Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds

It’s great to see historically marginalized equestrians begin to get some comeuppance on the Olympic stage. That includes racial and ethnic minority groups as well women, who until relatively recently weren’t even allowed to compete in the Olympic eventing. It wasn’t until the 1964 Games — which, coincidentally, were also held in Tokyo — that the sport of eventing would see its first female Olympian. Lana duPont rode her Maryland-bred Thoroughbred, Mr Wister, to a podium finished, having helped the USA to a team silver medal.

Their competition wasn’t without dramas. Recalling her cross-country round, Lana said: “We fell hard, Wister breaking several bones in his jaw. We were badly disheveled and shaken, but Wister was nonetheless eager to continue. We fell a second time near the end of the course, tripping over another spread. When we finished, we were a collection of bruises, broken bones and mud. Anyway, we proved that a woman could get around an Olympic cross-country course, and nobody could have said that we looked feminine at the finish.”

Equestrian sport often pats itself on the back for putting women and men on a level competitive playing field, but systemic inequality and disparities still exist. Watching Julia Krajewski win individual gold yesterday, I was telling my husband of the many obstacles she had overcome just to get to the Games, much less fight her way to the highest step on the podium, including the loss of her champion partner Chipmunk FRH when he was purchased (by the German Olympic Committee for Equestrian Sports, no less) to give to Michael Jung.

“Wait,” he said incredulously. “Are you telling me the German Equestrian Federation bought the best horse out from under this woman who just won gold to give it to a man who won … ?”

Mmmhmmm. We’re certainly making strides, but there’s a long way still to go.

Holiday: National Black Women’s Equal Pay Day

The U.S. Center for SafeSport has found international show jumping champion Rich Fellers ineligible to participate in the sport. On July 16, SafeSport changed Fellers’s status to “ineligible,” listing his misconduct as “criminal disposition; criminal disposition involving a minor; criminal disposition-sexual misconduct.” Rich was arrested June 7 on four counts of second-degree sexual abuse by the Tualatin (Oregon) Police Department after he was indicted by a grand jury.  [Chronicle of the Horse]

Prizes, prizes, prizes! Hundreds of thousands of dollars are up for grabs at the 2021 AEC. The event is just a month away and will take place Aug. 31 – Sept. 5 at the Kentucky Horse Park. [USEA] On a related note, Piedmont Equine is partnering with the 2021 MARS Great Meadow International to provide prize money to U25 Riders. That event takes place in The Plains, Virginia on August 19-22, 2021 and offers CCI4*-S, CCI3*-S, CCI2*-S, and Preliminary divisions. [USEA]

Onward to Olympic show jumping! Qualification is done and the top 30 will move forward to fight for the Individual medals tomorrow. The biggest surprise of the night was that not a single member of the crack American side have made it through. Jessica Springsteen (Don Juan van de Donkhoeve) and Kent Farrington (Gazelle) collected four faults each while Laura Kraut (Baloutine) collected eight. They won’t be in action again until the Team competition begins on Friday. Full report on EN to come soon. [Live Scores]

Video:

#TheTeaFromTokyo: These Poles Ain’t Loyal

And just like that, it was all over: but not before we witnessed two enormously influential showjumping rounds, shock poles rolling, others lodging unlikely clears — and all the surprise and tears and leaps of joy that our fragile hearts could possibly handle. Here’s how the day played out across social media…

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Want to stay in the know with all things Olympic eventing? We’re getting ready to kick off daily editions of our Olympic Digest starting Wednesday, July 28. You can sign up for free right here.

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Well knock me down with a feather – we’ve made it! It’s been an extraordinary week of eventing at Tokyo, with nary a wink of sleep to be had along the way, but we’ve come out the other side with enormously worthy winners in Great Britain and Germany’s Julia Krajewski. I’m already absolutely buzzing to jot down all my *oPiNiOnS* in a bumper post-show recap, but first, let’s have a look at today’s (rather belated) news and notes round-up.

US Weekend Results:

Olney Farm H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Catalpa Corner Charity H.T.: [Website] [Results]

Coconino Summer I Horse Trials: [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

Hambro Sport Horses Burgham International: [Results]

Bishop Burton International Youth Championships: [Results]

Calmsden: [Results]

Chilham Castle (2): [Results]

Cholmondeley Castle inc. British Grassroots Championships: [Results]

Frickley Park (1): [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

I’ve seen Olympic rings tattoos, but the rings shaved into someone’s head? That’s a new one, and I’m kind of into it. [Hair Flair: Athletes Sport Creative Styles at the Tokyo Olympics]

Steffan Peters and Suppenkasper are becoming unlikely TikTok superstars, thanks to their ‘rave horse’ freestyle. Maybe meme-ifying dressage is what we need to propel it into the public interest. [‘Rave horse’ Mopsie rages in Olympic dressage freestyle]

Jessica Springsteen is about to start her Olympic campaign, and the mainstream media have all made the exact same song reference. [Jessica Springsteen Readies for Her Olympic Debut With Horse, Don Juan van de Donkhoeve]

The whole world fell in love with Thomas Ho’s Tayberry this week. The 20-year-old, 15.1hh pocket rocket had a truly delightful time showing off his pizzazz in all three phases, showing that you don’t need to be tall, fancy, and young to do amazing things. [Tokyo Olympics: Tayberry star of show for Hong Kong’s Thomas Heffernan Ho after ‘horse of the day’ honour from prestigious UK magazine]

Snoop Dogg turned his hand to equestrian commentary for Peacock, and it might be the best commentary we’ve ever heard. It was certainly miles ahead of whatever they had on Eurosport today, anyway. [Snoop Dogg’s Incredible Commentary On Equestrian Event Is The Best Moment Of The Tokyo Olympics]

Want to live vicariously through our pals in Tokyo? Go behind the scenes with course builder Travers Schick to see what life is like at the Games. [From the Magazine – Travers Schick: A Day In The Life]

The FutureTrack Follow:

Who else but our new Olympic champion?

Morning Viewing: 

What a moment. What a team.

Monday Afternoon Delight, Part Two: Individual Final Live Updates – Julia Wins Gold!

Good lord, WHAT a team final that was! Not only did Great Britain storm their way to their first team gold since 1972, we also saw a new individual leader in the clubhouse in Julia Krajewski and Amande de b’Neville. We’re moments away from getting under way with our top 25 individual riders — so buckle up, baby, and let’s have at it. Here’s the course, which will now be set at 1.30:

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Want to stay in the know with all things Olympic eventing? We’re getting ready to kick off daily editions of our Olympic Digest starting Wednesday, July 28. You can sign up for free right here.

13.51: 

13.46: Right, I’m back from leaping around my house crying like a lunatic to pass along the news of the full individual podium:

  • Gold goes to Germany’s Julia Krajewski, who just overcame all the odds to become eventing’s first ever female Olympic individual gold medallist
  • Silver goes to Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser, who pick up just 0.4 time in a beautiful round
  • Bronze goes to Australia’s Andrew Hoy in his eighth Olympics — a testament to longevity!
  • and in an honourable mention, fourth place goes to Japan’s Kazuma Tomoto, who has been incredible not just this week, but for years in the lead-up — and what a tough spot to finish in.

13.39: SHE DOES IT! SHE ABSOLUTELY FRICKIN SMASHES IT! A GOLD FOR JULIA KRAJEWSKI, OUR FIRST-EVER FEMALE GOLD MEDALLIST! She’s come back from losing two top horses, and the sad passing of her father, and she’s just won the Olympics on an inexperienced horse — oh my god, what an utter legend!

13.38: Last in is Julia Krajewski and Amande de b’Neville in now, fighting to become the first-ever female individual gold medalist.

13.37: One rail and 0.8 time to add for Oliver, which drops him below Kazu and off the podium entirely.

13.36: That’s bronze at worst for Tom. Oliver Townend in and jumping for second place — and the first rail goes!

13.35: Clear with 0.4 time to add for Tom — he just stays ahead of Andrew!

13.34: Tom McEwen in now on Toledo de Kerser — one of the best jumpers in the sport.

13.33: That’ll be our first three-phase, two-round FOD for Andrew. Impressive! And he was yesterday’s fastest clear.

13.32: Clear and inside the time for Andrew and Vassily — just our second of the day to manage that! They’ll be no worse than fourth.

13.31: Andrew Hoy and the excellent Anglo-Arab Vassily de Lassos in now for Australia. Not jumping extravagantly but they were clear earlier.

13.30: If this isn’t a sign of how tough this course is, I don’t know what is: Laura and London 52 pull the final two fences. This horse’s showjumping record is nearly impeccable.

13.29: Beautiful through the treble there for Laura and London 52.

13.28: Team gold medallist Laura Collett returns with the super jumper London 52 after a surprise rail earlier.

13.28: Just the final element of the treble falls for Christo. He drops below Kazu, who’s the current leader and will be no worse than sixth.

