Classic Eventing Nation

Great Britain Clinches Second Consecutive Olympic Gold Medal in Paris

Brits atop the podium again. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Great Britain is golden once more as the team of Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, Tom McEwen and JL Dublin, and Laura Collett and London 52 clinched the team gold medal in Paris on a final score of 91.3. The home nation, France, secured silver medal on a score of 103.6, followed by Japan, overcoming the withdrawal of one of their team horses in this morning’s Final Horse Inspection to win bronze on a finishing score of 115.8.

This becomes Great Britain’s fifth Olympic team gold medal, putting the drought of 11 cycles before their gold medal in Tokyo (2021) firmly to bed and providing further testament to consistency, depth, and competitive drive.

As we led up to the selection of the team, it was all anyone in eventing sport could talk about: would the selectors get it right, what with so many proven pairs to choose from? As the selectors opted to put reigning World Champions Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir on the bench as the Traveling Reserve and also chose to leave off consistent competitors such as Oliver Townend and Kitty King, the pressure mounted. If the selectors — who possess perhaps the most unenviable position in our sport, particularly for this nation — got the choice right, they would be celebrated. If they didn’t, there would be hell to pay.

This was further underscored yesterday on cross country when Ros Canter was given 15 penalties for missing a flag at fence 21ABCD. Videos circulating on social media provided a mixed bag of reactions, mostly coming under the opinion that she had been clear. However, an appeal lodged with the FEI was dismissed, and the 15 penalties stood. This meant the Brits came into today under much more pressure than they would have otherwise had, with just one rail and some time (4.7 penalties total) in hand over the hard-charging French (and the feet-stomping French fans who certainly made their presence known this morning).

Team GB wins again! Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And to be sure, the rounds delivered by the British team weren’t perfect. As the first to go, Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo lowered one rail. Tom McEwen and JL Dublin jumped second and helped right the ship with a double clear round. Anchor rider Laura Collett also lowered a rail and picked up two seconds of time.

Luck was somewhat in play here for the British, though, as the French didn’t manage a clear or double clear round, lowering four rails amongst them and picking up one additional time penalty for their team score of 103.6. So while the British leave the day well out in front, it surely didn’t feel that safe as the rounds were ticking away.

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The French were understandably disappointed in their lack of clear rounds, but to hear the crowds and see the riders’ reactions on clearing the last, you’d likely not have known it. They’ve now medaled in the last three Olympic cycles, including Paris, building onto their bronze medal finish in Tokyo and working toward that coveted gold medal such as the one they won in Rio.

This silver medal becomes their fifth Olympic medal, and is also demonstrative of the momentum the nation has built; prior to a gold medal won in Athens (2004), the nation had not won an Olympic medal since they took bronze in Rome (1960). Competing on home turf can be challenging — Tokyo failed to bring home a medal in their home games in Tokyo, and Great Britain missed out on a gold medal in London (2012). Today, the French proved they’re here, they’re here to win medals, and they’re here to stay.

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And Japan. Japan. How much can I say about Japan in the 30 minutes I have left before the individual final starts?

Japan left Tokyo somewhat with their tails between their legs; after coming in highly-touted as medal contenders, they finished a distant 11th, though one rider, Kazuma Tomoto, did finish in fourth individually. It was a tough Games for all competitors. We were in the midst of a global pandemic, and the Japanese riders, who spend their lives basing in the UK, far from their friends and family at home, couldn’t even see their families while they were in Tokyo due to strict quarantine and social distancing rules.

Then today, Ryuzo Kitajima had to withdraw the 17-year-old mare Cekatinka from the holding box in the final jog. It was a heartbreaker for Ryuzo, who was the Traveling Reserve in Tokyo and felt emotional yesterday after finishing cross country at the chance to finally represent his country. Fortunately, Cekatinka has been reported to be absolutely fine, just a little sore in her hind end and therefore deemed ineligible to jump by the Ground Jury.

Ryuzo Kitajima leads the Japanese portion of the victory lap, quite enthusiastically, on foot. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This meant the Japanese had to take 20 penalties for activating their substitute, Toshiyuki Tanaka and Jefferson, who was admittedly quite nervous for this role — and what a tough one it is, to manage an event horse that hasn’t run cross country or done a dressage test for the technical challenge that is the final phase — as this wouldn’t be his preferred phase.

While Japan wasn’t out of the hunt, the mountain to climb certainly grew a little taller, as the substitution penalties dropped them from bronze to fifth place going into this phase. All three riders would need to deliver clear rounds — and hope someone in a higher-placed team gave them an opening to try to regain their spot on the podium.

They held up their end of the bargain.

Collecting just a handful of time penalties amongst them, the Japanese delivered three jump fault-free rounds, and one double clear from Kazuma Tomoto and Vince de la Vigne. They were the only team to leave all the poles in the cups.

“I’m really happy. Still, I’m focused on my second round,” Kazu said after the team round, and before the final rider had jumped. “I’m also keeping fingers crossed for the final rider in team show jumping. [Vinci de la Vigne] is a good jumper. I was a show jumper in Japan — and also I tried to get to Paris in two disciplines as well. I love show jumping.”

This is the first-ever Olympic medal in eventing for Japan and also the first-ever Olympic medal for any Asian country. For a nation that is not as large or flush with talent as the larger powers with multiple medals adorning their cabinets, and for riders who have to sacrifice so much to even have a shot, this medal means an unspeakable amount.

Teams France, Great Britain, Japan on the podium. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ll have a LOT more coming your way in our evening report, including results from the individual rounds and thoughts on the other team results, including a superb fourth-place finish for an exciting Belgian team and a seventh-place finish for the USA, but for now I must dash off to the individual final as we didn’t have a large amount of time in between!

To catch up on full team scores and individual rankings head of the final round (the current individual podium is Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH, Chris Burton and Shadow Man, and Laura Collett and London 52), click here. You can also view our team Companion Guide here and keep an eye out for our individual Companion Guide publishing very soon.

The start list for the individual final can be found here.

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

Maman Mia! Here We Go Again! Your Follow-Along Companion Guide to the Olympic Eventing – Show Jumping Individual Final

Jumping for individual honors and a third Olympic title, Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH.
Photo by Tilly Berendt.

*UPDATED TO INCLUDE FINAL SCORES. (Horses and riders shown in order of go.)

OK ENers, we’re back for another go in the ring for another round of show jumping. What’s this, you ask? More eventing? Yes, even more eventing, for at the Olympics we’re treated with two final phases, one to determine the team medals (which we’ve just done), which also serves the purpose of giving us the top-25 individuals, who then have to jump again to give us the final individual rankings. So sit tight ENers, the Olympic Champion is about to be crowned.

You’ll find below the information we shared earlier for combinations who have made it into the individual final, with the addition of each rider’s score across the competition thus far and what that means in terms of their position as they come into this round.

Don’t already know why our live blogs aren’t in fact live blogs and are instead companion guides? Here’s why:

For those of you who are avid followers of our live blogs (we salute you eventing nerds!), you’ll notice that things are a little different this time around. In order to adhere to the strict media rules for the Olympics, we’re not able to bring you live commentary. We can, however, keep you totally informed with regards to each of the horses and riders show jumping today, what their form is coming into the Games, their hobbies and favorite foods (amongst other, um, horseplay), and how they’re likely to perform in each phase based on the available data, so you’ll be securely in the know as you watch the live stream.

You can follow along with the live scores here.

In case you missed them earlier, here are some links of interest:

▶️ If you’ve yet to catch up on the dressage and cross country companion guides, you’ll find them right here – [Dressage] [Cross Country] [Show Jumping Round 1]

▶️ The substitute rule and scoring is, shall we say, a little complex at the Olympics, but never fear, EN is here with the clearest explanation we could manage of how things work.

▶️ Here’s everything you need to know about the show jumping phase of Olympic eventing. Click the link and all will be revealed.

▶️ For all things Olympics, check out EN’s Ultimate Guide to Eventing in Paris.

▶️ It has been a total blast bringing you the eventing from Paris. And there’s lots of it. We may be wrung out and kinda broken, with the inevitable eventing hangover already kicking in. but it’s all been worth it.

Maman mia, I’ve got deja vu, and here we go eventing again!
🥐🍾

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

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🇨🇳 Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex is very familiar with jumping in the final phase at a championships event, having contested three Olympics and three World Championships, as well as the Asian Games, which he won last year. He tumbled down the order after a flag penalty out on cross country, but scrambled into the top-25 after a clear round earlier for a spot in the individual final with this reliable show jumper.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alex’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 8th – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Tryon 2018 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Ind.)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Alex enthusiastically represents China but has been based in the UK for many years.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22
Cross Country Penalties – 20.6
Show Jumping Round 1 – 1.6
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 44.2 – 23rd

Show Jumping 📈 They’re on a streak of four clear rounds, all at short-format. The had two poles in their most recent long-format competition, the 4* in Montelibretti last year, and they don’t always make the time, but Alex will be focusing on those clears as he takes to the ring in Paris.

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🇸🇪 Louise Romeike and Caspian 15

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Caspian 15 is a bit of a triple threat when it comes to eventing. He’s consistently low-30s in the dressage, hasn’t had a cross country jumping penalty ever and is speedy to boot, and very, very rarely has a show jumping pole. Lucky Louise to be at the Olympics with such a talent.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Louise’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Caspian 15 is owned by Louise, her father-in-law, and Dutch eventer Madeleine Brugman, who’s grooming for Louise in Paris.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 37.7
Cross Country Penalties – 0.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 5.6
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0.4
Overall – 44.5 – 24th

Show Jumping 📈 In 26 FEI competitions this guy has had show jumping penalties on just six occasions, all of them at short-format events. They were two seconds over the time in the 4*-L Nations Cup event in Boekelo last season, which isn’t unusual for them in this phase.

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🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When you’ve got a horse who’s as good in each phase as ‘Walter’ is, you know you’re onto an eventing winner. He’s accurate and precise in the dressage ring, and an absolute machine cross country, in terms of both jumping and time, and well, in the final phase he more often than not leaves the poles in the cups. Wonderful Walter will have won over many hearts over the weekend, adding to his fan club every time he goes out there and does his thang. Oh yeah, Ros and Walter have just won a team gold medal!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ros’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020 (as traveling reserve)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 4th individually – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 Tryon 2018
1️⃣ Ros is currently World No. 1

🔴 Ros has a little girl called Ziggy who can often be seen cheering for her mom at events.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 23.4
Cross Country Penalties – 15
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 42.4 – 21st

Show Jumping 📈 If you were being threatened by something like, really threatening and absolutely had to pick out Walter’s ‘weak’ phase, you’d probably say this one. Although really, we’re pushing it here. In 22 FEI competitions he’s had a total of seven poles down. One of these came at the European Championships, but when your dressage score is 21.3 and you added nothing on cross country day, you can have a pole and still win. That’s the only time he’s had show jumping penalties at a long-format event; he even jumped clear ‘round Badminton last year on his way to the win, a feat that many found tricky given the ground conditions of the day before. They had a very unfortunate 15 penalties for a missed flag on yesterday’s cross country which dropped them right down the order, but wherever they end up today, the future’s certainly very bright for Ros and her buddy.

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🇦🇺 Shane Rose and Virgil

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Incredibly, Shane is in Paris completing at his fourth Olympic Games with his long-time pal, ‘Virg’. At nineteen, Virg knows a thing or two about this eventing lark, and it’s very cool to see these veterans of the sport turn out and look so damn good. All credit to the teams at home for the obviously excellent care and attention they pay to these horses and their, obviously totally on-point, training programs. Shane’s comeback from a serious injury just a couple of months ago is nothing short of amazing and wherever this pair end up today will be an enormous achievement and great testament to their relationship.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Shane’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥈 Tokyo 2020; 10th individually – Team 🥉 Rio 2016 – Beijing 2008 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 13th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) – Rome 1998 (Ind.)

🔴 Dare I mention mankini-gate? I do. Well, Shane said, on record, that should he win a gold medal in Paris, he will wear a gold-kini. Oo la la.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 34.6
Cross Country Penalties – 2.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 41.8 – 20th

Show Jumping 📈 He had a pole at Pratoni and also had one in the first round at Tokyo, adding another in the second round. But there are many more clears on this gelding’s record than there are poles. He finished on his dressage when he won the Horse of the Year event in New Zealand this season and has jumped clear in the final phase in each of his five 5* appearances.

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🇮🇪 Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Austin and ‘Salty’ got their first Olympic call-up at the very last minute, when they were bumped into the Tokyo team due to the late withdrawal of Cathal Daniels. They stepped up to the plate and did Ireland proud then, and this time around there mustn’t have been any doubt about his place being firmly on the team, what with a third place at Badminton and a Maryland 5* win now on their record.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Austin’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 13th individually – Beijing 2008 (Team) – Sydney 2000 (Ind.); 17th
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 18th individually

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Austin was the first Irish rider since 1965 to win a 5* when he took the Maryland crown last fall.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 31.7
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 8
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 39.7 – 17th

Show Jumping 📈 Previously, you wouldn’t have pegged Salty for a certain clear round in the final phase, but recently he proved that he can keep all the poles in the cups, at both long- and short- format, particularly when others can’t. That’s what earned him the win at Maryland 5*. Looking back to his championships appearances, he rolled two poles in Pratoni, and one in each round at Tokyo. But Austin’ll have his more recent form in mind and will be channeling his Maryland luck as he takes to the ring in Paris.

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🇫🇷 Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Despite only being 44, Nicolas has the experience of five Olympics, two World Championships and nine Europeans in his arsenal – he sure knows how to pack a whole lot into a career. And on top of all that, he’s just won team silver at his home games!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 6th individually – London 2012 (Team); 17th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.) – Team 🥇 Athens 2004 (Ind.) 8th – Sydney 2000 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Team)

🔴 Eventing’s in Nicolas’ genes – his dad and uncle are both eventing Olympians, with his uncle going on to coach the French team.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 27.2
Cross Country Penalties – 3.2
Show Jumping Round 1 – 8
Show Jumping Round 2 – 8
Overall – 46.4 – 25th

Show Jumping 📈 This gelding is a one or none kind of guy; across his career thus far it’s around a 50% clear jumping rate, but more recently he’s been clear more often. However, at long-format it’s exactly 50:50. He was clear inside the time on his way to winning the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season but had a pole in his season opener this year at short-format. Only time will tell how he copes with the two-round format of the Olympics, but one thing is for sure, based on his form thus far in his career, this horse has a sparkling future ahead of him.

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🇮🇹 Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have had a bit of a tricky time of it in the final round at championships thus far in their career. Will they put that right in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Evelina’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Team)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Evelina took over the ride on ‘Fidjy’ in 2020.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.6
Cross Country Penalties – 6.4
Show Jumping Round 1 – 5.2
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4.4
Overall – 34.6 – 22nd

Show Jumping 📈 This is the phase where this combination may fall down a little, with faults usually coming in the form of two poles, as happened in their most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Avenches. They also had eight show jumping penalties as well as 1.2 time at the European Championships last season, a long-format competition. It was a similar story at the World Championships in Pratoni, but there they pulled a third pole and added 1.2 time. There are clear rounds on their score sheet, but they’ve mostly come at short-format.

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🇧🇪 Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Surely one of the most experienced riders in the field, Karin knows what it takes to complete at an Olympics, she’s a six-time Olympian after all. She’s been a huge part of Team Belgium over the years and has very much been a part of the nation’s growing success and upward trajectory – they finished top of the standings of the Nations Cup series last year. She’s here with a relatively inexperienced ride, proving that the future is very bright for Belgian eventing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karin’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Ind.) – London 2012 (Team); 15th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.); 9th – Athens 2004 (Team); 16th individually – Sydney 2000 (Team); 9th individually – Barcelona 1992 (Team); 8th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 17th individually – Caen 2014 (Team); 5th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 4th individually – Aachen 2006 (Team); 13th individually – Jerez de la Frontera 2002 (Ind.); 19th – Rome 1998 (Ind.) – Den Haag 1994 (Ind.)

🔴 This combination haven’t finished outside the top-20 in an FEI competition since mid-2021.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.6
Cross Country Penalties – 7.2
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0.4
Overall – 38.2 – 16th

Show Jumping 📈 They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Boekelo last season, the last FEI long-format competition on their record. They’re on a run of four clear rounds, matching the highest number of clears they’ve had consecutively. There are a smattering of one pole rounds throughout their 29 FEI competitions, a couple of 8 penalties and one 12.

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🇧🇪 Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was an emotional day all round when Lara won Luhmühlen this season, the first Belgian to win a 5*. Lara didn’t even watch the rounds of those who went after her, she was just pleased with her performance and didn’t think anything more of it. And then her husband, Belgian team trainer, Kai Steffen Meier came into the collecting ring and informed her that she was a 5* winner. That’s eventing magic right there, my friends.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Lara’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 – Caen 2014; 18th Individually – Lexington 2010
4️⃣ Lara is currently World No. 4

🔴 Lara’s one smart cookie 🎓 As well as being a 5* winning eventer, she’s also got a Master’s degree in Commerce.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30
Cross Country Penalties – 1.2
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 35.6 – 13th

Show Jumping 📈 In 25 FEI competitions, this combination have had show jumping faults on just four occasions, each time just a single pole. Two of those times came in long-format competitions, of which they’ve done three. They occasionally add a smidge of time but far more often than not they add nothing at all in this phase.

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🇳🇿 Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park

Photo by Eventing Nation.

This pair were on a streak of five clear rounds and hadn’t had a pole this season, until earlier today. Will they be back on their clear round form as they come forward in the individual final? Only time will tell.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Clarke’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team); 6th individually
🗺️ Team 🥉Pratoni 2022 – Lexington 2020 (Team)

🔴 Clarke has won all of the major eventing titles in his native New Zealand.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.7
Cross Country Penalties – 4.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4.8
Overall – 39.7 – 18th

Show Jumping 📈 They had a pole at the World Championships in Pratoni, as well as being two seconds over the time.

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🇺🇸 Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz is making her Olympic debut after a few weeks of thinking she would have to watch from the sidelines as traveling reserve. She’s been part of a successful Team US before, winning the team silver at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last year. Nutcracker’s an exciting young talent and will be gaining so much valuable experience to take forward as he struts his stuff on the world stage.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 In the barn, Nutcracker’s known as ‘Bali’.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 28
Cross Country Penalties – 6
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0.8
Show Jumping Round 2 – 5.2
Overall – 40 – 19th

Show Jumping 📈 This combination do roll a pole, on occasion, having one down in the Kentucky 5* in the spring, where they finished eighth on the gelding’s debut at the top-level. They jumped clear in the 4*-L at Galway Downs last season, which they won, and again in the 4*-L at Tryon, which they also won. They do have the odd pole, but they’re almost always at short-format.

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“Obviously it’s not the [team] result we wanted … but I think for all of us it was still a wonderful experience to be here. We’re very grateful, very lucky, to be in this position. I think it’s just made us hungrier for the future.”

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🇫🇷 Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine

Photo by Eventing Nation.

This pair got caught out by the two-round format in Tokyo but they’ll be buoyed up by the home crowd this time around, and, despite Karim’s happy-go-lucky nature, there’s no doubt that he’s the fiercest of competitors. He’ll be buoyed up by the fact he’s just won team silver at his home Games, that’s for sure!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karim’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 12th individually – Team 🥇 Rio 2016
🗺️ Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) 10th

🔴 Karim is known for his epic sense of humor, arguably one of the most important traits in eventing.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 29.6
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4
Overall – 37.6 – 15th

Show Jumping 📈 They were on a streak of eight clear rounds until their most recent run in the 4*-S at Marbach, where they had a pole, and that includes long- and short-format competitions and Pau 5*, where they added just 0.4 show jumping time to their dressage score across the entire event and were runners-up. The last time they had jumping penalties in the show jumping ring was Tokyo, where they had one pole in the first round and two poles and 0.8 time in the second round. That must have been disappointing as this horse really is a great jumper, who very much more often than not leaves the poles in the cups.

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🇸🇪 Frida Andersén and Box Leo

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Frida didn’t get the chance to show jump at her other Olympic appearance in Rio, after withdrawing before the final horse inspection. She’ll be relishing her chance of an Olympic completion as she takes to the ring in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Frida’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Frida’s a bit of a smart cookie, with degrees in dental hygiene and sport and business 🍪

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 33.3
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 33.3 – 12th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair have a bit of a mixed bag when it comes to form in the final phase. They had two poles at the European Championships last season, and one at the World Championships in Pratoni. They generally have a pole at long-format events, but that second one at the Europeans was unlucky, they’re mostly a one or none kind of combination.

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FRIDA FINISHED ON HER DRESSAGE SCORE!

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“It was just amazing. I went here with a goal to stay on my dressage. You always go with that goal, but it almost never happens.To make it at this time – today – in this atmosphere, it’s just amazing.”

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🇺🇸 Boyd Martin and Fedarman B

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd rides regularly with Olympic show jumper Peter Wylde, so he’s well-placed for a good go at the final phase in Paris. And Bruno is a clear round kinda guy. Hold your breath Team USA fans…

Form, Facts & Stats:

Boyd’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 20th individually – Rio 2016 (Team); 16th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team); 7th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 10th individually
6️⃣ Boyd is currently World No. 6

🔴 Boyd’s mom and dad both competed at the Winter Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30.5
Cross Country Penalties – 1.6
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 32.1 – 10th

Show Jumping 📈 Since this pair started competing together, they’ve had one single pole, which came at Luhmühlen last season and dropped him down a couple of places to eighth. But he was clear at Pau, where he was also eighth, and has kept the poles in the cups at five long-format events with Boyd. We’re looking for a double clear for this pair in the two-round format, but as we know, always with horses, we’ll have to watch this space.

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“It’s just a true honor and privilege to get Annie’s horse here to the Olympics and finish her work … I just felt like she was cheering us on from above the whole event and I just feel privileged.”

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🇩🇪 Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A clear round is in no way a dead cert for this pair, so Julia will be holding her breath and hoping that all of the poles stay in the cups as she takes to the Olympic ring.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Julia’s championships experience:

🔥 Individual 🥇 Tokyo 2020 – Team 🥈 Rio 2016
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Julia originally won’t have thought she had a seat on the flight to Paris, having been allocated to Block 3 on the German longlist. Then she won Aachen and was named as traveling reserve. Then Sandra Auffarth withdrew, meaning that yes, in fact, the reigning Olympic Champion is in situ to try and defend her title.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.9
Cross Country Penalties – 4.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 32.1 – 11th

Show Jumping 📈 Nickel 21 jumped clear at Aachen on his way to the win a couple of weeks ago, but had a pole at the two competitions leading up to that. He hasn’t done a lot of long-format events, and he had a pole in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season, where he finished second. Before that we’re going back to a 3*-L in 2022, where, incidentally, he did jump clear. He’s a one or none kind of guy – which will it be?

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🇳🇱 Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This long-term partnership have been together since 2018 and Janneke has brought the gelding up from 2*. They’ve got plenty of Nations Cup experience under their cinch, as well as two European Championships and the Tokyo Games.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Janneke’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Janneke was part of the team at the Europeans last season which secured the Netherlands’ spot at the Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 31.9
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 31.9 – 9th

Show Jumping 📈 Every now and then this gelding will have a rail, but more often than not he jumps clear, really. He left the poles in the cups at the European Championships last season, a long-format competition, although it cost them two seconds over the time allowed. He had a pole in his last run, but that was short-format.

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JANNEKE FINISHED ON HER DRESSAGE SCORE!

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“It’s a dream come true, actually at the end. You know that a fault is made so quickly so… I hoped it, I dreamed it. I was okay with a little fault, but this is even better.”

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🇫🇷 Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It can’t be easy for Stéphane to ride in his friend’s honor as he does, but honestly, he does it with such grace and humility, reminding us all that the gelding is Thaïs’ in the stylized prefix he usually adds to the horse’s name – ‘Ride for Thaïs’. It’s one of the most poignant stories of eventing – Chaman Dumontceau’s rider was involved in a fatal fall and her friend took it upon himself to ride for her. And now all three are representing France at their home Olympics and have just won a team silver medal, which must be just so, so special.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 As well as her horse continuing in Thaïs’ name, her family continue her legacy with a foundation which raises money for safety devices in the sport.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 24.4
Cross Country Penalties – 2.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4
Overall – 35.6 – 14th

Show Jumping 📈 This is a one or none kind of guy, more often one. He’s had a pole in each of his last three FEI competitions, jumped clear in the 4*-S at Chatsworth last season (which he won), and then had a pole at each of his three events before that. He was on a streak of three clears up to that point. I think that gives a bit of a picture of how things tend to go in the show jumping ring for this combination. They’re generally inside the time, but can add a little here and there.

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🇳🇿 Tim Price and Falco

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim and Falco spent some time pure show jumping on the Sunshine Tour in Spain this season, so they’ll be well primed for the two-round Olympic format. Eyes on this pair to deliver another clear round 👀

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tim’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥉 & Individual 🥉 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team); 8th individually – Caen 2014 (Team)
9️⃣ Tim is currently World No. 9

🔴 Tim has won four of the seven 5*s, been on the podium two of the three he hasn’t (already) won and top-10 at the other.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.5
Cross Country Penalties – 2
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 28.5 – 6th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair haven’t had a pole since 2021 and you have to go way, way, way back to 2017 to find another one on their record. That’s two poles in 27 FEI competitions. They were a second over the time when they jumped for victory at Pau 5* in 2021, but Tim’s produced a streak of seven clears without going over the clock since then.

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“He jumped awesome in the second round. It encouraged good jumping, that course — it was a good course. I was hoping it might be a bit tougher. He was really, really nice — very happy with me, relaxed a bit more, and just jumped better.”

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🇯🇵 Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Kazuma began his equestrian career in the show jumping ring, so he’s well-used to the pressure of the two-round format we see at the Olympics. In Tokyo, he actually jumped better in the second round, having had a pole in the first, so he’ll be hoping for two clears – and potentially another medal (he’s just won team bronze!) – this time around.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kazuma’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 4th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 8th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Vinci de la Vigne is known as ‘Vince’ at home.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 27.4
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 27.4 – 5th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair are on a streak of seven clears inside the time after their super round earlier. They had a pole at the World Championships in Pratoni, and one in the first round in Tokyo, and the horse had one at the World Championships before that, when he was being campaigned for France by Astier Nicolas. He’s currently enjoying his best ever show jumping form though, so Kazuma will be keeping everything crossed that it continues at least a little longer.

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KAZUMA FINISHED ON HIS DRESSAGE SCORE!

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🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Felix is no stranger to the final round of a championships and he’s sitting on a very, very good jumper. The gelding’s untested over a two-round format, but his penchant for clear rounds sure does stand him in good stead.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Felix’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 19th individually – Rio 2016 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 14th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Felix’s grandad competed in eventing at the 1956 Olympics in Stockholm.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22.1
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4.4
Overall – 30.5 – 8th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair jump a lot of clear rounds, but they’re not infallible. They had a pole in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season, which tumbled them down the order to ninth place. They’ve jumped clear at each of the four competitions they’ve done this season, all short-format events. We’ll have to wait and see how ‘Dao’ finds the format at Paris, but this guy’s got a very exciting future ahead of him no matter how things ultimately play out.

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🇯🇵 Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In 2017, Yoshi became the first Japanese rider to win a 4* outside Japan and is, now, based with Pippa Funnell in the UK, after a condition of the sale of MGH Grafton Street was that he stay at her home. And now, Yoshi and ‘Squirrel’ have just won team bronze, the first eventing medal ever for Japan! Please someone get all the nuts for Squirrel.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Yoshi’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 20th – London 2012 (Team) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 20th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.); 18th

🔴 This gelding delivered Pippa Funnell a superb Burghley win in 2019.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.5
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0.4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 4.4
Overall – 30.3 – 7th

Show Jumping 📈 In their four FEI runs together, they have a 50:50 jumping clear rate, with two poles over two competitions and two clears. Historically, this gelding can be a little tricky in the show jumping phase, with more faults than clears across his many events, but it looks like he’s going well for Yoshi thus far. How will they do in the Olympic ring today?

