Classic Eventing Nation

Sunday Links from EcoVet

We are only on Day 2 of the Olympics and I don’t know about you, but I am already exhausted. Maybe that is a result of several last minute team changes, or maybe we can put it down to an absolutely mammoth day of dressage yesterday, with all 64 tests being crammed in to one day. Or maybe it is a combination of both, but whatever the reason, we had better dust ourselves and prepare for another day of highs, lows, and everything in between as the cross country gets underway.

In fact, it is probably already well underway by the time you read this, with the defending Olympic champion Julia Kraweski and this year’s Aachen winner, Nickel 21 (one of the afore mentioned last minute swap ins) due to leave the start box at 10.30 am local time (4.30 am ET/9.30 am BST) You can find the rest of the start times here.

This may not be the toughest course some of these horse and rider combinations have faced – don’t forget there are several 5* winners in this field – but it is certainly going to be another level of intense, with 28 fences – 45 jumping efforts – crammed into Pierre le Goupil’s 5149m, 9.02 minute course. Add to that the pressure of an Olympics and the stage is set for another thrilling day of sport.

Once again, we will be bringing you the very best of coverage and updating you as the competition unfolds – or at least, as much as we can whilst remaining within the strict media rules that apply at the Olympics. Just like yesterday, we will have a Companion Guide, compiled by the incredible Cheg Darlington, complete with facts, stats and trivia, and once it is all over, Tilly and Sally – our eyes and ears on the ground in Versailles will be filling you in on the days events.

If you want to refresh your memory as to what happened yesterday – though I don’t know how you could forget that Laura Collett broke an Olympic record – then check out all of our coverage thus far.

Once again, all of the action will be available to view live – find out how to watch here – and you can keep an eye on the live scores, too.

So consider yourself prepped and ready for Olympic Cross Country Day – see you on the other side!

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U.S. Weekend Action

Millbrook H.T. (Millbrook NY) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

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

UK International Events

Burgham International (Northumberland) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Major International Events
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Links to Start Your Sunday:

There may be records being set in Paris, but there are sub 20 dressage scores being recorded at Burgham International Horse Trials this weekend, too.

Arguably one of the hardest positions to be in at an Olympics, read more of what it is like to be a Travelling Reserve.

I’m not crying, you’re crying. There have already been tears aplenty after just one day of Olympic action. Ben Hobday – former rider of Chris Burton’s horse, Shadowman – is certainly not afraid to show his emotions following his former 5* partner’s 3rd placed test.

If you’re not already overloaded with information ahead of today’s cross country action, then check out EquiRatings’ Cross Country Form Guide, full of every fact and stat you could ever want to know – and some more besides.

If you struggle to sleep tonight after an adrenalin filled day of sport, then why not Irish eventer and EquiRatings co-founder Sam Watson read you a bedtime story…?

Sponsor Corner:

Ecovet ambassador and 5* eventer Sara Kozumplik deals with a lot of bugs and pests down at her Florida farm, Overlook South. Here’s what she has to say about how Ecovet works for her.

Morning Viewing:

All eyes may be on Versailles this weekend, but there is all sorts of fun going on at Hickstead this weekend, too. Alex Bragg and Quindiva won the Eventers Challenge there earlier this week – think arena eventing, but on double speed…!

Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent Gallop to the Lead at Millbrook Horse Trials

Meghan O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent. Photo by Grosserhode.

Time was the biggest factor on the Advanced division cross country phase today at the Millbrook Horse Trials. Meghan O’Donoghue, Round Hill, Virginia and her Thoroughbred gelding Palm Crescent had the fastest round of the day to add six time penalties and move into the lead (35.3). Allison Springer, Middleburg, Virginia, riding No May Moon, a ten-year-old Connemara Sport Horse mare, finished close behind in second place (38.2). She moved up from a tie for 16th place after dressage.

There was not much breathing room for the leaders, as only fractions of a penalty separated most of the top placing horses after dressage, so a few time faults really shook up the standings today. Overnight leader Phillip Dutton and Possante, a KWPN gelding owned by The Possante Group, are currently in 3rd place (39.9) after Phillip said he rode a bit conservatively due to the hilly terrain.