13.26: Christopher Six and Totem de Brecey back now. They’ve been one of the great dark horse combinations of this Games but fans in Europe know he’s been excellent for a while — he was fourth at the Euros in 2019.

13.25: CLEAR! CLEAR FOR KAZU! Just 0.4 to add in what has been the most stunning round of the day so far. I am SHAKING. Let’s get this man on the podium!!!!

13.24: Kazuma Tomoto in now with Vinci de la Vigne. Japanese hopes riding on his shoulders. Hits fence three hard but it stays up. Clear through the treble!

13.23: The back rail of the double falls when Chipmunk hits it behind. I’m sure he wishes he could swap his two jumping rounds.

13.22: Right, let’s see what Michi Jung and Chipmunk do with this. This has historically been the horse’s weak phase — but he jumped a bittersweet clear earlier.

13.21: 1.2 time penalties to add for Jonelle and Grovine de Reve.

13.20: Fence four falls, and the first part of the treble.

13.19: Jonelle Price up to bat now with Grovine de Reve. Hopefully she can rally after a disappointment for both Jesse and Tim.

13.18: Bit of a flyer to the double but he gets through — and that’s our first clear inside the time for Nicolas!

13.17: Nicolas Touzaint back with his creative, but wildly effective, jumping style. Absolut Gold HDC still looking reasonably fresh and picks his way through the treble without issues.

13.16: Staying on Australia as we look at Kevin McNab and Don Quidam. The second part of the treble falls, which is a real shame as Kevin is moving at a decent clip here. A second rail falls, and then the final fence. Bugger.

13.15: Just the one rail for Shane, who finishes inside the time.

13.14: Shane Rose comes in with stalwart campaigner Virgil. First part of the treble falls.

13.11: Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine in now and looking well. Clear through the treble and looking super — but then it goes badly wrong at the double. They have to cat leap the first element after the horse considers stopping, and then the same happens at the second element. Frankly, they’re lucky not to have had the stop, and Karim’s lucky to have stayed on. Very honest horse, and Karim’s balance is pretty impressive, too.

13.10: Two early rails but clear through the treble and double for Mélody. The penultimate fence falls, too, and they add 1.2 time penalties. Anyone else feeling a bit sick?

13.09: We’re hearing of some drama in the warm-up for Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine. They’re okay and cleared to compete. Switzerland’s Mélody Johner in the ring now with Toubleu du Rueire, who she’s been riding for just a year.

13.08: The penultimate fence also falls. They cross the line with three rails and 1.6 time penalties.

13.07: Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg in now. The first part of the treble falls — then the second. It’s not the USA’s week.

13.06: Five down and 1.6 time to add for Tim Price and Vitali. This is an inexperienced horse, so it’s understandable and hopefully educational — but that won’t make it any less heartbreaking for poor Tim.

13.05: Poor Tim Price and Vitali had a tricky time in their first round, with three down — and the first in this round comes down, too. They’re tapping their way around now. Middle part of the treble goes, too.

13.03: Great to see 22-year-old Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line back for a crack at the individual leaderboard. They’ve been impressive for a while now but how cool to see them step onto the world stage — especially representing Austria, a country that’s very much a developing eventing nation. Two to add — she chips in to the last and nearly gets jumped out of the tack. The middle part of the treble came down for them, too, but she’s another who comes home without time penalties!

13.02: The middle part of the treble comes down, but that’s it — and Austin is the first rider to come home inside the time!

13.01: Here’s a sub who truly smashed it this week: Ireland’s Austin O’Connor is best of his countrymen with Colorado Blue.

13.00: Phillip’s two seconds over the time of 60 seconds, too, so will add 8.8 penalties.

12.59: Z knocks the first part of the treble, though it stays up — but the second two elements come down. This is carnage so far.

12.58: Onto Phillip Dutton and Z. Come on, Big P-Dutty, put your foot down!

12.57: Doug’s not hanging around. The second part of the double — a big, wide oxer — comes down, though. He lived life on the edge and it nearly paid off. 4.4 total to add after coming in a second over the time, too.

12.56: No one has beaten the clock yet. Now our first US rider — Doug Payne and Vandiver make their move.

12.54: China’s Alex Hua Tian and Don Geniro come forward for their individual round. The first part of the treble at 5ABC comes down, followed by fence six. Argh — now the final fence falls. Don looks a little weary.

12.53: What a shame — the final fence falls for Susanna! She also picks up 1.6 time — the clock could be a huge influence here today. Five-stars have been lost on showjumping time penalties before, after all.

12.51: Italy’s Susanna Bordone and Imperial van de Holtakkers jumped a fast clear in the first round — can they do it again? They hit the second hard but it stays up.

12.50: New Zealand’s Jesse Campbell comes forward with Diachello. This horse really tired yesterday, but jumped well — though slowly — this morning for 0.4. He has the first part of the treble in this round, which is a pretty big effort for these horses who’ve worked so hard. 7A also drops and they add a further 1.6 time penalties.

12.49: The oxer out of the double is MASSIVE. Felix adds 1.2 time and a rail at fence 8.

12.47: Three down and 0.4 to add for Fouaad. This is going to cause a lot of problems — it’s a shortened course, but bigger and even more technical. Switzerland’s Felix Vogg in now with Colero.

12.46: First of our 25 pairs is India’s Fouaad Mirza and Seigneur. The first rail comes down for them, but Fouaad is regrouping. Ahh — now the middle of the treble falls. Bugger.

12.45: 

Monday Morning Madness, Part One: Team Final Live Updates – Gold for GB!

Gooooooood morning, sports fans, and welcome to the latest edition of ‘EN Breaks the Internet.’ I’ve done approximately three squats, chucked on a bodycon dress, popped a bottle, and have adopted The Position in preparation:

I’m kidding. I am in the exact same position I was in when I finally went to sleep four hours ago, except I’ve shifted my laptop over onto my person and am typing with one bleary eye open, having watched the sun rise for the seventh morning in a row. For the last couple of nights, I’ve shared my bed with a printer, and last night, I accidentally spilled a packet of crisps in the bed and just…lived with it. Is this the mark of a woman on the edge? Perhaps. Anyway! What am I on about! This isn’t Tilly Live Blogs Her Sad, Weird Life, it’s Tilly Live Blogs the Final Day of Tokyo! We’re due to get underway at 5.00 p.m. local time — so that’s 9.00 a.m. BST, 4.00 a.m. Eastern, or four minutes from now. Yikes.

Here’s a link to the order of go for this first session of jumping, which will be the team medal decider as well as the qualifier for the individual final later on, where the top 25 riders will battle for the podium.

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Want to stay in the know with all things Olympic eventing? We’re getting ready to kick off daily editions of our Olympic Digest starting Wednesday, July 28. You can sign up for free right here.

11.39: While we’re waiting for the individual rounds, check out Maggie’s predictions:

Show Jumping Powerhouses of Tokyo

11.26: The individual final will begin at 12.45 British time, which is 7.45 on the East coast.

11.20: And here’s the individual top ten as we head into the final, which will feature the top twenty-five riders after the first round:

11.15: Here’s the final team leaderboard, and a sense of how extraordinary that British achievement was:

11.10: This first showjumping session has already rearranged our individual standings going into the final, which will see the top 25 riders return over a shorter, but bigger, course. Now, it’s Germany’s Julia Krajewski sitting in top spot, and what a story — she had to retire her top horse this year after he lost an eye, and her father passed away earlier this year. She’s been in the tough position this week of competing against her beloved Chipmunk, who she lost the ride on in late 2018 to Michael Jung, and her feisty mare Mandy is pretty green in comparison to many of the obvious contenders here this week. And yet, here she is: on top of the world with one round left to ride.

11.08: So to recap! That’s:

  • A British team full of Olympic debutants winning gold by a country mile for the first time since 1972
  • The intrepid Aussies climbing from sixth after the first phase to silver, despite a last-minute horse-and-rider substitution before the first phase
  • Rio’s gold medallists France climbing from ninth to bronze, despite having to replace two horses and largely riding inexperienced horses

11.06:

11.05: 

11.04: The first part of the double comes down but it’s team gold for Britain — their first since 1972! NINETEEN SEVENTY SODDING TWO. My mother was four years old! That is SUCH A LONG TIME AGO OH MY GOD

11.03: Ballaghmor Class chucks his head over the second element of the treble and taps — but doesn’t topple — the third. Clear so far.

11.02: Okay, okay, this is fine, everything’s fine, Oliver Townend has four rails in hand.

11.01: Goes for the six strides to the double and remains clear. Jumps the last – CLEAR! Australia will take silver at worst!

11.00: This is Andrew’s eighth Olympics so he’s not lacking in experience dealing with pressure.

10.59: CLEAR! France is guaranteed bronze, and could move up in just a moment — Andrew Hoy needs to go clear to stay ahead.

10.58: Christopher Six in for France now. They’re in bronze now but could move to silver — a clear round here is essential.