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🇬🇧 Tom McEwen and JL Dublin

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

‘Dubs’ is very much a one or none kind of guy in this phase, happily more often none than one. But he’s not infallible, and the two-round format caught out a couple of the Brits in Tokyo, not Tom though, who took home the individual silver medal with Toledo de Kerser. He now has another team gold to add to his collection! It would be a fairytale should ‘Dubs’ find himself up there after all’s said and done today, and we know that anything’s possible in eventing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tom’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Team 🥇 Tryon 2018; 12th individually
3️⃣ Tom is currently World No. 3

🔴 Tom keeps fit by running and can often be seen at events undertaking his course walk rather more speedily than the rest of the competition.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.8
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 25.8 – 4th

Show Jumping 📈 In long-format competitions with Tom, Dubs has 50:50 form – one or none. He had a pole and added 1.2 time penalties on his way to second place at Kentucky 5* in the spring, expensive penalties considering he would have won the thing without them. He also had a pole at Pau 5*, where he was third. He was clear at Kentucky last year though, where he was second, and finished on his dressage in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo in 2022, where he was also second. There’s a lot of bridesmaid-ing going on for this pair, but it’s surely only a matter of time before they take a win.

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TOM FINISHED ON HIS DRESSAGE SCORE!

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🇬🇧 Laura Collett and London 52

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One third of the team who took the gold in Tokyo – and now team gold medalists in Paris! – Laura and London 52 are surely here for redemption after an expensive second show jumping round saw them drop down the Olympic order last time around. Laura must’ve been cursing the two-round format at the Games, but I’m willing to bet that she’s been practicing for it since, well 2021.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Laura’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 There’s no prizes for guessing who Laura’s eventing idol is. Of course, it’s British eventing hero Pippa Funnell.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 17.5
Cross Country Penalties – 0.8
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4.8
Shoe Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 23.1 – 3rd

Show Jumping 📈 So yes, Laura and London 52 jumped clear in the first round in Tokyo, but then had two poles in the second round. At that point, this horse had only ever had eight faults in a show jumping round once before, way, way back in 2018 (he’s since had two poles in a 4*-S competition in 2022). He did go through a spate of rolling a pole, around the time of Tokyo to the World Championships in Pratoni (where he had a pole), but once he came out of the other side of that, it’s been clear all the way.

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BRONZE FOR LAURA COLLETT AND LONDON 52!!!

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Laura’s taking two medals home from Paris to add to her Tokyo team gold – another team gold and individual bronze.

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🇦🇺 Christopher Burton and Shadow Man

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Chris has, handily, spent the last two seasons on the pure show jumping scene, so he’ll be well-prepared for the two round format, something we only see in eventing at the Olympics.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Chris’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Rio 2016; 5th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Chris was part of the team that helped Australia qualify for the show jumping at Paris, and had horses qualified for both eventing and show jumping at the Games.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 0.4
Show Jumping Round – 0
Overall – 22.4 – 2nd

Show Jumping 📈 This gelding jumps clear more often than not. He was on a streak of seven clear rounds until he lowered two poles in the 4*-L at Strzegom, Poland, in April (spanning both Chris and his previous rider, Ben Hobday). He kept them in the cups in his most recent run though, when he finished on his dressage score. He was a second over the time in the 4*-S in Kronenberg this spring, but there’s only been one other occasion that he hasn’t been inside in this phase.

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SILVER FOR CHRIS BURTON AND SHADOW MAN!

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🇩🇪 Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The curse of the last fence must still hang over Michi and haunt his dreams to this day. It cost him and ‘Chip’ the title at the World Championships in Pratoni, and it’s not the only time an unlucky rub has scuppered his chance of a win. Is it their turn to convert their bridesmaid status to bride?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Michael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 8th individually – Team 🥈 & Individual 🥇 Rio 2016 – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Caen 2014 – Individual 🥇 Lexington 2010

🔴 Michi’s won Badminton, Burghley, Luhmühlen and Kentucky, some of them multiple times.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 17.8
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Show Jumping Round 1 – 4
Show Jumping Round 2 – 0
Overall – 21.8 – 1st

Show Jumping 📈 It’s a similar story for this combination’s show jumping form as it is for their cross country form. They don’t have poles often, but when they do, they really count. In 33 FEI competitions together, they’ve had poles on nine occasions, including one in the second round of jumping in Tokyo. They were on track to win the World Championships in Pratoni, with a fence in hand, but when one went and everyone held their breath, no one could have predicted that the last would go as well, dropping them down to fifth place. They’d jumped clear since then, until the 4*-S at Luhmühlen this season when they had one pole, dropping them from first to third. They did jump clear for the win at Kentucky 5* in 2022, and we all know that Michi will be absolutely determined not to let the mistakes of the past haunt his present-day hunt for another Olympic title.

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GOLD FOR MICHAEL JUNG AND CHIPMUNK FRH!!!

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MICHAEL HAS BECOME THE FIRST PERSON EVER TO WIN THREE OLYMPIC INDIVIDUAL TITLES IN EVENTING!

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Glory and Gold Awaits – Your Follow-Along Companion Guide to the Olympic Eventing in Paris – Show Jumping Round 1 & Team Final

Jumping to retain their title, Team GB are headed up by Laura Collett and London 52, who were part of the gold medal winning team in Tokyo and currently sit in second individually. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This is it! It all comes down to this… Well, not all, there’s still the small matter of individual medals to go once all’s said and done for the teams (oh yes, even MORE eventing coming up, the Olympics just giveth and giveth), but we’ll get down to the nitty gritty of individual honors in due course. Right now our ears are pricked and very firmly pointed towards the team podium. It’s time to get ready to find out which nations will be celebrated in the medal ceremony. Ooh là là baguette! Eek.

Just in case you missed yesterday’s (and Saturday’s) explanation of why things are looking different in our live blogs for the Olympics, here’s what you need to know:

For those of you who are avid followers of our live blogs (we salute you eventing nerds!), you’ll notice that things are a little different this time around. In order to adhere to the strict media rules for the Olympics, we’re not able to bring you live commentary. We can, however, keep you totally informed with regards to each of the horses and riders show jumping today, what their form is coming into the Games, their hobbies and favorite foods (amongst other, um, horseplay), and how they’re likely to perform in each phase based on the available data, so you’ll be securely in the know as you watch the live stream.

Our roving reporters extraordinaire – Sally Spickard and Tilly Berendt – are mostly resisting the urge to crack open le champagne early in the Chat Zone, maybe. We’ll have a few of the riders’ reactions to their rounds coming at you but, as you can imagine, things are a little crazy back there so make sure you stay tuned for our full report later which will have everything you need to know, and more.

Buckle up and prepare to be hit with absolutely everything you didn’t know you need to know about the horses and riders as we reach the conclusion of the team eventing competition at the Paris Olympic Games.

There was a bit of a shake up at this morning’s horse inspection, which has left the top-5 going into the final phase looking like this:

1️⃣ Defending their Olympic title from Tokyo, Team GB go into the final phase in gold medal position on a combined score of 82.5.
2️⃣ They’ll bring the house down if they make it onto the podium. Home team France currently sit in silver on a combined score of 87.2.
3️⃣ Climbing up into bronze spot following this morning’s horse inspection, Team Switzerland are on a combined score of 102.4.
4️⃣ Belgium are just outside the medals as things stand. They’re on a combined score of 111.
5️⃣ Japan have slipped from third to fifth after incurring 20 penalties for making a substitution this morning, putting them on a combined score of 113.8.

And here’s the rest of the top-10:

6️⃣ New Zealand – 118.2
7️⃣ Sweden – 120.1
8️⃣ Ireland 121.1
9️⃣ USA – 128.5
🔟 The Netherlands – 147.5

Canada, Brazil, Italy, Germany, Australia and Poland round-out the team competition (in that order).

This is what the team start list looks like.

You can follow along with the live scores here and you’ll find the order of go here.

Before we get down to official Olympic business, here are some links of interest:

▶️ If you missed yesterday’s cross country companion guide, you’ll find it right here. And if you’ve a hankering for even more Paris action, here’s the dressage edition.

▶️ The substitute rule and scoring is, shall we say, a little complex at the Olympics, but never fear, EN is here with the clearest explanation we could manage of how things work.

▶️ Here’s everything you need to know about the Olympic show jumping rounds. Yes plural, because there are not one, but two rounds at the Olympics. Click the link and all will be revealed.

▶️ Even more you say? You want more eventing? More EN? Well here you go – all the info and links you can ever require (and some you don’t but actually, you do) in our Ultimate Guide to Eventing in Paris.

▶️ Safe to say, here at EN we are now looking entirely on point for an extra role in a remake of The Walking Dead, which is ironic as we’re more at the crawling stage, to be honest. Bloodshot, sunken eyes from severely limited sleep and 100 hours a day screen time ✅ Sallow, sun-starved skin ✅ A desperate, please-don’t-let-me have-run-out-of-frozen-pizza-just-yet aura ✅ Basically fingerless by now due to excessive scrolling/typing ✅ Except for Sally and Tilly, who are no doubt as dog-tired as the team at home, but a très chic version, because, Paris, baby, Paris. Click to appreciate all the sweet fruits of our labor.

Please remember to keep this page refreshed so that you don’t miss a thing. I’ll be adding in the riders’ reactions to their rounds as they come in, so keep flicking through to gather all the goodies.

This is it, sports fans. They’re going for glory, and gold.
Eyes on and aller, aller, aller eventing!
🥖🍾

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

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🇨🇿 Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke (Ind.)

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Miroslav and Shutterflyke have Olympic and World Championships completions under their cinch, and would love to add another one from the Paris Games. They find this phase a little tricky, because, well, it is tricky, but they jumped clear in their most recent run so Miroslav will be channeling that energy as he enters the ring on the Olympic stage.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Miroslav’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 As well as being an Olympic eventer, Miroslav is also an equine veterinarian.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 53
Cross Country Penalties – 72
Overall – 125 – 53rd

Show Jumping 📈 They had three rails in Tokyo and 1.6 time; at the World Championships in Pratoni they had four poles, and 2 time. They do have clear round form at short-format, but 4 jumping penalties is the best they’ve been at a long-format competition.

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🇪🇨 Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois

Sometimes those poles just don’t wanna stay in the cups, and that’s often the case for this pair. Nicolas thinks such a lot of the gelding though, and acknowledges that ‘Altier’ always tries his best. They’ve jumped on the final day of an Olympics once before, so they know the drill. Now all they need is for those poles to stay firmly lodged.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.) – Rio 2016
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Tryon 2018 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Ind.)

🔴 Nicolas is a true polyglot, with five different languages in his arsenal.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 42.3
Cross Country Penalties – 65.4
Overall – 107.7 – 52nd

Show Jumping 📈 They had 16 jumping faults in Tokyo, and 16 at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last year. They went through a spate of one-or-nones after the last Olympics, but that ended with five down in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season, and since then they’ve had three lots of 12 penalties, a 16 and a 4. So really, it’s anyone’s guess where they’ll land in Paris.

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🇿🇦 Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex is back at the Olympics after a twelve year hiatus, and brings forward ‘Norman’, as he’s known at home. This combination don’t have a ton of runs together under their cinch and will be aiming for a solid Olympic completion to add to their record.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alexander’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Ind.)
🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.)

🔴 Figaro des Premices is joint-youngest horse in the field, at nine.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 39
Cross Country Penalties – 33.2
Overall – 72.2 – 48th

Show Jumping 📈 This combination had one pole in their most recent run at Strzegom on their way to fifth place, their only event at 4*-L. They rolled three in the 4*-S at Bramham in June but jumped clear in the 4*-S at Bicton this season. They almost always add a handful of seconds too.

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“He just stepped up and performed like an absolute legend … He jumped amazing.”

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“We did look at calling him ‘Norman Crusade’ because we bought him with the dream of coming here — it was a pipe dream and it was kind of a joke. Then of course, as a seven-year-old, he was doing his first three-star, [as an] eight-year-old he did his first four-star, and I’m thinking, Oh, actually, this is not a dream, it’s reality.”

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🇪🇸 Esteban Benitez Valle and Utrera AA 35 1

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Esteban’s in Paris with his eleven-year-old Spanish-bred mare, making his Olympic debut for his country. He’s represented Spain at European and World Championships with another mare, Milana, who’s now going eventing for fun at 1* with his girlfriend.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Esteban’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Esteban has been based in Germany since 2016.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 39.9
Cross Country Penalties – 29
Overall – 68.9 – 47th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair have a bit of a mixed bag of results in the show jumping ring on their record, with a four or eight as likely as a clear round. They jumped clear in the 4*-L at Strzegom last season on their way to third place, rolled one pole in their most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup event at Montelibretti, and had two in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in Arville last fall. So none, one, or two – we’ll have to see how things fall.

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🇩🇰 Peter T. Flarup and Fascination

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Peter gave up his role as head trainer for the national eventing team in order to focus on making it to Paris with Tokyo ride Fascination. They tend to rattle the poles a bit in this phase, but kept it to one in Tokyo. How will they fare this time around?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Peter’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Team) – Rome 1998 (Team)

🔴 Peter and ‘Cooper’ (hey, their names kind of rhyme) have been going arena eventing over the winter.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 32.4
Cross Country Penalties – 33.6
Overall – 66 – 45th

Show Jumping 📈 They haven’t had a clear in their last six FEI competitions, which include short-format events and arena eventing. There are more single poles on their record than anything else, but there is the odd 8 penalties dotted in there. They kept it to one in Tokyo and jumped clear at their last long-format event.

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🇭🇺 Balász Kaizinger and Herr Cooles Classico

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Balász is making his Olympic debut as the first Hungarian eventer at a Games since 1996. It’s such a huge achievement to make it onto the world stage like this, and even more-so for those riders hailing from countries without such extensive support for the sport that others enjoy. Good for you Balász!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Balász’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Balász took over the ride on Herr Cooles Classico in 2022.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 45.8
Cross Country Penalties – 16
Overall – 61.8 – 42nd

Show Jumping 📈 This pair have got a bit of a mixed bag of show jumping scores on their card, with one pole in their most recent run, the 4*-S at Luhmühlen, and two in their only 4*-L run. They had three in the 4*-S at Montelibretti last season. They do tend to add time penalties to those scores.

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🇲🇦 Noor Slaoui and Cash In Hand

Trailblazing for Arab women and Moroccan equestrians, Noor has made history with her appearance at the Paris Olympic Games. She progressed from BE90 to 3* in just a couple of years, and now is the first North African representative ever in Olympic eventing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Noor is involved with a rehabilitation center for people with disabilities that her mother set up following a cycling accident which left her paraplegic when she was in her 30s. Noor has made visits to the center with horses and ponies for equine therapy sessions.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 36.4
Cross Country Penalties – 24
Overall – 60.4 – 40th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair rolled a pole in the 4*-S at Ballindenisk this season and two in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last fall. They were clear at the 4*-S Nations Cup event at Arville, but they’ve added time in almost every round they’ve jumped.

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🇫🇮 Veera Manninen and Sir Greg

How exciting it must be for Veera to be on the cusp of completing at her first Olympics with her long-time partner, friend and Juniors horse. Dreams really do come true in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Veera describes ‘Greg’ as adorably grumpy.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 36.8
Cross Country Penalties – 18.4
Overall – 55.2 – 37th

Show Jumping 📈 ‘Greg’ is generally a one or none kind of guy, although he’s only jumped clear in a long-format competition once. He does come to Paris with a clear in his most recent competition, although that came at the expense of 1.2 time penalties.

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🇦🇹 Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harald’s no stranger to the final round of a championships, having been to three Olympics and four World Championships. He’s in Paris with exciting new ride, former French horse, ‘Vitorio’.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Harald’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Ind.) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.) – Athens 2004 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Team); 19th individually

🔴 Harald may be an Olympic eventer, but it’s not actually his full-time job; in his real life he’s a dentist.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 36.5
Cross Country Penalties – 6.8
Overall – 43.3 – 31st

Show Jumping 📈 This combination had a pole in their most recent long-format run but have jumped three clears together at short-format. Historically, the horse is a relatively careful jumper, and has jumped clear on the final day at 5*.

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🇨🇳 Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex is very familiar with jumping in the final phase at a championships event, having contested three Olympics and three World Championships, as well as the Asian Games, which he won last year. He’ll tumbled down the order after a flag penalty out on cross country, and will be hoping to scramble back into the top-25 for a spot in the individual final with this reliable show jumper.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alex’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 8th – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Tryon 2018 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Ind.)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Alex enthusiastically represents China but has been based in the UK for many years.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22
Cross Country Penalties – 20.6
Overall – 42.6 – 30th

Show Jumping 📈 They’re on a streak of four clear rounds, all at short-format. The had two poles in their most recent long-format competition, the 4* in Montelibretti last year, and they don’t always make the time, but Alex will be focusing on those clears as he takes to the ring in Paris.

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🇵🇱 Wiktoria Knap and Quintus 134

Wiktoria is making her Olympic debut with her long-time partner Quintus 134. They’ve been together since Juniors and Young Riders and Wiktoria’s brought the gelding up through the FEI levels to, now, the Olympics. They’ve slotted into Team Poland after the elimination of Jan Kaminski and Jard on the cross country, and are ready to show the world what they’ve got in the show jumping phase.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Quintus 134 has been with Wiktoria since he was a six-year-old.

Show Jumping 📈 Safe to say, show jumping is not this pair’s favorite phase, with penalties accrued in almost every round. Sometimes two poles will go, sometimes three, sometimes four.

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“I am very grateful for this horse, for my team, that I am in this place where I am, and I was nominated for the Olympics.”

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🇦🇺 Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture

Shenae’s making her Olympic debut with OTTB Bold Venture, or ‘Bentley’ as he’s known in the barn. She’s traveled from Down Under for her second championships appearance under the Australian flag, the first coming at the World Championships in Pratoni. They’ve had some exciting results since then and are surely coming to Paris full of confidence. They’re jumping for the Australian team following the retirement of Kevin McNab and Don Quidam on cross country. Australia incur 200 penalties for the non-completion of a phase by a team member and a further 20 penalties for making a substitution. Shenae will be competing solely for the team, not as an individual.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Shenae’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Bold Venture is the only Thoroughbred in the field. When he was on the track, he was known as ‘Hell on Wheels’.

Show Jumping 📈 They rolled three poles for 12 penalties at the World Championships in Pratoni, but that’s the most they’ve ever had in this phase. They generally jump clear in long-format competitions, but do tend to have a pole at short-format, as they did in the 4*-S at Adelaide this season; it didn’t stop them from winning though.

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“… being a fresh horse going into the show jumping — not having run nine minutes — I wasn’t sure what to expect, with him being a Thoroughbred, whether he would light up and block me out, but he didn’t. He was just his usual amazing self with the atmosphere and I just know I can trust him.”

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🇩🇪 Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Despite having been eliminated on yesterday’s cross country after Christoph took the side exit and had to walk home, in terms of today’s test, this pair are coming in hot, with a clear round streak of eight. Under Olympic rules, following medical/veterinary checks, a combination who didn’t complete the cross country can go on to show jump for the team. Christoph’s out of the individual competition though. Team Germany will incur 200 penalties for having a rider not complete a phase.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Christoph’s championships experience:

🗺️ Team 🥇 Pratoni 2022

🔴 Amazingly, Christoph doesn’t consider himself to be a full-time eventer, despite being so darned good at it. Instead, he considers his role at the helm of his family’s breeding business to be his main job.

Show Jumping 📈 This horse is incredibly careful in the show jumping ring, and hasn’t had a pole since before the World Championships in 2022. They were clear inside the time at the European Championships, notably, a long-format event, where they finished fourth, and added nothing in Pratoni, or at Luhmühlen in 2021 on their way to second place. Don’t get me wrong, there are faults on their record, but like I said, they’ve been on a clear round streak for a while now.

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🇮🇹 Pietro Sandei and Rubis de Prere

Pietro finds himself part of Team Italia after having occupied the traveling reserve slot initially. He took his place on the cross country line-up following the elimination of Emiliano Portale and Future following their dressage test. He’s in Paris with long-time partner and pal ‘Rubis’, making his Olympic debut.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Pietro’s championships experience:

🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Pietro and Rubis finished 10th at Luhmühlen 5* last month.

Show Jumping 📈 There is the odd penalty for this pair in the final phase, mostly one or none, but there’s very occasionally one or two more than that. They jumped clear at Luhmühlen in the 5* on their way to tenth place, and were clear in their other run this season, the 4*-S at Pratoni, which they won, so they come into the show jumping round in Paris on good form.

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🇧🇷 Ruy Fonseca and Ballypatrick SRS

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Ruy’s got plenty of championships experience with the Brazilian team, with two Olympics and three World Championship caps in his locker. Initially selected as traveling reserve, he finds himself on the team, and chomping at the bit to do his bit for Brazil in Paris. Ruy has been substituted into the team following the withdrawal of Carlos Parro and Safira. That means that the team will incur 20 penalties for having made a substitution and Ruy will compete solely for the team, not as an individual.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ruy’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Ind.) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Team)

🔴 Ruy is a three-time winner of the Best Eventing Rider of the Year awarded by Olympic Brazil.

Show Jumping 📈 In 12 FEI show jumping rounds over the last two seasons, this gelding has had just one pole down, which came at short-format. They’re sometimes a second over the time but have been inside in each of their three runs this season.

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“… the horse has been here for the whole week and thinking, ‘When am I going? When am I going dressage? When am I going cross country?’. I only got the call really late last night … It is a privilege.”

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🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS

Jessie’s no stranger to representing Canada on the world stage, having competed at two previous Olympics, three World Championships and five Pan-Ams, as well as hopping the pond with the delightfully named Wabbit to have complete at both Badminton and Burghley. This mare’s not so experienced as her barn buddy, but Jessie takes her pure show jumping, competing at CSI4* last season, and it shows in her form.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jessie’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – 2010 Lexington (Ind.)

🔴 Jessie’s life philosophy is, “If you can dream it, you can become it”.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 35.4
Cross Country Penalties – 32.4
Overall – 67.8 – 46th

Show Jumping 📈 In 15 FEI competitions, this mare has had show jumping penalties five times, all but one at short-format and all five just the one pole. She was clear inside the time on her latest run in the 4*-S at Bromont, and was clear with 1.2 time in the 4*-L at TerraNova last November, the only time she’s added time in the show jumping.

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“It felt like we could really execute the plan to the mark. She just loved this French crowd, they are amazing. They’re so loud and I think she feeds off of it.”

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🇳🇱 Sanne de Jong and Enjoy

Sanne spends a fair bit of time doing pure show jumping, so she’ll be feeling comfortable in the ring today. This pair know each other so well, they’ve basically grown up together, and there can’t be a better feeling than completing an Olympic Games with your best friend.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sanne’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Enjoy’s mom was bred to compete, but an accident as a youngster left her blind in one eye and so she became a brood mare instead, and now her daughter’s at the Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 34.8
Cross Country Penalties – 48.2
Overall – 83 – 50th

Show Jumping 📈 They jumped clear at the European Championships last year, and have been clear in each of their three rounds since then. Before that, their form was a bit patchy – the mare kind of went from a one or none kind of gal to a short spate where eight seemed to be her favorite number, to getting over that and producing a bunch of clear rounds. Let’s hope that trajectory continues for Sanne as they finish up their Olympic debut.

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🇮🇪 Aoife Clark and Freelance

Aoife was off games for much of last season with an injury, but she’s back and fighting fit, taking up her place on the Irish team after being substituted in for Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M following yesterday’s cross country. Ireland will incur 20 penalties for making a substitution and Aoife will be competing solely for the team, not as an individual.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Aoife’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Team); 7th individually
🗺️ Caen 2014 (Team); 20th individually

🔴 Aoife’s been top-10 at Badminton more than once.

Show Jumping 📈 This season, the mare had a pole in the 4*-S at Bramham in her most recent run and was two seconds over the time, but jumped clear in the 4*-L at Saumur on her way to fourth place and a finishing score of 29.6. In her season opener, the 4*-S at Kronenberg, she had two poles and was one second over. So, a bit of a mixed bag thus far this year.

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“I love love, love that little mare. She’s just such a trier.”

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🇺🇸 Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

They had a pole at the Pan-Ams in Santiago, one of only two show jumping penalties on their record. Will they pull out a more characteristic clear in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 HSH Blake is joint-youngest horse in the field, at nine.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30.4
Cross Country Penalties – 32
Overall – 62.4 – 44th

Show Jumping 📈 They’ve got 20 clear rounds in their locker and have never had a time fault – will they make it 21? Hold your breath.

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“He’s nine-years-old; he’s really wise above his years. I think there’s a big, big, big, big future ahead of us, because anything was my mistakes. He didn’t do anything wrong this weekend, but he never does. He’s a bit of a unicorn.”

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“I’m sad that it’s over! I wish we could do this every week.”

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🇸🇪 Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z

Sofia and ‘Belle’ may be making their Olympic debut in Paris, but they’ve got two European Championships and a World Championships together in their locker.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sofia’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Sofia has produced ‘Belle’ through the levels right from the start of the mare’s career in 2017.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 33.3
Cross Country Penalties – 15
Overall – 48.3 – 35th

Show Jumping 📈 They had a pole at the Europeans but jumped clear at the World Championships in Pratoni. Their recent form suggests they’re likely to have a pole, but that’s all from short-format competitions. They did jump clear in their most recent run, the 4*-S at Luhmühlen last month.

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🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Hiarado

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Since this pair have been together, they haven’t had a show jumping pole down – that’s got to have Jonelle feeling confident as she comes into the ring. She’s got plenty of experience jumping on the final day of an event and will be going in there aiming to bring their tally of clears to nine.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jonelle’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 11th individually – Rio 2016 (Team); 17th individually – Team 🥉 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥉 Pratoni 2022; 10th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team); 19th individually – Caen 2014 (Ind.); 4th
8️⃣ Jonelle is currently World No. 8

🔴 Jonelle has won three of the world’s seven 5*s – Luhmühlen, Pau and Badminton.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30.8
Cross Country Penalties – 28.4
Overall – 59.2 – 39th

Show Jumping 📈 They’ve added nothing in the show jumping phase at both long- and short-format competitions, including at 5*. Clear round incoming? Eyes on 👀

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🇯🇵 Toshiyuki Tanaka and Jefferson

Toshiyuki spent the week leading up to the Games thinking he was firmly situated in the traveling reserve slot, and then, well, Olympics things happened and here is is, in the team and ready to complete an event for his country once more. His late call-up came just this morning, following the withdrawal of Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka. Japan will incur 20 penalties for making a substitution and Toshi will compete for the team only, not as an individual.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Toshiyuki’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon (2018) Team; 15th individually

🔴 Jefferson came to Toshiyuki via Germany, Australia and Great Britain.

Show Jumping 📈 Every now and again this gelding takes a pole or two, but the vast majority of the time he’s clear, although that’s often at the expense of a time penalty or two.

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“Probably when I see the podium, then probably I will feel it.”

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🇧🇪 Tine Magnus and Dia van het Lichterveld Z

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Belgian farmer/eventer Tine may be making her Olympic debut, but she knows exactly what it’s like to be at the top of her game, having been Belgian national champion in 2022. Incredibly, she’s not a full-time eventer, but there’s no mistaking a pure talent for the sport. The future sure looks bright for Belgian eventing with this pair in their ranks.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 I have it on good intel that this mare has been in hot demand, but her owners are hanging onto her very tightly.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 44
Cross Country Penalties – 2
Overall – 46 – 32nd

Show Jumping 📈 They were clear inside the time in their most recent long-format run, the 4*-L at Saumur; they had one pole in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season. That’s their form across the board, really – one or none, more likely none.

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“… you sit back, you jump, and you think, ‘Yes!’. I watched a bit in my eye after me, and then it fell down, but it’s my fault. My mare was really, really, really amazing.”