No one finished within the time allowed. While it was a warm, sunny day, riders agreed that the weather was much better than it has been lately, with a heat wave affecting much of the East Coast, so temperatures in the 80s were actually a relief. O’Donoghue pointed out that Millbrook tends to be the first event back for many upper level horses preparing for the fall season, after they’ve had a rest following their spring three-day events, so riders tend to not push too hard to make the time. Out of 39 starters, seven horses had jump faults, one was eliminated, three retired and one withdrew. The rest finished clear but with time faults.

O’Donoghue and Palm Crescent, 18, have a longstanding partnership, and after a at the fell off halfway around cross country at the Badminton CCI5* in England this spring, she is hoping to take him back across the pond to contest the Burghley CCI5* in September.

“I was thrilled with him today,” she said. “We’re old friends now, he’s an older horse and I’ve been campaigning him for a while and we know each other very well.” Regarding today’s cross country course she said, “I thought Morgan [Rowsell, course designer] did a great job. I’ve been coming to Millbrook for many years now and I love the terrain, I think it’s a fabulous fitness test. It’s also nice to see green grass after a very hot, dry summer in Virginia. I think he does a good job using the land and building the course up enough as we look into what we’re doing to prepare for a three-day.”

Springer rode two horses in the Advanced today and one in the Intermediate. “My horses were super; this was their first event back since Bromont (Canada) in June,” she said. “I was really pleased with [No May Moon], she’s been really fun at this level. She’s a very quick mare, and the ground was a little hard today but I just let her cook it when she’s happy and the thing with her is, she’s really looking for the flags and is really efficient. She’s got a lot of gears – there were a couple of questions out there that they had to reach for the make the strides and she’s just been awesome.”

Springer’s student, Katie Lichten, rode three horses in the Intermediate today and leads Division A with Roman Code Red and is second riding HTS Jensen R, and also has the lead in Division B riding Fast Company.

“All three horses were really good today and I thought the course rode well,” she said. “Roman Code Red was pretty strong – it was his first time out since Bromont and he was excited to be out there. She’s owned two of the horses for the past year and a half and one of them for about eight months. Originally from Massachusetts, she moved to Middleburg, Virginia about a year and a half ago. She said the cooler temps this weekend worked to her advantage with all three horses.

“It’s been so hot in Virginia, my horses were very fresh this morning,” she said. “I took them out and longed them and they were all bucking. It got hot as the day went on, but we have big hills in Virginia and they are all big horses with really big strides. Sometimes they can be a lot to contain, but they’re really good cross country horses.”

The Advanced, Intermediate and Preliminary divisions conclude tomorrow with show jumping. General admission and parking are free, and there are a number of options available for an elevated experience. This morning, patrons enjoyed brunch at the Yellowframe Farm Waterview Tent overlooking the water complex. On Sunday morning, a luncheon overlooking the show jumping will take place in small tents around the main arena.

Social events are always a highlight of the Millbrook Horse Trials. On Friday evening guests enjoyed a “Sip and Shop” event with shopping in the Millbrook Market tent, tastings from local purveyors of wine and spirits, and featured guests Mrs. Barbara Tober and Candace Bushnell, who discussed growing up as girls who loved horses – the theme of Mrs. Tober’s sponsored, signature pink fence on the cross country course.

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‘An Absolute Masterpiece – Technically and Aesthetically’: Riders React to the Olympic Cross Country

Where it begins. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Oo la la baguette! The Olympic cross country has got the riders pumped and ready for action.

There are the usual discussion points:

☔ the weather, more specifically the incessant rain that drenched dressage day;

🌱 the ground, because of said rain;

⏳ the time, because, “If you’re not thinking you’re late when you leave the start box, you’re not going to be making the time”.

One thing the riders all agree on is that the course is totally stunning – “the most beautifully-built cross country course” dressage leader and record-breaker Laura Collett has ever seen.

Pierre le Goupil’s designed a “creative”, “fair” and “flowing”, “impressive” track – the perfect mix for an Olympic Games.

Check out all the fences for yourself in Tilly’s course preview.

Who’s “gonna say I love it”? Who thinks people may be feeling a little too unsuspecting? Who’s “100 percent ready to go and give it a crack”?

Is Chris Burton back for good?

Find out all this, and more besides, straight from the horse’s mouth, so to speak…

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🇬🇧 Laura Collett and London 52 – 17.5 – 1st

Olympic record breakers Laura Collet and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There’s lots of [fences] that need a lot of respect. The water at the top of the hill has a lot of options, and there’s a fence jumping into water [the horses] have not really seen before with the shape of it. It’s gonna come up very quickly because it’s at the top of a long pull up a hill. To be honest, I think it’s as tough any other cross country course. You’ve got to be on your A game from start to finish, and you’re not home until you’ve gone through the finish flags.