10.55: Tim Price last in for New Zealand in just his second CCI4*-L with inexperienced Vitali. That inexperience is showing through — the first and last part of the treble fall. Ugh, and now the first part of the double.

10.54: I don’t feel bad calling out the commentator, mind you — he’s been actually laughing at teams’ misfortunes. Ugh, Boyd takes the first part of the double — that fence is such a heartbreaker. They also add 0.4 time.

10.53: Boyd Martin in now for the US — or ‘Martin Boyd’ as this very odd commentator calls him.

10.52: Rattles that first element of the double but they’re clear! What a round, and on an inexperienced horse. Super, super stuff!

10.51: Julia Krajewski in with Amande de b’Neville — the shining lights of the German team this week. Germany won’t make the podium as a team, but a clear now will set Julia up well to fight for her own medal later on. She’s currently in silver position.

10.50: Aaaaaaaand the first part of the double falls again. I have a feeling I’ll dream about that damn pole tonight.

10.49: Vittoria Panizzon and Super Cillious are up next for Italy. This is a horse who takes some real riding, and Vitto is one of the most tactful riders in the world — so she’s getting the best she can out of him. One rail so far, though.

10.47: The first part of the double falls again, but clear otherwise. The ring crew must be so sick of that fence.

10.46: Austin O’Connor in now for Ireland. He and Colorado Blue delivered one of seven clears inside the time yesterday to be best of the Irish — not bad for a last-minute substitution!

10.45: Clear on the second attempt and big pats for Don. My heart breaks for him — to come so close to something so big is an enormous blow. I hope he can take the positives away and realise that coming close this time means he can do so again.

10.44: Oh my god, I wasn’t expecting that. Don Geniro slams on the brakes at the final fence after a foot-perfect round. They wait for it to be rebuilt so they can try again.

10.43: Alex Hua Tian and Don Geniro come forward as the final Chinese pair. It’s been a bittersweet week so far for Alex — he was in bronze position after dressage but 12 time penalties yesterday pushed them to 18th. On the flip side, they’re helping make history with this first-ever Chinese team, which will complete the Olympics. That’s pretty magical. Clear through that tough double so far!

10.42: Nothing to add for Mélody and the cheers are enormous considering this is a spectator-free event! This commentator does make me laugh: “she only took up eventing in 2013! I wonder if anyone has taken up the sport that late.” Yes. Kazu. The rider you just saw.

10.41: Mélody Johner up now with Toubleu du Rueire for Switzerland. Another former showjumper here — she took up eventing on a challenge from her husband. Our kind of gal.

10.40: Kazu and Vinci tap the last hard but it doesn’t fall so just the one rail to add. They’ll jump in the individual final later on.

10.39: Kazu looking excellent so far — he was a top-level showjumper until 2016, when he swapped to eventing. Aaaaand I’ve cursed it, because the first rail of the double comes down. Damn it.

10.38: Just the one to add for Carlos and Goliath, who only stepped up to four star late last year. Kazuma Tomoto in now for Japan with Vinci de la Vigne.

10.36: Carlos Parro in with the green Goliath, who has put in such game efforts this week and looks to be a real star for the future.

10.34: Jan Kaminski in for Poland in this final rotation. Two down so far, including the second part of the double, for Jard. My autocorrect STILL thinks this horse is called Hard.

10.33: Someone just knocked on my door and I bellowed “IMSORRYIMDOINGLIVEUPDATESANDITSTHEOLYMPICSANDITSTHETEAMFINALANDICANTIMSORRYAAARRGGHHHH” so loudly that they’ve left. Sorry to whoever that was.

10.32: Louise Romeike jumps for Sweden with Cato 60 despite a technical elimination for missing a fence yesterday. They take three rails — a tough week for the Swedes.

10.30: I wonder how high Laura’s heart rate is right now. No one will have expected that from this exceptional jumping horse — it was rather like he took off and then tried to take off again in mid-air.

10.29: Crikey! They absolutely demolish the fence before the treble, but regroup to get through the double clear. Britain is still safe — they had five fences in hand and now go back to having four. The double remains upright.

10.28: Phew. Okay. Now. Laura Collett and London 52. I shan’t say anything about this horse’s jumping skills because I don’t want to jinx anything.

10.27: Shane Rose and Virgil in now — but the first part of the double falls when Virgil taps the front rail with his hind end. Australia is back to being just one penalty ahead of France.

10.26: There’s now less than a rail between France and New Zealand as they head into their final rotation. If Tim Price goes clear on Vitali, Christopher Six will need to do so as well to keep France on the podium.

10.25: The second part of the double comes down. They’re giving second-placed Australia a bit of breathing room — they’ve gone from a one penalty margin to a five penalty margin. Karim is clear over the last.

10.24: Will this round make the Kiwis’ journey easier? It’s Karim Laghouag, who was part of the gold medal winning team at Rio. This time, he rides Triton Fontaine. They look stylish to start.

10.23: Jonelle practically steeplechases the double and it stays up! A beautiful clear for Jonelle and Rev. The Kiwis get closer to that podium.

10.22: Jonelle Price in for the Kiwis with Grovine de Reve. This horse jumped super for third at Kentucky, and Jonelle has ice in her veins. I reckon she’s probably at her best when she’s in this kind of spot — fourth as a team, and fighting to take over a place on the podium.

10.21: Oof. Another down for Phillip and Z. They slip below Germany now and that podium dream is looking further and further away.

10.20: Phillip Dutton in now for the USA with Z. The final part of the treble comes down — Z looks to come right down on it behind.

10.19: Gosh, that is bittersweet for Michi — he jumps a foot perfect round. This horse’s weak phase has been the showjumping, and ordinarily we’d have been looking to him to jump in the lead and risk losing it on a rail. He’d be in the lead if not for that MIMclip; and with that round, he’d be our Olympic champion for the third time in a row.

10.17: Michael Jung comes forward for Germany — and it’s odd to see him coming forward halfway through the order. He’s in individual tenth because he — you guessed it! — hit the MIMclip at 14C. The rail didn’t fall until he was several strides away, which is…interesting.

10.16: Nothing to add for Italy in that round — super riding and a lovely jumping horse.

10.15: Susanna Bordone and Imperial van de Holtakkers for Italy also had that MIMclip at 14C yesterday, though added no time — they’re clear over fence six so far.

10.13: Sam’s another rider with an unconventional style over fences, though he’s effective. Today, though, luck isn’t on his side — he has two down, including the first part of that double, which is proving to be the bogey fence of this round.

10.12: Ireland’s Sam Watson and golden boy Flamenco now in. They produced a spectacular round for two time penalties yesterday — but raise your hands if you’ve ever felt personally victimised by the MIMclip at fence 14C, because they certainly have. They were one of seven pairs to pick up 11 there.

10.10: Just chips in at the first as Flandia looks a bit backed off, but she’s scopey enough — and Bao is capable enough — that they make it through clear and pick up a better rhythm by the time they get to the treble. They miss at the oxer before the wall and give it a clonk, but it stays up. The double stays up, too, but annoyingly the single oxer after it falls. They’ve gotten lucky a few times over this course and that appears to be their pay-to-play. One rail and 1.6 time to add — another valuable round for China’s first-ever eventing team.

10.09: Felix opts for more of an inside line to the double from the triple bar, but the pole still falls. They have a second rail shortly after and you can see the pain and frustration on his face. China’s Bao Yingfeng will be next in with lovely Flandia 2.

10.08: This round is looking very, very good so far. So does Felix, mind you.

10.07: Now in: Felix Vogg and Colero, the most experienced pair on this Swiss team. We’ve seen this pair finish in the top ten at Kentucky CCI5*, and Felix is ranked in the top twenty in the world rankings.

10.06: The third from home and the final fence both fall after what was a brilliant first two-thirds of a round.

10.05: Next up is Toshiyuki Tanaka for Japan, who had a run-out and 10.8 time penalties with Talma d’Allou yesterday. It’s not been the week Japan had been hoping for, so their hopes rest on an individual medal for Kazuma Tomoto.

10.04: Two down for Malgorzata and Chenaro but a good round and an admirable effort, considering they lost a stirrup on course yesterday and had to ride on without it. We’re so impressed by this 23-year-old, who has just one horse and is also a full-time Psychology student.

10.03: Malgorzata Cybulska and Chenaro 2 come forward to jump for Poland after their technical elimination for missing a fence yesterday. This is allowable under the new format — and they’ll be one of just two Polish combinations to jump for the team today, as Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Frieda were spun in this morning’s final horse inspection.

10.01: Marcio plans to retire this 19-year-old gelding, who he rode at the 2018 WEG, after this competition — so even though Brazil is miles out of contention for a placing, it’s wonderful to get to see Marcio and Iberon JMen in this beautiful arena. They have one down and 0.4 time, and they finish to a huge cheer. Honestly, what is wrong with me — I’ve started crying watching him cantering around hugging his beloved horse’s neck. What a super partnership.

