your podium finish. Sara particularly felt the intensity of that pressure as the youngest rider in the top five.

“For sure there was pressure going into today,” Sara said. “This was the biggest atmosphere me and my horse have ever show jumped in, which was really exciting, especially with a whole group of coaches, friends, and family that came out to watch. I just wanted to do them and my horse proud. I knew he was capable of this– he’s such a special horse. I just wanted to do him justice all week, and he stepped up to it every single day. I couldn’t be more proud.”

Will Coleman and Fahrenheit Addict. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Like the rest of the top three, Will Coleman also chose to ride Team Rebecca LLC’s Fahrenheit Addict at the Maryland 5 Star to build the nine-year-old Selle Francais’ education. “I’ve probably only done three or four runs at this level, and I just knew that I would get some good feedback from doing an event like this,” Coleman said. “It’s a cross country course that’s really up to standard. It’s long. It gives you a sense of how we might handle some of the bigger events in the world down the road. I think I got some great feedback. I’m excited about the horse, and we’re still a ways away, but I think this was a great step in his progression.”

Will has only had the ride on Fahrenheit Addict (Utah van Erpekom x Picouik du Pont, by Echogene latour) for less than a year and is still building his partnership with the young up-and-comer. “He’s owned by some of my longtime best owners, the Broussards, who have helped me to support my horses for many years. We found him at the end of last year and he came to me at the beginning of this year. So I’m still very much getting to know him,” Will said.

Like the 5*, the 3* cross country course was intense. Also designed by Ian Stark, it covered a total of 5250 meters with 34 jumping efforts. Today the 3* horses tackled a difficult show jumping course created by Canadian designer Michel Vaillancourt. After starting the week with 54 horses, the competition finished with 40 pairs remaining. In total, 46 rails came down, with fence five being the biggest challenge for the riders. It was, indeed, a “serious” week, as Will called it.

Sharon White, Sara Schulman, and Will Coleman. Photo by Shannon Brinkman

“I think horses that came out here and jumped well in this atmosphere– I think that bodes very, very well for them, and hopefully for bigger events down the road,” he said.

Keep an eye on these three horses and their riders as they move up through the ranks of eventing and into the highest levels of the sport. There are bright futures ahead of many pairs who tackled the 3* this week. Honorable mention goes to the horse who moved up the most spots in the leaderboard – Tamie Smith and Pierre’s Farceur du Bochard (Con Air 7 x Ariane du Bochard, by Epsom Gesmeray), owned by the Guariglia family, sprung up the ranks from 50th to 18th.

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website][Scoring] [Live Stream Replays][EN’s Coverage]

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Another CCI5* Title for Ballaghmor Class and Oliver Townend at MARS Maryland 5 Star

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Roya Brinkman for Shannon Brinkman Photography.

It’s a story we’ve written before, and yet another one demonstrative of the grit, strength, and talent of a certain fleabitten gray gelding who collects a fourth CCI5* trophy this weekend at the MARS Maryland 5 Star, presented by Brown Advisory.

Great Britain’s Oliver Townend was touted with a 51% win chance by Equiratings coming into today’s Michel Vaillancourt-designed show jumping track. And with just seven competitors to best, Oliver and his old hand, Ballaghmor Class (Courage II – Kilderry Place), did what they do best, delivering a clear round in a hushed stadium to clinch the victory on a final score of 31.5.

Ballaghmor Class now adds on to the titles collected at Burghley last year, Kentucky in 2021, and Burghley in 2017 (which was also his 5* debut) — and Oliver said earlier this week that if the 17-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding was fit and well after this run, that he doesn’t see a reason why he won’t aim for at least another 5* in 2025.

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

If you take a look at Ballaghmor Class’ show jumping record, you’ll notice a trend: historically, he’s only jumped one clear round at this level, and that came at Kentucky in 2021. In his other nine starts at the level, he’s lowered at least one pole on the final day, and it’s something Oliver had words for.

“I think that it’s very difficult to judge horses’ show jumping performance when they bust a gut through mud at Badminton and Burghley, and they go in and jump on the worst possible ground you could put in front of them. He’s gone in the lead an awful lot of times, and had one down and come out, and everybody says he’s not a great show jumper. Well, he’s been on two surfaces, two good surfaces, seeing good light [at] Kentucky and Maryland, and to me, he’s jumped better than as good as any of them. I think he’s possibly, from the British team situation, not always been treated with the respect that he deserves. Because, one, he’s got me on his back, and two, he has a fence down [while in] the lead at Badminton and Burghley every so often.”

Badminton, Burghley, and Adelaide remain the three 5* events in the world that hold show jumping on grass, and of course on most grass surfaces there is also a reasonable amount of undulation that can add its own nuance.