I’ve been walking it every day since Wednesday; it’s the most beautifully-built cross country course I think I’ve ever seen. It gives it a really nice feel because you want to get out there and attack it, and I’m looking forward to the pictures afterwards.

🇩🇪 Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH – 17.8 – 2nd

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I really like the course, it’s a super nice build. Every fence is very nicely built and the gallop track is so nice. I’m really looking forward to tomorrow. I think the rain is good for the ground — before, I thought maybe it’s a bit hard somewhere, but we will see tomorrow. We [do not] have not much experience here. We will know tomorrow after maybe 20 to 30 horses, but my feeling is that cross country will be amazing tomorrow.

I really try to concentrate to give the same feeling to my horse like at every other competition. It doesn’t work all the time, but I try to ride him to the same feeling with him, the same fun with him, to enjoy and let him gallop We need to stay concentrated. We need to do everything 100% perfect. But I try not to give the horse a feeling that it’s something special to make him more nervous.

🇦🇺 Christopher Burton and Shadow Man – 22 – 3rd=

Chris Burton and Shadow Man. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We have to go clear first, and Pierre has built a really tough track out there, so we’ve got to do our job. We’ve got to keep our head in the game and stay focused — step by step. Luckily for me, he’s got a real turn of foot, so we’ll do what we can do.

I think parts of the ground actually needed [the rain]. I think now it might be a bit skatey, I hope by tomorrow it dries out a bit and it might be good going — we will wait and see.

[We asked him if he’s back for good?]

Stop asking difficult questions! We will see. Do you want to buy him for me?!

🇨🇳 Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof – 22 – 3rd=

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

I think it’s an absolute masterpiece — technically and aesthetically, it’s stunning. I think the weather is going to play a big role; we’ll see how much it dries up tomorrow with a bit of sunshine. I think the time is going to play [its part] — the big boys and girls in the big nations, I think, will breeze around, but the rest of us have got to have a pretty good go.

🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean – 22.1 – 5th

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

It’s the prettiest course I ever seen — I think it’s maybe a little bit too pretty. Everyone feels comfortable. If you have the line, you maybe forget a little bit to ride, but I think that’s where it gets you. If you are not really focused and riding like it is a cross country, I think it will be tough. The time I cannot say, you’ll see after first riders.

🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo – 23.4 – 6th

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Plenty to jump, plenty of places where you’ve just got to be on your game the whole way around. The time is going to be a big factor, of course, and that’s where mistakes creep in. I’ve got a plan, I’m open to that plan changing, but I’m going to try and stay in my bubble. I’ve got a fantastic team around me and hopefully we can get the job done tomorrow.

🇳🇿 Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park – 25.7 – 9th=

Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think it’s great compared to what I expected. I’ve never been here before, but it’s a bit more strong than I expected, and more undulating. There’s a lot of terrain — they’re not huge hills, but there’s a lot of terrain everywhere, testing that you can keep your horse balanced going uphills and downhills — and the water jumps are all pretty strong. I think [Pierre’s] done the most wonderful job designing it that it feels — certainly to walk — like it has a lot of flow to it. It doesn’t feel twisty to walk. I think it’s got beautiful flow [and] the jumps are great. I think it should be well suited to our team.

🇮🇹 Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress – 25.7 – 9th=

Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think it’s a lovely track, beautifully built. Now with this rain, I don’t think it will be heavy, but it probably will be quite slippery and you know speed with slippery ground is never ideal. I think mistakes probably will come, but hopefully not. That’s my guess, because especially under the trees, is very squashy.

🇳🇿 Tim Price and Falco – 26.5 – 12th

Tim Price and Falco. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s a proper challenge. This rain that has been quietly falling all day, I think it’s probably going to have a bit of a toll on the ground; we’ll see if that plays into the advantage of the Kiwis or not. We’ve got good cross country horses and it’s a great course, beautifully presented, some nice big, open gallops, and then some very difficult patches as well. Seems like there are options everywhere — it’s always like that at Games, isn’t it? Mark Phillips, I remember, having ‘ABCDE’ and things like that, but once you get your head around it, you can see why the options are there. I wouldn’t say that the options are Get Out of Jail Free cards anywhere though; there’s still a challenge in those. But there’s the obvious straight routes, a few options, and it’s just our job to make a good plan to know what’s important in terms of results, and ride the horse underneath you.