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🇨🇭 Mélody Johner and de Rueire

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Mélody was top-20 individually in Tokyo, where they very nearly finished on their dressage. Their dressage test in Paris didn’t go exactly to plan for them, but they only added 3.2 out on cross country. They’re in 30th coming into the final phase.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mélody’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 17th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Mélody was Swiss Junior Champion in jumping, so she’s got a solid foundation for the final phase of an event.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 38.4
Cross Country Penalties – 3.2
Overall – 41.6 – 28th=

Show Jumping 📈 OK, let’s first talk Tokyo. They were just one second over the time on cross country day and followed up that superb performance with a clear round in the first of the two show jumping rounds. And then the poles came, three in total, plus 1.2 time. To be honest, the clear round was the anomaly in terms of their form, they more often have a pole than not – they had one at the European Championships last season – but they mostly keep it to one. Unless they don’t, like they didn’t at the World Championships in Pratoni, where they had four.

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🇫🇷 Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Despite only being 44, Nicolas has the experience of five Olympics, two World Championships and nine Europeans in his arsenal – he sure knows how to pack a whole lot into a career. He’s gunning for team and individual honors at his home Games, and there’s every chance he’ll do it with this exciting gelding, who’s already proved his mettle by finishing on his dressage at the 4*-L Nations Cup event in Boekelo last season to take the win.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 6th individually – London 2012 (Team); 17th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.) – Team 🥇 Athens 2004 (Ind.) 8th – Sydney 2000 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Team)

🔴 Eventing’s in Nicolas’ genes – his dad and uncle are both eventing Olympians, with his uncle going on to coach the French team.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 27.2
Cross Country Penalties – 3.2
Overall – 30.4 – 11th

Show Jumping 📈 This gelding is a one or none kind of guy; across his career thus far it’s around a 50% clear jumping rate, but more recently he’s been clear more often. However, at long-format it’s exactly 50:50. He was clear inside the time on his way to winning the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season but had a pole in his season opener this year at short-format. Only time will tell how he copes with the two-round format of the Olympics, but one thing is for sure, based on his form thus far in his career, this horse has a sparkling future ahead of him.

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“Now I’m going to analyze that and give my advice to my teammates.”

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🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo

When you’ve got a horse who’s as good in each phase as ‘Walter’ is, you know you’re onto an eventing winner. He’s accurate and precise in the dressage ring, and an absolute machine cross country, in terms of both jumping and time, and well, in the final phase he more often than not leaves the poles in the cups. Wonderful Walter will have won over many hearts over the weekend, adding to his fan club every time he goes out there and does his thang.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ros’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020 (as traveling reserve)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 4th individually – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 Tryon 2018
1️⃣ Ros is currently World No. 1

🔴 Ros has a little girl called Ziggy who can often be seen cheering for her mom at events.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 23.4
Cross Country Penalties – 15
Overall – 38.4 – 24th

Show Jumping 📈 If you were being threatened by something like, really threatening and absolutely had to pick out Walter’s ‘weak’ phase, you’d probably say this one. Although really, we’re pushing it here. In 22 FEI competitions he’s had a total of seven poles down. One of these came at the European Championships, but when your dressage score is 21.3 and you added nothing on cross country day, you can have a pole and still win. That’s the only time he’s had show jumping penalties at a long-format event; he even jumped clear ‘round Badminton last year on his way to the win, a feat that many found tricky given the ground conditions of the day before. They had a very unfortunate 15 penalties for a missed flag on yesterday’s cross country which dropped them right down the order, but wherever they end up today, the future’s certainly very bright for Ros and her buddy.

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“What will be will be, won’t it? I couldn’t have two greater teammates … We’re competitors, but we’re also great friends, and whatever happens today, I know we’ll hold our heads high and be very proud of each other.”

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🇵🇱 Robert Powala and Tosca del Castegno

Robert should be feeling pretty cool, calm and collected as he comes into the show jumping ring, given the fact that he’s competed at World Cup competitions in pure show jumping previously.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Robert is based in Italy, a childhood dream of his that came true.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 34.7
Cross Country Penalties – 60
Overall – 94.7 – 51st

Show Jumping 📈 This season, in four short-format runs ‘Tosca’ has jumped clear three times, and once had two down. In their most recent long-format run, the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season, they rolled just the one pole. There is often a bit of time to be added in the final phase for this pair.

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🇦🇺 Shane Rose and Virgil

Incredibly, Shane is in Paris completing at his fourth Olympic Games with his long-time pal, ‘Virg’. At nineteen, Virg knows a thing or two about this eventing lark, and it’s very cool to see these veterans of the sport turn out and look so damn good. All credit to the teams at home for the obviously excellent care and attention they pay to these horses and their, obviously totally on-point, training programs. Shane’s comeback from a serious injury just a couple of months ago is nothing short of amazing and wherever this pair end up today will be an enormous achievement and great testament to their relationship.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Shane’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥈 Tokyo 2020; 10th individually – Team 🥉 Rio 2016 – Beijing 2008 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 13th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) – Rome 1998 (Ind.)

🔴 Dare I mention mankini-gate? I do. Well, Shane said, on record, that should he win a gold medal in Paris, he will wear a gold-kini. Oo la la.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 34.6
Cross Country Penalties – 2.8
Overall – 37.4 – 23rd

Show Jumping 📈 He had a pole at Pratoni and also had one in the first round at Tokyo, adding another in the second round. But there are many more clears on this gelding’s record than there are poles. He finished on his dressage when he won the Horse of the Year event in New Zealand this season and has jumped clear in the final phase in each of his five 5* appearances.

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“I felt like I had an important job to do to help the team and I feel like I’ve done my bit. It would have been great to finish without the pole down, but I’m really proud of my horse. He’s done an amazing job.”

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🇩🇪 Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

A clear round is in no way a dead cert for this pair, so Julia will be holding her breath and hoping that all of the poles stay in the cups as she takes to the Olympic ring.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Julia’s championships experience:

🔥 Individual 🥇 Tokyo 2020 – Team 🥈 Rio 2016
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Julia originally won’t have thought she had a seat on the flight to Paris, having been allocated to Block 3 on the German longlist. Then she won Aachen and was named as traveling reserve. Then Sandra Auffarth withdrew, meaning that yes, in fact, the reigning Olympic Champion is in situ to try and defend her title.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.9
Cross Country Penalties – 4.8
Overall – 31.7 – 14th=

Show Jumping 📈 Nickel 21 jumped clear at Aachen on his way to the win a couple of weeks ago, but had a pole at the two competitions leading up to that. He hasn’t done a lot of long-format events, and he had a pole in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season, where he finished second. Before that we’re going back to a 3*-L in 2022, where, incidentally, he did jump clear. He’s a one or none kind of guy – which will it be?

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“Going in there now and riding in front of such public at the Olympics — because in Rio I didn’t get to ride the showjumping, and Tokyo, zero people, only the team — and here they’ve all come out, so that’s really a treat.”

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“It’s also sometimes cool to do it without being in the lead and nervous and having all the pressure. I want to perform well, but this way, I can actually enjoy doing it.”

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🇮🇹 Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress

Photo by Alex Jeffery.

After her extravagance in the dressage ring and determination on cross country, ‘Swirl’ can be a bit tricksy when it comes to the show jumping. She has penalties more often than not, sometimes quite a few, even incurring an automatic elimination in the 4*-S at Chatsworth last season for having more than five fences down.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Giovanni’s championships experience:

🗺️ Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Giovanni may be very much Italian, but he’s been based in the UK for over a decade.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.7
Cross Country Penalties – 36.4
Overall – 62.1 – 43rd

Show Jumping 📈 OK, are you ready for this? This mare rolled three poles in her most recent run in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen, but jumped clear in her other two runs this season, two of only four clear rounds on her record. She had one pole at the European Championships last season, a long-format event, which is generally where she sits – one pole, or maybe a few more. It was six at Chatsworth last year, resulting in elimination due to it being a short-format event. How will she find Paris?

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🇧🇷 Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

This gelding is for sure one to watch in the show jumping ring, with his 2022 Sunshine Tour practice showing up as clear in the final phase of an event more often than not. They’re on a streak of seven clears, will they make it eight today?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Marcio’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Marcio is a trained doctor and anaesthetist.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 33.3
Cross Country Penalties – 42.2
Overall – 75.7 – 49th

Show Jumping 📈 In 15 FEI competitions they’ve had poles on just three occasions, all coming in the first two years of the gelding’s career. They haven’t had a pole this season, and didn’t have any last season, including at the Pan-Ams in Santiago where they won bronze. They did have 0.8 time that day but they finished on their dressage in the other two long-format runs on their FEI record. Eyes on this one 👀

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🇨🇦 Michael Winter and El Mundo

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination know just what it’s like to stand at the top of the podium, having won team gold at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season. They’re an experienced pairing with World Championships and 5*s under their cinch, and now an Olympics. It’s around 50:50 whether they’ll jump clear in this round – place your bets.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mike’s championships experience:

🔥 Beijing 2008 (Team) – Athens 2004 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022(Team)

🔴 Mike actually came from a non-horsey family, with his introduction to the madness coming at summer camp, and we all know how contagious the horsey bug is, he had no chance.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 35.2
Cross Country Penalties – 14.4
Overall – 49.6 – 36th

Show Jumping 📈 They were on a clear show jumping streak of five until they had a pole in the 4*-S at Bramham this season. That includes the Pan-Ams, where they were fifth individually and won team gold, and the 4*-L at Bramham last season. Before that, the last time they had a pole was at the World Championships in Pratoni. He tends to be a one or none kind of guy, and it’s around 50:50. There are a smattering of time penalties on his record too, at both long- and short-format. He was two seconds over in Santiago, and one at Pratoni.

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🇳🇱 Raf Kooremans and Radar Love

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This partnership really is brand new, with just six FEI runs this season together. Getting to Paris was very much the motivation behind the pairing, and here they are, at the Olympics within striking distance of a place in the individual final. They seem to be getting on well together so far, with a win, a second and a fifth place under their cinch already.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Raf’s championships experience:

🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Raf’s making his Olympic debut but he’s represented the Netherlands a bunch of times at European Championships as well as being part of the World Championships team in Tryon.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 27
Cross Country Penalties – 5.6
Overall – 32.6 – 18th

Show Jumping 📈 Since Raf took to the saddle, this gelding’s show jumping stats have improved- he’s had one pole in six rounds this season and has delivered by far the most consecutive clears of his career. The pole came in their only 4*-L competition together, so they’re still untested in terms of the Olympic format should they secure a spot in the top-25, but Raf must be feeling pretty good about how far he’s come with this horse in such a short time.

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🇮🇪 Susie Berry and Wellfields Lincoln

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Susie’s in the enviable position of having a string of five horses which were all on the Olympic selectors’ radar. Wellfields Lincoln may not have quite as many miles on the clock as some of his stablemates, but he’s proved himself to be a good all-rounder, and particularly careful in the final phase, so Susie should be feeling good as she enters the show jumping ring in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Susie’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Susie helped Ireland to qualify for the Paris Olympics when she made her Senior team debut at the World Championships in Pratoni.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 33
Cross Country Penalties – 15.2
Overall – 48.2 – 34th

Show Jumping 📈 In 17 FEI rounds, this pair have had poles on just three occasions, none of which have come at long-format competitions. They’ve jumped three clears inside the time already this season. Eyes on this one for a play to move up the leaderboard 👀

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🇺🇸 Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz is making her Olympic debut after a few weeks of thinking she would have to watch from the sidelines as traveling reserve. She’s been part of a successful Team US before, winning the team silver at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last year. Nutcracker’s an exciting young talent and will be gaining so much valuable experience to take forward as he struts his stuff on the world stage.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 In the barn, Nutcracker’s known as ‘Bali’.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 28
Cross Country Penalties – 6
Overall – 34 – 22nd

Show Jumping 📈 This combination do roll a pole, on occasion, having one down in the Kentucky 5* in the spring, where they finished eighth on the gelding’s debut at the top-level. They jumped clear in the 4*-L at Galway Downs last season, which they won, and again in the 4*-L at Tryon, which they also won. They do have the odd pole, but they’re almost always at short-format.

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“I’m just absolutely over the moon with him. He gave me such a good round and such a good feel — in all that atmosphere too. This has been a big learning experience for him as well, and he’ll be an even better horse next year for it.”

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“I think he’ll go home and have a big holiday, which he deserves, and then come back a really fabulous 11-year-old next year.”

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🇸🇪 Louise Romeike and Caspian 15

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Caspian 15 is a bit of a triple threat when it comes to eventing. He’s consistently low-30s in the dressage, hasn’t had a cross country jumping penalty ever and is speedy to boot, and very, very rarely has a show jumping pole. Lucky Louise to be at the Olympics with such a talent. They’re rounding out the individual final places as they come into this round.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Louise’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Caspian 15 is owned by Louise, her father-in-law, and Dutch eventer Madeleine Brugman, who’s grooming for Louise in Paris.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 37.7
Cross Country Penalties – 0.8
Overall – 38.5 – 25th

Show Jumping 📈 In 26 FEI competitions this guy has had show jumping penalties on just six occasions, all of them at short-format events. They were two seconds over the time in the 4*-L Nations Cup event in Boekelo last season, which isn’t unusual for them in this phase.

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🇳🇿 Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park

Photo by Eventing Nation.

This pair are on a streak of five clear rounds and haven’t had a pole this season. That’s come at the cost of a smidge of time sometimes though. Double clear today? Only time will tell.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Clarke’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team); 6th individually
🗺️ Team 🥉Pratoni 2022 – Lexington 2020 (Team)

🔴 Clarke has won all of the major eventing titles in his native New Zealand.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.7
Cross Country Penalties – 4.8
Overall – 30.5 – 12th

Show Jumping 📈 They had a pole at the World Championships in Pratoni, as well as being two seconds over the time. They’re on a good run of clears as they head to the Olympics, which should have Clarke feeling confident for another one, or two.

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🇯🇵 Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Kazuma began his equestrian career in the show jumping ring, so he’s well-used to the pressure of the two-round format we see at the Olympics. In Tokyo, he actually jumped better in the second round, having had a pole in the first, so he’ll be hoping for two clears – and potentially a medal – this time around.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kazuma’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 4th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 8th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Vinci de la Vigne is known as ‘Vince’ at home.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 27.4
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 27.4 – 8th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair are on a streak of six clears inside the time, but they’ve all come at short-format events. They had a pole at the World Championships in Pratoni, and one in the first round in Tokyo, and the horse had one at the World Championships before that, when he was being campaigned for France by Astier Nicolas. He’s currently enjoying his best ever show jumping form though, so Kazuma will be keeping everything crossed that it continues at least a little longer.

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“Basically for the equestrian people in Japan, you are dreaming about getting the medal one day, and then we are just wishing for this moment for a long, long time — many many years. 32 years — the last time we got the medal was before the Second World War. So for equestrian people, getting the medal — for 90 years, nothing happened. This was for a long time our dream, so this is a huge thing for us.”

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🇧🇪 Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Surely one of the most experienced riders in the field, Karin knows what it takes to complete at an Olympics, she’s a six-time Olympian after all. She’s been a huge part of Team Belgium over the years and has very much been a part of the nation’s growing success and upward trajectory – they finished top of the standings of the Nations Cup series last year. She’s here with a relatively inexperienced ride, proving that the future is very bright for Belgian eventing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karin’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Ind.) – London 2012 (Team); 15th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.); 9th – Athens 2004 (Team); 16th individually – Sydney 2000 (Team); 9th individually – Barcelona 1992 (Team); 8th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 17th individually – Caen 2014 (Team); 5th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 4th individually – Aachen 2006 (Team); 13th individually – Jerez de la Frontera 2002 (Ind.); 19th – Rome 1998 (Ind.) – Den Haag 1994 (Ind.)

🔴 This combination haven’t finished outside the top-20 in an FEI competition since mid-2021.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.6
Cross Country Penalties – 7.2
Overall – 33.8 – 21st

Show Jumping 📈 They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Boekelo last season, the last FEI long-format competition on their record. They’re on a run of four clear rounds, matching the highest number of clears they’ve had consecutively. There are a smattering of one pole rounds throughout their 29 FEI competitions, a couple of 8 penalties and one 12. Will they make it five clears in a row in Paris? Or even six, given the two round format and the fact that they’re currently in one of the spots for the individual final.

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🇨🇭 Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination have a whole bunch of championships experience under their cinch, with two World Championships, three Europeans and a whole slew of Nations Cup appearances on their card. Robin’s looking for his first Olympic completion in Paris and he’s hoping to do it with his long-term partner, ‘Grandeur’, who he’s been competing with for nine years. They are just outside the individual final slots as they come into this round.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Robin’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 15th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Robin and ‘Grandeur’ won their last two FEI events – that’s gotta have him feeling confident as he came into the Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 29.1
Cross Country Penalties – 9.6
Overall – 38.7 – 26th

Show Jumping 📈 They had a pole in the final phase at the European Championships last season, and one at the World Championships in Pratoni; in fact, they’ve had at least one pole at each of their championships appearances. Generally, this is a one or none kind of gelding, more often one, and sometimes the time can creep up on him too.

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🇫🇷 Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine

Photo by Eventing Nation.

This pair got caught out by the two-round format in Tokyo but they’ll be buoyed up by the home crowd this time around, and, despite Karim’s happy-go-lucky nature, there’s no doubt that he’s the fiercest of competitors.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karim’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 12th individually – Team 🥇 Rio 2016
🗺️ Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) 10th

🔴 Karim is known for his epic sense of humor, arguably one of the most important traits in eventing.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 29.6
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 29.6 – 10th

Show Jumping 📈 They were on a streak of eight clear rounds until their most recent run in the 4*-S at Marbach, where they had a pole, and that includes long- and short-format competitions and Pau 5*, where they added just 0.4 show jumping time to their dressage score across the entire event and were runners-up. The last time they had jumping penalties in the show jumping ring was Tokyo, where they had one pole in the first round and two poles and 0.8 time in the second round. That must have been disappointing as this horse really is a great jumper, who very much more often than not leaves the poles in the cups.

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🇬🇧 Tom McEwen and JL Dublin

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

‘Dubs’ is very much a one or none kind of guy in this phase, happily more often none than one. But he’s not infallible, and the two-round format caught out a couple of the Brits in Tokyo, not Tom though, who took home the individual silver medal with Toledo de Kerser. It would be a fairytale should ‘Dubs’ find himself up there after all’s said and done today, and we know that anything’s possible in eventing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tom’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Team 🥇 Tryon 2018; 12th individually
3️⃣ Tom is currently World No. 3

🔴 Tom keeps fit by running and can often be seen at events undertaking his course walk rather more speedily than the rest of the competition.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.8
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 25.8 – 6th

Show Jumping 📈 In long-format competitions with Tom, Dubs has 50:50 form – one or none. He had a pole and added 1.2 time penalties on his way to second place at Kentucky 5* in the spring, expensive penalties considering he would have won the thing without them. He also had a pole at Pau 5*, where he was third. He was clear at Kentucky last year though, where he was second, and finished on his dressage in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo in 2022, where he was also second. There’s a lot of bridesmaid-ing going on for this pair, but it’s surely only a matter of time before they take a win.

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“He was class from start to finish.”

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🇵🇱 Malgorzata Korycka and

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Malgorzata and ‘Valencia’ know perfectly well what it’s like to enter the show jumping ring for the final of a championships, having competed at the World Championships in Pratoni as individuals. This time they’re part of the team on their Olympic debut.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Malgorzata’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Do you think Malgorzata and and fellow Olympian (and fiance) Jan (Kaminski) have been asking the Prices for advice about being an Olympic eventing couple?

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 39.4
Cross Country Penalties – 21.2
Overall – 60.6 – 41st

Show Jumping 📈 This pair had two poles and 2 time faults in Pratoni at the World Championships and have two eight fault rounds on their card thus far this season. They’re a bit of a none, one, or two kind of combination, with the three variables being around about equal, really, and spread between long- and short-format events.

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🇦🇺 Christopher Burton and Shadow Man

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Chris has, handily, spent the last two seasons on the pure show jumping scene, so he’ll be well-prepared for the two round format, something we only see in eventing at the Olympics.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Chris’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Rio 2016; 5th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Chris was part of the team that helped Australia qualify for the show jumping at Paris, and had horses qualified for both eventing and show jumping at the Games.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 22 – 3rd

Show Jumping 📈 This gelding jumps clear more often than not. He was on a streak of seven clear rounds until he lowered two poles in the 4*-L at Strzegom, Poland, in April (spanning both Chris and his previous rider, Ben Hobday). He kept them in the cups in his most recent run though, when he finished on his dressage score. He was a second over the time in the 4*-S in Kronenberg this spring, but there’s only been one other occasion that he hasn’t been inside in this phase.

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“Isn’t he a lovely animal? And what a lucky person I am to be here in Paris, having so much fun here. The atmosphere at the Olympics is indescribable, isn’t it? You wish you could bottle it … Ben Hobday, thanks for the horse, mate. He’s a ripper.”

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🇩🇪 Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH

The curse of the last fence must still hang over Michi and haunt his dreams to this day. It cost him and ‘Chip’ the title at the World Championships in Pratoni, and it’s not the only time an unlucky rub has scuppered his chance of a win. Is it their turn to convert their bridesmaid status to bride?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Michael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 8th individually – Team 🥈 & Individual 🥇 Rio 2016 – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Caen 2014 – Individual 🥇 Lexington 2010

🔴 Michi’s won Badminton, Burghley, Luhmühlen and Kentucky, some of them multiple times.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 17.8
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 17.8 – 1st

Show Jumping 📈 It’s a similar story for this combination’s show jumping form as it is for their cross country form. They don’t have poles often, but when they do, they really count. In 33 FEI competitions together, they’ve had poles on nine occasions, including one in the second round of jumping in Tokyo. They were on track to win the World Championships in Pratoni, with a fence in hand, but when one went and everyone held their breath, no one could have predicted that the last would go as well, dropping them down to fifth place. They’d jumped clear since then, until the 4*-S at Luhmühlen this season when they had one pole, dropping them from first to third. They did jump clear for the win at Kentucky 5* in 2022, and we all know that Michi will be absolutely determined not to let the mistakes of the past haunt his present-day hunt for another Olympic title.

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“Chipmunk jumped amazing. It’s a tough day. [I’ll] try to stay focused.”

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🇮🇹 Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have had a bit of a tricky time of it in the final round at championships thus far in their career. Will they put that right in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Evelina’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Team)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Evelina took over the ride on ‘Fidjy’ in 2020.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.6
Cross Country Penalties – 6.4
Overall – 33 – 19th

Show Jumping 📈 This is the phase where this combination may fall down a little, with faults usually coming in the form of two poles, as happened in their most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Avenches. They also had eight show jumping penalties as well as 1.2 time at the European Championships last season, a long-format competition. It was a similar story at the World Championships in Pratoni, but there they pulled a third pole and added 1.2 time. There are clear rounds on their score sheet, but they’ve mostly come at short-format.

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🇧🇷 Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington

Rafael may be young but he’s got Olympic experience in his locker from Tokyo and a Pan-Ams medal in his trophy cabinet, thanks to a team bronze at Santiago, which he won with his Paris ride, Withington.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Rafael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)

🔴 Rafael has almost a century of FEI starts under his belt, and he’s a few years off turning thirty yet.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 32.4
Cross Country Penalties – 9.2
Overall – 41.6 – 28th=

Show Jumping 📈 In their eight FEI runs together since Rafael took over the reins in 2023, this pair have had poles on two occasions, both long-format. They had 8 faults at the Pan-Ams in Santiago, where they won team bronze, but jumped clear in the 4*-L at Montelibretti this season; it came at the cost of 3.2 time penalties though.

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🇨🇦 Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo

They had a taste of what a team gold medal feels like at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season, and now they’re Olympians with the brightest of futures ahead of them. If you follow Karl on social media, is is abundantly clear that he thinks the absolute world of this mare, and for good reason. Whatever the outcome at the Games, she’s an exciting talent, that’s for sure, and we’ll be seeing very much more of her in the future. We may even spot her foal, Hot Tamale, in the start box one day.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karl’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Karl affectionately refers to Hot Bobo as “the bestest mare”.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 35.8
Cross Country Penalties – 4.8
Overall – 40.6 – 27th

Show Jumping 📈 There are a smattering of show jumping faults throughout this mare’s record, but only once has she had more than one pole; that came at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last year, where they won team gold and were fourth individually (their placing wouldn’t have improved had they had their more usual 4 penalties, but they would have been third if they’d gone clear). They have been clear in the final phase at long-format once, but that was a 3* back in 2022 – they’ve had jumping penalties at every long-format event they’ve done since then.

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🇳🇱 Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This long-term partnership have been together since 2018 and Janneke has brought the gelding up from 2*. They’ve got plenty of Nations Cup experience under the cinch, as well as two European Championships and the Tokyo Games.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Janneke’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Janneke was part of the team at the Europeans last season which secured the Netherlands’ spot at the Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 31.9
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 31.9 – 16th

Show Jumping 📈 Every now and then this gelding will have a rail, but more often than not he jumps clear, really. He left the poles in the cups at the European Championships last season, a long-format competition, although it cost them two seconds over the time allowed. He had a pole in his last run, but that was short-format.

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🇮🇪 Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue

Austin and ‘Salty’ got their first Olympic call-up at the very last minute, when they were bumped into the Tokyo team due to the late withdrawal of Cathal Daniels. They stepped up to the plate and did Ireland proud then, and this time around there mustn’t have been any doubt about his place being firmly on the team, what with a third place at Badminton and a Maryland 5* win now on their record.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Austin’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 13th individually – Beijing 2008 (Team) – Sydney 2000 (Ind.); 17th
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 18th individually

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Austin was the first Irish rider since 1965 to win a 5* when he took the Maryland crown last fall.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 31.7
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 31.7 – 14th=

Show Jumping 📈 Previously, you wouldn’t have pegged Salty for a certain clear round in the final phase, but recently he proved that he can keep all the poles in the cups, at both long- and short- format, particularly when others can’t. That’s what earned him the win at Maryland 5*. Looking back to his championships appearances, he rolled two poles in Pratoni, and one in each round at Tokyo. But Austin’ll have his more recent form in mind and will be channeling his Maryland luck as he takes to the ring in Paris.

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🇺🇸 Boyd Martin and Fedarman B

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd rides regularly with Olympic show jumper Peter Wylde, so he’s well-placed for a good go at the final phase in Paris. And Bruno is a clear round kinda guy. Hold your breath Team USA fans…

Form, Facts & Stats:

Boyd’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 20th individually – Rio 2016 (Team); 16th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team); 7th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 10th individually
6️⃣ Boyd is currently World No. 6

🔴 Boyd’s mom and dad both competed at the Winter Olympics.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30.5
Cross Country Penalties – 1.6
Overall – 32.1 – 17th

Show Jumping 📈 Since this pair started competing together, they’ve had one single pole, which came at Luhmühlen last season and dropped him down a couple of places to eighth. But he was clear at Pau, where he was also eighth, and has kept the poles in the cups at five long-format events with Boyd. We’re looking for a double clear for this pair in the two-round format, but as we know, always with horses, we’ll have to watch this space.

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“I’m just blessed to have a super-duper jumper. He didn’t touch a jump in the warm up and came in the ring and jumped like a superstar.”

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🇸🇪 Frida Andersén and Box Leo

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Frida didn’t get the chance to show jump at her other Olympic appearance in Rio, after withdrawing before the final horse inspection. She’ll be relishing her chance of an Olympic completion – and maybe even an individual final – as she takes to the ring in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Frida’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Frida’s a bit of a smart cookie, with degrees in dental hygiene and sport and business 🍪

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 33.3
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 33.3 – 20th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair have a bit of a mixed bag when it comes to form in the final phase. They had two poles at the European Championships last season, and one at the World Championships in Pratoni. They generally have a pole at long-format events, but that second one at the Europeans was unlucky, they’re mostly a one or none kind of combination.