In addition to this fourth title, Ballaghmor Class also becomes just the third horse to win more than three times at the level, joining Ginny Elliott’s Priceless and Michael Jung’s La Biosthetique Sam in this esteemed category.

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“It’s unbelievable,” Oliver reflected on the weekend and the win. “I’m relieved more than anything. A lot of pressure comes with riding Ballaghmor Class, I think because I expect to do well on him. And when you’re against these guys, you know, it takes some winning. It’s a five-star for a reason, and five-stars are very, very tough to win. I was very conscious that I’d come into the last two times in the lead into the show jumping and not come out being the winner. So I thought, if it went wrong this time, I’m going to start and have to get a jumping coach or something like that! So I’m relieved. I’ll stick to the system, and I’m very, very happy for his owners, Karyn Schuter, who’s a massive part of my life, and I wouldn’t still be an event rider without her, and Angela Hislop and Val Ryan. We’ve been on a massive journey with the horse, and couldn’t be prouder of him.”

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

At 15, Falco (Cardenio 2 – Witta, by Weinberg) is somewhat inexperienced at this level, but the two 5* showings he’s had with New Zealand’s Tim Price indicate just how talented this Hanoverian gelding owned by Sue Benson is. In his debut at Pau in 2021, he took home the title, beating out 34 other finishers to collect the trophy. Today, he moved up to finish second at Maryland after British rider David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed lowered a pole.

“I was a little bit nervous bringing him,” Tim said of his Paris partner. “Here was the first time he’s seen a hill. The other five-star was Pau, and so I said we’d have a little bit of a go and see how he copes with the whole job. He came through really well. It’s more learning a bit more about your horse, and every competition at this top level allows the horse to be more established at that level, so they know themselves and that stamina requirement at the end of the course a little bit better. They know how to come out the next day and try for you again. So I think every day is a school day, isn’t it?”

Tim and his wife, Jonelle, travel to Spain to compete on the Sunshine Tour in show jumping each winter, starting their season and bringing as many as 20+ horses with them for the trip. Tim wryly reflected that this year’s trip to Spain feels like it was about two years ago with everything that’s gone on in the intervening months, but he does feel the tour benefits both him and his horses.

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

“Jonelle and I have been going to Spain for maybe seven years now, maybe even eight, and we’ve added it to just our system,” he said. “It’s early in the year, so there’s only so much you can do at home. We get down there, the weather’s a bit kinder, you can spend a little time with the horses. You [have] good surfaces, grass and artificial. And we just feel like we get a lot done in terms of their conditioning and their strength. And also, when we come back, it’s quite typical for, out of the first three or four events, maybe two of them get canceled for weather. And we don’t feel that that’s too much of a loss, because they’ve already done quite a lot during February and March down in Spain. So we decided to build that in into our plan, and it’s been working really well.”

Falco today adds on to his impressive show jumping record; as of this weekend, he’s only had two poles down in 29 FEI eventing competitions, the most recent one at Aachen in 2021. “This is the part that is always really, really good fun on him, because he is just an out and out jumper in his own way,” Tim said. “I’m not saying he’s a top show jumper if he was to be a pure show jumper, but the way that he just gets in the air is a lot of fun. It brings an element of pressure, because he jumps a lot of clear rounds, but it means that he’s expected to jump a good clear around. So that’s a little bit something that that I have to overcome, but when I’m on him and he comes to a fence, he gives you the most confidence that you could imagine, and you just squeeze him up with your leg. And today was no different. Thankfully, he had a great day yesterday. He pulled up very well, and so I had a lot of horse today.”

David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

David Doel will have to wait another turn to snag his first 5* victory, finishing his eighth 5* with Galileo Nieuwmoed (Carambole – Sjaloma, by Harcos) in third place on a finishing score of 38.5. This marks the sixth top-10 finish at the level for this true-blue 5* horse, who he describes as “just a phenomenal horse.” It’s also the third time David has finished on his dressage score at 5*, which is an incredible accomplishment on its own. As the sole rider to catch the time on cross country, he was the only one to accomplish this feat this weekend.

“I just sort of felt that, actually, I let him down today and didn’t quite do him justice,” David said. “I started in the distance, going down to the treble, and was a little bit quiet, and it just made him work a little bit too hard. Like Tim says, definitely he wouldn’t be an out and out Falco double clear machine, but he is a pretty phenomenal horse, and normally a very, very good jumping horse. So yeah, that was definitely sort of a my mistake today. I kick myself a bit as I always like to try and put a little bit more pressure on Oliver!”