10.00: Now we have a first rider for Team Brazil, and it’s a sub: this is Marcio Appel and Iberon JMen. He replaces Rafael Losano and Fuiloda G. The last-minute withdrawal of Marcelo Tosi and Glenfly means that just two combinations will represent Brazil in this final phase.

9.59: Another in for Sweden; this is Therese Viklund, who fell from the lovely one-eyed Viscera yesterday. They tip two rails and add 0.4 time, too.

9.57: Well, that was glorious, because of course it was! Toledo knows he’s done well and cocks an ear at his sobbing groom as if to say, ‘you ever doubted me?’

9.55: Let the clenching begin: it’s Tom McEwen up now for the Brits on Toledo de Kerser. This is one of the best jumping horses in the sport, even though he’s so quirky that Tom can’t really school him over fences at home.

9.54: I love this game, bold little horse. Kevin, for his part, is a stylist, with one of the most following hands in the game. They’re clear! Best ride we’ve seen so far from the triple bar to and through the double. Super stuff! That puts some pressure on Great Britain, who are currently miles ahead with four rails in hand — but every clear round will make them clench their bums a little harder.

9.53: Kevin McNab now in for silver-placed Australia. Don Quidam has a 50/50 chance of going clear, realistically. They’re safe through the treble!

9.51: Nicolas clears the last with his characteristic elbows-out enthusiasm, and they’re clear! Just 0.4 time to add — this is a HUGE moment for the French team, who currently sit in bronze but wouldn’t be on the strongest show jumpers in the field.

9.50: France’s Nicolas Touzaint up next with Absolut Gold HDC. Our former European Champion has a unique style over fences, but you can’t fault his effectiveness.

9.49: They’re picking up the pace midway through the course. They get a bit lucky at the plank, the penultimate fence, when the horse swaps his leg on the way in, but they’re clear with just 0.4 to add. They won’t give the US an open door to the podium — it’ll be closely fought for that bronze medal position, which is currently held by France.

9.47: Just four penalties to add for Doug and Vandiver. We’ll have to wait and see if he gets through to the individual final. Jesse Campbell in now with Diachello, who looks to have recovered after visibly tiring on course yesterday. He’s not running through the hand like we’ve seen many do, but he’s got his ears pricked and is jumping carefully. They will have time penalties.

9.46: They live a bit dangerously down to the wall, but get away with it. First part of the double goes, though.

9.46: Now up: Doug Payne and Vandiver for the US. The team sits fifth at the moment and within touching distance of the podium. This round is very, very important.

9.45: We get a nice glimpse of Germany’s team showjumping trainer, Marcus Döring, in the kiss and cry zone. What a delicious bit of eye candy for a Monday morning.

9.42: Sandra Auffarth in with Viamant du Matz for Germany, who sit sixth after an uncharacteristically tricky day for the team yesterday. This pair had a surprise 20 penalties yesterday but Sandra has come out with fire in her belly to try to add nothing further today. It’s easy to see why she was our former World Champ; she has ice in her veins. Clear.

9.41: Arianna Schivo and Quefira de l’Ormeau up for Italy — they were super yesterday, adding just 2.8 time penalties. They’re looking quick today, too, and Arianna is having to discuss a few things with fiery Quefira along the way. The second part of the double goes, but that’s all.

9.39: Sarah balances forward riding and precision well on this course and has just one fence down. It’s great to see all these horses coming out so well after yesterday’s exertions in the heat — and they’ve had much longer than normal to recover, which is helpful. They finished cross-country around noon on Sunday, and now it’s after 5 p.m. the following day in their time.

9.38: Now the turn of Ireland’s Sarah Ennis and Woodcourt Garrison. This is a rider with an enormous amount of experience — she was part of the silver medal winning team at WEG in 2018, though not on this horse.

9.37: This horse has a huge stride and Sun just doesn’t quite scale it back enough on that related distance from the triple bar to the double. They take the first part, and then get a bit forward and deep to the final fence, too. 9.6 to add in total, as they finish four seconds over the time, too.

9.36: The first of our Chinese riders — and the first actual team rider we’ve seen — is Sun Huadong and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. They jumped a slow and steady clear yesterday and Sun, who also showjumps, will be looking to make some headway in this phase with this very nice jumping horse.

9.34: It’s sub city in here. Switzerland sends forward Eveline Bodenmüller and Violine de la Brasserie. There’s a 20 penalty addition to the team score for the substitution, plus a 200 penalty ‘fee’ for the non-completion of cross-country of the horse and rider she replaces, but Eveline adds nothing further — another super clear from a fresh horse who hasn’t run cross-country.

9.32: Now in is Ryuzo Kitajima who, like Sara, has been subbed in for this final phase for team Japan. He replaces Yoshiaki Oiwa and Calle 44, which is something of a surprise as they passed this morning’s horse inspection. Ryuzo and Feroza Nieuwmoed give us our first clear!

9.29: Sara Algotsson-Ostholt and Chicuelo are first up for Sweden. She hasn’t competed in any other phases this week, but as the sub rider, she’s been pulled in to replace one of the non-completing riders. And honestly, they’re having a rough time of it: Louise Romeike was technically eliminated for missing a fence, Therese Viklund fell from Viscera, and Ludwig withdrew after dressage. They’ve effectively lodged non-completion penalties across the board for 723.9 total team penalties after Sara pulls three rails and adds 0.8 time penalties.

9.28: Here’s a reminder of how the team standings are looking:

9.26: ‘Fighty’ has lived up to his name a tad through the week, but he seems on side today — they have the first part of the double when Lea slightly kicks and flings at it, but the rest of this round, and this pair’s week, has been impressive. Now onto team riders!

9.25: Lea Siegl for Austria is up next with DSP Fighting Line; they had an impressive clear to sit 16th overnight yesterday. Lea is just 22 — the youngest rider in the field — and says that that really takes the pressure off her, because she knows she has so much time.

9.23: Gosh, Fouaad really is a beautiful rider; you can tell he trains with the Germans. That influence is so evident in his riding. He has the second part of the treble, which is a shame, and then the last fence falls after they have a pretty big miss. Seigneur — who was piloted at the top level previously by Bettina Hoy — has never found this phase the easiest.

9.22: India’s Fouaad Mirza and Seigneur have been extremely impressive this week — they were in the top ten after dressage and then added 11.2 time yesterday to sit 22nd overnight. They’re fighting now for the chance to jump in the individual final later.

9.21: Colleen Loach and Qorry Blue d’Argourges are in for Canada. They had a bit of a bad time in this phase at Kentucky but are looking good so far. Colleen opts to swing wide out after the triple bar and come into the double on a very forward stride. The second part falls, and then they take another late pole at the end of the course.

9.19: Miroslav is a gutsy jumper himself; he gets himself slightly in the backseat, allows the horse his neck, and encourages an open, positive stride. They tip just one pole — the first part of the double — but it’s a back rail that falls and with time, they’ll tidy up the edges of the performance with this ten-year-old.

9.18: Now in for the Czech Republic: Miroslav Prihoda and the adorable Ferreolus Lat. This JUMPS.

9.17: 26 penalties to add in total for Andrey and Gurza — five rails, and six time penalties. Just a little bit lacking in planning, that round.

9.15: The second Russian competitor is in now; this is Andrey Mitin and Gurza. This horse was very cool across the country, though picked up 30 time penalties. They take two parts out of the treble after adding strides on the way in and then having to scrape their way through.

9.14: They bowl down from the triple bar to the double in six strides, get a bit close, and have the first part of the double down. In total, they’ll take three rails down, but this will have been super experience for them to gain ahead of Paris 2024.

9.13: The Czech Republic’s Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke are in now and making a lovely show of it so far — though the second element of the triple is tipped. This ten-year-old still looks incredibly keen, and takes a flyer with pricked ears at the upright wall, but leaves it intact.

9.11: Nicolas kicks on for the triple bar, which works well — at that fence. It’s a short distance from there to the double, and he’s just too flat for it, so both parts fall. The next falls, too, so he adds 16 penalties but no time.

9.10: Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois. The live dangerously at three, and take off nearly from underneath it, but it stays up. The last part of the treble goes, though, after they just lose their shape a bit there.

9.08: Denmark’s Peter Flarup is next in with Fascination. They didn’t have the easiest time of it yesterday, so this will be about giving this relatively young and inexperienced horse a good, educational experience. They’re clear so far through the treble and jump the wall beautifully. They run on a bit after the triple bar and the first part of the double falls, but a nice, swift round with just the one rail.

9.07: In fact, Tayberry is perhaps too feisty today — he’s getting a bit ahead of himself and jumping slightly over his front end, which sees him tip up three rails and the brick wall, too. They add some time, as well. The 79 second time is looking pretty tight out there.

9.06: Three down and 2.4 to add for Mikhail and Imagine If. Tom Heffernan Ho and Tayberry, who’s looking super today, tip an early rail. This 20-year-old gelding, who’s just 15.1hh, looks nice and feisty today.