🇮🇹 Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes – 26.6 – 13th=

Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

[I don’t watch] too many [riders before cross country]. I’ve got my plans and I think there are no so strange things that you have to see. Normally it’s about the horse, because there are no lines that you say, ‘I do that or I do the opposite’ — I think it’s quite clear. The time will be difficult. I have to be focused on not looking around me. I have to be focused on my plans and my course and don’t get butterflies.

🇧🇪 Karin Donkers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof – 26.6 – 13th=

Karin Donckers and Leipheimer Van’t Veraho

It’s very fairly built, the cross country fences are clear – I think the horses will read it well. When I walked it, I felt very ‘Woah” [it’s] a lot of fences’ – you really have to know your lines very well in case of something going wrong. You definitely have to pay really good attention. Good riding, being prepared – it’s definitely not going to be a dressage show.

It’s a nine minute course, but I think they have the maximum fences allowed, so that makes it already tight enough. Lots of combinations, a lot of choices you have to make, in combination with the crowds — the people always make it extra tense and more difficult to ride. I think it will be tough enough to go around clear and in the time.

🇩🇪 Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 – 26.9 – 15th

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s impressive as always, beautifully presented. Everything is being asked; I think you actually cannot say it’s in any way easy [or] to be underestimated. The course is very clever. I think if you ride forward and brave and have an honest horse, you probably will do well.

🇺🇸 Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker – 28 – 19th

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think it’s beautifully presented; it’s a gorgeous course. I think it’s difficult, it’s tough. There’s definitely some five-star questions on the track, but everything’s been built in a way that’s fair. I think the distances are there to be ridden. They’ve worked incredibly hard on the ground — already out there today, they’re spreading gravel and doing everything they can. It’s very impressive, what they’ve presented us with here. It’s a it’s a joy to be able to be here.

🇨🇭 Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH – 29.1 – 20th

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think it’s a very beautiful course. The time will be very difficult, and now with the rain, the ground will be softer, so it makes the time even more difficult. I’m very happy with the jumps and we are very confident with my horse; it is our [best] discipline. I will try to be in the time — I know that he’s not the fastest horse but I can take the turns sharp.

There are a lot of combinations that we have to be careful at, but I think the most difficult one technique-wise is at the end — the last water –because the angle is not so easy to ride and it’s [at] the end, after eight minutes; we have to pay attention. Also, when the horse is a bit tired and long, we have to react and be ready.

🇩🇪 Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S – 29.4 – 21st

Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It is absolutely beautiful; the way it’s designed and everything, it’s outstanding. We will have to wait and see, with the rain, whether that will affect the ground maybe, or not, because I think they’ve done loads and loads of work already over the last two years to prepare the ground. Nobody knows — we’ll have to find out, and I think Julia [Krajewski] has the best possible option to find out and give us the best of information on how we can react.

🇺🇸 Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake – 30.4 – 25th

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s easy to make a mistake at any jump. Every jump is hard because either they’re under shadows, the design of the jump, the terrain — there is no give away jump. Even with the footing now, with all this rain, it’s beautiful turf, but it is new turf in some places, so it’s quite easy to slip. I was fortunate to run around Tryon because I feel like it’s the same sort of terrain and it has similar bridges, which is great for America, to have another course of [preparation] for this. But it’s not gonna be easy, and if other people are saying it’s easy — no way.

I think it’s a fantastic course. If I compare it to Tokyo, it’s slightly different with the ideas and questions, but I think it very cleverly opens you out. There’s galloping areas — it’s not just twisty — but then I actually think at the end, that’s when you’re going to slightly get caught out. There’s lots of twists and turns, not just the fences, but obviously the land as well, and actually, I do see the time being quite tight. I see it riding quite intense — a little bit like a nine-minute Luhmühlen type of idea. I sort of see that as a comparison, really. It’s a great course, really well designed, beautiful.

Like all cross country courses, it’s actually sort of a state of flow. If you can get the flow and the idea of the course, then it should go [well]. Sometimes you can get away with something that looks quite simple, but will catch you up later. For me, I think a big question — and I think it’s a big jump in — [is] the direct route up at the second water, the highest point of the course – that’s tough. I think there’s a few different questions elsewhere. I think it’s accumulation — you can build the easiest course in the world, but it’s the Olympics and people will make some mistakes with the pressure.