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🇳🇿 Tim Price and Falco

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim and Falco spent some time pure show jumping on the Sunshine Tour in Spain this season, so they’ll be well primed for the two-round Olympic format. Eyes on this pair to deliver a clear round 👀

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tim’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥉 & Individual 🥉 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team); 8th individually – Caen 2014 (Team)
9️⃣ Tim is currently World No. 9

🔴 Tim has won four of the seven 5*s, been on the podium two of the three he hasn’t (already) won and top-10 at the other.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 26.5
Cross Country Penalties – 2
Overall – 28.5 – 9th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair haven’t had a pole since 2021 and you have to go way, way, way back to 2017 to find another one on their record. That’s two poles in 27 FEI competitions. They were a second over the time when they jumped for victory at Pau 5* in 2021, but Tim’s produced a streak of seven clears without going over the clock since then.

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🇯🇵 Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In 2017, Yoshi became the first Japanese rider to win a 4* outside Japan and is, now, based with Pippa Funnell in the UK, after a condition of the sale of MGH Grafton Street was that he stay at her home. Before that, he’d based himself in Germany with Dirk Schrade.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Yoshi’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 20th – London 2012 (Team) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 20th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.); 18th

🔴 This gelding delivered Pippa Funnell a superb Burghley win in 2019.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 25.5
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 25.5 – 5th

Show Jumping 📈 In their four FEI runs together, they have a 50:50 jumping clear rate, with two poles over two competitions and two clears. Historically, this gelding can be a little tricky in the show jumping phase, with more faults than clears across his many events, but it looks like he’s going well for Yoshi thus far. How will they do in the Olympic ring today?

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TEAM BRONZE FOR JAPAN!!!

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“The more people come into the sport after this medal — there’s probably more people looking now and recognizing this sport.”

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🇧🇪 Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It was an emotional day all round when Lara won Luhmühlen this season, the first Belgian to win a 5*. Lara didn’t even watch the rounds of those who went after her, she was just pleased with her performance and didn’t think anything more of it. And then her husband, Belgian team trainer, Kai Steffen Meier came into the collecting ring and informed her that she was a 5* winner. That’s eventing magic right there, my friends.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Lara’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 – Caen 2014; 18th Individually – Lexington 2010
4️⃣ Lara is currently World No. 4

🔴 Lara’s one smart cookie 🎓 As well as being a 5* winning eventer, she’s also got a Master’s degree in Commerce.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 30
Cross Country Penalties – 1.2
Overall – 31.2 – 13th

Show Jumping 📈 In 25 FEI competitions, this combination have had show jumping faults on just four occasions, each time just a single pole. Two of those times came in long-format competitions, of which they’ve done three. They occasionally add a smidge of time but far more often than not they add nothing at all in this phase.

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Belgium have finished just off the podium in the team competition, in fourth.

“I think I picked the best horse I could to bring the three of us here, and that was a wonderful result, even though I’m disappointed in my rail.”

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🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Felix is no stranger to the final round of a championships and he’s sitting on a very, very good jumper. The gelding’s untested over a two-round format, but his penchant for clear rounds sure does stand him in good stead.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Felix’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 19th individually – Rio 2016 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 14th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Felix’s grandad competed in eventing at the 1956 Olympics in Stockholm.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 22.1
Cross Country Penalties – 0
Overall – 22.1 – 4th

Show Jumping 📈 This pair jump a lot of clear rounds, but they’re not infallible. They had a pole in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season, which tumbled them down the order to ninth place. They’ve jumped clear at each of the four competitions they’ve done this season, all short-format events. We’ll have to wait and see how ‘Dao’ finds the format at Paris, but this guy’s got a very exciting future ahead of him no matter how things ultimately play out.

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“I just do my thing and I believe in the horse and believe in myself.”

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🇫🇷 Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It can’t be easy for Stéphane to ride in his friend’s honor as he does, but honestly, he does it with such grace and humility, reminding us all that the gelding is Thaïs’ in the stylized prefix he usually adds to the horse’s name – ‘Ride for Thaïs’. It’s one of the most poignant stories of eventing – Chaman Dumontceau’s rider was involved in a fatal fall and her friend took it upon himself to ride for her. And now all three are representing France at their home Olympics.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 As well as her horse continuing in Thaïs’ name, her family continue her legacy with a foundation which raises money for safety devices in the sport.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 24.4
Cross Country Penalties – 2.8
Overall – 27.2 – 7th

Show Jumping 📈 This is a one or none kind of guy, more often one. He’s had a pole in each of his last three FEI competitions, jumped clear in the 4*-S at Chatsworth last season (which he won), and then had a pole at each of his three events before that. He was on a streak of three clears up to that point. I think that gives a bit of a picture of how things tend to go in the show jumping ring for this combination. They’re generally inside the time, but can add a little here and there.

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TEAM SILVER FOR FRANCE!!!

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🇬🇧 Laura Collett and London 52

One third of the team who took the gold in Tokyo, Laura and London 52 are surely here for redemption after an expensive second show jumping round saw them drop down the Olympic order last time around. Laura must’ve been cursing the two-round format at the Games, but I’m willing to bet that she’s been practicing for it since, well 2021.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Laura’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 There’s no prizes for guessing who Laura’s eventing idol is. Of course, it’s British eventing hero Pippa Funnell.

▶️ Score coming into this phase:
Dressage – 17.5
Cross Country Penalties – 0.8
Overall – 18.3 – 2nd

Show Jumping 📈 So yes, Laura and London 52 jumped clear in the first round in Tokyo, but then had two poles in the second round. At that point, this horse had only ever had eight faults in a show jumping round once before, way, way back in 2018 (he’s since had two poles in a 4*-S competition in 2022). He did go through a spate of rolling a pole, around the time of Tokyo to the World Championships in Pratoni (where he had a pole), but once he came out of the other side of that, it’s been clear all the way.

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TEAM GOLD FOR GREAT BRITAIN!!!

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Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent Secure the Advanced Win at Millbrook Horse Trials

Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent. Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

Going into Sunday’s (July 28) show jumping phase at the Millbrook Horse Trials, Meghan O’Donoghue and her 18-year-old Thoroughbred gelding Palm Crescent could afford to have one rail down and still claim first place in the Advanced division. They left all the rails up and cantered across the finish line in the time allowed to clinch the win.

Allison Springer and No May Moon, second after cross country, very nearly jumped clear, but a rail down at the final fence had them finish third overall. This made room for Ariel Grald and Isla de Coco, a ten-year-old Holsteiner mare owned by Annie Eldridge, to move up to second, with Springer finishing 3rd overall. Phillip Dutton and Possante, leaders after dressage and 3rd after cross country, had four rails down and dropped to 18th place overall.

Ema Klugman, who rode four horses in the Advanced division this weekend, finished fourth with the syndicated mare Bronte Beach Z who was tied for 16th after dressage 6th after cross country, then climbed a couple more places in the rankings with a double clear.

One of five siblings, with three older brothers and a younger sister, O’Donoghue gave a shout out to her oldest brother James, who celebrated his birthday on show jumping day. “This one’s for you,” she said.

O’Donoghue said that her horse came out feeling good after the previous day’s cross country effort. “He’s a one hundred and ten percent trier, so I never have to worry about that, and I find there’s something unique about this arena; it has a little bit of natural atmosphere, it’s up on the hill, they have all the tents set up. He’s an experienced campaigner and pretty reliable about taking all of that in, but if anything I think it helps him a little bit, especially on the last day. He’s not the most naturally scopey jumper but he does everything he’s asked.”

She said that “Plan A” for the fall is to compete at the Burghley CCI4* in England with Palm Crescent.

Ariel Grald and Isla de Coco. Photo by Amber Heintzberger.

Grald, who drove all the way from Southern Pines, NC to compete at Millbrook, brought five horses to the competition. She said that most of her horses hadn’t been out since the spring season, and said that she likes to bring her horses to Millbrook every year to start preparing them for the fall events. “We love the cross country, it’s got the terrain, it’s got good questions and as Meghan said, even for the dressage it’s got a bit of atmosphere. Everything is beautifully done and it’s a good educational outing to get the horses cranked back up for the rest of the season.”

She said that she imported “Coco” from England as a five-year-old and moved her quickly up the levels, but a minor tendon injury kept her sidelined for a little while. “Honestly that was the best thing that could have happened to her; she’s a big horse, she did a three-star at age seven, and having some time off gave her time to mature a little. She’s just been back out this year, and this was actually her first advanced – I just moved her right up the four-star short at Tryon and Bromont. She’s always been scopey and while I wouldn’t have said she was the bravest horse, I just hucked her off at the deep and was like, let’s go girl. I’m just along for the ride she’s like, ‘I got it – don’t get in my way!’. She’s a big horse and just needs a little strength on the flat still. She’s amazing on cross country, as long as I put her on the line and show her where to go, she’s got it.”

Grald also won Open Intermediate A riding Adagio’s Nobility, owned by Annie Eldridge, and she won the Open Preliminary riding Obelisk, also owned by Annie Eldridge. Katie Lichten and Fast Company won the Open Intermediate B. The top Young Rider in the Intermediate was Cassie Sanger, formerly a resident of the Millbrook area. Sanger finished fourth in Open Intermediate A riding Fernhill Zoro.

Patrons enjoyed a ringside luncheon today, watching the conclusion of the event with show jumping at the Preliminary through Advanced levels. Millbrook is one of the last horse trials in the Northeast to offer the upper levels. More than 400 horses competed this weekend and the organizing committee, staff and volunteers are to be commended for this huge undertaking.

You can also enjoy some Millbrook highlights courtesy of videographer Marion de Vogel:

Millbrook H.T. (Millbrook NY) [Website] [Results]

Major Shake-Up on Paris Podium at Slightly Calmer Final Horse Inspection

Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka at the First Horse Inspection in Paris. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sunday trot-ups are always high in potential for tension with the massive efforts made on cross country the day before. After we saw multiple holds and an elimination in the First Inspection, it was hard to know what to expect this morning. Generally, however, today’s Final Horse Inspection was far less drama-filled, a huge testament to both the conditioning and care of the horses as well as the incredible work of the grooms and support staff through the night to help the horses recover well from cross country.

We do, however, have one major shake-up to the team podium after a withdrawal from the holding box on the part of Japan’s Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka.

Team Japan was poised to finish on the podium today, securing bronze medal position on a team score of 93.0. But when the team riders came to present their horses to the Ground Jury of Christina Klinspor (SWE), Xavier Le Sauce (FRA), and Robert Stevenson (USA), two were sent to the holding box: Cekatinka as well as Yoshiaki Oiwa’s MGH Grafton Street. It was then reported that Cekatinka had sadly been withdrawn from the holding box. MGH Grafton Street was re-inspected at the end of the trot-up and was subsequently accepted after a lengthy conferral amongst the Ground Jury.

Individual leaders Michael Jung (GER) and Chipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This means some big moves on the team standings. Japan will now have to activate Traveling Reserve pair Toshiyuki Tanaka and Jefferson to move a complete team to the final phase. This substitution will incur 20 penalties, putting Japan onto a team score of 113.0. This does not spell complete disaster, as the Japanese will now be in fifth position, but certainly makes the task at hand more difficult to move back up to the podium.

Switzerland will now move into bronze medal position with their team score of 102.4, while Belgium moves up to fourth on a 111.0. The remaining team standings, which can be viewed here, remain unchanged, pending any additional substitutions, of which we should see one or two yet.

Laura Collett (GBR) and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In the trot-up, the only other hold we saw was Australia’s Shane Rose and Virgil, who were accepted upon re-inspection.

A handful of withdrawals were announced before the jog: Carlos Parro (BRA) and Safira, Sarah Ennis (IRE) and Action Lady M, Sanna Siltakorpi (FIN) and Bofey Click, and Carlos Diaz Fernandez (ESP) and Taraje CP 21.10.

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We do know that Germany will still send Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S, who parted ways on cross country yesterday, forward to show jumping rather than activating Reserve pair Calvin Boeckmann and Phantom of the Opera, incurring 200 penalties for failure to complete the cross country phase. Aofie Clark and Freelance will be activated as substitutes for Ireland after the withdrawal of Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M, incurring 20 penalties. Australia will also activate Reserve pair Shenae Lowings and Bold Venture after the retirement of Kevin McNab and Don Quidam on cross country, incurring 220 penalties. Brazil will activate Reserve rider Ruy Fonseca and Ballypatrick SRS after the withdrawal of Carlos Parro and Safira, incurring 20 penalties. Scratching your head on all these penalties? You can reference our Scoring Guide here.

Update: Poland has substituted Reserve rider Wiktoria Knap and Quintus 134 for Jan Kaminski and Jard, incurring 220 penalties as Jan retired on cross country yesterday and did not complete the phase.

Boyd Martin (USA) and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Looking to the finale, which kicks off with the team final at 11 a.m. local time, followed by the individual final for the top 25 pairs at 3 p.m. local time, Great Britain will have a slim margin of 4.7 penalties over France after Ros Canter’s appeal to remove a missed flag (15 penalties) penalty yesterday was not accepted. France is in silver on a score of 87.2, followed by Switzerland on a score of 102.4. Full scores and standings can be found here.

We’ll keep you up to date on any additional changes, substitutes, and confirmations as the day proceeds. Stay tuned for our Companion Guide to show jumping coming later, as well as full reports on both rounds.

Update: Order of Go for show jumping in the first round can be viewed here. The Team Start List can be found here.

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

Out of all the photos I’ve seen from cross country day at the Paris Olympics — and I’ve seen some incredible shots, both from our own Tilly Berendt and other talented photographers — I think this one hits the hardest. That’s the late Annie Goodwin’s father looking on as her horse, “Bruno”, runs around the cross country at the Olympics with Boyd Martin in the stirrups. If that doesn’t leave a lump in your thoat, then I’m not sure you have a soul. And I’m sure that the connections of Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau felt much the same way yesterday. Both Boyd and Stéphane paid incredible tributes to their horse’s former riders by delivering beautiful clear rounds on the world stage.

Looking ahead now, we’re in for one heck of the show jumping finale. Don’t forget — we’re going to see two rounds of jumping today! In case you need a refresher on how the eventing show jumping works in the Olympics, here you go.

U.S. Weekend Results

Millbrook H.T. (Millbrook NY) [Website] [Results]

Hunt Club Farms H.T. (Berryville, VA) [Website] [Results]

UK International Events

Burgham International (Northumberland) [Website] [Results]

Major International Events
#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

Your Monday Reading List:

In case you’re new here and not familiar with Boyd and Bruno, USA Today published a really nice article on their bittersweet partnership subsequent to the death of Annie Goodwin in 2021. Grab a box of tissues.

The most serious injury on cross country yesterday, to my knowledge, was sustained by Don Quidam, the mount of Australia’s Kevin McNab. Kevin jumped off the horse as he felt a lame step towards the end the of course. Don Quidam is expected to make a full recovery.

The crowds were INSANE! Check out just a couple of neat snapshots to get a feel for the number of spectators that were out and about and cheering on their favorite pairs.

After watching show jumping today you might be a little inspired. At least that’s how I often feel after watching a big event! If you’ve got the urge to saddle up and pretend you’re riding in the ring at Versailles, considering implementing a few lessons that Olympian Laura Kraut shared with a group of lucky young riders at the recent USEF Horsemastership Training Session.

Morning Viewing: Take a look inside the Great Stables at Versailles (not where the competition horses are being housed) and hear from Canadian eventing team manager Emily Gilbert about the logistics it takes to get to the Games.

More Paris Post Cross Country Analysis from EquiRatings

While you’re diving in to our meaty cross country report from a busy day in Paris, you can also follow along with the EquiRatings team’s coverage, featuring an analysis sit-down review with Nicole Brown, Sam Watson, Diarm Byrne, and Kylie Roddy.

If the embedded player above does not work in your browser, you can also listen to the episode here.

Nicole, Sam, Diarm, and Kylie Roddy dissect every twist and turn of the course, highlighting standout performances and unexpected surprises.

Highlights Include:

    • Kylie Roddy’s take on the surprising time achievements and faults.
    • Sam’s insights into the rollercoaster of team performances, with a focus on Germany and Australia’s dramatic exits.
    • The incredible journey of Team Japan, from their early struggles to their current position as strong contenders.
    • Predictions and expectations for the upcoming show jumping.

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

A Shake-Up at the Chateau: The Paris Olympics Cross-Country Day Report

Switzerland’s Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire cross the pontoon in front of the Chateau de Versailles on a thrilling day of cross-country at the Paris Olympics. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Update: Since the writing of this report, it’s been confirmed that Britain’s appeal to remove Ros Canter’s 15 penalties has been unsuccessful. You can see the results in full here.

We knew, well ahead of time, that the atmosphere at Versailles for the Paris Olympics would be something beyond words on cross-country day – after all, France is arguably the country that loves eventing, and its home riders, more vocally than any in the world. There’s not many places that you’d see groups of teenage girls bursting into a busy flurry of snotty tears because Astier Nicolas galloped past them on cross-country (which we’ve witnessed at Pau, not just once) or adults hurling small children out of the way so they can hoik their iPhones across the roping and get a video that they’ll… never watch again? Watch every night before they go to sleep for the rest of time? It’s unclear. But what is clear is that they love eventing, and today’s cross-country day was always going to be their magnum opus, their piece de resistance, their Mecca.

And thus unfolded the most deafeningly loud cross-country day we’ve ever had the privilege of reporting on. It began with a general level of overarching madness that sat on the moderate to extreme end of the spectrum; it ended with full-on, balls-to-the-wall, red-faced and wild-eyed insanity.

Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nearly four hours in, we at EN, and our colleagues on the course and in the mixed zone with us, felt fairly well ready to drop from the fast-paced intensity of it all. But not the French, who were just getting started, nor the strong contingent of British supporters, who’d shown up wearing Union Jacks from top to tail, and brought their own faintly horrifying Charles and Camilla (if Camilla was styled by Ginger Spice, that is).

Somewhere in the distance, a small child shrieked “allez! ALLEZ! ALLEZ!” with such ferocity that we couldn’t initially worked out whether the screaming had stopped because she’d finally ruptured a vocal cord, or whether she’d somehow opened a portal to hell and been swallowed up by her demon brethren. People weren’t just shouting: people’s eyeballs were straining out of their skulls and veins were protruding from their foreheads as they fought to be the very loudest, very French-est French person of them all.

The fervor didn’t just stop with the fans, who’d packed into the Versailles estate by the tens of thousands. It also extended to France’s home riders, who triumphed as a trio over Pierre le Goupil’s influential track, logging three quick clears in spite of – or perhaps helped along by – the roars of approval, which began when they were specks on the horizon and only increased in intensity as they approached and tackled each fence. You could log their movement around the parkland just by listening to how the collective roar shapeshifted and relocated; when team pathfinder Karim Laghouag returned home clear and inside the time with Triton Fontaine, despite a very near disaster at the tricky drop-to-ditch-to-brush combo at 16ABCD, you could also log his movements by his interview style. Here’s a snippet from our transcription app for some clarity on the matter, and how he felt about it all:

That clear round, and the two very swift ones to follow from his teammates, Stephane Landois and Nicolas Touzaint, have propelled France one spot up into silver medal position overnight on a two-phase team score of 87.2 – and at the time of writing, that means that they’re just a whisper away from taking over the gold medal position, still held by Great Britain at the end of the day, though not without a hitch in the plan.

The Brits could, in theory, still finish their day on a score of 67.5, which would see them head into the final day of competition with 19.7 penalties, or four rails and nine seconds in hand. But for now, they hold onto a team score of 82.5, which gives them just one rail and one second in hand.

The reason for that variable margin? A flag, deemed to have been missed by team anchors Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo, initially reported to have been at the combination at 16ABCD, and then revised to within those reports to have been at the final element of 21ABC. At the moment, we’re awaiting updates from the appeals process – we’ve seen at least one other flag ruling appealed and removed very quickly earlier in the day, for New Zealand’s Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park, but this one, which has such significance for the team, and for Ros as an individual, is taking its sweet time. If it stays in place, the Brits have that shortened margin, and Ros will go into the final day in 24th place; if it’s taken away, they have a much more favourable margin and Ros moves up to fifth place and remains on her dressage score of 23.4.

It is, perhaps, the most significant drama of the day at this moment in time – but the rest of the day certainly hasn’t been short on surprises. Germany, second as a team after dressage, is now 14th out of 16 after their second pair, the hugely consistent Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S, were eliminated at the ditch element of fence 16ABCD, which came after a significant drop and wasn’t well-read by several horses in the field. Though Carjatan made a game effort to pop it neatly, his back legs slid off the lip of the ditch and he stumbled, depositing Christoph in a perfect-form forward somersault onto the ground. Despite a clear with just 4.8 time penalties for pathfinders Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21, and a clear inside the time for Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH, the three-to-a-team format here at the Olympics renders them wholly out of the hunt for a team medal.

Similarly affected is the Australian team, who logged 2.8 time penalties via their pathfinders, Shane Rose and Virgil, and a clear inside the time for anchors Chris Burton and Shadow Man, but lost Kevin McNab and Don Quidam, who pulled up mid-course after Kevin felt the horse take a misstep. It’s since been announced by the Australian federation that the gelding sustained a soft tissue injury, from which he’s expected to fully recover. Australia are now 15th of 16 teams.

Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand, previously fourth, slipped to sixth when their first rider, Jonelle Price, picked up 20 penalties with Hiarado; similarly experienced four-time Olympian Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof, who were third after dressage, fell foul of the flag rule and dropped to 32nd as a result. And for the USA, who had been sixth after dressage, 20 penalties for Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake means they’ll have to work their way up from eighth, having already moved up one placing since the close of play due to a substitution announcement from Ireland. The Irish, sitting ninth after taking on those 20 substition penalties, will slot Aoife Clarke and Freelance in for Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M, who completed with just 3.2 time penalties today. The Irish federation announced this afternoon that the mare has picked up an injury on course.

They battled enormous atmosphere, changes of light, traitorous flags, and the colossal weight of pressure on the world stage – not to mention a Pierre le Goupil track that walked as much less challenging than it ultimately ended up being – but ultimately, so many constituent parts of the field of competitors also logged huge victories today. Take team Japan, for example, who now sit in bronze medal position after outriding all their Tokyo demons today; or upward rising Switzerland and Belgium, who are fourth and fifth, respectively, after excellent rounds for all their riders. And the Netherlands, too, has much to celebrate: they might sit tenth as a team, but for the first time in Olympic history, they had a rider clear and inside the time, thanks to Janneke Boonzaaijer and ACSI Champ de Tailleur.

Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

63 combinations started today – China’s Huadong Sun withdrew Lady Chin Van’t Moerven Z this morning, thinning our field by one – and 56 ultimately completed, giving us an 87.5% completion rate, and 41 of them, or 64%, jumped clear. An impressive ten combinations went clear inside the time; a further two – Ros and Lordships Graffalo, and Swedish pathfinders Sofia Sjoborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z – were inside the time but had flag penalties.

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Atop the pack at the end of the day? Well, you might think that breaking an Olympic record with a score of just 17.5, and then adding just 0.8 time penalties across the country, would be quite enough to hold onto gold, but first-phase leaders Laura Collett and London 52 will have to settle for a very close overnight second instead.

Those two seconds of time left the door open just enough for Germany’s Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH to overtake them when they sailed their way to a clear inside the time in the final hour of competition. That leaves them on their dressage score of 17.8, giving them a one-second buffer – but nothing even close to a rail in hand – going into tomorrow’s final phase.

“Today there was quite a lot of moments to enjoy,” says Michi, who put his Tokyo MIM-clip penalty firmly in the past with today’s excellent round. “Chipmunk made it very easy for me — every time, the jump was easy. He was listening so well and connected to me, and he was so powerful galloping. I checked the time and said, ‘Okay, we have more time on the next fence. Slow down, slow down.’ It was an unbelievable feeling.”

Michi confesses that even he – a four-time Olympian and the most successful eventer of all time – felt a bit of stage fright heading down to the collecting ring from the stables today.

“So many people are here watching the course — it’s fantastic. Especially in the warmup – there’s many people. I was a bit scared at first, but they are quiet [there], so it’s a very good place to warm up the horses. Outside they are very loud and everywhere on the course, but in the end, you see more when you look on television than when you’re on the course.”

Today’s 5300m course, which had a 9:02 optimum time, was on the shorter side for a four-star long, and didn’t have much in the way of terrain – but one of the major surprises of the day was how many horses appeared to tire in the final stages.

Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Chipmunk wasn’t one of them, despite a slow start to his season thanks to Europe’s ongoing deluge of rain.

“[For Chipmunk’s fitness, he does] a bit of everything. He is a bigger horse — he needs for sure endurance and muscles, and I started a bit later into the season, with a smaller show,” he says. “The focus was absolutely the Olympic Games this year, so I was — with the conditions and everything — a bit quiet in the beginning of the season. But he’s a horse with so much talent. In the dressage, in the jumping. He’s so brave in the cross country. He makes everything, for the rider, a bit easier.”

Now, two-time Olympic individual champion Michi’s looking ahead to tomorrow’s showjumping phase – a phase which has seen him miss out on some major wins with this horse, including individual gold at the 2022 World Championships and the CCI4*-S at Luhmühlen this summer. He’s determined, though, not to spend too much time worrying about what could come tomorrow.

“If you are in front, it’s fantastic, for sure. At the moment it’s time to enjoy – it’s a dream,” he says. “Today, just today; tomorrow, it’s a new day. I try to really focus — I try to go step by step through the day, not thinking to prize giving or something after. I just concentrate to the vet check, to the first jumping, to the second jumping, step by step. And I have a great feeling. He’s super fit in the finish, is not a little tired. He’s looking like he can go again, so this is very good for tomorrow.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Snapping at his heels is one of the very best showjumping partnerships in the field, though a pair who have their own Tokyo demons to overcome in that phase. Laura Collett and London 52 had a hugely uncharacteristic two rails down there; this year, though, the three-time five-star champions are taking that as a learning experience to propel them to greater heights.

“He’s a very good jumper, but anything can happen, as we saw in Tokyo,” she says. “Being in an Olympic stadium is a completely different experience to anything that [the horses] have ever seen before. He was very spooky in Tokyo and there were no crowds, so I’m just hoping he likes the crowds — hopefully he’ll show off tomorrow like he has done for the last few days.”

In the meantime, she won’t get much sleep.

 “I was buzzing after yesterday, and then the thought of today — it definitely wasn’t very many hours sleep. I’ll sleep for a week when I get home,” she laughs.

That lack of sleep came down to “a lot of head scratching, to be honest” about which routes she’d take in some of the key combinations on course. She ultimately opted to go the ever-so-slightly longer route at 16ABCD, where so many horses misread the ditch, which may have added her marginal time penalties, but also kept her and ‘Dan’ well in the hunt when others had faltered.

“I was always very much wanting to jump left off the drop — I just felt like the ditch was a bit of a nothing ditch and there were too many unknown circumstances for how they would read it and jump it — and with only two strides to the triple brush, I just thought that was an unnecessary risk,” she says. “I think we saw that with quite a few of the first ones that went — they didn’t really make a mistake, but they didn’t understand the question. For me, that was always plan A, and I stuck to it and it rode really nicely.”

An early lost front shoe also meant she had to ride conservatively in some of the twistier parts of the track.

“[The time] is quite tight. There are a couple of places where you can really let them gallop, but there’s an awful lot of twists and turns,” she says. “He lost a shoe and we were slipping all over the place, so I had to be quite careful on those turns and really kill the speed a bit to get around the trees without doing anything stupid.”

 Where fitness was concerned, though, Dan certainly didn’t struggle, thanks, in part, to a system well honed over the last five seasons at the top levels of the sport.

“He doesn’t have very much blood, so he’s had to build it up over the years and learn to go that extra distance,” she says. “We’ve learned over the years that it’s actually the runs that get him fit. He finds going up a gallop very, very easy. He’s run quite a few times – he’s done four four-star shorts this year — so we use the runs to really get him extra fit. It’s good because then he doesn’t get too keen like he did at the at the Worlds in Pratoni, where he got to thinking he knows everything. Today he was perfect.”

In the aftermath of her round, she says, she “can’t really believe it, to be honest. I’m just relieved that it’s over and I haven’t let anyone down. London is just my horse of a lifetime. He’s just incredible; he’s just so talented. I think for me, knowing what he was like as a young horse and knowing how much he’s had to trust me and believe in me — he’s not an actual cross country horse, and then he goes around a course like that on railway tracks — it just shows what years of partnership you can build up. You can make him believe in you, and I have full faith in him now, – and then you can go and enjoy yourself out there.”