Buck Davidson and Sorocaima. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Fourth and top U.S. rider in the field was Buck Davidson with the off-track Thoroughbred Sorocaima (Rock Hard Ten xx – Sankobasi xx, by Pulpit xx). Buck was disappointed in his two rails down after securing a double clear at Kentucky earlier this spring, but the improvement in this horse’s show jumping is notable nonetheless.

“I think he’s just getting stronger,” Buck said, describing “Cam” as not loving other horses coming at him in warm-up and therefore not finding a lot of value in practicing at jumper shows. Instead, he’ll go off property to another farm and set up courses to practice in unusual environments. “Funny enough, I took him to some jumping shows and all it did was make him more nervous and jump worse. So it’s just getting him confident. I don’t jump him very big in the warm-up. He doesn’t have a rail down because he’s not trying. He sometimes just gets out of shape, and so I’ve just tried to work on his shape and really just keep everything consistent.”

Buck also shrewdly added a thought, alluding to the low number of finishers here this week and the all-European podium. “I think with these guys [indicating Oliver, Tim and David to his right], I don’t know exactly the record, but I think the horses that finished here and did well here, the emphasis was on this [event]. It wasn’t on the short four-stars leading up to this. And I think we all had a plan on how we wanted to do well here. Sometimes the five-star horses are not going flat out around [four-star Short events], and I think that keeping the horses sound fresh and happy and ready for the big job at the end of the year is actually the learning thing, not actually anything at the competition.”

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

This is certainly something that’s interesting to look at when handicapping a 5* field. I like to look and see where riders have seemed to push harder for time, and I’ll use Falco as an example here (Oliver also is well-known for coming out, particularly at the start of the season, and having some slow canters around Intermediate and 4*-S events). You can clearly see a pattern of putting the pedal down on Long format cross country courses, while Tim slowed up and accumulated more time penalties, generally speaking, at 4*-S and below competitions. This is a pattern we see often with some of these stalwart horses and riders, and I do think there are some key takeaways there.

It’s certainly been a wild weekend of eventing at this year’s MARS Maryland 5 Star, and I do hope you’ve enjoyed following along. I truly hope to see the entry list for this event grow each year, and we are all looking forward to seeing what Olympic course designer Pierre le Goupil has in store for us next year. There’s a distinct visual difference in the styles of the French designers versus those from other regions of the world, and it’s safe to say we can expect some rather significant changes to the look and feel of this course to be forthcoming over the next few years.

While much chatter and discussion (which, in my opinion, is never a bad thing) surrounding cross country yesterday and the entry numbers this week, my conclusion is that there is never a single answer to the questions we have. We certainly saw some horses and riders who will be taking some homework home, others who simply had some mistakes that they’ll be able to build on, and others who really rose to the occasion across both divisions here this weekend. I’ve no doubt these discussions will (and should) continue, and in the meantime we’ll look forward to seeing you back here for the five year anniversary of our newest CCI5* event in beautiful Cecil County.

Until then, Go Eventing.

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website][Scoring] [Live Stream Replays][EN’s Coverage]

Our coverage of the MARS Maryland 5 Star is brought to you by our incredible supporters, Kentucky Performance Products, your one-stop shop for science-backed nutritional products to keep your horse feeling their best at all times. They’ll even get on the phone with you to help you formulate a solid supplementation plan for your horse’s individual needs! We’d really appreciate your support of KPP, as they’re champions for our sport and beyond and are wonderful people to boot. Check them out here.

Quiet Final Horse Inspection at MARS Maryland 5 Star Sees All Presented Move Forward

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Sally Spickard.

This morning’s Final Horse Inspection at the MARS Maryland 5 Star, presented by Brown Advisory, proved to be quite drama-free. We only had eight horses to see in the 5* jog, and 43 to see in the 3* jog. In total, we saw just two holds in the 3* — Jennie Brannigan and Kismet as well as Rory Frangos and Monty’s Tune — and both horses were accepted when they came back for a second jog.

We did see one overnight withdrawal in the 3*, from third-placed Allie Knowles and P.S. I Love You, who picked up an injury on cross country and will sit today out. This moves Will Coleman and Fahrenheit Addict into third place on a score of 31.5.

Sharon White and Jaguars Duende. Photo by Sally Spickard.

In the 5*, we were completely free of drama, with all horses trotting up successfully before their Ground Jury of Christina Klingspor (SWE), Xavier le Sauce (FRA), and Valerie Pride (USA).

We now move to show jumping which begins at 11:30 a.m. ET for the 3* and 3:07 p.m. ET for the 5*. Check back later for a full recap on the final day of the 2024 MARS Maryland 5 Star!