🇺🇸 Boyd Martin and Fedarman B – 30.5 – 26th

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s a hell of a course out there, but I feel like my horse is tailor-made for this sort of track. I’ve just got to stay switched on for every jump, every stride. I’ve got complete belief in Bruno in the cross country — he’s ready to go. Every jump counts, every moment counts. You can learn a bit by watching some of the others and getting feedback. But then this rain, the ground will be a bit ripped up, and that could be an extra challenge going later.

I think I have just got to work at obviously going flat out, but then trying to keep him settled in the first mile. That’s when he gets really fired up and so I’ve got to try and ride him fast but calm at the beginning. I think that there’s tough combinations the whole way around. There’s nothing I see out there that we can’t do, but there’s a lot of jumps you could have a mistake at.

‘ve got confidence that we’re going to get through it well, but by no means am I going to be losing concentration ‘til I get through the finish flags. I think I’ve made a couple of mistakes in the past at this level, by going too fast and flying jumps and then getting caught out by not not getting him back to the correct speed on a few of the accuracy fences. So that’s my moment that I have got to concentrate on.

I rode a bit out on the cross country this morning, and it [the ground] felt fantastic. There will be parts underneath the trees that will get muddy, but the bulk of the course will be fantastic. It should be fun.

🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Hiarado – 30.8 – 27th

Jonelle Price and Hiarado. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think Pierre has done a fantastic job. It’s not an easy brief, I don’t think, building an Olympics where you’ve got the world’s best combinations, and then you’ve got some of the lesser [established] nations as well, but I think he’s done a really good job. There’s some things we haven’t really seen before – he’s been creative.

It’s got to be fast and clear – there’s a reason I’m out first for the Kiwis! Well, there’s only one Olympics I haven’t gone out first, so [it’s] pretty standard practice — and I actually quite like being done early.

[In] the third minute, I think the key is you’ve got to be as conservative as you can — you look at the second minute, I think there’s seven jump efforts. Number one, you could be cruising quite happily; you could come out at minute two, and find yourself 10 seconds down, and then there’s not going to be a whole lot of places to catch it up. I think it’s going to be about minimizing the damage in those busy patches.

🇮🇪 Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue – 31.7 – 28th

Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I certainly wouldn’t get lulled into a false sense of security with the man that’s designing it. He [Pierre] is a very, very clever course designer — fair, but clever. It’s quite intense; nine minutes is going to be quick. I think it’ll be good safe ground, but it’s certainly going to be on the softer side.

🇳🇱 Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur – 31.9 – 29th

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

I think it’s really friendly for the horses. It has a lot of questions, but [is] also quite readable — so if you ride well, it’s really good to do, but if you make a mistake, then you’ll have a run out. I think that’s really clever. With the options, it’s maybe a little bit longer or you can do what suits your horse. I think the time will be hard. For sure, we’re gonna try and chase it, but in the back of our heads and minds, we want to do it safe as well. I’m gonna say I love it. It’s really nicely built, nice details, and in this garden, it’s amazing.

🇩🇰 Peter Flarup and Fascination – 32.4 – 30th=

Peter Flare-up and Fascination. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The first time I saw [the cross country course], I thought, ‘Oh, this is too much’ – they really squeezed it to the highest level. But after walking it a few times, I think it looks more doable. I have the feeling that if you get out of the start box with a good, positive feeling, and you can get that into your horse, I think they will fly around. But if you start having concerns at the beginning of the course, then it’s going to be tough.

I know it’s a 4* course, but you cannot be closer to a 5*. The distance is only nine minutes but you have the same amount of fences [as over a longer course], and that makes it really compact. One, two, three, four are really nice, and gets them going, and hopefully that makes them more positive for the rest [of the course]. It’s really nicely built, and I’m looking forward to riding it. When we walked [it] yesterday, it was already a little bit slippery in places, but I’m quite sure they will fix it, I have no concern about that; I’m quite sure that we are in really good hands [and] they will do the best they can.