Chris Burton and Shadow Man. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Australia’s Chris Burton continued his sterling comeback to eventing after several seasons focusing on pure showjumping by delivering a speedy clear inside the time with Shadow Man, retaining their first-phase score of 22 and the bronze medal position overnight.

This is just the seventh FEI run for the pair since they joined forces over the winter, the second long-format run – and the first time Chris has really let the handbrake off in a long format with him, too. For that reason, and because Shadow Man hadn’t evented since the spring of 2022 when Chris took him on, there was something of a question mark hanging over them going into today’s competition. There isn’t anymore.

“You always worry — it’s hard, and then you worry that they get a bit tired and you hope you have them ready and fit enough, but the crowd really sort of picks them up,” muses Chris, who expressed that he has ‘mixed emotions’ after an excellent individual result, but a tough day for his team.

Chris Burton and Shadow Man. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Shane [Rose] rode a lovely round this morning and did his job as the pathfinder, and he was outstanding. [But] I’m so sad for Kevin and his beautiful horse. I always want to ride well, but you have in your mind that you have to put up a good score for the team. I wasn’t always thinking, ‘I’ll go slow and clear’ — I was always thinking, ‘I’ll go clear inside the time.’”

The performance also proved to Chris that he hadn’t lost his grasp on riding quick clears in his time out of the discipline.

“I wasn’t out of the sport,” he points out. “I’m still riding jumps; it’s fundamentally all the same. I will tell you, there was a few times this year I woke up a bit nervous thinking, ‘Oh you know what, this might be stupid’. But I’ve always loved jumping — and jumping the Grand Prixes like I’ve been able to do this year actually helped me. I’m lucky enough — thanks to the Australian High Performance program — to train with Nelson Pessoa, so we work together with the jumping and we work together with the cross country. First show I came back to, he rang and said, ‘You think it makes you better?’ I said, ‘I think it does; I feel like I’m riding well,’ and he said, ‘I think so too.’ Eventing is its own sport; show jumping is its own sport. They’re different animals, and it’s a different game. I’m not going to compare them [except to say] – these animals are beautiful, and look what they’re out there doing.”

Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Switzerland’s got plenty to celebrate in camp tonight: the team, which has been on such an upward trajectory over the last five seasons or so, sits fourth in the overnight rankings, while their anchor rider, Felix Vogg, is also individually fourth after a determined clear sans time with Dao de l’Ocean that belied the horse’s relative inexperience – he’s done just one CCI4*-L prior to this, and began his campaign this week, too, with one of his best-ever dressage tests.

“Yesterday he just gave his best again — he’s so clever,” says Felix, who explains that the round really came to fruition when he figured out that he needed to let the gelding make his own decisions.

“I tried to disturb him at the beginning of it, but I had a couple of bad jumps. He made the best out of it — and after a while, after like [fence] 12 or 13, I just said, ‘Look, whatever you do, do it. I’m just a passenger.’ I showed him the way, but the rest he did. He just did what he should do.”

Felix’s round came in the final team rotation near the end of the day, when plenty of trouble had already unfolded. But he was blissfully unaware of much of it.

“I cannot answer who fell or struggled. I saw a couple of struggles at the beginning, and then I went into the lorry and slept a bit,” he says. “The course was, in part, difficult because we didn’t have a test event, and it’s not a usual event where we go often, so the first riders found out a little bit how it’s going and how to the ground is and how fast you can ride. That was the only information we had, and that’s what made it really difficult. The track was really intense — the time was really tight, so it made all of it a little bit tough in this way. Then you had a lot of combinations in between really fast, so there was no time to mess around and think about it.”

Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yoshiaki Oiwa and Pippa Funnell’s 2019 Burghley champion MGH Grafton Street lead a provisional third-place charge for Japan after crossing the finish line three seconds inside the time – and giving a great show of partnership despite only half a season, and a few runs, together.

In getting ‘Squirrel’ prepared for today’s challenge, he had plenty of help from the gelding’s former rider, with whom he’s now based.

“[Pippa] gave me a lot of advice, so many things — make sure my balance is back, not pointing down. It is a little thing, but this is very helpful — just to remind me a lot. I think Pippa is always with me as [MGH Grafton Street’s] ex-rider, and she is giving me all the advice — where is the button, and he’s like this, this, this. All the instruction I get from her all the time makes it possible for me to do this,” says Yoshi, who has had an impressive, if short, string of results with the historically tricky horse.

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin cross the finish line with one of the rounds of the day behind them. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin climbed from eleventh to sixth after delivering a clear inside the time in the British team pathfinder position. Far from being put off by the hugely vocal spectators on course, they relished every moment of the chaos.

“[It’s an] amazing crowd, all the way around the course,” he says. “It’s absolutely wild — not just at the fences, it’s in between the fences, in every single area. The horses love it even more – there’s nothing irritating about it, and even more people would be better! It’s amazing; they’re cheering for you before, over, and after the fence, and it’s just a lovely start, and the horses really pick up.”

He was full of praise, too, for Pierre’s track, after a tough previous experience battling the designer’s efforts saw him fall at last year’s European Championships.

“It’s a fantastic Olympic course. It allows you to be really open and free to begin with, and then requires the riders to think where you need to close up,” he says. “Actually, it’s been such a great course that I changed my mind on some of the elements, just as we were about to start, from how they were jumping. It was great, and for me — I call it the leaf pit — the two drops where there’s an option [at 16ABCD], that’s a big question.”

Their round was masterful, but it wasn’t perfect:  I had a huge slip just on the flat coming out of a combination after a lovely ride through there. You’ve got to stay with them; you’ve got to stay connected and give them all the confidence.”

Now, the Tokyo individual silver medallist is within breathing distance of the individual podium once again.

“The job isn’t done, and I’m very lucky my horse is a European champion in his own right with Nicola [Wilson] – he’s a phenomenal horse, and I’ve done enough five-stars on him now to have a lot of experience.”

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The cheers for each of the three French riders were deafening – but the loudest of all went to debutant Stephane Landois, who crossed the finish line with 2.8 time penalties aboard Chaman Dumontceau.

“For Thaïs, and for France,” said the announcer with palpable emotion, referring to Chaman’s former owner and rider, who lost her life in a cross-country accident while competing him in 2019. She was just 22 years old.

Representing Thais must add an awful lot of pressure to the already extraordinary weight of riding for France at a home Olympics – but if Stephane was ever going to falter, which he never looked close to doing, he’d have been picked up and carried home by the ferocity of his countrymen’s support. Step by step by step, though, he simply delivered.

“I stayed concentrated through the whole course, and went to my plan — the plan that was given to the whole team — and I did exactly what I needed to do,” he says. “There is so much atmosphere and the crowd is so loud that actually I couldn’t even hear my watch properly, which goes off every minute to give the time frame. I didn’t even have a moment to look at it to know exactly where it was — I just kept going and stayed concentrating on the course.”

Kazuma Tomoto and Vince de la Vigne. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kazuma Tomoto, who was fourth in Tokyo with Vinci de la Vigne, added nothing to his first-phase score of 27.4 to climb ten places from eighteenth to eighth.

“He was amazing. I’m really, really pleased, and I’m proud of him,” says Kazu of his experienced partner, who was formerly ridden by France’s Astier Nicolas. “He knows everything: what he needs to, do what I want him to do, he’s absolutely a professional horse — especially in the big event, big atmosphere. At home, he’s a lazy boy, but in a big atmosphere, he’s like, ‘Come on, it’s my time’, so he was fantastic today.”

Tokyo was a disappointing experience for Japan as a team – but now, in bronze medal position and on superb form, Kazu’s focusing on taking his first step onto an Olympic podium after having been so achingly close as an individual three years ago.

“We have very good show jumpers, three of them. We are really, really hungry to get a medal and bring it back home, so we will try our best,” he says.

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tim Price and Falco boosted a tricky day for team New Zealand by cruising around the track to climb from twelfth to ninth – though he rued his 2 time penalties after finishing his round.

“He was really good – just very focused, and he traveled beautifully, and had plenty of gallop at the end,” says Tim of his World Championships double bronze medallist. “It’s a little bit regretful to have the time faults on one hand, but there’s so many things to take care of to make sure you don’t have a silly moment, and that you jump cleanly and through all those pesky flags, which we did. I’ve had a couple of occasions where I’ve gone for it and then at the end I’ve regretted it a little bit. I didn’t want that to happen again. I wanted a bit of finesse available for the last couple of combinations, and I had that ,and had a really good final water and the one up and down the hill. And then when I galloped, he bloody motored down home. I think I probably made up 10 seconds, but I couldn’t make up 14 seconds. But he’s pulled up super, with a big smile on his face, and ready for tomorrow.”

Like Tom, Tim was full of praise for Pierre’s efforts.

“It felt like an Olympic track. [Pierre]’s done such a good job – I’m going to buy him a drink when I see him next, because it’s not easy to deliver the perfect kind of course. But in terms of being French – when I think French, I think twisty-turny, with lots of acute angles with a really searching distance. He had that a couple of places, that we had to arrive on the right distance to make the job easy. But that’s of the level, I think. The people that didn’t do that got a bit unstuck somewhere along the way, but in a safe way, so I think it was a great course all around.”

Tim and teammate Clarke, twelfth overnight, were able to keep cool heads after Jonelle’s run-out early in the day, thanks in part to prior frank conversation about Olympic fates and fortunes – both good and bad.

“We straightaway chatted [about Jonelle’s runout], the three of us and [team trainers] Jock [Paget] and Sam [Griffiths] — and it was a time to remain very staunch,” he says. “Last night over dinner, we talked about Olympics gone by where there’s been a 20 [penalty rider] put on the podium, on a couple of occasions over the last couple of Olympics. So it’s about being informed and reformed as a team and maintaining that through the whole thing. The mindset was the same really. We did think maybe we need to push a little bit harder.”

Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

National treasure Karim Laghouag rounds out the top ten with Triton Fontaine, and in the end, he did say more than just a guttural roar after his clear inside the time.

“I was pretty sure about the course; it was always the number 16 obstacle that I was a bit wary of because of the drop,” he says, referring to the spot on course where he so nearly had an early finish when his horse stumbled in the ditch. “I was apprehensive in the beginning before coming up to it. It was always the one that I was wary of coming into the course. Once we got there, I was like, ‘You’re Triton — you do your thing, you’re Pegasus, so you get us over there and then we’ll keep going.’ But as I just said, it’s a sport for the two of us, so I let him do his thing and then we went on together to finish the course.”

“[The crowd] gives me goosebumps; it’s just amazing to be here,” he continues. “Even 30 seconds before coming into the course — before starting to gallop — I could hear the crowd calling my name. That really was just amazing; that is the most incredible feeling.”

Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This is another partnership that’s been forged through time, understanding – and friendship.

“It’s been seven years that we’ve been together. Already within the first six months of riding together, we won our first four-star. I just knew that this was going to be a partnership that was going to go a long way, and I could then already get into the five-star level and compete with this horse,” he says with a smile. “There was a little bit of Triton that just held back a bit before we got to that point — that’s probably why it took so long to get there — but once we did, then it’s been a perfect partnership. I don’t actually ride him a lot in big competition — it’s really doing a lot of preparation work with him. I take him to the beach quite a lot as well, to run him along the beach. There’s an area in France called Rouen where we go. It’s a lot of physical preparation together that we do, rather than being in big competitions all the time.”

The North American Update

The U.S. delivered strong performances today, but for an unfortunate error from pathfinders Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake (Tolan R – Doughiska Lass, by Kannan), in which they were assessed 20 penalties for a runout at fence 16C. Subsequently, Liz Halliday and Nutcracker (Tolan R – Ballyshan Cleopatra, by Cobra) as well as Boyd Martin and Fedarman B (Eurocommerce Washington – Paulien B, by Fedor) secured clear rounds with small amounts of time to put the U.S. onto a team score of 128.5. The withdrawal of Ireland’s Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M due to an injury sustained on cross country (and the subsequent addition of 20 penalties for Ireland to substitute in reserve rider Aoife Clark for the final phase) means the U.S. will move up one spot, from ninth to eighth, in the team rankings, though at the time of publication the team rankings had not yet been updated to reflect this.

Caroline Martin and HSH Blake. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“[Blake]’s a phenomenal athlete,” Caroline commented. “The course was riding like a dream, and then we came to that bank and he fell in the ditch. When you fall into a ditch like that you only have a few options for what to do. The biggest thing is that I’m fighting for the team. I’m riding for the team. If I were individual, I’d fight and try to jump the skinny, but we’re on a team, so I did the best option I could.”

Caroline is currently in 47th individually on a score of 62.4.

Liz Halliday was over the moon with the performance of Nutcracker, who finished just off the podium in his CCI5* debut at Kentucky this spring and really stepped up to the plate in the biggest competition of his career to date. Liz thought this horse would be among her strongest contenders for Paris at the outset of this year, having really matured and gained strength over the last season, and he proved that he was fully prepared for the task at hand today.

“He’s kind of a freak of a horse — he’s just so powerful and he’s relentless; he can gallop forever,” Liz said. “He was plenty fit for Kentucky, so I just did a similar gallop plan without overdoing it — because I was a little concerned about him being too fit, if I’m honest. He had tons of running left [today]. I’m a little annoyed I wasn’t a bit quicker, but I know I rode smart too, and that was also important today. He had plenty of running left and is fresh as anything right now. The girls are struggling to hold on him — which is also how you want to be, you want to finish the Games with a horse who’s fresh and happy.”

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a mixed bag of emotions for Liz, who of course was slotted into the team competition at the midnight hour earlier this week. Realizing two-thirds of the Olympic dream today was an emotional experience for her. “I’ve dreamed of coming to this Olympics for a long time — and then when I was so close, but not quite there, and then suddenly I was there… It’s going to settle in more when I’m gone, and to recognize it. Just to walk around and be standing at a cross country jump and see the Palace of Versailles and recognize that we’re actually on those grounds, it’s something I will never experience again in my life. It’s a moment that I will cherish.”

Liz is currently in 22nd individually with a two-phase score of 34.0.

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd Martin was the last out for the U.S. and is now the top-placed for the country on a score of 32.1, sitting in 17th individually with Fedarman B.

“He is an absolute legend,” Boyd said of “Bruno”. “He just was brilliant every step of the way. I couldn’t have asked for anything more today. He gave me his heart and soul and got a little tired over the last three fences, but he just dug deep and kept going. Very, very pleased with him.”

On a day that featured somewhat slippery going on some of the turns due to yesterday’s day-long downpours, Boyd said he was grateful to be sat atop a “mountain goat” of a horse. “I was lucky, I got a few tips on which turns were the worst [from the other riders], and he’s surefooted as a mountain goat, old Bruno. So I didn’t actually have crazy studs in, and you know I protected him a bit through the sharp turns, which cost me a bit of time but, it would be a bugger to slip over, too.”

While the U.S. is lower in the team rankings that they would have liked, the influence of tomorrow’s show jumping phase should not be discounted (anyone remember a little show in Pratoni a couple years ago?). All of the U.S. horses have strong show jumping records, with just a handful of rails between them in recent competition. In particular, Fedarman B has never had a pole down in international competition. Both Liz and Boyd benefit from the tutelage of Peter Wylde, while Caroline Pamukcu has gotten mentorship from several riders, not the least being show jumping extraordinaire Anne Kursinski.

“I was obviously really looking forward to being in a much better position because we have very, very good jumpers,” U.S. chef d’equipe Bobby Costello said. “They all have shown time and time again, that they can jump clear rounds, and I expect that to happen tomorrow. It’s just a bummer that we’re not in a place right now it looks like we can use that to our advantage, but absolutely, anything can happen. Anything can happen overnight. Anything can happen. Just freak things happen, as we saw today, all the time. So we certainly are not going to you know crawl in a hole. We’re just going to come out tomorrow with a fresh mindset for the day and just finish up as strongly and in the best place that we possibly can.”

Mike Winter and El Mundo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Canada also had a somewhat mixed bag of results, delivering two clear rounds from Mike Winter and El Mundo (Numero Uno – Calvaro’s Bria Z, by Calvaro Z) as well as Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo (Arkansas VDL – Taneys Leader xx, by Supreme Leader xx), while anchor rider Jessie Phoenix picked up an unfortunate 20 penalties at fence 7B with Freedom GS (Humble GS – Friedel GS, by Fidertanz). Canada will take a team score of 158.0 and 11th in the standings forward to Monday’s finale.

Jessie Phoenix and Freedom GS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“[Freedom GS] was a little bit within herself,” Jessie said. “She came up that bank and jumped beautifully out over the skinny, and I just didn’t have quite enough room to get her going forward and ahead of my leg again. She jumped up the next bank and just literally never saw the birch railing. Was it really a refusal? No, because she didn’t see it — everything she sees, she jumps. On a day like today, it’s just terrible timing because you feel like you’ve like your entire team and country down. Anyhow, after that we regrouped and she was pure class. I am so excited for this horse’s future. She just galloped around there with such speed and confidence and just got better and better as she went on. I’m really looking forward to show jumping her tomorrow.”

Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Karl Slezak is the top-placed Canadian, bringing home Hot Bobo with just 4.8 time penalties to go into 27th individually on a 40.6.

“She was phenomenal,” an elated Karl said after his ride. “She just came out of the box on fire. And we were way up ahead on her minutes at minute two. So I had to back off a little bit. She was just cruising around, never had to kick her once. So, I mean, when she comes out of the box like that, I just know we’re gonna get around. And then yeah, just took that last long route at the end there just to make sure we didn’t have a pin at the corner. And so we had a little bit of time, but I was super thrilled.”

“I just love her so much,” Karl continued. “She loves this ride. I’ve been saving her a little bit this season. She’s just got to put the pedal down and go. She loves it. She eats it up.”

Ian Stark and Pierre Le Goupil’s Thoughts on Cross Country

We caught up with both U.S. cross country advisor Ian Stark as well as our designer in residence here at Versailles, Pierre Le Goupil, to find out their thoughts and reactions to the day.

“I think it was interesting really,” Ian reflected. “As the day started, the ground was a bit slippery and wet. It dried out as the day went on and I think the going — the footing — got better for the later competitors. I thought it was a really good track, I thought Pierre le Goupil designed a great track, it looked magnificent.”

Ian as well as Pierre echoed the thoughts we all had after the first handful of riders made the course look like a walk in the park.

“For a while, I thought it was going to just be a bit of a gallop round,” Ian said. “But you know, as always, the pressure on at an Olympics can cause its own problems. So there was trouble spread well out. The ditch after the big drop caused more influence than I thought it would do. But the horses didn’t really read it [the ditch]. Some of them jumped it beautifully, and others just ran through it. Most got away with it.”

“At the beginning of the course of the day, I was staying by the control center and everybody was going very well,” Pierre agreed. “Too well, I say to myself, ‘Oh, that’s gonna be too easy.’ The time has been obviously influential. My feeling is that they were all riding pretty well. And so that was very impressive. It didn’t look too dirty, like the time was tough. It’s difficult. Horses were jumping well.”

“You don’t have a crystal ball,” Pierre continued. “The problem is making things too easy, doesn’t make it safer. I will say that, it was not a very big course, it was not an enormous course. It was a course to give a chance to everybody. I think it has worked. There were plenty of little locations to make little mistakes.”

Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And there is also the fact that on an Olympic venue, the designer generally has no historical data to draw from in terms of how the ground responds or how the track rides.

“The challenge here is that nothing happened here before and nothing will ever happen here again. For a century,” Pierre elaborated. “So, you have no return. I mean, when you organize on a regular basis at a venue, even if it’s only for one year, it’s really a different job. Because you’re always thinking about the next experience when you’re watching the horses. You prepare already the next course you’re going to design here and if not improve, you take lessons and you can refine your project and change it for the better. And get new ideas. Here is different. It’s one shot and there was no feedback from previous experiences.”

In general, today was a phenomenal display of sport and horsemanship, and at a time when equestrian sports are under a greater microscope than ever before, it was heartening to see the immense attention to welfare and horse (and rider) safety on cross country today. We do this, at the end of the day, out of love for the horse. From the throngs of spectators, to the keen horses, to the determined riders, we saw this in spades today. And may we never lose sight of this guiding moral, always seeking to improve our sport and the lives of our horses.

Go Eventing.

The individual top ten following cross-country.

The team top ten following cross-country.

Sally Spickard contributed to this report.

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FEI Issues Yellow Card in Response to PETA Complaint

Carlos Parro and Safira. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This story has been updated with comment from the rider. 

The FEI have issued a yellow card at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games to Brazilian team rider Carlos Parro in response to concerns raised by the animal rights group PETA.

A letter of concern and photographs were sent by PETA which appear to show Carlos hyper-flexing Safira to FEI president Ingmar De Vos on Friday.

“The FEI can confirm receipt of the letter and accompanying photographs from PETA highlighting the concerns about the conduct of Brazilian athlete Carlos Parro. The FEI Officials have issued a yellow warning card as the action of the athlete could have caused unnecessary discomfort to the horse,” The FEI said in a statement.

“Additionally, the Ground Jury has directly addressed the situation with the athlete and the chef d’Equipe of Brazil. The FEI Stewards are aware of this incident and will be vigilant at all times for any behavior that is not in line with horse welfare and are prepared to take immediate action if such behavior occurs.”

The four-time Olympian is ranked 51 after the first phase with his and John and Juliet Chambers’ Safira, a 12-year-old British Sport Horse (Spring’s Spirit – Hidden Sapphire, by Uptons Deli Circus), on a score of 37.7.

Following cross country, Carlos responded to the warning stating that the mare is an anxious type and “naturally” can move in that way when the reins slack. “The stewards were there. They could have seen if I was done anything wrong, and they didn’t. She will do that anytime. You let the reins go, the first thing she’ll do is put her head down,” he said, adding that on that day schooling he tried Safira in a double bridle, which he doesn’t normally employ.

“I did try a double bridle on her that day. I was suggested to try it because as I said she does tend to put her head down. It was suggested to me that I put a double bridle to help her come up a bit. It could have been that she didn’t want it, but I’ve never ridden in a double bridle before. It’s always on a snaffle. I put snaffle back, it’s fine,” he said. Carlos went on to complete his dressage test in his usual snaffle bridle.

“I think it’s it’s wrong that the governing body is accepting that and giving them wood for the fire. Because, as I said I was not riding her over-bent. She did it by herself. My hands were loose. The curb rein was loose. It’s not something I do. We love the horses. That’s why we do sport. When we were kids we rode every day because we wanted to be around them not to treat them badly,” he said.

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Oo La Let’s Go! Your Follow-Along Companion Guide to the Olympic Eventing in Paris – Cross Country Day

Have a good ride! Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bonjour tout le monde! It is officially the best day of the entire Olympic Games, and yes, I am including the Opening Ceremony, the 100m final, the 4×100 relay, and the 50m freestyle in that bold statement, because, well, eventing is the best – cross country is the bestest of the best – and we all know it.

Oh yes, it’s cross country day at the Palace and the scene is set by the Grand Canal for an epic day’s sport. And I’m going to be here, with you ENers, for all of it. Welcome to our signature live blog, but not as you know it…

Just in case you missed yesterday’s explanation of why things are looking different in our live blogs for the Olympics, here’s what you need to know:

For those of you who are avid followers of our live blogs (we salute you eventing nerds!), you’ll notice that things are a little different this time around. In order to adhere to the strict media rules for the Olympics, we’re not able to bring you live commentary. We can, however, keep you totally informed with regards to who’s heading out onto the cross country course today, what their form is coming into the Games, their hobbies and favorite foods (amongst other, um, horseplay), and how they’re likely to perform in each phase based on the available data, so you’ll be securely in the know as you watch the live stream.

I’ll also be bringing you the riders’ reactions following their rounds, courtesy of our roving reporters extraordinaire – Sally Spickard and Tilly Berendt – who are somewhat inconspicuously scraping croissant debris from the roof of their mouths in the Chat Zone, probably. So buckle up and prepare to be hit with absolutely everything you didn’t know you need to know about the horses and riders of the Paris Olympic Games.

Before we get down to official Olympic business, here are some links of interest:

▶️ If you missed yesterday’s dressage companion guide,you’ll find it right here.

▶️ The substitute rule and scoring is, shall we say, a little complicated, at the Olympics, but never fear, EN is here with a natty explanation of how things will work should a team run into trouble on the cross country.

▶️ Here’s everything you need to know about the Olympic cross country phase.

▶️ There’s info and links galore in our Ultimate Guide to Eventing in Paris.

▶️ We’ve been chinchilla-ing away backstage to bring you all the Paris content you can possible handle, and we’re not done yet, oh no! For now though, click here for our view from between the flags – IYKYK.

Please remember to keep this page refreshed so that you don’t miss a thing. I’ll be adding in the riders’ reactions to their rounds as they come in, and the scores periodically, so keep flicking through to gather all the goodies.

*Updated to include scores below as things stand directly after cross country. There are potentially some reviews in progress.

Croissants a go go, let’s go cross country!

#Paris2024: [Website] [Equestrian Schedule, Timing, Scoring] [Peacock for U.S. Viewers] [How to Watch Guide] [Ticket Resale Market] [Spectator Guides] [EN’s Coverage]

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FIRST TEAM ROTATION

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🇩🇪 Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Julia is, understandably, very excited about this young horse, who, at just 10-years-old has already proven his talent in all three phases. He’s got just one non-completion with Julia on his record and no cross country jumping penalties. Oh yeah, he’s at the Olympics right off the back of a superb, winning run at Aachen.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Julia’s championships experience:

🔥 Individual 🥇 Tokyo 2020 – Team 🥈 Rio 2016
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Julia has been presented with the highest sporting award in Germany – the Silver Laurel Leaf – not once, but twice.

Cross Country 📈 In 17 FEI runs with Julia, this guy has never had a cross country jumping, flag or frangible device penalty – not a single one. There is one – wet – blip on his record, courtesy of that water at Boekelo last season, which took the scalp of a number of combinations that day. Up until their dunking, they were in the lead. He hasn’t been inside the time for a good while, but he’s often very close, and time penalties are very much in the single figures. Trust me, this combination is one to watch 👀

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“It’s not Mandy [her Tokyo gold medalist], he’s not there to take me around — I’m there to take him around, and take his hand and make it happen.”

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How did things go out there for the reigning Olympic champion?

“I’m beyond proud of Nickel … You just set off on him and it’s as if you’ve done an Olympic course on him twice before. He’s such a genuine horse — he’s trusting. I maybe was a little bit careful in the beginning with the ground because it changes a lot. It’s not that it’s actually bad, but it’s a bit softer in the turns — there are little hills on the tracks, so you do lose bit of time here and there. For me, the most important was that he’s happy and fit for the last three minutes, so I didn’t want to push him too much in the beginning, and that worked out perfectly. He did everything actually perfect. In the last water, he took me along a bit; I was brave and said, ‘Okay, we do it on five and five’, and didn’t take the safe option because I thought, ‘Okay, the time’s running away’, and he just did it like a pro. That makes me very, very proud of him.”

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Score for Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 – 4.8 XC penalties – Overall 31.7 – 14th

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🇦🇺 Shane Rose and Virgil

Given that Shane is heavily involved in racehorses as well as being an eventing legend, you won’t be surprised that he’s no slouch out on the cross country. This long-term partnership had a superb spin ‘round the Tokyo course on their way to team silver. They contested their first FEI competition back in 2011 and we all know that eventing’s all about the relationship between horse and rider, which will stand them in very good stead as they look to add another medal to their haul.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Shane’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥈 Tokyo 2020; 10th individually – 🥉 Rio 2016 – Beijing 2008 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 13th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) – Rome 1998 (Ind.)

🔴 Shane’s a five-time winner of the Anna Savage Medal, presented to the best and fairest Australian eventing rider.