9.05: Let’s take a look at this first-round course, which is set at 1.25:

9.03: Francisco tips three rails — but wow, what an exceptional feeling to have completed three phases at the Games! Russia’s Mikhail Nastenko and MP Imagine If in next, and straight away, they have one down.

9.02: First into the ring is Spain’s Francisco Gaviño Gonzalez, who brings forward 123 penalties from across the first two phases. His spicy mare Source de la Faye doesn’t appear to have been fazed by her exertions so far!

Show Jumping Powerhouses of Tokyo

The time change has me all in a tizzy; so strange to do jogs what seems to me as late evening and show jump the following morning. Of course by now I should be used to it, but the frenetic pace we’ve been at over in chinchilla world has been non-stop for the last 5 days and I therefore can no longer tell up from down.

This is it, the final moment. Order below is in reverse order of go, as you will see each pair enter the ring. Only the competitive teams have been done, alongside the one competitive individual.

Sandra Auffarth & Viamant du Matz (GER)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Jesse Campbell & Diachello (NZL)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: Yes

Doug Payne & Vandiver (USA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: No

Phillip Dutton & Z (USA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Kevin McNab & Don Quidam (AUS)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: Yes

Boyd Martin & Tsetserleg TSF (USA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: No

Nicolas Touzaint & Absolut Gold (FRA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: No

Jonelle Price & Grovine de Reve (NZL)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: Yes

Karim Florent Laghouag & Triton Fontaine (FRA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 8

Predicted to Have Time: No

Michael Jung & Chipmunk FRH (GER)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: Yes

Shane Rose & Virgil (AUS)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: 

Christopher Six & Totem de Brecey (FRA)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Andrew Hoy & Vassily de Lassos (AUS)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Tom McEwen & Toledo de Kerser (GBR)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Kazuma Tomoto & Vinci de la Vigne (JPN)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Tim Price & Vitali (NZL)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Laura Collett & London 52 (GBR)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 0

Predicted to Have Time: No

Julia Krajewski & Amande de b’Neville (GER)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: Yes

Oliver Townend & Ballaghmor Class (GBR)

Predicted Jump Penalties: 4

Predicted to Have Time: No

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‘If I Ride Properly, He’s Just a Genius’ – Riders React to Their Tokyo Cross-Country Rounds

Through all the blazing excitement of Tokyo’s cross-country session, we had the chance to debrief with riders after they came through the finish — and they were happy to talk about the good, the bad, and the ugly. Read on for some snippets from throughout the day — from surprises against the clock to tack malfunctions on course, frangible devices to pressure from the public, nothing was off the table.

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

Oliver Townend – Great Britain (1st overnight with nothing to add)

Oliver was second out of the start box after having to wait an agonising few moments for the course to be cleared after the trailblazer, Arinadtha Chavatanont’s fall. He sailed home five seconds under the optimum time to deliver the first of Great Britain’s three clears inside the time, and was able to move from second place into the lead after Michael Jung picked up 11 penalties for activating a MIMclip. 

“Anyone that watches eventing knows [Ballaghmor Class] is special. He’s tough; he digs deep. Early on, I thought he was slightly away with me. In fact, a couple of places I thought, ‘he’s in control, I’m not.’ But I sat behind him and helped find good distances for him, and once I got into the course I started picking up very good, quick, big, fast distances – almost racing distances – to the straightforward fences, and he answered beautifully. He’s tough in every aspect of life. He’s quirky, but he’s tough. And the bottom line is he wants to do his job more than most horses.”

Oliver and Ballaghmor Class had a slightly sticky jump over the hanging log into the first water, and had to rally to make the line and distance work. 

“Clearly the distances didn’t happen quite how I imagined, just in the first two waters. But having said that, they were very comfortable distances and I have a lot of trust in Derek di Grazia’s courses. I think the man’s one of the, if not the, best in the world at what he’s doing and even when I think a distance is one way I know that even if it isn’t, it’s going to be a safe distance.”

On the time:

“When you start, you look at the terrain, you look at the intensity more than anything – if you get a couple of bad shots, you’re losing time. You’re behind, obviously, at your first minute with six jumping efforts. And I thought it was going to be tough, but then I convinced myself last night by myself that it wasn’t.”

On finding the fun in top-level courses:

“I don’t enjoy these things until I’m on the plane on the way back home. And then I can enjoy it more than you can ever imagine.”

Julia Krajewski and Amande de b’Neville. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Julia Krajewski – Germany (2nd overnight with 0.4 time)

Julia rode one of the less experienced horses in the field, who has stepped up to the plate following the retirement of Julia’s Rio mount, Samourai du Thot. In the end, her heart won out over her inexperience.

“She was a little bit surprised with the surroundings in there. At the first fence, she had a little spook. We didn’t warm up so much, because we thought [that due to the heat,] maybe they shouldn’t be too much used before. And this moving camera in the middle of the course, she was a bit distracted. But generally, she just told me what a cool mare she is. She was jumping super, galloping. Even if here and there she was a little bit off the line, like maybe in the long route at the coffin, she would just try. She has the biggest heart and she’s the biggest lion and a huge fighter. I would like to say it was all fun. Three quarters [of the course] was real fun, then it was a bit of work! At the end, it’s a very intense course. And they get a bit heavy and maybe not so adjustable. Time is achievable, but you have to be on it – but you don’t have to chase them all the way.”

Julia has previously had problems on cross-country at the 2018 WEG and Rio Olympics, which has led to some negative appraisals from punters. But she hasn’t let that get to her — because all competitions, she explains, come with pressure, both internal and external. 

“I said to the TV [interviewer] that I know that there are quite some people who say, like, ‘she doesn’t get it right at championships anyway.’ It’s not so much in my head actually because for me, something like Luhmühlen or Saumur is also at that moment super important. Today I was even less nervous maybe than at other important shows or events. But this year – after the winter, with Sam retired in the end, and my father[‘s death] at the beginning of the year… he would have, well he truly is proud to see me, and us, doing well. And all the people at home I know who only wish for me to to do well. It’s a great relief and I’m happy that I’ve made it happen so far.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Laura Collett – Great Britain (3rd overnight with nothing to add)

Laura and London 52 have become one of the world’s most consistent partnerships since the tail end of 2019, when they won the CCI4*-L at Boekelo after a season full of learning experiences for the gelding, who had been thrust into the spotlight early on due to his extraordinary talent. Though their learning curve in 2019 was very public as a result, so, too, have been their victories ever since, including taking the win at Pau last season on the gelding’s five-star debut. Now, Laura makes her Olympic debut in fine style, despite feeling some disappointment with her dressage score of 25.8. 

“I was disappointed with the test, and luckily it ended up not being too bad. And looking back on it, not having the pressure of going out there in gold medal position individually was probably a blessing in disguise. It’s all about fighting for it now and trying to climb up that leaderboard. I’m not really sure I’ve got any words for it, to be honest. I’ve always said he’s a superstar, and he just went out and proved to everyone just how good he is. I’m just so relieved; I did my job to be selected on this team this year — and everyone at home will understand this — we’ve had to fight for our place here. He’s just proved to everybody he well and truly deserved it. And I can’t tell you how proud I am of him.”

Winning at Pau likely helped the horse, as it, like Tokyo, is a twisty track that’s been described as a ‘go-kart course’. This suits the rangy Holsteiner, though. 

“He’s a big horse, but he’s so adjustable. He rides like a pony like that, you know, he’s got so many gears and he listens and he was foot perfect. [The course was so quick –] blink and you missed it. There was no time to dwell on anything; you were at the next question before you knew it. There were the odd bits that you thought was a bit of a galloping stretch and then suddenly you were like, ‘Oh my God, the fence is there!’ Coming up to fence 12, he winged around the corner and I was like, ‘Oh Lord, there it is’.”

These days, Laura says that the most remarkable thing about London 52 is that he finally believes what she’s always known: that he’s a champion.

“Look, I just do the steering, and on a horse like that it’s about not interfering with him. He knows his job now, and yes, we’ve had our ups and downs in the past, but it’s been a learning curve. And ever since Pau last year, he’s just changed. And he’s come out here at the Olympic Games with all the belief — he’s just a phenomenal horse.”

Tim Price and Vitali. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Tim Price – New Zealand (4th overnight with 1.2 time)

Tim and Vitali only came together as a partnership in October of 2020, and the horse hadn’t actually competed in an FEI event since September of 2018, when he’d made his CCI4*-S debut with James Avery. This was just his second-ever CCI4*-L and this partnership’s third-ever international run.