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Entries] [Tickets] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [Volunteer] [EN’s Coverage]

Our coverage of the MARS Maryland 5 Star is brought to you by our incredible supporters, Kentucky Performance Products, your one-stop shop for science-backed nutritional products to keep your horse feeling their best at all times. They’ll even get on the phone with you to help you formulate a solid supplementation plan for your horse’s individual needs! We’d really appreciate your support of KPP, as they’re champions for our sport and beyond and are wonderful people to boot. Check them out here.

Sunday Links

The Strides for Equality Ever So Sweet camp is underway! Sara Kozumplik is graciously hosting the camp benefitting Strides for Equality this week at her Virginia home base, and the camp will feature daily lessons, horsemanship, care, and saddle fitting sessions, and plenty of bonding amongst the attendees. Strides for Equality Equestrians is a group founded in 2020 to support the development and mentorship for riders from underrepresented backgrounds, and we can’t wait to see more content out of this first camp open to all participants!

U.S. Weekend Preview

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Entries] [Tickets] [Volunteer] [EN’s Coverage]

Hagyard Midsouth Three-day Event (KY): [Website] [Entries/Timing/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Ram Tap National H.T. (CA): [Website] [Entries/Timing/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Windermere Run H.T. (MO): [Website] [Entries/Timing/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Willow Draw Charity Show (TX): [Website] [Entries/Timing/Scoring] [Volunteer]

Major International Events:

Mondial Du Lion – FEI WBFSH Eventing World Championship for Young Horses (France): [Website] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream]

Links & Reading

Eventing Nation and Horse Nation are pleased to present our upcoming Holiday Gift Guide series! A series of gift idea lists aimed at everything from the Organizational Freak to the Tech Nerd in your family or barn group, this series will launch in mid-November to help all of the hapless gift givers out there with a gift you’ll ACTUALLY want. If your brand would like to place a product into a list or even obtain full ownership of an exclusive list just for you, visit this link to fill out our interest form. Placements in these lists start at $250, and insertions are being taken until November 11.

Gaby Ruane: Hooked on Horses

Maryland 5 Star Cross-Country Photo Gallery

Preventive Equine Joint Care for Equine Athletes

Thoroughbred Logic, Presented by Kentucky Performance Products: 4 Makeover Horse Typologies

Video Break

Watch YEH 5-year-old East Coast champions Emily Bradford and Rose Traveler come from behind with their jumping performance at Maryland:

Shooting for Three Stars: Jaguars Duende Takes the Lead in CCI3* at Maryland 5 Star

Sharon White and Jaguars Duende. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

The CCI5* at MARS Maryland 5 Star, presented by Brown Advsory cross country course may have thrown the leaderboard into an absolute uproar today (more on that coming soon), but the CCI3* cross country was nearly as influential, causing upheaval across the board. Today was deeply disappointing for some teams and exhilarating for others -– such is eventing.

Multiple riders moved up as many as 32 places, while others found themselves plummeting down through the leaderboard. But the competition isn’t over until it’s over. No matter where they are on the leaderboard today, everyone who’s still in play has a chance to make it through the horse inspection and leave it all out on the floor in the show jumping phase tomorrow.

Sharon White and Jaguars Duende. Photo by Shannon Brinkman

Sharon White and her own Jaguars Duende (Jaguar Mail x Latina, by Lancaster) skyrocketed up the rankings, moving rapidly from ninth to first place on their dressage score of 29.6. “Jag” is quickly becoming Sharon’s superstar and is poised to one day follow the footsteps of her barn mate, Claus 63, as her new 5* mount. Sharon has owned the mare since she was just three years old, sourcing her from Dirk Schrade, and has produced her up the levels. Thus far in her FEI career, Jag has never finished off the podium, nor has she ever had any obstacle faults on cross country (knock on wood).

True to form, Jag was her usual stellar self on the track today. “Well, I couldn’t have asked [Jag] to be any better today. It was really a special day for her,” Sharon said. “She’s a very good competitor. Her mind is excellent, and it is really nice to sit on a horse that wants to go and fight for you and will think of nothing else but doing her job. That’s just really, really wonderful.”

Sharon believes her focus on Jag’s fitness prior to the event was key to the 8-year-old Westphalian’s nearly foot-perfect round today. As a West Virginia resident, Sharon has had easy access to terrain relatively similar to the Maryland Five Star’s never-ending upward climb. “We know the terrain is a big factor coming here. I have a very good friend, Anita [Antenucci], with the most beautiful hill at home. So we’ve been galloping up that hill a lot in preparation so that the cross country would be a non-issue, physically, for Jag and I felt like that worked really well,” Sharon said, adding, “I’m just really proud of her.”