Cross Country 📈 They were clear inside the time at Tokyo and added just 2.8 time at the World Championships in Pratoni. More recently, they finished on their dressage at the Horse of the Year event in New Zealand on their way to taking the win, and were just one second over the time in the Adelaide 5*, which they also won. In 48 FEI competitions across his career, Virgil’s had a 20 out on cross country on just five occasions, with just one 11 for a breaking a frangible device, two eliminations and two withdrawals before cross country – seriously, this guy is one to watch 👀 He’s also speedy – the most cross country time he’s added since the beginning of the 2019 season is 5.6. Dependable, honest as the day’s long, and quick, all the attributes of the great event horse that this guy has proved he is, time and again, as Shane’s brought him up through the levels since his first event back in 2011.

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“He feels amazing; he finished like he could have gone around again. He was awesome.”

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Virgil’s a veteran of the sport at nineteen, and it’s amazing to see these experienced horses come out looking so fabulous. Shane talked about how they’ve prepped for Paris and how things went out there:

“We had a really specific plan for this championship with him to try and get him so that he jumps as well as he can tomorrow — as well as today. So far, he feels amazing. He’s traveled really well — I think he’s carrying more condition, which is one of the things we’ve worked on, and I think he looks and feels much better for it. He was typical Virgil on course, keen to run and jump, not so keen to slow down and listen, but he was foot-perfect. The only fence that I would say wasn’t perfect was he just did not see the ditches at the bank. I don’t know whether it was [that] the ground line was a similar color to the rocks in the ground — he just did not see them. Luckily, at the first one I was a little more aware. I could get the distance that I chose, and the second one was a tight three, and I just expected him to back up and chip in and he just literally cantered across it — which was a little bit of a heart palpitation — but fortunately he landed quite well -balanced.”

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“He sees a jump and jumps it.”

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Score for Shane Rose and Virgil – 2.8 XC penalties – Overall 37.4 – 23rd

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🇨🇦 Michael Winter and El Mundo

Mike Winter and El Mundo. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

There’s nothing more important than the relationship between horse and rider as they’re galloping and jumping across the country, and this combination have one of the closest. ‘Roberto’ was supposed to be a produce and sell prospect, but Mike struggled to find a buyer for him, and then the gelding was injured and had to be put on box rest. Mike appointed himself full-time carer for the big guy and of course, selling was totally off the table after that. And here they are, at the Olympics. Bet Mike’s very glad that Roberto stayed firmly in his barn.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mike’s championships experience:

🔥 Beijing 2008 (Team) – Athens 2004 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Outside of eventing, Mike’s hobbies are snowboarding, and tractors.

Cross Country 📈 In 31 FEI competitions, this pair have had cross country jumping penalties on just five occasions, the most recent being at the World Championships in Pratoni in 2022. They added 7.6 time at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season, where they won team gold, and are generally between about that and low-teens in terms of time penalties. They kept it to 10 in the 4*-L at Bramham last season, a notoriously tough track, and added 8.8 there in the 4*-S this year. The Olympics are kind of in between a long- and short-format in terms of number of jumping efforts, length and time allowed (it’s 4* in terms of the obstacles), so that gives us a bit of a picture of El Mundo’s relevant form when it comes to time penalties.

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Mike took on the role of pathfinder for the Canadian team, here’s what he had to say about what that meant to him:

“I tried to be a good caretaker of my position of going first and put a score on the board and a good caretaker of my horse’s wellbeing and give him the best possible ride I could around there and bring him home safely with a score that can contribute to the team.”

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What’s he taking back to the team after his trip ‘round the Olympic track?

“Some of the French crowds are really enthusiastic which is great. It gives us a lot of energy. It’s very exciting. And I think in the first part of the course it takes the horses by surprise, but later I think it encourages them on and they enjoy it. [I’ll tell them about] the crowds at the beginning, and that the middle section through the woods is a bit wetter, a bit slippery – be cautious there, but also keep the energy level up in your horses because at 21ABC, that’s a bit energy sapping through there with the wet ground — but then they get a second wind as they come out of there and back into the open.”

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And how did things go out there for him and El Mundo?

“I would say when it gets later on in the course, normally [El Mundo’s] turning isn’t as good; I probably was overly cautious there. He actually responded much better than I thought. I was worried I wouldn’t be able to bring him around in the six [strides], and instead I almost ended up there in five because he was so obedient and he turned so well. It’s information for the future, I think, as he matures, and the training and the strength. These horses are incredible natural athletes, but the time that goes into the training, the suppleness, the strength and conditioning training they have so that they can be their best athlete – year on year, they build in confidence and obedience and strength and it’s just an amazing thing.”

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“Everywhere where I was concerned that maybe was something he hadn’t seen or was difficult for him to pick up on, he was just amazing.”

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Score for Michael Winter and El Mundo – 14.4 XC penalties – Overall 49.6 – 38th

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🇮🇪 Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M

Sarah’s a pretty speedy kind of lady, and she’s sat on another speedy kind of lady, so it seems like they make the perfect match. They sure are a mighty combination. It sure will be exciting to watch this pair – blink and you’ll miss ‘em!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sarah’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥈 Tryon 2018, 5th individually – Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Sarah will be totally fine galloping alongside and crossing the Grand Canal – she’s a qualified scuba diving instructor to dive master level.

Cross Country 📈 In 16 FEI starts this pair have sixteen completions, fourteen of them coming after jumping clear across the country. Add to that the fact that this pair are pretty quick, and you’re onto an eventing winner. They added just one second of time to their dressage score in the 4*-S at Ballindenisk this season, where they finished third. In their most recent long-format run, which came at Blenheim last year, they added just 3.6 time penalties on cross country day.

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Sarah sums up what it’s like out on cross country at a French Olympics:

“I have never seen so many people.”

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Action Lady M got a bit hot in the huge atmosphere yesterday, but today the crowd’s enthusiasm came in handy for Sarah:

“It’s funny, whereas the crowds weren’t good in the dressage ring, the crowds out there [on course] helped, because she’d be spooking at them it helped me in every turn because she backed away from the people, and I could ride her around the turn, saying, “You have to turn now,” and she’s like, ‘Woaooooh!’”

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Fair to say, the dressage was subjected to a deluge of rain all day yesterday. How’s the ground out on course?

“You could hear it [the ground] being a bit ‘ploggy’. The only place I slipped, and I actually saw somebody slip on the TV there, is that bit in the woods. We did the first skinnies fine, it’s getting to the second skinny and landing after is very, very slippy. I slipped just before that skinny, so I was lucky to get over. We went to get over it sideways. That’s the only really bad bit of ground, but the rest of it was grand. You can hear the wetness, but you weren’t disappearing.”

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Sarah, her leg, and Action Lady M were having a good chat on the way ‘round, it seems:

“All the way round, I stuck to Plan A. I think I was close to the flag at the corner coming out of the top water. My leg was like, ‘Uugh!’ and she went, ‘Like this!’ and I was like, ‘I’m not touching that!’”

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All in all, it appears Sarah had a grand ol’ time out there:

“I had walked six [strides] between the two houses along the canal and it was a moving six, and Dag [Albert] said ‘That could five,’ and I was like, ‘Hmmm, I think I’ll stick to my six.’ I came to it, I was like, ‘Oh my god there’s five!’. I was laughing to myself about that but he [Dag] was dead right.”

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“I’m very proud … She was on it all the way, she was incredible.”

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Score for Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M – 3.2 XC penalties – Overall 41.2 – 29th

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🇨🇭 Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This horse is a cross country machine with so, so many clear rounds under his cinch over his decade-long career. It must feel so good to be sat on such an experienced horse as you leave the Olympic start box, and to be on one so consistently careful cross country, well, Mélody’s one lucky lady.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mélody’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 17th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Mélody’s sporting motto is very apt for a team Olympian: “Do the best you can and give your best. For yourself and for your teammates.”

Cross Country 📈 Since this pair got together, they haven’t had a single cross country jumping penalty, not even a flag. In fact, this gelding has only ever had one 20 in ten years. Seriously, he’s a true eventer’s eventer. They were just one second over the time in Tokyo, and added 8 penalties at the World Championships in Pratoni. and just a few more at the Europeans last season, 15.6. There is some variation on how quick this pair seem to go, from very, to moderate. We’ll have to wait and see what plays out in Paris.

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Score for Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire – 3.2 XC penalties – Overall 41.6 – 30th

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🇺🇸 Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake

Photo by Sally Spickard.

HSH Blake comes here in hot hot hot form 🌶️ He won the 4*-L in Tryon last time out, where he finished on his dressage. He was clear inside the time on his way to winning individual gold at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season and clear inside the time at the Young Horse World Championships in 2022. This guy sure knows how to step it up when things get serious.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 HSH Blake lost a shoe in the 4*-S at Kentucky and still pulled off a fast clear for fifth place.

Cross Country 📈In 22 FEI competitions, this pair have never had a cross country jumping penalty – not a single one. Totally clear, all the way. And they’re quick too. Since the start of the 2023 season, they have five clears inside the time on their record, and when the did have time penalties, they were very much in single figures. This is an exciting prospect for Team USA. Eyes on 👀

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“The biggest thing is that I’m fighting for the team. I’m riding for the team.”

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Caroline picked up penalties after taking a long route. Caroline explained what happened out there.

“[Blake]’s a phenomenal athlete. The course was riding like a dream, and then we came to that bank and he fell in the ditch — so I did the smartest option and said ‘Going long’ and jumped the different element. If I were individual, I’d fight and try to jump the skinny, but we’re on a team, so I did the best option I could.”

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Score for Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake – 32 XC penalties – Overall 62.4 – 47th

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🇵🇱 Malgorzata Korycka and Canvalencia

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have plenty of 4* experience, with twenty-one runs at the level since 2019. It must feel good to be setting off on your Olympic debut with so much practice under your belt.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Malgorzata’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Malgirzata and Canvalencia were third at the 4*-L Olympic qualifier in Poland last season.

Cross Country 📈 This combination’s cross country record isn’t without its blips. They had an 11 for breaking a frangible device on their most recent run, one of two they’ve had this season. They also have the odd 20 on their record. They jumped a steady clear at the World Championships in Pratoni in 2022, where they added 32.4 time penalties. More recently they’ve been quicker, with time penalties ranging from 6.4 to 18.

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Score for Malgorzata Korycka and Canvalencia – 21.2 XC penalties – Overall 60.6 – 44th

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🇸🇪 Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z

This pair aren’t here to win the dressage, they’re here to show their jumping mettle with the probability of a clear, and possibly quick, round in the cross country.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sofia’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z’s name in the barn is ‘Belle’.

Cross Country 📈 This pair haven’t had a problem out on the cross country since 2021. They jumped clear at the European Championships last season and at the World Championships in Pratoni; they added 10.4 time at the Europeans, finishing up in thirteenth place; at the Worlds they added 14.8. In their three 4*-S runs this season, they’ve made the time once and added just a smidge at the other two events; they were also clear inside the time in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen last season.

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“That was very cool.”

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Sofia was totally delighted with her horse after their round:

“It was amazing. She came out the startbox — she’s always been a quick horse, but we’ve just put a little bit more gallop work into her, and she just flew, really. She’d be around 50% [blood] – around half, but she’s quite jumping bred. I think she just gets better and better cross country. I spent a lot of her youth riding quite slowly. She’s quite a hot horse and she could get strong. But she spent a lot of years consolidating, learning to wait for me and now, when she’s been going fast, the last two or three years, she’s really got quicker in her brain and quicker in her legs. Today, it really felt like we had another step forward.”

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And how did she find the ground out there?

“It didn’t feel bad — the horses felt quite surefooted. There was one turn into that first ditch at fence four in the woods — she just lost her backend a little bit there — but everywhere else it felt pretty good. If anything, they go to a few of the crossings and you almost feel like, ‘Whoa!”, but actually the going was very good.”

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Score for Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z – 15 XC penalties – Overall 48.3 – 37th

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🇬🇧 Tom McEwen and JL Dublin

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

‘Dubs’ finished on his dressage when he became European Champion with Nicola Wilson in 2021, with an incredible finishing score of 20.9. Tom’s not quite reached those levels with the gelding since taking over the ride in 2022, but it’s coming, that’s for sure. They’ve been second at Kentucky 5* twice and third at Pau. Tom knows what it’s like to win both a team and individual medal at a Games, and there’s no doubt he’ll be hankering for the same for Dubs, and Nicola, who he always credits for producing Dubs so beautifully.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tom’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Team 🥇 Tryon 2018; 12th individually
3️⃣ Tom is currently World No. 3

🔴 Tom has been incredibly busy lately – he got married last year and is expecting a mini McEwen this year!

Cross Country 📈 Since having an unlucky, and surprise, rider tumble at the European Championships last season, this pair have finished either first, second or third in each of the events they’ve done – not a bad comeback at all. They had a 20 in the 4*-S at Aachen last year, but really, that should be put down to the pair learning one another’s ways in the early stages of their relationship. In their last five FEI competitions they’ve jumped clear on cross country day, with time penalties kept well and truly within single figures, and that includes two 5*s.

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“It is amazing; they’re cheering for you before, over, and after the fence.”

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Tom elaborated on how his round went with ‘Dubs’:

“I’m very lucky my horse is a European champion in his own right with Nicola — he is a phenomenal horse, and I’ve done enough five-stars on him now to have a lot of experience … It is a fantastic Olympic course. It allows you to be really open and free to begin with, and then requires the riders to think where you need to close up. Actually, it’s been such a great course that I changed my mind on some of the elements, just as we were about to start, from how they were jumping. It was great, and for me — I call it the Leaf Pit — the two drops where there’s an option, that’s a big question. I jumped through the two verticals and the two egg things — and I had a huge slip just on the flat coming out there after a lovely ride through there. You’ve got to stay with them; you’ve got to stay connected and give them all the confidence.

I was up [on time] all the way around. Obviously, having watched Sarah Ennis get time penalties — that was a bit of a shock — thinking, ‘Crikey, this is gonna be a very, very fast time,’ but actually, if you can keep a rhythm — which is obviously harder said than done. The time is obviously achievable; the ground is good. You’ve got to feel your way around, and I think for me as a kid and having so much experience in Britain with so many tracks, there’s plenty of fresh ground that’s actually really good.”

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“I must say a massive thank you to the whole team at Versailles. Considering we had not British weather, but Irish weather yesterday, they’ve done the most incredible job preparing the ground. Everyone’s worked unbelievably hard, so for the horses, it’s absolutely perfect.”

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Things must be feeling pretty cool in the Team GB camp right now. Tom talked a little about being part of the team that’s defending their title from Tokyo:

“Obviously, it makes the rest of the day for me less stressful, but I’m here now fully supporting the girls — giving them any support or words they need from me. It’s definitely easier being first than third — I can now chill out and watch the girls [Laura and Ros] do an incredible job — but the two girls are probably the two best riders in the world at the moment, so that will be fantastic to watch around this course.

I thought Laura’s dressage test was probably the best eventing dressage test I’ve ever seen — and by quite a long way, and I’ve seen some good ones. It was amazing. We know we’re a great team. It’s easy for me to stand here now and say I have a lot of confidence. The girls still have to get their job done, but they are amazing riders, so touch wood! Hopefully, I can give them some great feedback to maybe help their rides — or I’m sure they know what they’re doing without me to be honest.”

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Score for Tom McEwen and JL Dublin – Clear inside the time – Overall 25.8 – 6th

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🇧🇷 Carlos Parro and Safira

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have been together since 2018, but Carlos has taken his time with the mare, only stepping her up to 4* last season. And what a season they had – a team bronze medal from the Pan-Ams in Santiago must have them feeling good as they set out on their Olympic journey in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Carlos’ championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Team); 18th individually – Sydney 2000 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) – Rome 1998 (Team)

🔴 Carlos is part owner of this mare, along with John and Juliet Chambers of Springfield Stud, who bred her by their homebred stallion.

Cross Country 📈 In 18 FEI competitions, there’s just one rider fall is this horse’s list of clear cross country jumping rounds, and Carlos wasn’t in the irons that day. This pair were clear inside the time at the Pan-Ams last season, where they won team bronze, and they added just 2.4 time penalties in the 4*-L at Sopot, Poland, in their most recent run. They had 23.3 time in the 4*-S at Strzegom earlier this year, and as the Olympic course is a bit longer than a short-format, but not as long as a long-format, we can perhaps expect somewhere in between for this combination.

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Score for Carlos Parro and Safira – 22.4 XC penalties – Overall 60.1 – 42nd

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🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Hiarado

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Known as one of the fastest women on the eventing circuit, Jonelle sure doesn’t hang about when she’s galloping across the country. Hiarado wouldn’t be one of the faster horses that Jonelle’s piloted, but she’s proving to be very consistent in delivering clear rounds that are there or there abouts.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jonelle’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 11th individually – Rio 2016 (Team); 17th individually – Team 🥉 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥉 Pratoni 2022; 10th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team); 19th individually – Caen 2014 (Ind.); 4th
8️⃣ Jonelle is currently World No. 8

🔴 In 2022, Jonelle and her husband Tim were the first married couple to be World No.1 and 2.

Cross Country 📈 This pair have one 20 on their card in eight FEI runs, which came at their second event together. They were clear with 12 time on the mare’s 5* debut at Pau last year and head to Paris with two clear rounds at 4*-S this season, one with 7.2 time and the other with 14. Their best result came at Kilguilkey House in Ireland, when they were second in the 4*-L last season, where they added just one second of cross country time to their dressage score to finish on 31.4.

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🇳🇿 Score for Jonelle Price and Hiarado – 28.4 XC penalties – Overall 59.2 – 41st

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🇯🇵 Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka

Form, Facts & Stats:

This pair are coming to Paris in hot form, off the back of a second place in the 4*-L at Ballindenisk this season and a win in the 4*-S at the Spring Tour in Portugal. That’s gotta have you feeling good as you set out onto an Olympic cross country course.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ryuzo’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Ryuzo’s based in the UK with Angela Tucker.

Cross Country 📈 They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Ballindenisk and jumped clear with 10 time penalties at the World Championships in Pratoni, before unfortunately withdrawing before the final horse inspection. This horse’s cross country jumping record is something to behold – in 32 FEI competitions there are zero jumping penalties on his card – zero. That’s with four different riders. The only blips on his incredible record are two rider falls, both Paris Olympian Ros Canter, way, way back in the day.

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Safe to say, Ryuzo is very, very pleased with Cekatinka:

“Oh she was amazing! It’s an amazing feeling. She’s so brave, with a big heart and she knows the cross country phase.”

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“Just at the beginning when we started, she was a little bit, ‘Whoa’, but after the first of couple minutes, she was like, ‘Oh cross country phase!’ She knows the job.”

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“She looks for the flags, boom, straight, and go.”

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Score for Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka – 6.4 XC penalties – Overall 40.9 – 28th

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🇮🇹 Pietro Sandei and Rubis de Prere

They may have had a slightly circuitous route to lining up as part of the Italian team, via the traveling reserve slot, but Pietro and ‘Rubis’ are ready to add an Olympics to their card, which already contains a European Championships, multiple Nations Cup appearances and two 5*s. Pietro has stepped up to the plate following the elimination of Emiliano Portales following his dressage test.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Pietro’s championships experience:

🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 This combination have been together since 2011 and Pietro has brought ‘Rubis’ right through the levels, all the way up to 5*.

Cross Country 📈 This pair jumped clear ‘round the the 5* at Luhmühlen last month, adding 11.2 time penalties and finishing in the top-10. They were clear inside the time in the 4*-S at Pratoni the previous month, which they won. They finished up last season with another 4*-S win, so Pietro’s got to be feeling confident as he sets off out of the start box in Paris.

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Pietro’s stepped up for the Italian team following the elimination of Emiliano Portales after the dressage, and understandably, it’s been an emotional Olympic debut for him:

“Yesterday I was very disappointed for Emiliano, for this accident. I know that it’s difficult to to get over, but today is another day. Our team asked me to jump in the saddle and try to support the Italian Federation — I accept this and answer yes. Today the feeling was amazing, because it’s a mix of emotions — Olympic emotion, emotion with my old friend always, and also because at home, my girlfriend is pregnant.”

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He’s not displeased to have missed out on the dressage phase, fair to say:

“For me it is the best way, because I don’t like very much dressage! It’s the perfect Olympic games because I start in the cross country, tomorrow show jumping, and for me, it’s the best way. I am an eventer — I know that that dressage is a part of the competition — but I try to be focused on the on this day and tomorrow, and to try to do my best.

I try to walk the cross country like a normal competition, try to be relaxed, not too much problem if I ride or not ride. For me, it’s amazing, because when I walk the competition, I have an idea and then to end today, I made the idea true with my friend.”

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🇳🇱 Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur

[caption id="attachment_378376" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination really did run into some eventing bad luck on their Olympic debut in Tokyo, having a 20, an 11 for activating a frangible device, and then being eliminated for missing a fence. But Jenneke’s a gutsy competitor and will be back to show the world just how things usually work out for her and her long-time partner, seventeen-year-old ‘Champ’.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Janneke’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 As well as being an Olympic eventer, Janneke has a degree in Sports Marketing.

Cross Country 📈 Since Tokyo, there’s nary a cross country jumping penalty on this pair’s record; in fact, since this pair got together way back at the beginning of the 2018 season, they’ve only had jumping penalties on four occasions. They added 19.2 time at the European Championships, but that’s the most they’ve had in quite a long while. It does tend to vary between events, and swings back and to between low-single figures and low-teens, but there’s no difference between long- and short-format events, on the whole.

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Score for Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur – Clear inside the time – Overall 31.9 – 16th

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🇫🇷 Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

With five Europeans, two Worlds and two Olympics in his locker, it’s safe to say that Karim knows a thing or two about representing France. And now he’s in Paris, competing under the French flag at a home Games. Listen out for the cheers as he makes his way ‘round the course; he’s in for one heck of a ride today, whatever the outcome, but based on this pair’s form, they’re on track for a big one.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karim’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 12th individually – Team 🥇 Rio 2016
🗺️ Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.) 10th

🔴 This pair have been runners-up at Pau 5*, where they added just 0.4 show jumping time to their dressage score.

Cross Country 📈 You have to go back to 2022 to find a cross country jumping penalty on this combination’s record. They were clear inside the time at Pau 5*, where they were runners-up, and clear inside the time at Tokyo. They’ve had just a smidge of time at each of their two 4*-S runs this season, we’re talking 1.2 and 3.2 penalties. They did add 16.4 at the 4*-L European Championships last year, but that’s the most time added by quite a bit across all the competitions they’ve done. Clear inside the time coming up for them in Paris? Maybe so.

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EN’s boss lady and Paris roving reporter Sally Spickard has translated Karim’s reaction to his Olympic round:

“”SCREAM OF JOY*”

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… More to follow…

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“You’re Triton — you do your thing, you’re Pegasus.”

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Once he’d finished screaming for joy, Karim elaborated on what it was like to ride ‘round his home Olympics cross country:

“I was pretty sure about the course; it was always the number 16 obstacle that I was a bit wary of because of the drop. It’s something we’re not used to as well, so I was wondering how Triton was going to react. I was apprehensive in the beginning before coming up to it. It was always the one that I was wary of coming into the course. Once we got there, I was like, ‘You’re Triton — you do your thing, you’re Pegasus, so you get us over there and then we’ll keep going.’ But as I just said, it’s a sport for the two of us, so I let him do his thing and then we went on together to finish the course.”

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“It’s been seven years that we’ve been together. Already within the first six months of riding together, we already won our first four-star. I just knew that this was going to be a partnership that was going to go a long way.”

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The home crowd gave Karim “goosebumps”. Us too, Karim, even sat at home around the world watching through the screen, it’s fabulously electric:

“Even 30 seconds before coming into the course — before starting to gallop — I could hear the crowd calling my name. That really was just amazing; that is the most incredible feeling.”

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Score for Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine – Clear inside the time – Overall 29.6 – 10th

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🇧🇪 Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Karin’s championships experience speaks for itself; she’s a total stalwart of Belgian eventing and has been a superb representative over her long career, taking on her first international event in 1988. That was around the time I started following eventing, so I literally don’t know an eventing without Karin being an eventer. This combination are coming in hot for a clear round, with ‘nil points’ added for jumping penalties across their 28 FEI competitions together 🌶️

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karin’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Ind.) – London 2012 (Team); 15th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.); 9th – Athens 2004 (Team); 16th individually – Sydney 2000 (Team); 9th individually – Barcelona 1992 (Team); 8th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 17th individually – Caen 2014 (Team); 5th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 4th individually – Aachen 2006 (Team); 13th individually – Jerez de la Frontera 2002 (Ind.); 19th – Rome 1998 (Ind.) – Den Haag 1994 (Ind.)

🔴 Liepheimer Van’t Verahof is the only stallion in the field.

Cross Country 📈 In 28 FEI competitions, there’s nary a cross country jumping penalty on this combination’s card. They do add a handful of time, which, interestingly, doesn’t alter much between long- and short-format competitions. In their two FEI runs this season, both 4*-S, they added 8.4 and 8.8. In the 4*-L at Boekelo last year they kept it to 6.

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Even the super experienced Karin Donckers has never seen a crowd like the French at their home Games:

“What a crowd there is! It’s unbelievable. We walked this course between 7 and 9 am, and there was nobody and then when you come out now, there are people everywhere.”

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She talked about how her round went with the only stallion in the field:

“Personally, I hoped to be maximum, between 10 to 15 seconds over the time. I’m 18 [seconds] out, so I am a little disappointed maybe, but in the end, you have to ride it clear, you’re the first one to go. We didn’t see much from other people, you don’t have so much information, so you have to ride your own course and I think [Leipheimer Van’t Verahof] did very well.

I think course-wise, it rode like I expected, but I think the crowds and everything around was very impressive to me. Especially when you start, the noise everywhere, but then — especially when you came out of fence four and you come more into the open area — that was really where I felt a bit like, “Whoa,” and I picked it up that it’s not a normal cross country.”

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Every day’s a school day and Karin’s already reflecting on her own performance:

“There were one or two fences where I maybe didn’t ride good enough — to ten a, b for example, I didn’t show him the line so well. But he clicked on straightaway and he said “Okay, if you tell me a real line, I still solve it for you.” So in that way, I’m very proud of my stallion. You have to ride every combination well. You need a straightforward horse that trusts you and it’s important as a rider to tell your horse very clearly and show them very clearly what to do. That’s where I maybe blame myself a tiny little bit, that I could have done that better [shown her horse where to go] but I’m very proud of how ‘Leipy’ helped me with that.”

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Score for Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof – 7.2 XC penalties – Overall 33.8 – 21st

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INDIVIDUAL RIDERS

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🇪🇸 Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Carlos is making his Olympic debut with his World Championships ride, ‘Taraje’. They’re in Paris off the back of some decent recent form, with a win, a sixth place, and two thirds coming in their last four FEI events.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Carlos’ championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Carlos has represented Spain at three World Championships and four European Championships.

Cross Country 📈 This combination were clear inside the time at the 4*-L in Romania last fall, which set them up for the win. In 26 FEI competitions, there’s just one cross country jumping penalty on their record, which came way back in their first ever event in 2019. There’s also a fall on their card, which came at the World Championships in Pratoni. Other than that, their clear cross country jumping rate is really excellent. They’re fairly quick too. They added just 6.8 time in their most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in Montelibretti on their way to third place, and 4 time penalties in the 4*-L at the same venue last fall. Apart from one short-format competition, time penalties have been firmly in single figures since 2021.

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Score for Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10 – 17.6 XC penalties – Overall 47.8 – 35th

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🇭🇺 Balász Kaizinger and Herr Cooles Classico

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair are, for sure, here for the cross country (aren’t we all?) and we’ll likely see them climb the leaderboard after today’s competition, all being well.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Balász’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Balász is the first Hungarian eventer at an Olympics since 1996.

Cross Country 📈 In 14 FEI runs together, this combination have had cross country jumping penalties on just one occasion, and one 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device. They’ve jumped clear at both 4*-L and 4*-S, although they don’t have a ton of 4* experience, having stepped up to the level just last season. They incurred just 4.8 time penalties in the 4*-L at Sopot, in Poland, this season, but that was pretty quick for them; they added 17.6 in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen last month.