“It felt fast and furious with lots of big jobs just around the corner. It just hits them in the face, which is why it was always a little bit of a risk for young horse because they come up the hill, and even though you’ve warmed up over some fences, it sort of dawns on them that this is actually a cross country day — it’s not another training day – and it looks like it’s a pretty serious day at the office. So they’ve got to absorb that in about two minutes before you start, and [you’ve got to] hope that they get it and compartmentalise it their minds, and off we go. And he did all that. For a young horse, I couldn’t be more proud of how he dealt and coped. Because especially with a young horse, but on any difficult track, you want to set out on the course and give them a little moment or two at the beginning, [let them] find themselves, their rhythm, their breathing, their jump, their scope. Out here, you just have to keep squeezing just because with 7 minutes 45 you haven’t got time to give them an easy couple of minutes. So I’d asked quite a lot of a young horse in the first couple of minutes, it felt like. He was super.”

“He coped with it remarkably well. That’s why I had the faith in him and the confidence in him. He was like, ‘well, this is quite tough’, and I’m like, ‘yep, and there’s another one, and now we’ve gotta gallop’ and he was just, like, ‘right’. He’s an athlete and with everything he is, training-wise and experience-wise, it’s athleticism that keeps coming to the fore every time. So he just gets on with using himself and doing what’s in front of him and having belief that what I’m asking him is doable.”

The serious heat meant that riders had to reconsider how they warmed up for cross-country day:

“It’s really tough, actually. You have your routines, and you stick to you routines because you know they work ,and they work with your systems. And here you have to break that down and work out the science behind your routine that works, because I can’t just go and walk in the corner, I have to go and stand still – which feels like the wrong this to do once you’ve jumped some cross country jumps – and let his temperature come down. So that’s quite weird. But it’s important, because we needed to get up here [to the start] ready to go in the heat with their tempatures as low as possible, so they can withstand it and then go back and cool down again. So the heat has been a definite factor, but it’s been amazingly managed by all the teams and the facilities we’ve been given to use.”

Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Kazuma Tomoto – Japan (5th overnight with 1.6 time penalties)

If anyone knows pressure, it’s Japan’s trailblazer Kazu: he and his team have worked extraordinarily hard to be able to mount a significant challenge for a medal at their home Games. 

“It was not quite fast, maybe too smooth. But as the first player around the course, I have to collect information to get the details to the rest of the team, and I think I did what I expected today. [Trainer William Fox-Pitt said] don’t panic, don’t come rushing home to get inside the time — just do it as normal and usual. So I tried to make myself relaxed and normal.”

British-based Kazu regrets the lack of spectators — but even more importantly, that his friends and family, including his wife and young daughter, who he hasn’t been able to see due to the pandemic, can’t be at the venue. 

“I’m sorry we have no audience today. But then, I also receive constant messages from all over the world as well as from all over from Japan. So I feel like it’s an honour to be here. My family actually lives like a one-minute walk from the main stadium park but I can’t see them. But I still can receive all the messages from my daughter and family.”

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Tom McEwen – Great Britain (6th with nothing to add)

As the anchor for the British team, Tom had a huge amount of pressure on his shoulders: both his teammates had jumped clear inside the time, and so it fell to him to do the same and secure the gold overnight for Great Britain. And that’s exactly what he did, producing a sterling clear inside the time to ensure that Britain stayed on top and added nothing to its aggregate first-phase score. It also allowed Tom to move up into the top ten after he found himself in 12th place following a dressage mark of 28.9, which is slightly above the pair’s norm.

“[Toledo de Kerser] was incredible, absolutely incredible. He was relaxed, very keen, and I think, if Burghley were on, we’d be ready for Burghley in a couple of weeks. He’s come back and he’s not too hot — he was just phenomenal. He was so straight, he’s wanting to jump every fence as he can do. He’s prepped and ready, and yeah, I’m just really pleased that I could give him the ride that he deserved after sort of messing up a couple things yesterday and not quite putting us in a place. But the team has been phenomenal and more importantly, I think, beyond what you’ve seen on TV from our three riders — obviously we’ve got huge strength and depth to get here, but actually the whole team support behind us, with the National Lottery and the funding we get, has really provided a great team support. We’ve got the stables [decorated] and yeah, it’s everything that’s done behind the scenes that’s why all three of us can show up on the scene.”

Tom took an unplanned long route at the final water. 

“The trakehner [at 19, just before the water] wasn’t the biggest — I saw such a great shot, and I thought, ‘this is a really bad idea; I’ve got so much time that I don’t need to go flying into the water’. I had it in mind — I had everything in mind — but he was so comfortably easy with the time and with the course, so I thought it was just a risk that really wasn’t worth taking. And maybe a nice, suppling S-bend will supple him up for tomorrow!”

All the riders on the British team are Olympic debutants, and through the week, they’ve worked together to find the best method for tackling the course. 

“We’ve been walking [this course] for, I don’t know — it feels like a month! But actually, it needed it — it’s only just stuck in my head from yesterday, really. It’s a new place, a new course, and […] it’s just about remembering which bank you’re coming up and over! But the other two gave me the most amazing feedback: I think it was just more the confidence that the lines we’d been walking were the correct ones. It’s not often that you get someone like Oliver going out and making it all look quite so easy so early on — and I’m not sure whether that makes it easier or harder, when you’re on their team! But just to have the confidence in what we’re doing [was so helpful]; we were behind in the first two minutes and made it all up later on. The course rode amazingly, and exactly as we thought. It was nice to actually have a few positive, open distances. I think the one thing we’d all take away is that at the first water, we all thought it was going to be three [strides] — but barring one or two I saw this morning, everyone’s done four, which is very interesting. But everything rode really well and on lovely distances. It’s so well produced and in front of you and clear for the horses. It’s been a great, great, great show.”

Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Michael Jung – Germany (10th with no time penalties but 11 for an activated MIMclip)

Michael, who led after dressage, delivered one of the rounds of the day as the penultimate rider out of the start box. It looked like a solid bid to win the Olympic gold for the third time in a row, until the unthinkable happened: he activated the MIMclip safety device at the open corner at 14C, which had broken seven times throughout the day. Although his horse, Chipmunk FRH, didn’t appear to do more than tap the fence, and the rail remained up until some strides after Michi had cantered away, the ground jury awarded him an indisputable eleven penalties, plummeting him to tenth place.

“I’m very happy about fischerChipmunk — he was very good, and put in a very good performance. He galloped nice, and jumped everywhere very good, so I’m very happy with him. We had a little mistake [at 14C], and I actually did not really realise that it had fallen down. After, when I galloped away from the fence, I heard the sound — and it was quite a surprise for me. But everything else was really nice to ride, and it was a very good course.”

Michael found the weather conditions better than expected — and better than they’d been on his previous trip to Tokyo to compete in the test event with fischerWild Wave in 2019. 

“It was much better than the test event, so I think we’re quite lucky with the weather. I felt nothing bad. We are used to sport, and getting wet — it was not as strong as we thought [it would be]. With the wind, now, I think [the course] was easier than I thought before.”

Boyd Martin and Tsetserleg. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Boyd Martin – USA (13th with 3.2 time penalties)

Boyd was the last rider out of the box for Team USA, which had logged two clear rounds with a smattering of time already — so he knew that he had to deliver, and he had to try to do it as quickly as possible. Perhaps in the back of his mind was his last FEI run with Tsetserleg, also over a Derek di Grazia course, when the diminutive gelding had a highly uncharacteristic tumble on course at Kentucky. 

“It’s a big sigh of relief, getting around well. Thomas tried his absolute heart out. It wasn’t a course that suited him that well, with the twists and turns and back and forths, but he dug deep. In hindsight, maybe I should’ve pushed him a little harder — I thought we were good on the time, but then those last seven jumps seemed to take two minutes. But he finished well, and I’m very proud to be American and have three American horses finish clear today.”

As team anchor, Boyd was able to use feedback and observations to make some decisions about his route through the course. 

“I was in the mindset of taking different paths on three of the fences, and [after] just sitting back and watching and chatting with Doug and Phillip and Erik [Duvander], I ended up going the slightly longer way at the second water, which wasn’t that much longer. I got to take the fast ways on the other ways I wanted to go. I’m just pleased, and relieved, and still dialled in for tomorrow.”

Though the American horses were widely considered to be the most likely to cope with the heat, even Tsetserleg felt struck by it. 

“The heat knocked him around, for sure. I’ve felt like at Kentucky, where it’s cold and spring weather with a little bit of rain, they’re fresh ’til halfway [around] — I felt like he was a bit winded by the second minute [here], which is unusual. But he didn’t get worse; he stayed in that mode the whole way around and never dropped a bit; he just got a bit lower over the last few fences.

This is Boyd’s third Olympics, and the only one he’s competed at which has used a shortened course [we also saw one in Beijing in 2008, but Boyd didn’t compete at that Games].

“I’ve been lucky enough to be at London, and Rio, and here — and they’re all just different. I still think it showcases the best horses and riders, and some horses and riders are suited to bigger, longer courses and some are suited to these kind of go-kart courses. I think you’ve just got to try to master all types of course, because it’s great to ride at these championships and they’re all very different. Like, I think the WEG next year will be back to a big, brave five-star course. Initially, I was hoping for a longer course because my horse’s best attribute is his endurance and stamina, but saying that, he was pretty empty at the end, so I’m glad it wasn’t a minute or two longer — it would have been ugly.”