Sara Schulman and Cooley Chromatic. Photo by Shannon Brinkman

Out of the 53 riders who left the startbox this morning, Sara Schulman and Cooley Chromatic (Thorgal x Castrade) was the only one to maintain her position on the leaderboard. Adding just two points to her dressage score, Sara and Cooley Chromatic are still in second place this evening with a score of 30.6. At just 26-years-old, Sara has an impressive cross country record with “Caden.” Together, the pair has finished in the top ten in seven out of eight of their FEI starts.

“I’ve had him since he was three. He’s the first horse that I produced, and he has gained so much confidence over the years,” Sara said. “For instance, going to Bromont was a testament to that. To say, ‘Hey, how far has this horse come in the last four years since he was spooking over his first Beginner Novice?’ Going out there today, and again, me not getting it 100 percent right all the time, having full trust in him, giving him the reins a time or two, and just sitting back and supporting him– and he answered every question. I could not be prouder of how much confidence he’s gained, especially over these bigger tracks and in much bigger environments.”

Sara believes riding at the MARS Bromont CCI3*-L, where she also participated in the Bromont Rising Program, was good preparation for the terrain at Fair Hill. “We actually went to Bromont sort of as a preparation for this event, long term, just so that we had a baseline of what he would feel like at a three star long because neither of us had done the level before. So that was a good test of fitness, as Bromont is quite hilly as well, to get a good idea.”

Allie Knowles and P.S. I Love You. Photo by Shannon Brinkman

Allie Knowles and Katherine O’Brien’s P.S. I Love You (FSS Correlli Bravo x Woodmount Queen, by Crannagh Hero) are currently in third place on their dressage score of 31.4. The pair has a relatively short record, having done only seven FEI competitions together. What they don’t have in quantity, they do have in quality. Together they’ve placed in the top five in four of those seven starts.

“He’s a very sharp horse and arrogant, but also insecure, and you need to read between the lines with him and make sure that you can be reassuring but also firm and and really in tune with him,” Allie said. “So it’s been a really fun progression coming to this. And I came in here with a lot of confidence and I think so did he, but that confidence might be a little bit frail. It wouldn’t take much for him to question that. It happened a little bit in the dressage -– we’re having an amazing test, and then one mistake, and he’s kind of like, ‘I’m not sure,’ and then he gets frustrated, and you just need to settle him back down and reassure him. It’s the same on cross country. If a problem did happen, I think he would overreact. I tried to stay on the ball and not be casual with him. But also trust the training, trust that he knows what he wants to do, and he’s going to try to do it right, but not let him down and not forget that he’s actually only eight.”

Having gotten the ride on “Jerry” as a five-year-old from JP Sheffield, Allie says the key to producing the horse up the levels was to take her time and really slow down. Never one to do something halfway, Allie and Jerry were a full minute over the time at their first Modified event. “He was hot and sharp, and JP really encouraged me to take my time and be patient. And I have– I had a minute of time at my first Modified on him. I mean, I really, properly took my time, because he is so quick to get a bit frazzled.”

Today, Knowles showed just how much Jerry, owned by Katherine O’Brien, has grown over the intervening years. Going into this morning, Knowles’ biggest concern was whether or not the Irish Sport Horse would have the endurance required to navigate the nine-and-a-half minute course. “Jerry is a serious competitor. It’s like he knows he’s there to win. And he’s always right on the ball and very sharp and very ready to go at all times. And he’s very fast, but he has never gone nine-and-a-half minutes, so that was a question mark in my mind. And he probably went faster than he ever has. I couldn’t even believe it,” Allie said.

Nine riders made the time today, however only eight went clear as Tracy Bienemann and Venezuelan River activated a frangible device at fence four. Seven horses were eliminated and two retired. Following a fall with his first 3* mount, Mo Chroi, Boyd Martin withdrew his second ride, Barney Rubble, from the division and turned his attention to the 5*.

Tomorrow, the 3* riders must endure the scrutiny of the horse inspection at 9:30 a.m. (blissfully moved back from 8 a.m., thank the media gods). At 11:35 a.m., the first 3* rider will enter the atmospheric show jumping arena for the culminating phase.

MARS Maryland 5 Star: [Website] [Entries] [Tickets] [Timing & Scoring] [Live Stream] [Volunteer] [EN’s Coverage]

Our coverage of the MARS Maryland 5 Star is brought to you by our incredible supporters, Kentucky Performance Products, your one-stop shop for science-backed nutritional products to keep your horse feeling their best at all times. They’ll even get on the phone with you to help you formulate a solid supplementation plan for your horse’s individual needs! We’d really appreciate your support of KPP, as they’re champions for our sport and beyond and are wonderful people to boot. Check them out here.