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Score for Balász Kaizinger and Herr Cooles Classico – 16 XC penalties – Overall 61.8 – 45th

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🇨🇿 Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Miroslav and Shutterflyke are making their second Olympic appearance in Paris, making this the third time they’ve been on the world stage under the Czech flag, having also contested the World Championships in Pratoni in 2022. They haven’t had a cross country clear jumping round at a championships, yet, despite having plenty in other competitions. Will today put that right?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Miroslav’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Miroslav is one of a few riders in Paris who have full-time jobs outside their eventing career. In Miroslav’s case, he’s an equine veterinarian, specializing in soundness problems.

Cross Country 📈 This pair had a 20 at Tokyo and at the World Championships in Pratoni, but these seem to be unfortunate blips in an otherwise pretty clear record. They’ve jumped clear at both 4*-L and 4*-S recently. In terms of time, they obviously added a fair bit in their two championships appearances due to those 20s, but generally they’re around the mid-teens. They can be quicker, we’ll just have to wait and see where they land in Paris.

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Score for Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke – 72 XC penalties – Overall 125 – 56th

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🇪🇨 Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske

Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Ronald is a self-confessed horse nut (aren’t we all ‘round here?!) and has come to Paris with his veteran eventer, who is 21-years-old, yet ‘Forever Young’. Despite that, he’s not actually a full-time eventer, instead spending his days heading up several businesses and finding time to, you know, qualify for the Olympics outside of office hours. There’s nothing like having an experienced old pal beside you as you set out of the start box on cross country day, and Ronald’s guy has got 50 FEI competitions under his cinch as he makes his Olympic debut.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ronald’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Ind.)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Ind.)

🔴 At 21, Wundermaske is the oldest horse in the competition by two years.

Cross Country 📈 This pair have had a bit of a spate of eliminations and withdrawals recently, with just one completion in five starts this season. He was pretty consistently clear cross country jumping last season though, and he went clear in his most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Avenches last month. Realistically, we can expect time penalties in the high-20s, at least.

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Score for Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske – Eliminated XC (rider fall)

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🇫🇮 Veera Manninen and Sir Greg

There’s nothing quite like taking to a cross country course with a long-time partner, and Veera’s in that enviable position as she makes her Olympic debut. Together since Juniors, Veera’s brought Sir Greg right up through the levels and it’s safe to say that this pair know each other inside out, a real advantage when it comes to their biggest test yet.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Veera’s just 24 but her and Sir Greg have been going eventing together for almost a decade.

Cross Country 📈 This pair consistently pull out clear cross country jumping rounds, with just three occasions when they’ve incurred a 20 and one elimination in 29 FEI competitions. They were clear inside the time in the 4*-S at Sopot, Poland, last season on their way to fourth place, but generally they do tend to pick up time. It was 12.8 penalties in their most recent run in the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Strzegom, where they finished sixth, and 16 in the run before that.

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Score for Veera Manninen and Sir Greg – 18.4 XC penalties – Overall 55.2 – 39th

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🇩🇰 Peter T. Flarup and Fascination

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have been on a run of very hot form over the last season, with 8 FEI runs and results in the top-8 in all of them. They honed their skills going arena eventing over the winter and come to Paris on a streak of 8 cross country clear jumping rounds. If you’re into numbers games, check out all those eights.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Peter’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Team) – Rome 1998 (Team)

🔴 Fascination is known as ‘Cooper’ in the barn.

Cross Country 📈 This combination haven’t had a cross country jumping penalty since 2022, and that includes at both long- and short-format events and arena eventing. They had 14 time penalties in their most recent run, the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Strzegom, but they can be quite a bit quicker than that, and added just 2.8 in the 4*-L at the same venue last season. They did have 40 jumping penalties in Tokyo, and added 27.2 time, and they retired after 20 jumping and 11 for breaking a frangible device on their 5* debut at Luhmühlen in 2022. But more recent form suggests that they’ve put all that behind them and will be going for the clear in Paris.

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Score for Peter T. Flarup and Fascination – 33.6 XC penalties – Overall 66 – 48th

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🇪🇸 Esteban Benitez Valle and Utrera AA 35 1

Esteban’s here as an individual after a Herculean effort by Spain to have a team in Paris that, sadly, didn’t quite come together in the end. But it’s great that there are two Spanish representatives, and although he’s making his Olympic debut, Esteban has European and World Championships experience on his side.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Esteban’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Esteban’s World Championships horse is now going eventing for fun, doing 1*s with Esteban’s girlfriend.

Cross Country 📈 This pair only have one cross country jumping penalty on their card from 23 FEI competitions. That came in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in Arville last season. They’re pretty speedy to boot; they went clear inside the time in the 4*-S at Kronenberg last year, where they finished third, and added just 4.8 in the 4*-L at Strzegom a little later in the year. We only have that one long-format run to go off, although they’ve been quick enough to pick up just 2.8 time penalties in the 4*-S Nations Cup event at Montelibretti this year.

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Score for Esteban Benitez Valle and Utrera AA 35 1 – 29 XC penalties – Overall 68.9 – 50th

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SECOND TEAM ROTATION

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🇩🇪 Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S

Photo by Shelby Allen.

Christoph and Carjatan S played a huge part in Germany’s team gold medal at the World Championships in Pratoni and will no doubt be aiming for more of the same as they take to the course by the Grand Canal. This really is an exciting horse to watch – he’s striking, gutsy and classy, a real eventer’s eventer. Eyes on 👀

Form, Facts & Stats:

Christoph’s championships experience:
🗺️ Team 🥇 Pratoni 2022

🔴 Christoph doesn’t just have a senior medal in his bling cabinet, he also has a bunch of Junior and Young Rider medals too.

Cross Country 📈 In 48 FEI competitions this pair have had problems out on cross country on just six occasions. They activated two frangible devices in the 4*-S at Marbach this season, but before that we’re going back to 2021 to find cross country penalties – a rider tumble at the Nations Cup event in Arville. They jumped clear at the European Championships last season, adding 13.2 time and finishing 4th; were clear at the World Championships in Pratoni, where they incurred 9.6 time penalties; jumped clear at Badminton in 2022, where they had just 3.6 time, and were clear inside the time at Luhmühlen on their way to second place in the 5* in 2021. They looked to be producing a very classy round in their final run prior to Paris, the 4*-S at Aachen, before pulling up on German team orders. Saving the very best for when it matters most, it seems. Shrewd.

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Score for Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S – Eliminated XC (rider fall)

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🇦🇺 Kevin McNab and Don Quidam

Photo by Shelby Allen.

Here with his Tokyo Olympics and Pratoni World Championships mount, Kevin took team silver at the last Games, with a clear and quick round on cross country day contributing to their success. He’ll be hoping for more of the same as he takes his turn in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kevin’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥈 Tokyo 2020; 14th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 This pair suffered a tack malfunction at the World Championships, where a broken cheek piece resulted in 20 penalties and a slew of time faults.

Cross Country 📈 This pair had that 20 out on course at the World Championships in Pratoni, but were clear and quick in Tokyo, adding just 2.8 time faults and finishing 14th individually, an expensive second round of show jumping dropping them down the order. He very nearly finished on his dressage at his most recent complete run in the 4*-S at Marbach, where he was two seconds over the time to add 0.8 to his dressage of 33.9. Since Kevin took on the ride in 2018, he’s had 16 clear cross country rounds from 21 competitions. This guy’s got 5* form as well – he jumped clear inside the time at Kentucky in 2021 on his way to sixth place.

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Score for Kevin McNab and Don Quidam – Retired XC

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🇨🇦 Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo

Hot Bobo already has a gold medal to her name, after triumphing with the Canadian team at the Pan-Ams in Santiago, and Karl will be itching to add another, this time of the Olympic variety. Incredibly, Karl had planned to sell Hot Bobo on, but she was so spooky it was tough to find a buyer and now, well, Karl must be very, very pleased about that.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karl’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Hot Bobo was actually an impulse buy when Karl’s hand ‘slipped’ at the Monart Sale seven years ago.

Cross Country 📈 Hot Bobo sizzles on the cross country on her day. This pair were clear inside the time at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season, on their way to winning team gold and coming fourth individually, and they won the 4*-S at Kentucky after finishing on their dressage score. Time penalties can rack up into double figures, but that’s at short-format competitions, at every long-format event they’ve done, they’ve either been clear inside the time or just a couple of seconds or so over. There are a couple of jumping penalties on their record; in 15 FEI competitions, they’ve had jumping penalties on four occasions – a 20 in a 4*-S this year and 60 in their season opener, the 4*-S at TerraNova, as well a 20 in the same event last year. The other one’s way back in her first everf FEI run. So a clear round isn’t a given, but is likely. When she’s hot, she’s hot. Is she hot for Paris?

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Score for Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo – 4.8 XC penalties – Overall 40.6 – 27th

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🇮🇪 Susie Berry and Wellfields Lincoln

Susie’s making her Olympic debut for Ireland but she knows a thing or two about being on the team, having represented Ireland at every stage of her career, from Ponies to Young Riders through to Seniors. She’s been on the path to success for some time, having been in the first cohort of riders selected for the Wesko Foundation program, where she was mentored by none other than every horsegirl’s eventing hero, Pippa Funnell. So it may be her first time, but she sure is well-prepared.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Susie’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Wellfields Lincoln is known as ‘Slinky’ to his friends.

Cross Country 📈 This pair have been prone to the odd 20 in the cross country phase, but they’re on a streak of four clear rounds coming into Paris, their longest streak yet. They’ve had three FEI runs so far this season, showing a speedier turn of foot at short-format than long-format. They had 7.6 and 3.6 time penalties in their two short-format runs, and added 20 in the 4*-L at Kronenberg, which was still good enough for fourth place.

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“The amount of Irish flags I saw when I was cantering round — it was really special; it was class.”

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Susie talked about her Olympic round:

“I had to do a long route at the end; that definitely wasn’t Plan A — I just landed a little bit more left than I needed to over the first log. I probably could have done it as a risk if it was doing it for myself, but as a team, you need to get home. I felt a little bit frustrated [crossing the finish line] if I’m honest. We’re so competitive by nature — I could have just been a bit quicker, but it was a matter of getting around and putting a clear round down.

[Wellfields Lincoln] was incredible — I could have gone another five minutes. But he is like that — he’s quite chunky to look at, but he’s a lot of blood; he gallops really well. He just felt a little bit like he was running a bit away from me to start with. Not that he was strong, just the atmosphere — he was like, ‘Go, go, go!’. I just had to take a little bit of time in the middle to be like, ‘No, you have to come back and listen, and look where you’re going.” He was so straight everywhere — he was brilliant. He was really full of running. I had to be like, ‘Whoa,’ to finish, which is a lovely feeling. He’ll go back to the stables now and Crisy [Salmon] — my head girl — she’ll make sure he has everything he needs. A lot of ice on and washed, and have a little lunch, most importantly! He felt brilliant finishing, so I really am happy.

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And what’s it like in the Team Ireland camp?

“The support network has been incredible this week. These three riders are three riders I’ve looked up to from being quite young. To ride alongside them and learn from them has been an experience in itself.”

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Score for Susie Berry and Wellfields Lincoln – 15.2 XC penalties – Overall 48.2 – 36th

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🇨🇭 Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Robin and ‘Grandeur’ are here on hot form, having won their two most recent runs 🌶️ They’ve been together since 2015 and there’s no denying the power of a long-term partnership when it comes to going cross country, particularly at the Olympics.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Robin’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 15th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Robin says the most influential person in his career is his mom.

Cross Country 📈 This pair jumped clear at the World Championships at Tryon and Pratoni, and also pulled clear rounds out of the bag at all three of their European Championships appearances. In 44 FEI competitions, they have just one non-completion which came waaaaay back in 2017. There’s a 20 on their card from 2021 and then you have to travel back in time to 2016 to find another one. This combination really are clear round machines. They do add time, most of the time. It was 7.2 penalties at Tryon and 20.4 at the Europeans last season. In their two 4*-S runs this season they’ve kept time faults to single figures though.

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Robin talked about his Olympic round:

“I’m very happy. For sure, we could be faster, but we know that he’s not the fastest horse. He was a lot behind me because of the people — he was a bit surprised. He’s used to doing championships, but it’s the first time with so many people. At the end, he was very fit — he was not so tired at the end. I’m happy with that, and sure we have some [time] points, but we did our best — and it’s not finished yet.”

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Score for Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH – 9.6 XC penalties – Overall 38.7 – 26th

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🇺🇸 Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker

Photo by Sally Spickard.

Liz hasn’t had a lot of time to get her head around the fact that she’ll be leaving the start box on cross country day, but boy, I best she’s so ready for it. This pair have had eight top-9 finishes since stepping up to 4* and jumped clear ‘round Kentucky 5* in the spring.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Speed demon Liz isn’t just quick on cross country, she’s also competed in motor racing, including the 24 hour race in Le Mans.

Cross Country 📈 In 21 FEI competitions, this pair have just one non-completion, two 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device, and no other jumping penalties. That’s nine clear jumping rounds, including one at Kentucky 5*, where they finished eighth. They haven’t always been super speedy, Nutcracker’s just a ten-year-old, but just 6.4 time penalties in your first 5* ain’t half bad. They added 9.6 in the 4*-L at Galway Downs on their way to the win last fall, and just 3.6 in the 4*-L at Tryon a little earlier in the year, which they also won.

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“I’ve dreamed of coming to this Olympics for a long time.”

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Liz talked us through her round with Nutcracker:

“The ground is definitely influential — I had huge studs in, and he still slipped on me pretty early on .. that’s where I would say all my time faults came from — just being a little bit careful on the turns, because he’s a big powerful horse and power’s up behind, and I really wanted to get the job done well [but] it’s also his future. Honestly, all the jumps rode to plan, and he was outstanding.

There weren’t any instructions other than to stick to the plan. We had discussed maybe going the opposite way, or the left side of that bank. Actually, I had a split second in my brain — because he tripped in the first ditch — I went, ‘No, he’s careful, that’ll tune him up for the next one,’ and he did it perfectly. I think it’s the design of it, and maybe the color as well — there’s this ditch, and then there’s just this bright sand and I don’t think they understand what they’re supposed to be doing. I think they look at the white, and they don’t think about the ditch.”

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“I’m a little annoyed I wasn’t a bit quicker, but I know I rode smart too, and that was also important today.”

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Liz also noticed the awesome crowds lining the course at Versailles:

“They’re immense — the crowds are incredible! I will say he noticed it between fence 2 and 3. He’s a sharp, sensitive horse, and I just gave him a bunch of pats and I talked to him — I just said, ‘You’re alright buddy, we”ll settle in, it’s okay.’ I was a little slow to fence 3 because I just gave him a bit more time and that kind of suited him there, but once he did the first water, he settled in and he never looked at them again. He was just on his job, one hundred percent.”

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“… you want to finish the Games with a horse who’s fresh and happy.”

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And how did Nutcracker seem after his efforts for the team?

“He’s kind of a freak of a horse — he’s just so powerful and he’s relentless; he can gallop forever. He was plenty fit for Kentucky, so I just did a similar gallop plan without overdoing it — because I was a little concerned about him being too fit, if I’m honest. He had plenty of running left and is fresh as anything right now. The girls are struggling to hold on him…”

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“Just to walk around and be standing at a cross country jump and see the Palace of Versailles and recognize that we we’re actually on those grounds, it’s something I will never experience again in my life. It’s a moment that I will cherish..”

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Score for Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker – 6 XC penalties – Overall 34 – 22nd

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🇵🇱 Jan Kaminski and Jard

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This duo jumped clear ‘round Tokyo but had a 20 in Pratoni. Jan’ll be channeling those Tokyo vibes as he heads out of the start box in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jan’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2010 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Jan and Jard (say it fast, it’s fun) won the 4*-L at Baborowko in Poland last season, which gave them their Paris chance.

Cross Country 📈 They’ve had a bit of a mixed bag of results thus far this season, with falls in two of their five FEI runs; they jumped clear in the other three events though. They were clear cross country jumping at Tokyo, adding 12.8 time penalties, but had a 20 at the World Championships in Pratoni, and 25.2 time, and ended up withdrawing before the final horse inspection.

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Score for Jan Kaminski and Jard – Eliminated XC

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🇸🇪 Frida Andersén and Box Leo

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have finished in the top-25 in all of their FEI starts together and have just one cross country jumping penalty on their record. They can be relatively quick too, although not often inside the time. Will they manage it in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Frida’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Frida and Box Leo jumped clear with just two time penalties at the World Championships in Pratoni, finishing 17th individually and best of the Swedes.

Cross Country 📈 This pair are incredibly consistent on cross country day. They were clear with 14.4 time at the European Championships last season and were just five seconds over the time at the World Championships at Pratoni. They haven’t had a jumping penalty since 2022, and then there’s just the one on their record. All those clears include long- and short-format events and time penalties are generally kept well in single figures. They made the time in the 4*-S at Sopot in Poland this season, on the way to third place.

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Score for Frida Andersén and Box Leo – Clear inside the time – Overall 33.3 – 20th

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🇬🇧 Laura Collett and London 52

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Three-time 5* winners with an Olympic team gold medal in their bling cabinet, this pair know what it’s like to come to a Games and deliver the goods. This horse has been such a dream for Laura, and I’ve no doubt she’s in no hurry to wake up. He’s finished on his dressage in two 5*s and added just one second of show jumping time in the third; he’s contested three 5*s and won them all. He’s not infallible, but he’s a darned good eventer who deserves all the glory that’s been bestowed on him thus far in his career, and more besides.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Laura’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Laura has limited vision in one eye due to a serious fall in 2013 – that’s why she wears goggles when she’s going cross country.

Cross Country 📈 A random 20 penalties stands out on this pair’s record, because, well, they don’t have a 20 very often. It came at Pratoni and happened as the result of a drive-by at the skinny after the slide. They weren’t the only ones to pick up penalties there that day. Another unfortunate event was a 15 for going the wrong side of a flag at the European Championships, putting them out of contention when they’d been sitting on a dressage score of 22.4. But why do we notice these blips? Because there are so very few blips in their form. In their 16 FEI runs since 2020, they are the only cross country jumping penalties on their card; in 32 completions they’ve been clear inside the time at fifteen events, including at 5*s and the Tokyo Olympics. That’s a heck of a stat right there – almost half the time at the competitions they’ve completed they’re clear inside the time (sorry EquiRatings).

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“London is just my horse of a lifetime. He’s just incredible.”

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You’d may think that London 52 was born a champion, but it’s taken years of relationship-building to get him to where he is today:

“He’s just so talented. I think for me, knowing what he was like as a young horse and knowing how much he’s had to trust me and believe in me — he’s not an actual cross country horse, and then he goes around a course like that on railway tracks — it just shows what years of partnership you can build up. You can make him believe in you, and I have full faith in him now, and then you can go and enjoy yourself out there.”

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Laura picked up a smidge of time and has slipped behind Michael Jung in the standings going into tomorrow. How did Laura find the time?

“There are a couple of places where you can really let them gallop, but there’s an awful lot of twists and turns. He lost a shoe and we were slipping all over the place, so had to be quite careful on those turns and had to really kill the speed a bit to get around the trees … I don’t know where he lost a shoe — I think quite early because of the amount he was slipping – a front shoe, which is a bit annoying – not ideal, but it just shows what a good horse he is.”

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Team GB look to be in very strong shape to defend their title:

“At the end of the day, looking forward and just trying to get the job done — we’re here as a team and we want the team to do really well. We actually just focus on our team, not what everyone else is doing. We’ve got our plan and we stick to that.”

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Score for Laura Collett and London 52 – 0.8 XC penalties – Overall 18.3 – 2nd

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🇧🇷 Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington

They may be a new combination, with Rafael having taken over the ride on Withington from Britain’s Sam Ecroyd just last year, but they’ve already got a team bronze medal in their trophy cabinet – that came at the Pan-Ams in Santiago in the fall, after they delivered a clear inside the time on cross country day.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Rafael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)

🔴 Rafael was just 24 when he competed in Tokyo.

Cross Country 📈 They had an 11 penalties for activating a frangible device in the 4*-S at Marbach, after posting a PB in the dressage. Before that though, the gelding was on a streak of ten clear cross country rounds. They were clear inside the time at the Pan-Ams in Santiago on their way to team bronze, where they were 9th individually, at 4* though, we’re looking at double figures in terms of time penalties. They added 18 in the 4*-L at Montelibretti this season and 17.2 in the 4*-S at Marbach.

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Score for Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington – 9.2 XC penalties – Overall 41.6 – 30th

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🇳🇿 Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park

Photo by Eventing Nation.

UK-based Kiwi, Clarke, knows just what it’s like to take a medal home from a championships, having won team bronze at Pratoni. This pair have only had cross country jumping penalties once since teaming up in 2021 and have proved that they’re capable of finishing on their dressage. Will they pull off this elusive feat in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Clarke’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team); 6th individually
🗺️ Team 🥉Pratoni 2022 – Lexington 2020 (Team)

🔴 Clarke was the highest-placed Kiwi at the Rio Olympics.

Cross Country 📈 They had a 20 at the World Championships in Pratoni, as well as 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device. But they’re the only cross country jumping penalties they’ve had in twelve FEI runs together. They finished on their dressage in the 4*-L at Kilguilkey House in Ireland last season, securing the win. More often than not, they do add time however, but it only ever converts to penalties in the single figures.

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“He honestly just skipped around and gave me a dream ride.”

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Clarke talked a little about his ride with Menlo Park:

“I had no idea how he was going to cope with the crowds being so loud and so close to the fence, and if anything, it helped me, because he just felt so motivated all the way around the course. Even towards the end of the course when I was asking him for a bit of extra effort, he was really giving it to me.”

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“I couldn’t fault him at all. He just left the start box and jumped every fence how I wanted. He was just on the job.”

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“It was so cool. It’s hard to pick out a voice in the crowd, but I did hear a couple of familiar Kiwi voices actually when I was going around. Weirdly, about the third minute marker, I made eye contact with a lady that was sitting on the ground beside the track. I don’t know why.”

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Score for Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park – 4.8 XC penalties – Overall 30.5 – 12th

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🇯🇵 Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street

Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Yoshi and MGH Grafton Street contested their first FEI event together this season and have just four runs under their cinch before embarking upon the Olympic Games. They’ve been good ones though.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Yoshi’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 20th – London 2012 (Team) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team); 20th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Ind.); 18th

🔴 Yoshi’s taken on the ride on MGH Grafton Street from Great Britain’s Pippa Funnell.

Cross Country 📈 This new partnership have jumped clear in each of their four runs together this season, at both long- and short-format. They’ve steadily got quicker as they’ve gone, starting out with 12.4 time in the 4*-S at Kronenberg in the Netherlands, and finishing up with 3.2 in the 4*-S at Bramham in the UK, taking in the 4*-L at Ballindenisk in Ireland along the way, where they added 4.8 on their way to fourth place.

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“Everybody’s watching, cheering, the atmosphere is amazing.”

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Yoshi’s taken over the ride on ‘Squirrel’ from none other than British eventing hero Pippa Funnell, who’s a pretty cool source of info to have on your side:

“[Pippa] gave me a lot of advice, so many things — make sure my balance is back, not pointing down. It is a little thing, but this is very helpful — just to remind me a lot. I think Pippa is always with me as [MGH Grafton Street’s] ex-rider, and she is giving me all the advice — where is the button, and he’s like this, this, this. All the instruction I get from her all the time makes it possible for me to do this.”

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Score for Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street – Clear inside the time – Overall 25.5 – 5th

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🇮🇹 Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination are on a streak of ten cross country clear jumping rounds – that includes both long- and short-format, Nations Cup events, and European and World Championship appearances. Will they make it eleven alongside the Grand Canal on their Olympic debut? Time will tell.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Evelina’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Team)

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Sporty siblings alert – Evelina’s sister represented Italy in modern pentathlon at the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

Cross Country 📈 Clear jumping isn’t a worry for this pair, in 36 FEI competitions there are just two cross country jumping penalties on their record. They’ve had the odd flag penalty and a broken frangible device, but there are many, many, many more clears on their record than anything else. Time can be their undoing; it’s fair to say that they won’t be the quickest ‘round the course on cross country day. They added 21.2 time penalties at the World Championships in Pratoni and 20.4 at the 4*-L European Championships last season. They have proved they can be quicker over short-format courses though, as they were in the 4*-S at Pratoni del Vivaro this season, where they added 8.8 on the way to third place.

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Score for Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes – 6.4 XC penalties – Overall 33 – 19th

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🇳🇱 Sanne de Jong and Enjoy

This pair have yet to come home clear on cross country day at a championships, so now’s the time to put that right. That’s not to say they don’t often jump clear, because they absolutely do, t just seems to be the luck on the big days that catches them out and upsets their long record of, otherwise, smart clear rounds.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sanne’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Sanne’s mom went eventing with Enjoy’s dam and granddam.

Cross Country 📈 This pair are a class act on the cross country and have the results to prove it. Unfortunately, the mistakes come in places you’re going to notice them – a 20 at last year’s Europeans, another one at the World Championships in Pratoni, a technical elimination at the Europeans in Avenches. In between though, they’re clear all the way. They won’t be the quickest out on course, but are unlikely to be the slowest, with time penalties recently ranging from 6.4 to 15.6 when they’ve jumped clear.

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Score for Sanne de Jong and Enjoy – 48.2 XC penalties – Overall 83 – 53rd

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🇫🇷 Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair know what it’s like to take a team medal home from a championships, having been part of the bronze medal winning French team at the Europeans last season. He’s not just here for himself though, there’s three people in this relationship, as Stéphane rides in honor and memory of his friend Thaïs.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Stéphane’s sporting motto is: “You have to be rigorous and work a lot. It’s really the work that pays off”.

Cross Country 📈 Since Stéphane began riding this gelding, they’ve had 14 FEI completions together, and within those competitions they’ve had cross country jumping penalties just once, back in 2020 during their first season as a pair. Going clear inside the time at both long- and short-format competitions isn’t outside their reach, and when they do have time penalties they keep them in single figures.

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Stephanè talked us through his Olympic experience:

“I stayed concentrated through the whole course, and went to my plan — the plan that was given to the whole team — and I did exactly what I needed to do. There is so much atmosphere and the crowd is so loud that actually I couldn’t even hear my watch properly, which goes off every minute to give the time frame. I didn’t even have a moment to look at it to know exactly where it was — I just kept going and stayed concentrating on the course.”

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Score for Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau – 2.8 XC penalties – Overall 27.2 – 7th

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🇧🇪 Tine Magnus and Dia van het Lichterveld Z

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combo is one to watch, both now, on cross country day at their Olympic debut, and in the future 👀 This is one of the really exciting pairings in eventing right now, with plenty of quick, clear round form. And Tine’s here as, essentially, an amateur – in her real life she works on her family’s farm.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Tine was Belgian national champion in 2022.

Cross Country 📈 In 26 FEI competitions, this pair have just one rider fall on their entire cross country record. They added 2.4 time penalties on their way to winning the 4*-S at Strzegom and 4 in the 4*-L at Saumur this season. Time faults have stayed in single figures for their last seven FEI runs.

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“I was like, ‘Come on, don’t f*** it up! Do your job!'”

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Tine talked about her talented mare and how she found the Olympic cross country:

“My mare was wonderful — she’s so, so good. If she sees a fence, she wants to jump. She was a bit impressed with the people — so many people, I never had that before and I don’t think I will have that again. It’s good for the sport to have so many people and you hear a name screaming all the time all the time. My horse a little bit like, What’s this?!’ but she was wonderful. I’ve had her from four years old. A friend of mine bred her and then I brought her in and did the championship five-, six-, or seven-year-old [Championships] in Belgium, and she won that. I did the World Championship twice and then she won twice also at four-star. We had a nice building up to here. She’s really a cross country machine.”

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“She’s so nice; she’s so beautiful, she’s really something special.