🇧🇷 Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington – 32.4 – 30th=

I’d love to ride cross country on that course. Absolutely, 100 percent ready to go and give it a crack. I think it’s big — we are at an Olympic Game, so that’s exactly what we expected — and I’m sure there’s lots of room to go wrong. We need to walk it five, six times — make sure we’ve got a plan A. It’s only nine minutes, but I think it’s gonna ride pretty fast.

🇧🇷 Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova – 33.3 – 33rd=

Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

To be honest, I don’t think much about [the order.] Going first or last, it’s about the same for me. Of course, if you go last, it’s good for you. You can watch some and then that helps a bit, but we walked the course many times, we have a plan and it doesn’t change much.

🇸🇪 Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z – 33.3 – 33rd=

Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It looks really nice. There’s a few tough questions at the end, just where they jump in and don’t know what’s coming until quite late. If you’ve got a bit of a tired horse, a mentally tired horse, then you just have to really make sure that you show them where they’re meant to be going and you help them as much as possible. It looks testing, but it looks fair, and it’ll be hunting down the clock.

It is very mental. I think the horses don’t get many rests, because even though there’s a few galloping parts, I think they’re always turning in the woods, out of the woods. I think they will need a few breaths around there to carry on.

🇦🇺 Shane Rose and Virgil – 34.6 – 38th

Shane Rose and Virgil. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think there are some some really strong elements to it. I think the time could be could be tight as well; it does flow a little better than perhaps we thought, but I think the first couple of minutes — certainly that second minute — is going to take a lot of time and a lot of thought process to get through. Overall, I think it’s definitely stronger than Tokyo. It seems quite similar, potentially, to Rio. Certainly in that second minute, there are a lot of influential fences that are going to shape the way the competition runs, and then you need a bit of force at the end of the course to negotiate the last couple of lines.

🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS – 35.4 – 43rd=

Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I am pumped. I cannot wait to leave the start box on that horse, like from start flags to finish flags. It is game on. I am so excited to take her out there tomorrow. Normally I’m the pathfinder at these things, so having the ability to just watch some of the key combinations to see how the flow goes, see how the striding is, see how the horses are interpreting the different jumps out there, is going to be a huge advantage before leaving a start box tomorrow.

The course designer is brilliant. What he has set up out there is next level, he’s just put so much thought into it – into the design and to the layout, using the terrain. It’s pretty exceptional to walk around a course like that. From the start flags to the finish, there’s not going to be any letting up out there, or you’re going to be having time faults. It feels like a four-star short over nine minutes. It’s a lot of jumping efforts in a short space with a lot of turns. If you’re not thinking you’re late when you leave the start box, you’re not going to be making the time.

🇨🇦 Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo – 35.8 – 46th=

Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I’m looking forward to seeing how [teammate] Mike [Winter] has a good go out there, but I’m optimistic. It looks like a great course. I think that you have got to get their focus early, but then it opens up and we can fly.

I was never concerned about coming here, because it is the Olympics. You just put your heart and soul into it, and so you come out of the [start] box hard. I think it’ll be good for [Hot Bobo] and it will be good for me to get focused in on the job right away.
Certainly, you are going to be slow at the beginning, but there are some stretches where there are only one or two fences, so there are opportunities to catch up a little bit. I do think it’s going to be difficult [to get the time]. I don’t think it’s going to be easy, but I am curious to see. We will see after the first few horses.

I like to have my plan and stick with it. Obviously, if things are going haywire out there I will adjust it, but for the most part, I like to stick to my plan and not get too too focused on whatever anyone else is doing.

🇪🇨 Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Wundermaske – 37.7 – 51st

Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I think maybe five or six riders will make the time, but the question is will those horses be sound the next day? You have to plan and see; you need to know your horse well. I know that people will be like, ‘I can make the time’, but I think they will be surprised the next day. This is a challenging course — it’s not hilly, but it’s challenging. There’s new grass in some areas, so the roots will not be long enough, so here we need to use bigger studs — besides, it’s been raining a lot.

🇧🇷 Carlos Parro and Safira – 37.7 – 51st=

Carlos Parro and Safira. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

When I first walked it, I thought it was nice — I thought it was really jumpable. Then the more you walk it, the more you see problems that could occur, but she’s jumped the level before. I think this course, if you ride well on a good horse, you’ve got a great chance of getting good results.

The last water is quite tricky, being [at] the end of the course. The middle water, we don’t know how the horses are going to react to the new development, jumping into the water. But this horse and most of the horses here have jumped courses like this. If I can ride well, get in a good spot, in a good rhythm and let her read the question, it’s very likely the horse is going to jump. Some of the horses here have a lot of experience and they’ll be able to get the time.