Townend Takes Command + Breaking Down THAT Cross Country at MARS Maryland 5 Star

Ballaghmor Class and Oliver Townend. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

We knew we’d be looking at a true 5* test after hearing the riders react to Ian Stark’s final cross country design here at the MARS Maryland 5 Star, presented by Brown Advisory. As we waited in the viewing tent at the finish, we watched Harry Meade and Away Cruising going out of the box as the first on course (original trailblazer Jessica Phoenix withdrew Fluorescent Adolescent ahead of cross country this morning), figuring we’d be watching a deceptively easy first trip around. But then Harry reached the top of the hill to the MARS Sustainability Bay, jumped the long route bounce, and then pulled up. His horse was lame, and quickly the tone of the day changed.

First, a quick update as I know we’re all concerned about Away Cruising, and I’m happy report that while he did lose a shoe and seems to have some bruising on his foot, radiographs came back clean and he will be ok to fight another day.

We then welcomed Lillian Heard Wood and the ageless LCC Barnaby home after delivering a solid round with one missed flag penalty and time, and the ship began to feel somewhat righted for the rest of the field yet to come. It was riding tough, but was still early, and our first rider to interview predicted the time would be achievable.

We were certainly wrong.

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

A few horses later, we waited with trepidation as overnight leaders Tamie Smith and Mai Baum headed out of the startbox. After jumping the first half of the course in classic Mai Baum style, the German gelding began to tire up the huge pull to the highest point of the course, and just before the most intense parts of the track. Tamie made the decision to pull him up before the influential Sawmill Slices, therefore ending her bid for a second 5* win in the 18-year-old gelding’s final event at the level.

In the end, we would see just eight finishers out of the original 22 starters, which would later drop by one when Boyd Martin withdrew Tsetserleg after falling with Commando 3 at fence 3. This makes for a 38% completion rate, just over 50% less than the 64% completion rate we saw in 2023 over a very similar course.

So this leaves Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class atop the podium and poised for a fourth 5* victory after delivering a clear round with 12 seconds of time, sitting on a two-day score of 31.3.

Before we get too deep into the leaderboard, let’s talk about, well, what everyone’s talking about: the course and the numbers.

First, it’s easy to look at this completion rate and think “wow, that was carnage” — and certainly in many ways, it was. It’s also easy to look at the numbers and wonder if the course was unfair or dangerous.

Putting my opinion hat on for a moment, I don’t believe it was a course issue. Now, does this mean I also unequivocally believe this course is perfect? I’m not sure I’m really qualified to make that judgement, but from my view as an observer I do know there are multiple opinions on it since this event began. In fairness, the same can generally be said about most of the other 5* events as they — and the sport – have evolved.

To back this up, I went into the numbers from 2023, which saw nearly the exact same track built by Ian. He changed a few fences this year, moved some things around, made some adjustments to lines based on what he saw last year, but in many ways it was very similarly routed.

David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

If you look closely, the leaderboard from 2023 also bears some similarities to its 2024 counterpart. After cross country last year, the top three placings were held by British horses (Cooley Rosalent, Graffenacht, Brookfield Cavalier Cruise). Two strong American horses who also competed here this year, Sorocaima and LCC Barnaby, jumped around clear. Hannah Sue Hollberg and Mia Farley also finished strong, with Mia being the only one to catch the optimum time. Nine pairs were eliminated or retired. The remaining four horses who completed cross country last year all collected jumping penalties.

Cool as a cucumber, Jennie Brannigan navigates the MARS Sustainability Bay with Twilightslastgleam. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

So, yes, the optics of this year’s result look worse, on paper. But the story is still the same: this course is tough, and the strong cross country horses emerge on top. It’s no secret the British are strong on these types of courses; more than once, the Maryland track has been compared to Burghley in terms of terrain and its stamina element. So it should really not be a surprise to see two very seasoned, proven English horses in possession of the top two spots (and another in fourth), and an equally strong New Zealand pair (Tim Price and Falco) holding third. It should also not be a surprise, after looking at last year’s results, that Sorocaima with Buck Davidson now holds fourth place, and save a 15 penalty mark for missing a flag, Lillian Heard Wood and LCC Barnaby also delivered a strong performance. Another strong horse on cross country for the U.S. is Jennie Brannigan‘s Twilightslastgleam, who delivered a clear aside from a 15 penalty mark for missing a flag at 17 (the Sawmill Slices).

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Oliver Townend and Tim Price both spoke to this after their rides.