Lea Siegl and DSP Fighting Line. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Lea Siegl – Austria (16th with 2.4 time penalties)

22-year-old Lea is the youngest rider in the competition, and impressed with her fast, gutsy round with the bold Fighting Line, who lives up to his name. 

“I don’t feel pressure because I’m the youngest; I think I don’t have any pressure [precisely] because I’m the youngest. I still have time to get experience, and I’m happy to be here. I’m happy I got the chance to compete here for Austria, and so I’m cool — I say I don’t have to be nervous or anything like this, because I’m the youngest and I still have the time to get experience.”

Felix Vogg and Colero. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Felix Vogg – Switzerland (21st with 0.8 time penalties and 11 for an activated MIMclip)

Felix was one of the first riders of the day, and he scorched around the course with his experienced partner Colero. He was one of several riders to be awarded eleven penalties for activating a safety device, but unlike many, his didn’t come at 14C — instead, it was 18B that caught him out at the ‘coffin’ complex. 

“I had a bit of a stupid start when I had not-so-good distances from number one to number four. But then we found each other, and he just went like a beast. He was tired, of course, but he was so, so honest and he tried really, really hard. I think no one expected that he can be two seconds over the time, but I know him and I know he can be really slow or really fast. If I ride him properly, he’s just a genius. With the pin, Andrew [Nicholson] came to me last night and we decided that I should ride it on four strides. I always wanted to ride it on five strides. I said I will ride it on five; this morning, he came again and said I should ride it on four. I think that was the wrong decision. Otherwise, it was a great course, and I’m really happy that Derek diGrazia made it.”

Felix received feedback at the start about how Oliver Townend was faring against the clock, which helped inform his barometer of the speed on course. 

“I had the information at the start that Oli was ten seconds over in the first minute, and 12 over in the second. I actually was always on the point, but I was expecting that it would get worse. Usually when you have the first minute, though, it’s fine — and the first minute, I think, was the hardest one. I didn’t expect that I would be so close to the time because Beijing and Rio, we looked all that up, and everyone talked about how it would not be possible.”

Doug Payne and Vandiver. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Doug Payne – USA (23rd with 6.2 time penalties)

Doug and Vandiver left the start box as Team USA’s pathfinders, which meant they were third to go and had no course intel to use – other than the knowledge that the first rider hadn’t completed. But their sensible, occasionally conservative decision-making allowed them to come home clear and pass valuable information to their teammates. 

“Oh, it’s incredible. I’ll tell you right off the bat, I couldn’t be happier to have ‘Quinn’. He’s got probably the biggest heart of any horse I’ve had the opportunity to work with and although a bit unconventional times, he tries his heart out. That’s really all you could ask for on a course like this.”

On the tough-to-catch time:

“You know, we expect to always be down at the first minute. We came through all those good. He was quite strong up through sort of two, three and then I thought we were going to be able to catch up a bit faster than we did when we were able to. But you know, at the end we were totally on empty. So you know, it’s all you can ask for really. I’m sure it’s gettable – the first minute you just have to accept that you’re gonna be down. And then it’s just how sort of how efficient, how quick can you dare to be, and how they feel. But a clear is, I think, probably the most important thing here with no drop score.”

Jesse Campbell and Diachello. Rafael Mamprin Losano and Fuiloda G. Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Jesse Campbell – New Zealand (27th overnight with 14.4 time penalties)

Jesse’s horse, Diachello, was one of several horses to tire over the final minute of the course in the tough conditions, and so Jesse slowed the pace down and gave a masterclass in sympathetic, nurturing riding to get his horse home safely and happily. 

“The round up to about five minutes was exactly how I’d planned it. We all knew we’d be down on time, but that we could then have some galloping stretches. I nearly got back on my five-minute marker, but then the heat just hit my horse and we literally went from the full tank to not much. With three on the team, it’s really important that we finished, so I just had to nurse him as best I could to get home, and keep jumping as good as I could. We were always going to go long at the coffin [18ABCD], so that was fine, but it was just about putting the jumps in front of my horse and giving him as much support as possible. It wasn’t the prettiest round that I wanted to have, but but I had to get the job done.”

Susanna Bordonne and Imperial Van De Holtakkers. Rafael Mamprin Losano and Fuiloda G. Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Susanna Bordone – Italy (28th overnight with no time penalties but 11 for an activated MIMclip)

Like Michael Jung, Susanna sailed home inside the time – but fell foul of the same open corner at 14C, where her horse activated the safety device.

“I had a great ride, and he jumped every jump really well. I had a little doubt when I was setting off for the coffin near the end [18ABCD] whether I was going to go the long route, but then I noticed I had a pin, which was very strange because I didn’t even hit it hard. I didn’t get the hit that you get underneath — he just lightly touched it. So then I thought, ‘well, I already have those faults, so I’m not going to go round — I’ll go straight.’ He was clear inside the time — I had 7:41. I was just a bit unlucky. My dressage was unlucky as well, because he just needed to wee before the dressage, so he got in and was really tight — so it’s all okay, but let’s just say that luck is not on our side this time. I’ve never had a pin before, but I think the logic behind it is to avoid the falls — but you don’t want to be too far off. You want to get a bit closer to it, and then if they touch it, okay.”

Part of Susanna’s decision to take the straight options, even though almost everyone in the field went long at 18, came down to her horse, Imperial van de Holtakkers, who she tells us is perfectly suited to this twisting track:

“On two combinations I thought I was going to go a bit wider and add a stride, but actually, it flowed to stay a bit tighter. I looked at both options and decided to stay tighter and do one less than I’d anticipated. It was very nice, and for my horse it was good, because he’s not very fast in the galloping but he’s very balanced and he doesn’t pull, so you can keep going. This course is a bit like a derby, really: turn here, turn there, up, down, and it’s perfect for him. He would be less a Burghley horse, where you go uphill for one minute with one fence, but here, where it’s turn and go, it’s perfect because he always comes back to me.”

Sam Watson and Flamenco. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Sam Watson – Ireland (31st with 2 time penalties and 11 for an activated MIMclip)

Sam Watson was on track for a superb round for Team Ireland, but he, like six others, was caught out by the safety device at the open corner at 14C.

“It’s fine margins in the modern sport, and those devices are there to look after us. I fully approve, not just because they do that, but because they make you ride precise and accurate. It’s the one time I let adrenaline just go, ‘there’s the fence and the inside line’, and I just got there a fraction too early. But it’s like me missing my change; if your timing’s off, if you rush a little bit, if you don’t keep your head 100% relaxed, you make mistakes. And you don’t want to make mistakes at the Olympics. I’m deeply, deeply frustrated because he was ready for this, and he was really, really good. He loves it, and he kept his ears pricked and he just enjoyed doing his job the whole way.”

“I rode it like an ERM, like a short format. You don’t waste anything; don’t waste any energy, don’t waste any ground, don’t waste any time, just be 100% ruthlessly efficient. That’s what I tried to do. There’s a couple of places, like the second water, he took off a mile off. I thought he’d chip a stride in, but he didn’t — but he was magic the rest of the way through it. He just loves the game. I knew in the start that there was a chance he could be a little bit bold on me early on, because he really wanted to get going. He’s been in quarantine acclimatising, and he wanted to let loose. I’m really proud of him and god, it would be some privilege to have the ride on him in Paris in three years, because he’s still young enough. I thought in his test, and out there on cross-country, that he’s got so much more to give and there’s a huge result in there.”

Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Huadong Sun – China (40th with 42 time penalties)

Sun — or Alex, as he’s known to his friends — is part of China’s historic first-ever Olympic eventing team. The team orders were straightforward: come home safe.

“This is the first time for the Chinese team at the Olympics, so I don’t go fast, I just want a clear round with my horse. A nice round. It’s okay for the team, and we made a plan to make the long lines so we could keep jumping. It’s also better for my horse; she has a big stride so really, it’s better to take a longer line and not always hold her so much.”

Alex is a relatively new convert to eventing, and is based with teammate Yingfeng Bao at Tim Lips’s stables in the Netherlands. 

“I started eventing in 2013, and I like doing this so much. And this is special for our country. I think people in China don’t know this is a sport so much, but I think for us to have a team of riders competing in Tokyo will be good for the young riders and the Chinese people to get to know it, and to learn to love this sport.”

Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Joanna Pawlak – Poland (41st with 20 jumping penalties and 25.2 time penalties)

Joanna makes her Olympic debut while contributing to some exciting history for Poland — and her determination, and that of her horse, Fantastic Frieda, carried them home when things got a bit tricky after the mare lost a shoe halfway around the course.