________________________________________________________________________________

Go eventing!

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Laura Collett Breaks the Olympic Dressage Record Amid Full Paris Leaderboard Shift

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Perhaps this was always going to be the way of things, with 64 tests crammed into one day – but when the morning dressage leader at the Olympics is someone like Great Britain’s Tom McEwen and JL Dublin, and they’re sitting on a score of 25.8, you start to convince yourself that perhaps only a few competitors will be able to best them in the afternoon.

But there was something in the water over that lunch break, evidently, even though Paris is operating an almost entirely dry venue here. (Well, we say dry – it’s certainly alcohol-free, though after a full day battling the elements, we’re not sure anyone can really use the word dry with a straight face.) In the early afternoon, we saw the ground jury of Christina Klingspor, Xavier le Sauce, and Robert Stevenson enter a period of next-level joie de vivre, and suddenly, records were being smashed, leaderboards were being overturned in rapid succession, and enough excellent scores were being thrown around that we’ve ended the day with a sterling 22 competitors coming in under the 30 barrier – and a top ten that features absolutely none of our morning riders.

Tom’s not far off the pace, though, and a gold medal still feels well within his grasp: he and ‘Dubs’ now sit eleventh on that 25.8, and have contributed to the best post-dressage team score ever recorded at a Games. The Brits go into tomorrow’s cross-country on an aggregate score of 66.7, smashing the previous record of 68.6, held by the Australians since the 2008 Beijing Games.

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But the rider who had the biggest part to play in that overnight success for her nation also finds herself so close to individual gold that she can taste it. Laura Collett and London 52 are certainly no stranger to extraordinarily competitive first-phase marks – nor, even, to scores that dip below the 20 barrier. And today, in her 389th career international test, the Tokyo team gold medallist and her three-time five-star winning partner truly put the pedal to the metal to deliver Laura’s best-ever score – a 17.5 that also sets a new Olympic record by nearly two points.

“I loved every second of it,” beams Laura, whose incredible finish was met with a sea of Union Jack flags from the strong British support front in the stands. “That horse is unbelievable. What he’s done throughout my whole career is amazing, and he just keeps on delivering. So I’m just very grateful to him. I had the time of my life, to be honest. From the moment I entered the arena, he had his ears pricked and loved it, and so did I.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

On this, the beginning of their second Olympic adventure, Laura’s taking everything she’s learned over the years with ‘Dan’ to try to coax his very best out of him – going back to Tokyo in 2021, where they were individually ninth after an uncharacteristic couple of rails, and further, too, to his early years at the top levels peppered with genuine, though achingly high-profile, teething moments.

But time, and patience, and learning from both the great days and the tough ones, has been the making of the now very nearly infallible partnership.

“It takes years and years of hard work [to develop a relationship], and he’s a horse that’s actually very shy,” she explains. “It’s taken him quite a long time to understand cross-country, mainly because he’s a very shy horse. In 2019, we had a roller coaster year, and at the end of the year, he won a four-star long and went into a prize giving, and that, for me, was the turning point. He really believed in himself; he had full trust in me, and I can feel it on top of him.”

In today’s consistent downpour, Laura had to rely on that trust in the fishbowl of the main arena, where the stands were full of people utilising any method possible to try to stay dry.

“He doesn’t like umbrellas and things like that, so it’s about reassuring him every step of the way and making him believe, because then you can go and do a performance like he did there,” she says. “You never really think you’re going to do it, but everything’s been gearing towards this. It’s been three years in the making, since the moment we stood on the podium in Tokyo. We thought there, he’s still young enough to aim for Paris, and I’ve been very lucky that everything’s gone to plan in the lead up. He’s just a horse that luckily gets better and better with age.”

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Laura’s continued remarkable reign of domination in the sport isn’t just impressive because of ‘Dan’s’ wobbly 2019 season; it’s also a testament to the force of her will, which saw her battle back from a nearly catastrophic injury eleven years ago that left her in a coma and took the vision, irreversibly, from one of her eyes. Her motivation then was much the same as it is now: to keep moving towards the next goal, the next step, the next dream, whether that dream is learning how to see a stride again or hunting out an individual gold medal.