“Brilliant, Ian,” Oliver, who has competed at this event since its inception in 2021, said. “I know it’s been a tough day, but this event is going to be as important as Badminton, Burghley, and Kentucky. Nothing comes near these four events. I thought last year was plenty tough enough. And I think, you know, it’s Ian’s last year. Why shouldn’t he let his imagination go a little wild? He wanted to build a five-star, and that’s what he’s done. And it’s a fair course. It’s just, you know, we haven’t got 80 runners, so when 23 set off and only 10 or 12 come home, it doesn’t look great. But that’s nothing to do with being an unfair track. It’s just the the field and and the way it’s panned out.”

Tim, who sits third on Sue Benson’s Falco (the horse he competed with in Paris this summer and with whom he won Pau in 2021), echoed this. “[Equiratings] needs to look at the world ranking of riders and use that as a part of the benchmark that they’re measuring against when building things to do with ratio of riders to clear rounds,” he said. “I think if you had more riders of mine and Ollie’s ilk and there’s others — I’m gonna apologize for leaving people out, this is an abbreviation of the top riders — if you had a few more of those, I think you’d see more clear rounds and good rounds. You know, they’re good on good horses, and they’ve mastered these courses after they’ve walked them a few times, and they will come out with a plan and and nail it, but look, it’s just a decent track. I think you would still see good combinations struggling, whether it was with the time or whether it was with a combination here or there, or a jump here and there. It’s five-star.”

Bubby Upton, who jumped a beautiful, gritty mostly-clear with Cola save a frangible pin at the coffin, also summed up the ask that Ian Stark puts on his courses quite well:

“The thing is, with Ian, why he’s so clever, and why the course rode so tough, is because if you commit to the straight route, basically you’re in and there’s no room for error,” she said. “So that’s kind of where we then pay quite a high price if it goes wrong.”

So, where does this leave us?

David Doel and Gaileo Nieuwmoed. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

We’ve got Oliver Townend with the seemingly ageless Ballaghmor Class in first, followed by David Doel and Galileo Nieuwmoed, who took Mia’s place this year and were the sole pair to catch the time (doing so grandly, coming home nearly 24 seconds fast), and Tim Price in third with Falco. Buck Davidson leapt his way up to third place despite a broken martingale on course with Sorocaima, and Bubby Upton would’ve been placed higher but broke the pin at the A element of the Irish Horse Board Coffin Question and now sits in fourth with Cola on a score of 50.5. Jennie Brannigan and Twilightslastgleam, sitting fifth overnight with time and the flag penalty added today for a two-phase score of 52.3.

Equiratings now gives Oliver a 51% chance to pick up another 5* win with Ballaghmor Class, who adds a legend-status 12th cross country completion at the level to his resume.

“He’s been phenomenal,” Oliver, who was visibly emotional about this horse of a lifetime in the mixed zone, said. “I worked him this morning and he spooked at a bin, wouldn’t go past the generator, and I thought, ‘yeah, it’s hopefully gonna be a good day.’ It’s his sharpness and his strength, and that’s why I’m lucky enough to have kept the ride on him. Only a couple of people ever tried him, but they got off fairly rapidly. One fell off and one got off! So yeah, I’m just very privileged. He is a special horse.”

David Doel has been knocking on the door of a 5* win for what feels like ages. His closest call came with a second place finish at Burghley last year, and now he finds himself in similar stead with the speedy round he delivered aboard the 13-year-old KWPN gelding today.

“We didn’t actually have the best of preparations,” David said. “We were originally aiming for Burghley and Galileo actually had a bit of an infection in his hock following Luhmühlen. So it was either go back to Pau or come out here, and I know we’ve got a good galloping and jumping horse underneath me there.”

“He was ten seconds up at about the seven minute mark,” he continued. “And I just sort of felt like he kept on cruising, really. I just had him gallop underneath me, and he’s just so smooth to ride — I don’t really need to do too much on top. He was phenomenal in his assessing of the flags today, and really tried to make sure you jump between the flags. It was almost a little bit embarrassing going that quick. But it just was within his stride. I never really felt like I was pushing him. I never felt like it was actually going to go into his limit.”

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

I would certainly not say there was a question mark around Falco‘s suitability for a bigger, beefier track than what he would have seen at Pau or Paris, but Tim acknowledges that for a horse that’s got just 28% Thoroughbred blood, it would on paper be a challenging ask. I found his approach to the course today fascinating, though, so I’ll let him speak for himself:

“He’s always had a bit of a system where we start out quiet, we build up through the middle, and we push at the end,” he described. “And [there’s hardly] been one occasion where we’ve had him racing from the start. When you’re asking a horse that, it might not be this most natural thing to push and to dig and to find a second wind and to stay balanced, not just blindly running. You do it in a way that you’re asking something that they’ve got to give. I was quiet at the start. [Giving] him clean jumping is the other thing. I’m giving him good distances. He’s not up against anything. [The jumps are] just passing underneath. So that’s good for energy conserving. And then let’s ask a little more as he goes, and it’s a bit of a rinse and repeat. I’ve done it lots of times now, so he knows that he can do it, and he has belief in himself.”