“At number 14 my horse lost a front shoe, and so I was a little bit afraid of quick turns. At fence number 18 I jumped the first fence a little bit off and I couldn’t turn, so we had a problem, but generally I’m very happy because for the first time in 70 years, we have a Polish team, and me and my friend [Malgorzata Cybulska], we are the first women in a senior Polish eventing team. It’s a pleasure for me; I’m feeling really glad about this. We made history and that’s why I really wanted to make my best, but there was this one moment, one mistake.”

Arinadtha Chavatanont (Thailand) and Boleybawn Prince. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Arinadtha Chavatanont – Thailand (did not complete)

Arinadtha had the unenviable task of being the day’s trailblazer, and after a polished, committed effort over the first few fences, she had a seriously unlucky tumble when her horse pecked on landing over the first hanging log into water at around the one-minute mark. This saw Thailand eliminated as a team, as they didn’t have a reserve pair. Both horse and rider were unharmed in the fall.

“Even last night, I have a really good sleep. In the morning I wake up really fresh – I’m here! And to start the training my horse was really in front of me; it’s like he knows his job. He’s really ready to do it. I could feel a sense of pride in the canter – I don’t need to wake him up at all. In the start box he wasn’t excited, he was so calm and really ready to ride with me. First fence, second fence, everything went really well. I was really, really happy at the way he started and I have all the fences clear in my mind. Like, it’s really in my nerves to do it. I have all the straight routes, except for one of the fences I took the option and I was really looking forward to doing it. He’s a quite fast horse, and the first [long route,] I wanted to do it. We did it nice and the accident was not the pressure at all, really – I think it was an accident. It was not [because of] my stress or his stress. It was a pity for me and for him as well, since he’s a really good cross country horse.”

“I’m feeling fine – it’s like swimming!”

Rafael Mamprin Losano and Fuiloda G. Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Rafael Losano – Brazil (did not complete)

Rafael and Fuiloda G had been having a positive round when the horse suddenly stopped two fences from home and looked in some distress, so Rafael opted to retire. He’s since confirmed that she’s doing well. 

“She started off great — jumping so well. She’s such a good jumper. But it’s hot, and I knew it was going to be tough on them, but the course was jumping so good that I let her go. That’s part of this sport, isn’t it? She came to the second-last jump and ran out of 100% of her stamina, so I had to pull up. [Of course it’s so disappointing –] there’s 100 people behind us, such a big team of people trying to help us do our best, but it can go one way or another. She’s 100% — in five minutes she was ready to go again, so it’s so frustrating, but I guess we have to go home and think about that one.”

Rafael praised the course, which he’d enjoyed riding around with his relatively inexperienced mare. 

“It rode great! Very forward-riding — we like that. It didn’t feel like a four- or four-and-a-half star; it just felt like a great course to ride. But I guess we never know how we’ll cross the finish flags.”

Rafael has been based with Mark Todd in the UK for seven years, but began his career in earnest around the Rio Olympics. He speaks about the progression from riding in Brazil to coming to Europe to train: 

“We don’t have many events at home, so it’s a great place to start. You can get the feeling of the sport, and then make your way – if you want to be a professional rider, and come out here, and do a little better than I did, you have to go to America or Europe to get some bigger tracks, and bigger jumps, and try to be competitive against good riders. I’ve lived in England for seven years now. There was such a big push for our sport [around Rio] — we had Mark Todd training [the Brazilians] and all of us young boys got really excited about it. Unfortunately I was the only one who came out of all this [still in the sport], but at least I’m here! I do my own thing and try to run my own yard in the UK now. Of course, it would be great if we had a team trainer so we could really push to try to be at the top of the leaderboard. I don’t think we’re far off; at the Pan-Ams we had a great result. Of course, here is a different level of the game, but we will get there. When I was a kid I did a lot of football, and I really wanted to be a football player, but then I started riding and I really loved it. Of course, we all want to do very well, and I said, ‘well, I’ll go to England for six months and see what I can do.’ And my career really started like that.”

Małgorzata Cybulska and Chenaro 2. Rafael Mamprin Losano and Fuiloda G. Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’T Moerven Z. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Malgorzata Cybulska – Poland (did not complete)

It was a tricky day in the office for Gosia and Chenaro 2, who started off well but suffered a tack malfunction partway through the course. The 23-year-old student, who had surgery on her spine two years ago, gamely completed the course with one stirrup in order to help her team, but was later informed that she was technically eliminated for missing a fence — a problem that happened for four riders on this course. 

“What can I say? Everything that could happen, happened. In the warm-up arena, it was all the time delayed — from the training area, to the cooling area, back to the training area, and the cooling area again, [being herded] like cows a little bit. On the cross-country he wasn’t like my horse at all — he absolutely wasn’t my horse, so I don’t know what’s going on at all. Because of all this, I got really stressed out and nervous, because it’s really difficult to ride this kind of cross when you don’t have your horse. In all the stress I had a refusal, which has not happened too often in my life. And then I missed a fence — this is only my fault, and no one else’s, and I don’t want to make excuses because this is just sport. [Chenaro] came back well, but still, it’s worrying that he stopped fighting. And then I lost a stirrup, and the rest of the course I was riding without a stirrup. It was terrible — and it was not meant to be like this.”

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Jog Strip Photo Gallery: A Monday Trot-Up

Phillip Dutton (USA) and Z. Photo by Sally Spickard.

To be quite honest, I’m not entirely sure what day it is at this point. This morning, I remembered my flight home is tomorrow so I had to scramble to spit in a tube and submit a Covid test so that I can hopefully be allowed back in the U.S., so you could say things are going well! Covering events, especially of this magnitude, is a massive amount of work involving many 12+ hour days, but it’s been an experience like no other that I wouldn’t trade for the world. I also can’t thank our team at home enough for their help keeping the content mill churning while I catch a few hours of sleep (and honestly, I think I’m still getting more hours of sleep than Tilly is!) – it’s truly been a team effort (not counting our development team, which we won’t talk about…) and we can’t thank you enough for following along with us!

It’s really hard to believe we’re already on the final day of competition here in Tokyo, and it’s also strange to be having a jog on a Monday (hence why I don’t know what day it is), but here we are. All of the remaining horses jogged for the Ground Jury this morning, and save one hold and subsequent spin the dramatics were kept to a minimum.

Doug Payne (USA) and Vandiver. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Now, you will see some pairs on the order of go – whenever we get it – that were eliminated yesterday. The new rules allow for combinations to continue on in the competition as long as they were not eliminated for a horse fall or a welfare issue (blood, abuse of horse, etc.). Carrying on does carry a hefty penalty of 100 points, so it’s not going to keep any teams in contention for taking this route, but it does give riders the opportunity to complete a team nonetheless. Personally…..I feel that if you’re eliminated, you’re eliminated. But I don’t make the rules, and I’m also not an Olympic rider who worked my tail off to get here, so my opinion is just that – an opinion.

Oliver Townend (GBR) and Ballaghmor Class. Photo by Sally Spickard.

One pair was held and subsequently spun upon re-inspection: Poland’s Joanna Pawlak and Fantastic Freida. It’s been a tough weekend for Poland, who also had a pair get spun at the first horse inspection (Pawel Spisak and Banderas). Aside from this, there were no other holds and all other pairs that presented were passed.

We did have several withdrawals overnight, and some riders who did not come forward despite having the option to continue on after elimination yesterday. Alexandre Zelenko of Belarus did not present Carlo Grande Jr..South Africa’s Victoria Scott-Legendre did not present Valtho De Peupliers. Marcelo Tosi also did not present Glenfly for Brazil.

Show Jumping Need to Know:

Team Start List
Order of Go
Team Final Course

#TheTeaFromTokyo: Sashay Away? Shantay, You Stay

Welcome to the last hurrah of Tokyo 2020’s big eventing party — but before we get into the thick of the showjumping action, our competitors first needed to talk to the catwalk for the final horse inspection. You thought yesterday’s cross-country was turn-and-burn? Try navigating the far end of the jog strip with a fit reserve horse that hasn’t actually contested any of the phases. We hear Cathal Daniels is somewhere near the Korean maritime border and still trying to persuade Rioghan Rua to slow down and get a grip.

Anyway, here’s a little snippet of what went down in this morning’s trot-up, which all but one horse accepted to continue on: that was Fantastic Frieda, who lost a shoe midway through the course yesterday with Poland’s Joanna Pawlak. As Poland’s reserve rider has already stepped into the team following the first inspection, Poland will need to move forward with a non-completion penalty added on to their team score. This truly is the Math Olympics, isn’t it?

 

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Tokyo Final Horse Inspection: Live Tweet Updates

Unfortunately the lack of live feed continues to be a problem for the final horse inspection. Once again, we make an effort to keep the superfans updated and have forced on-site reporter Sally Spickard to tweet furiously after each horse in order to keep up to date on information coming out of Tokyo. The feed will go live at 8:15 PM EST and the jogs begin at 8:30 PM EST. (That’s 9:30 AM Tokyo time.)

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