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Score for Tine Magnus and Dia van het Lichterveld Z – 2 XC penalties – Overall 46 – 34th

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INDIVIDUAL RIDERS

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🇫🇮 Sanna Siltakorpi and Bofey CLIck

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s nothing quite like a long-time partnership on cross country day, and Sanna and ‘Click’ have been together for almost a decade. Until their most recent run, they hadn’t been placed outside the top-10 in an FEI competition since 2022, so they’ll chalk that 19th place in April down to experience, remember that they haven’t had a jumping penalty since 2015 – yes, really – and head out of the start box knowing that they’ve totally got this.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sanna’s championships experience:

🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Sanna’s friend has been selling team merchandise to help raise the money needed for Finland to get to Paris, as well as helping to raise awareness of eventing in Finland.

Cross Country 📈 You have to go all the way back to 2018 to find anything like a problem out on cross country for this pair, and even then it was a retirement without penalties. In 43 FEI competitions they have just a single cross country jumping penalty on their record. Just one. And that came way, way, waaaaay back in 2015. What’s more, they’re pretty speedy too. They were just one second over the time in their most recent 4*-L run, and had 6.4 time penalties at their latest short-format event. This pair may well be ones to watch 👀

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strong>Score for Sanna Siltakorpi and Bofey CLIck – 21.8 XC penalties – Overall 57.2 – 40th

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🇿🇦 Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

British-based South African rider, Alex, comes to his second Games with relative new kid on the block ‘Norman’. They have just 10 FEI competitions in their locker, and nine completions, so today’s cross country will very much be an educational opportunity, but what an exciting one!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alexander’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Ind.)
🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.)

🔴 Alexander was the first South African rider to compete at Burghley (2009) and Badminton (2010).

Cross Country 📈 This combination have only had cross country jumping penalties once in their 10 FEI starts, a 60 in the 4*-S at Bicton this season, which saw them retire out on course. Other than that it’s been clear all the way for them at this early stage in their career together. ‘Norman’ is just a nine-year-old so Alexander has been taking things steady thus far, picking up time penalties in the twenties at all of their 4* runs.

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Score for Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices – 33.2 XC penalties – Overall 72.2 – 51st

🇨🇳 Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex is an excellent ambassador for equestrianism in China and is very passionate about improving access to horses, and inspiring Chinese riders to follow their dreams, just as he did when he set himself the goal of representing China at his home Olympics in 2008, a dream he realized. He won the Asian Games in Hangzhou last season and comes to Paris for his fourth Olympic appearance.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alex’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Ind.); 8th – Beijing 2008 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Tryon 2018 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Ind.)

🔴 Alex has set up a charity in the People’s Republic of China connecting kids to riding schools to help more people get into horses.

Cross Country 📈 You have to go back to 2021 to find a cross country jumping penalty on this pair’s card, although they do tend to take things a little steady out on course. They picked up 23.2 time penalties in their latest run in the 4*-S at Bramham, but kept it to 10 at their most recent long-format completion, the 4* in Montelibretti last year.

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Score for Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof – 20.6 XC penalties – Overall42.6 – 32nd

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🇵🇹 Manuel Grave and Carat de Bremoy

Manuel is making his Olympic debut with a late-allocated place, thanks to some changes in the qualification places. He’s got dad/coach/former Olympic eventer Carlos by his side as he takes on Paris with his twelve-year-old gelding.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Manuel’s championships experience:

🗺️ Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Manuel’s dad represented Portugal at the Athens Games in 2004.

Cross Country 📈 They’ve jumped three clear cross country rounds this season, including both long- and short-format events. They have had their fair share of troubles out on course though, with five eliminations and a retirement after a 20, in 27 FEI competitions, and a further four cross country jumping penalties on their record. They added 6 time penalties in the 4*-L at Kronenberg in their most recent run, and just 2.4 in the 4*-S event at the Spring Tour in Portugal. They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Sopot, Poland, last season on their way to eighth place, and clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Montelibretti a little earlier in the year, where they finished ninth.

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Score for Manuel Grave and Carat de Bremoy – Eliminated XC

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🇲🇦 Noor Slaoui and Cash In Hand

Noor is making history for Morocco as she takes to the course in Paris, as the first-ever international eventer from the country. She’s been learning the trade from Aussie eventing stalwart Bill Levett, so she has plenty of experience to draw from as she takes on her first Olympic cross country.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Noor didn’t start eventing until she was 19, after driving past a Horse Trials in the UK, where she was studying at University.

Cross Country 📈 Since stepping up to 4*, this pair have jumped clear in five out of eight FEI runs. They had 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg at Avenches on their most recent run, but went clear at both long- and short-format events in their two runs prior. Time does tend to clock up for them, particularly at short-format, with 23.6 added in the 4*-S at Ballindenisk this season and 12.8 in the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season.

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Score for Noor Slaoui and Cash In Hand – 24 XC penalties – Overall 60.4 – 43rd

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🇦🇹 Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet

The galloping dentist is back at the Games, this time with ex-French horse ‘Vitorio’. This is an exciting prospect for Harald, and Austria, who has some great form behind him, including finishing on his dressage score at Pau 5* two years running and earning an eighth and a fifth place finish.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Harald’s championships experience:

🔥 London 2012 (Ind.) – Beijing 2008 (Ind.) – Athens 2004 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.) – Aachen 2006 (Team); 19th individually

🔴 ‘Vitorio’ partnered up with Harald to represent Austria via Spain and the Czech Republic, after leaving French rider Maxime Livio.

Cross Country 📈 This horse has proven to be incredibly reliable out on the cross country course. His best rounds have come with Maxime Livio, who rode him for five years, but Harald’s been putting in the miles since starting out with him last September and in six FEI runs they haven’t had a cross country jumping penalty. Most recently, they had 19.2 time penalties in the 4*-L at Baborowko, Poland, where they finished fourth, and 6 in the 4*-S at Sopot, where they were fifth.

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Score for Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet – 6.8 XC penalties – Overall 43.3 – 33rd

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🇨🇿 Miroslav Příhoda and Ferreolus Lat

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have a hattrick of championships experiences in their locker, having represented the Czech Republic at the Tokyo Olympics, the World Championships in Pratoni, and the European Championships in Avenches. The had 11 penalties for a frangible device at Tokyo, and a 20 at Pratoni, but secured a smart clear in Avenches. What will they pull out of the bag in Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Miroslav’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Ferreolus Lat is known as ‘Ferda’ in the barn.

Cross Country 📈 This combination jumped clear in the 4*-L at Strzegom in Poland in their most recent run, where they finished third. They’ve also jumped clear in a 4*-S event this season. Really, they most often jump clear, those penalties at Tokyo and Pratoni are blips in an otherwise clean record. They added 19.6 time at Tokyo, and 21.2 at the European Championships in Avenches, another long-format competition. They kept it to 6 time penalties in their most recent 4*-S run though, and do tend to have a swifter turn of foot at short-format.

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Score for Miroslav Příhoda and Ferreolus Lat – Eliminated XC

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🇪🇨 Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois

Nicolas sure is a busy guy, what with being a CEO and Olympic eventer all at once. He’s one of those people who jumps out of bed in the dark to go ride his horses before work, then heads to the gym on the way home from the office. Which is why he’s an Olympian and I’m definitely not.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.) – Rio 2016
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.) – Tryon 2018 (Ind.) – Caen 2014 (Ind.)

🔴 Nicolas’ dad is Swiss and his mom is French, but his ex-wife was Ecuadorian, which made him eligible to compete for Ecuador.

Cross Country 📈 Things aren’t always plain sailing for this pair out on cross country, but often they are. They had an early 20 in Tokyo and followed that up with another one in a 3*-S competition a few months later. They retired out on course twice last season; after racking up a slew of penalties in a 4*-L in September, and having a 20 and breaking a frangible device in a 4*-S in April. Aside from that though, you’re looking back to 2020 to find another cross country jumping penalty on their card, and they jumped clear at the Pan-Ams in Santiago. Time is a funny thing, particularly for this pair. At 4*-L they’ve been inside and they’ve also had almost 30 time penalties. So, somewhere in between that is where they’ll probably be in Paris.

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Score for Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois – 65.4 XC penalties – Overall 107.7 – 55th

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FINAL TEAM ROTATION

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🇩🇪 Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We all know how Tokyo played out. But surely, surely, you can’t be that unlucky twice. This horse deserves to totally showcase his talent this time around, and well, there really is no better pilot. Fingers crossed the frangibles behave themselves.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Michael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 8th individually – Team 🥈 & Individual 🥇 Rio 2016 – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Caen 2014 – Individual 🥇 Lexington 2010

🔴 Michael is one of only two riders to win the Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing, with consecutive Badminton, Burghley and Kentucky victories (the other’s Britain’s Pippa Funnell).

Cross Country 📈 They’ve been clear inside the time at World Championships (Pratoni 2022), European Championships (in 2021) and 5* (Kentucky 2022), but a heartbreaking frangible device scuppered their chances of a gold medal in Tokyo. Michi had an unlucky ducking at the European Championships last season and they had a 20 in a 4*-S run in Strzegom, not to mention that Aachen flag. What I’m getting at is that we all know there’s the aspect of a little luck on the day needed in eventing, and thus far, Michi and Chip have been on the wrong side of it seemingly more times than they perhaps deserve. But look past that and you’ll find just two 20s, one flag, one frangible device and one rider fall in 33 FEI competitions together. You’ll also find an awful lot of inside the times on their record, notably at Tokyo, Pratoni and Kentucky.

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“Today was quite a lot of moments to enjoy.”

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Michael heads into tomorrow’s show jumping as the leader of the pack. He’s chasing down yet another championships title and has only one second in hand:

“Chipmunk made it very easy for me — every time the jump was easy. He was listening so well and connected to me — and he was so powerful galloping. I checked the time and said, ‘Okay, we have more time on the next fence. Slow down, slow down.’ It was an unbelievable feeling. He’s so brave in the cross country. He’s a horse with so much talent – in the dressage, in the jumping – he makes it for the rider a bit easier, everything. I’m so thankful to have such good horses and to be at my fourth Olympic Games. It’s a dream, and it’s always a special feeling.”

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Score for Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH – Clear inside the time – Overall 17.8 – 1st

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🇦🇺 Christopher Burton and Shadow Man

Chris is comin’ in hot 🌶️ He was clear inside the time at Millstreet, Ireland, on the way to the win in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in his latest FEI run prior to Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Chris’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Rio 2016; 5th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Chris has won Adelaide 5* twice, as well as taking the Burghley title.

Cross Country 📈 You have to go all the way back to 2018 to find a cross country jumping penalty on this gelding’s record, and that’s the only one – in 33 FEI runs. He made the time on his most recent run, but before that it’d been a few years since he last stopped the clock without penalties; although Chris is known as one of the fastest riders in the world, this pair have added between 16.8 and 28.4 in their six FEI competitions together. But those runs were very much a getting to know each other exercise – doing what was needed to qualify for the Olympics without risking any mishaps – and their blistering run at Millstreet is surely the kind of determination we can expect from them moving forwards.

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Score for Christopher Burton and Shadow Man – Clear inside the time – Overall 22 – 3rd

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🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS

Photo by Shelby Allen.

Jessie must be feeling pretty good on cross country day, knowing she’s sat on a mare who’s never had a jumping penalty out on course. Jessie’s no stranger to the world stage and will no doubt be fully prepared to use all of her vast experience to steer the relatively inexperienced Freedom GS ‘round the Paris track.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jessie’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team) – 2010 Lexington (Ind.)

🔴 Freedom GS is Canadian-bred and is the product of four generations of Canadian breeding.

Cross Country 📈 In 13 FEI runs this mare has no cross country jumping penalties, but has had 11 for activating a frangible device on three occasions. She hasn’t been inside the time since 2* and time penalties do tend to vary – she added 19.8 on her latest run in the 4*-S at Bromont, and 4.4 in the 4*-S at TerraNova on the way to second place. In her last long-format run, the 4*-L also at TerraNova in November, she added 4 time penalties.

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“This is the best Olympics I have ever taken part in. The venue, the jumps, the design, the people, the way this country is so welcoming — it is second to none. To be able to gallop through Versailles is undescribable.'”

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Jessie explained what happened in her round with Freedom GS:

“She] was a little bit within herself — she came up that bank and jumped beautifully out over the skinny, and I just didn’t have quite enough room to get her going forward and ahead of my leg again. She jumped up the next bank and just literally never saw the birch railing. Was it really a refusal? No, because she didn’t see it — everything she sees, she jumps. On a day like today, it’s just terrible timing because you feel like you’ve let your entire team and country down. Anyhow, after that we regrouped and she was pure class. I am so excited for this horse’s future. She just galloped around there with such speed and confidence and just got better and better as she went on. I’m really looking forward to show jumping her tomorrow.”

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Score for Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS – 32.4 XC penalties – Overall67.8 – 49th

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🇮🇪 Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

If you love cross country, make sure you watch this guy, because ‘Salty’ loves it too (and so does Austin). Man, there’s nothing better than seeing a true cross country horse do its thang, and that’s exactly what you get with this talented, plucky gelding. He’s got scope and power and speed and… well let’s just says he’s the whole package when it comes to cross country day. Enjoy.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Austin’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 13th individually – Beijing 2008 (Team) – Sydney 2000 (Ind.); 17th
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 18th individually

🔴 Austin drove his own horse lorry to Paris.

Cross Country 📈 In 28 FEI competitions, this combination have had cross country jumping penalties just twice – that’s a total of 26 clear rounds. This guy is an eventing machine. He was clear inside the time in Tokyo and just two seconds over at the World Championships in Pratoni. He added just 1.2 time penalties at Maryland 5* on his way to the win.

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Score for Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue – Clear inside the time – Overall 31.7 – 14th

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🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

‘Dao’ may be making his championships debut in Paris, but Felix has two Olympics, four World Championships, multiple European Championships and a bunch of Nations Cup appearances in his locker, as well as having completed at Badminton, Pau, Kentucky – where he was sixth – and Luhmühlen – which he won on his birthday. Huzzah!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Felix’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 19th individually – Rio 2016 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 14th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Felix and his brother, Ben, both represented Switzerland at the Rio Olympics.

Cross Country 📈 This pair had a bit of a rocky start to their relationship, picking up plenty of cross country penalties at the beginning of their time together, but practice makes perfect and all that and they’re now on a streak of twelve clear rounds. They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season, where they finished ninth, and added just 6.8 time penalties in the 4*-S at Wiesbaden this year on their way to the win. Felix hasn’t pushed for the time on this horse though, so it’ll be interesting to see what happens if he decides to unleash the beast in Paris.

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“I showed him the way, but the rest he did.”

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“The track was really intense — the time was really tight, so it made all of it a little bit tough. You had a lot of combinations really fast, so there was no time to mess around and think about it.

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Score for Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean – Clear inside the time – Overall 22.1 – 4th

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🇺🇸 Boyd Martin and Fedarman B

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd’s bling cabinet has a silver from the World Championships, and a team and individual gold from the Pan-Ams in it, and he’d very much like to add an Olympic medal to his haul. He’s known to take an ice bath on cross country day and often shows up at events with his guru. Boyd may be a bit of a character and game for a laugh, but put him on that pony and he’s one hella fierce competitor.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Boyd’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 20th individually – Rio 2016 (Team); 16th individually – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥈 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team) – Caen 2014 (Team); 7th individually – Lexington 2010 (Team); 10th individually
6️⃣ Boyd is currently World No. 6

🔴 Boyd’s been named USEA Rider of the Year six times.

Cross Country 📈 They were clear in the 4*-S at Kentucky this season, and just two seconds over the time, finishing up fourth overall. In 11 FEI runs together they’ve had jumping penalties just twice, once in a getting-it-together round right at the start of their journey and an 11 for breaking a frangible device at Pau last fall, where they finished eighth. We all know Boyd’s a fast rider, and Bruno’s a pretty quick horse. They were clear inside the time at Luhmühlen on their way to eighth place and were inside the time at Pau, despite that pin. So, long-format clears inside the time – check; achingly close to the time at short-format – check. What more do you want as you head out onto an Olympic cross country course?

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Score for Boyd Martin and Fedarman B – 1.6 XC penalties – Overall 32.1 – 17th

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🇵🇱 Robert Powala and Tosca del Castegno

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This mare stepped up to 4* last season and has gained a fair bit of mileage since then, with eight FEI runs at the level, including two Nations Cup events.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Robert is based in Italy, a childhood dream of his that came true.

Cross Country 📈 This combination are on a run of six clear cross country jumping rounds, including both long- and short-format events. In 24 FEI competitions they’ve had jumping penalties on five occasions. They tend to go for steady-ish clears, although time penalties recently have come down into single figures sometimes at short-format. In their last long-format run, the 4*-L at Montelibretti last season, they added 15.6 time.

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Score for Robert Powala and Tosca del Castegno – 60 XC penalties – Ovearll 94.7 – 54th

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🇸🇪 Louise Romeike and Caspian 15

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair have some very hot form across the country 🌶️ Louise has produced this guy through the levels herself, so it’s safe to say they know each other really well, exactly the kind of relationship you want with your horse as you set out from the start box onto the Olympic cross country course.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Louise’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)
🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Louise’s father-in-law is none other than 2008 Olympic individual and team gold medalist Hinrich Romeike.

Cross Country 📈 In 24 FEI runs this pair have never had a cross country jumping penalty, not one or any, zero. And they’re pretty speedy too. They added just 2 time penalties in the 4*-L Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season and were two seconds over the time in the 4*-S at Marbach this season.

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Score for Louise Romeike and Caspian 15 – 0.8 XC penalties – Overall 38.5 – 25th

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🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo

European Champion ✅ 5* winner ✅ Making his Olympic debut ✅ ‘Walter’ really is living the eventing dream right now. Ros was traveling reserve for Tokyo, a role which she stepped up to heroically, supporting the team to the gold medal, but this time she’s not watching from the sidelines on cross country day – she gets to ride the wonderful Walter ‘round the Olympic track. Walter, who’s never had a cross country jumping penalty. Walter, who very often makes the time. What a lucky woman Ros is!

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ros’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020 (as traveling reserve)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 4th individually – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 Tryon 2018
1️⃣ Ros is currently World No. 1

🔴 Ros is a bit of a smart cookie and has a degree in sports science.

Cross Country 📈 In 22 FEI competitions, Walter has had cross country jumping penalties a total of zero times. None. He’s been inside the time on nine occasions, and one or two seconds over on a further two. According to my math, that’s almost a 50:50 clear inside the time rate, give or take a second or two. This horse is just something else. And really, the times where the penalties have been a few extra can be explained by planned steady runs and the Badminton mud. Blink and you’ll miss ‘em, which you won’t want to do, as this pair are ones to watch 👀

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“He was nicely tucked up in bed about an hour ago having a sleep, so I had to get him up to get ready for the cross country. It’s been a good day for him in France, I think.”

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Ros explained how she got on out there with ‘Walter’:

“I don’t think there’s many horses like that — that can come back into balance and come down again easily. But that’s where I haven’t sat on another horse like him – that can go to the big gears and then come back to the steady gears as easily as he can.
I had to keep chugging on, it certainly wasn’t a breezy walk in the park at all — but there are so many lovely galloping stretches. I had to get Walter back a little bit more sometimes than I have done in the past. He’s definitely come out this year a little bit stronger in the bridle than he has been; he hasn’t run as much and he’s a bit fresher, but he came back to me really well, and he was an absolute superstar.”

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There is flag penalty on their score as things stand right now, but we’re still within the review period at time of writing. This is what Ros had to say:

“I did touch a flag coming out of the triple brushes at the end, but I would never have imagined [that] I didn’t jump the jump, to be honest. I didn’t come back and think I’d done anything but go clear inside the time. Hopefully not.”

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“Walter was his usual, incredible self. He absolutely loves to run, he loves to gallop and jump, and he loves the crowds. He was in his element today.”

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Score for Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo – 15 XC penalties – Overall 38.4 – 24th

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🇧🇷 Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

This combination have just 15 FEI starts behind them, but they brought home a team bronze and individual silver medal from the Pan-Ams last season, so have at least experienced the buzz of a big occasion and stepped up to the plate. Marcio knows his way around an Olympics, or two, so he’ll be there to guide, relatively young at eleven, ‘Howard’ ‘round the Paris track.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Marcio’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio 2016 (Team) – London 2012 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Marcio’s been based in Britain since competing at his home games in Rio.

Cross Country 📈 They added just a smidge of time in both the cross country and show jumping at the Pan-Ams last season on their way to a silver medal. In 15 FEI competitions there’s nary a cross country jumping penalty on their record – not one, or any. The only mark on their card is a technical elimination in 2022. And they’re rather swift of foot to boot. They finished on their dressage in the 4*-L at Sopot, Poland last season and were just four seconds over the time in Santiago. In their two 4*-S runs this season, they added 12.4 at Kronenberg and 7.2 at Luhmühlen.

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Score for Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova – 42.2 XC penalties – Overall 75.7 – 52nd

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🇳🇿 Tim Price and Falco

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Smooth and quick, Tim always makes cross country day look so easy. Seriously, this is one classy rider to watch in all three phases, but especially when he’s galloping and jumping – it all just looks so effortless. Sit back and enjoy this one 👀

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tim’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team) – Rio 2016 (Team)
🗺️ Team 🥉 & Individual 🥉 Pratoni 2022 – Tryon 2018 (Team); 8th individually – Caen 2014 (Team)
9️⃣ Tim is currently World No. 9

🔴 Tim has achieved the rare feat of completing all seven of the world’s 5*s.

Cross Country 📈 This pair have had their fair share of problems out on course over the years, most recently in the 4*-S at Bicton in May, where they picked up 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device and retired. They had 40 jumping penalties in the 4*-S at Aachen last year and 20 the year before. It seems they have penalties out on cross country around once a season, and they’ve had them this year, so based on those stats, it’s safe to say they’ll pull out a clear in Paris (sorry EquiRatings, for my clunky data analysis). But seriously, they were clear inside the time at Pau 5* and at the World Championships in Pratoni, and when they do add time, it’s single figures.

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“He’s pulled up super with a big smile on his face and ready for tomorrow.”

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Tim explained how he got on out there with Falco:

“He was really good – just very focused, traveled beautifully, had plenty of gallop at the end. It’s a little bit regretful to have the time faults on one hand, but there’s so many things to take care of to make sure you don’t have a silly moment, and jump cleanly and through all those those pesky flags, which we did. I’ve had a couple of occasions where I’ve gone for it and then at the end I’ve regretted it a little bit. I didn’t want that to happen again. I wanted a bit of finesse available for the last couple of combinations and I had that and had a really good final water and the one up and down the hill. And then when I galloped, he bloody motored down home. I think I probably made up 10 seconds, but couldn’t make up 14 seconds. I’m really happy with him.”

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Score for Tim Price and Falco – 2 XC penalties – Overall 28.5 – 9th

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🇯🇵 Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Kazuma started out in the show jumping ring and didn’t ride around a cross country course until 2016. He learned his trade from none other than Mr Eventing himself, William Fox-Pitt, so there’s no doubting his pedigree when it comes to classy cross country riding.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kazuma’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 4th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team); 8th individually – Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Vinci de la Vigne is known as ‘Vince’ at home.

Cross Country 📈 They were bang on the same dressage score in Tokyo and the World Championships in Pratoni, and were very close in the cross country too, with two jumping clears and 1.6 time in Tokyo and 1.2 in Pratoni. Seriously, this is a consistent combination, and consistently excellent too. They’re not always super quick at short-format events, but get them running and jumping and they really show what cross country riding’s all about. They have had a fall this season, which is a blemish on a very clean cross country sheet, but after his stellar performance in Tokyo, where he finished just off the podium individually, he’ll be yearning to take that extra step in Paris.

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“He was amazing. I’m really, really pleased. I’m proud of him.”

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Kazuma was really pleased with ‘Vince’:

“He knows everything: what he needs to do, what I want him to do – he’s absolutely a professional horse, especially in the big events, big atmosphere. At home he’s a lazy boy, but in a big atmosphere, he’s like, ‘Come on, it’s my time’. He was fantastic today.”

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Score for Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne – Clear inside the time – Overall 27.4 – 8th

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🇮🇹 Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination has been together from the start, with Giovanni bringing the mare up through the levels from 1*. They have an enviable record across the country, although they’ll need to step it up a bit in terms of time if they’re going to catch the clock alongside the Grand Canal.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Giovanni’s championships experience:

🗺️ Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 At home, Swirly Temptress is known as ‘Swirl’, because, why not?

Cross Country 📈 Apart from two rider falls and a flag penalty, this pair’s cross country record is remarkably clean over 28 FEI runs. They do tend to add time, although they finished on their dressage in the 4*-L at Ballindenisk in 2022 on their way to the win, a career-best finishing score and result. They added 18.8 time at the European Championships last season, a long-format competition, and 9.6 in their most recent run, the 4*-S at Luhmühlen.

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Score for Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress – 36.4 XC penalties – Overall 62.1 – 46th

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🇳🇱 Raf Kooremans and Radar Love

This horse has a remarkably clean score sheet when it comes to cross country jumping, which must have Raf feeling positive as he sets out of the start box at Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Raf’s championships experience:

🗺️ Tryon 2018 (Team)

🔴 Raf’s daughter has competed for the Dutch eventing team at Ponies, Juniors and Young Riders.

Cross Country 📈 This combination had an 11 penalties for breaking a frangible device in the 4*-S at Bicton, but in their five other runs together, they’ve jumped clear. They may not have many runs as a pair under their cinch, but Radar Love has 31 FEI starts on his card, and there’s just that one 11 penalties, a 20 back in 2022, and a fall on his record, that’s it. Other than that it’s clear all the way, although it has to be pointed out that there are only a handful of 4* runs on that list. This gelding is a steady clear kind of guy, with time penalties generally racking up into the mid-teens or a bit higher.

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Score for Raf Kooremans and Radar Love – 5.6 XC penalties – Overall 32.6 – 18th

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🇫🇷 Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Nicolas knows just what it’s like to take the metalware home from the Olympics, having won team gold in Athens and team bronze in Tokyo. He’ll be itching to add to his collection with this talented gelding at his home Games.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥉 Tokyo 2020; 6th individually – London 2012 (Team); 17th individually – Beijing 2008 (Ind.) – Team 🥇 Athens 2004 (Ind.) 8th – Sydney 2000 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Aachen 2006 (Team)

🔴 In 2008 Nicolas became the first French rider to win Badminton.

Cross Country 📈 In 15 FEI competitions this pair have had zero cross country jumping penalties, not a single one. They were clear inside the time at the Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season, finishing on their dressage and taking the win, and at the Young Horse Championships in 2020 they added nothing on cross country day on their way to third place. They’ve had two 4*-S runs this season, incurring 7.2 time in their season opener and 2 in their most recent run. They can be clear and quick at both long- and short-format, and this pair could very well be ones to watch in Paris 👀

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Score for Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe – 3.2 XC penalties – 11th

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🇧🇪 Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Lara had no fewer than five horses qualified for the Olympics. She’s in Paris with ten-year-old gelding, Origi, who was top-10 at the Young Horse World Championships as a seven-year-old. Incidentally, Lara was seven when she got her first pony. She hasn’t had a whole lot of Championships luck in the past few years, with a really, really unlucky fall at the first fence in Pratoni and withdrawing after the dressage in Tokyo, but she turned all that around when she became the first Belgian to win a 5* at Luhmühlen last month. Here’s to continuing on her most recent trajectory in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Lara’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team) – Tryon 2018 – Caen 2014; 18th Individually – Lexington 2010
4️⃣ Lara is currently World No. 4

🔴 Lara’s sporting heroes are Swiss tennis player Roger Federer and, of course, eventing magician Michael Jung, who she’s competing against in Paris.

Cross Country 📈 They had an uncharacteristic 20 in their most recent FEI run in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen. In their 25 competitions together, they’ve had cross country jumping penalties on just three occasions and one rider fall. They can be quick on their day too. They were clear inside the time in the 4*-L at Montelibretti back in November, the last long-format run they’ve had, and one of only three. They’re no slouches at short-format – even with the 20 at Luhmühlen they only added 8.8 time penalties.

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Score for Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi – 1.2 XC penalties – Overall 31.2 – 13th