Tim picked up 7.2 time penalties, but the result is good enough to put him within a rail of Oliver and Ballaghmor Class, .1 penalties behind David’s 34.5.

Buck Davidson and Sorocaima. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Buck Davidson is the top-placed American, sitting fourth with Sorocaima on a score of 39.2. “Look, he’s a great cross country horse,” Buck said, noting that he’d had to change his bridle due to FEI rules and decided to put on the ill-fated martingale as a result. The breakage of the martingale did cause some rideability difficulty, but Buck got the job done. “Last year, the Sunken Road was a bit funny, and this year it was like he’d done it before. I’m pretty happy with him. When you go up past eight minutes [on a Thoroughbred], you think, ‘whew, I’m still going!’. His steering wasn’t amazing today, but maybe I shouldn’t have put the martingale on. He’s amazing. He tries to get through the flags even if there’s no chance, so I couldn’t be happier.”

Buck has been vocal in the past about his thoughts on this Maryland track, and in contrast to some of his fellow riders, he actually has had some gripes about the difficulty — as in, he thinks in some ways it’s not quite up to 5* standard.

“I mean, it’s a different kind of five-star,” he said today. “I’m not sure it’s really five-star, to be honest with you, but it’s hard enough work. The way he’s tightened the ropes up, it’s not as flowing and the horses do have to work to get around here. I think Morven Park is harder, if I’m being honest. I think the hills, yeah it feels pretty hard at that top water if you’re not on a Thoroughbred, but I think usually the let-up fences at a five-star are really big, and they’re not big here. They’re almost, in a way, too small. The worst jump we had was at that little log before the [Foxcatcher Flyer at 24]. If there was a big jump there, that might maybe help a little bit. But it’s unique and different and it still has to be jumped. It doesn’t appear that many people have finished, because I don’t see a lot of people here [in the vet box], so maybe I just have a really good horse.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Looking to the rest of the field, as I mentioned earlier we saw Tamie pull Mai Baum up after running out at the Sawmill Slices at 17. It had always been her plan that if she had any trouble, she’d pull up, and for her, it was an easy decision.

“I think that that long pull on that hill, I just got to the top and he ran out of steam,” Tamie told me, out grazing Lexus. “He felt great all over through the whole thing and then just that whole climb he just ran out of steam. Nothing technical, he looks great now. He thinks he finished. “I already said if I had a problem I would stop. Honestly, Maryland’s terrain…I don’t know whether Lexus could have ever been able to withstand that. He did everything really easy and he’s good and he’s happy. Just the prep coming in, he could’ve maybe had another run or another gallop — or maybe not, I’m not sure. But the most important thing is he’s happy.”

Boyd Martin had a weekend he’d like to forget, first falling from Mo Chroi in the 3* earlier in the day and subsequently withdrawing Barney Rubble so he could regroup for his two 5* riders. He then fell with his first 5* horse, the debutant Commando 3, at the A element of fence 3, the Select Event Group’s Locust Log Pond, when the horse got his back legs tangled up over the fence and sent both of them tumbling into the water. Thankfully, both horse and rider are ok. Boyd opted to withdraw Tsetserleg and will now focus on the two horses he’s got running at Pau next weekend.

Bubby Upton and Cola are fifth after cross country. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Cosby Green also had a down day, logging three refusals (two at the coffin and the last at the Sawmill Slices) after a really strong start with Highly Suspicious and therefore ended her weekend prematurely.

In terms of his final course, Ian shared some thoughts with us at the end of the day.

“The ones that got around looked phenomenal, and there were others that I thought looked amazing but had a hiccup that could have happened anywhere, anytime, and it stopped them completing,” he reflected. “But I thought there was some great riding and some fabulous horses, and there were some green combinations that they had the odd hiccup that they’ll learn from. The main thing, from my point of view, is the horses and riders are all at home in one piece and ready for another day.”

We are happy to report that no injuries to horse or rider have been reported from the 5* today. In the 3*, one rider, Kiersten Miller, did have screens put up after her horse landed on her at the Timber Rails early on in the course. We did receive reports that Kiersten was back on her feet, but have not received any further reports on her or her horse at this time. We will work on getting an update from Kiersten.

We now move on to show jumping tomorrow, and the final trot-up has been pushed to 9:30 a.m. Show jumping will then begin with the 3* at 11:35 a.m. EST, followed by the 5* at around 3:00 p.m.

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