“I look back it only to see how lucky I am and just to be here, let alone be literally here. It’s in the past and we try not to dwell on the past, but I know full well that I was very lucky to walk away from that and be able to carry on doing the job that I love. It’s my life, and I love these horses and love working with them day in and day out, and being able to come perform on a stage like this with a horse like London 52… I’m very, very lucky,” she says. “To be honest, I don’t think about [my impaired eyesight]. There’s no other option than to carry on. It’s amazing how quickly my body adapted, and depth perception was very difficult to begin with, but the only thing I wanted to get to do was get back on and ride horses. You have to find a way, and for me it’s normal now to only have one [working] eye. I might be better if I had two, but we’ll never know!”

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

You’d be forgiven for thinking that a 17.5 would lend a commanding lead and perhaps a fair chunk of time in hand in tomorrow’s cross-country phase, but no such luck: sitting second overnight is Herr Gold Medal himself, Germany’s Michael Jung, who delivered a 17.8 to slot in just three-tenths of a penalty behind Laura and helms the German team into second place, too.

This is a personal best at four- and five-star for the sixteen-year-old gelding (Contendro I x Havanna, by Heraldik), but, remarkably, not an all-time international personal best – that came earlier this year in a CCI3*-S at Radolfzell, where the pair put a 17.3 on the board. We’ve heard of aiming to make your bank account balance match your phone number, but inching towards making your dressage score match your horse’s height is a whole new set of niche goals, frankly.

“It was an amazing feeling to gallop into the stadium — it was a goosebump feeling, but at the same time a really great feeling, because Chipmunk was so well concentrated and so good with me, so well listening,” says Michi. “It was so nice to ride every second — and directly before I started the dressage, I knew I could take all the risks and I could try everything.”

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk FRH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Like Laura and Dan, Michi and Chip are tackling their second Olympics together – they finished eighth at Tokyo after a contentious safety device activation. Now, five years into their partnership after Michi took the ride over from teammate Julia Krajewski, he’s ready to throw all his own considerable experience (Michi’s won three Olympic golds already, in case you’d forgotten that reign of domination) at the job at hand – and the years of learning he’s done to unpack the inner workings of his horse, too.

“At every competition, everything I did was experience and learning, trying to get a better partnership with him together and get information, and everything was training for this competition,” says Michi. “I think everybody had the same idea because the Olympic Games are such a special competition and everyone is really, really well prepared.”

Alex Hua Tian hears his score as he leaves the arena with Jilsonne van Bareelhof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

China’s Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof didn’t match their four-star personal best today, but for a first crack at a five-star test, they certainly acquitted themselves admirably. They sit in equal bronze medal position going into cross-country on a score of 22, the same score as Australia’s returning eventer Chris Burton and Shadow Man.

“He’s good in this space, but you never know going into arena like that — especially with a horse like ‘Chocs’,” says Alex, who tells EN that his horse’s stable name was chosen because he’s ‘big, brown, indulgent chocolate.’ “He’s very extravagant, and he knows it, and he’s very arrogant; he loves the attention. I think for him, he was always going to trot in there and think, ‘Oh, I finally found a venue of similar majesty to myself!’ That was either going to go this way, which thankfully it did, or it was going to go the other way, and he was going to get over the top about it. He’s done a 21 at four-star, so he can do a really good test – it’s mainly whether he walks, basically!”

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

Now-four-time-Olympian Alex has primarily targeted Chocs at CCI4*-S format, with his last long-format run coming in March of 2023 at Montelibretti’s CCI4*-L – and that, he explains, is largely a management decision.

“He’s jumped around a lot of four-shorts, but he’s a horse that I always liken to a human athlete that’s at Olympic level — weightlifting, marathon running, and gymnastics — one body cannot have that much talent and that much range,” says Alex. “Chocs is the most talented horse I’ve ever sat on in my life. There are other very talented horses that have been more consistent, or more successful than him over years, but if you look at him in each phase, he just goes extra — and I think because of that, through his career he’s picked up little bits and pieces on his way to big events, and so he’s quite often not made it. Last year, he was our first choice for the Asian Games, and picked up a little injury in the month beforehand, and that would be his story.”

But if the gelding isn’t historically easy to manage, he does, at least, have the great benefit of having been built up, trained, and strengthened in order to hit his peak this weekend.

“For me, this has always been his goal and his target. We’ve saved him for seven years to come here, and tomorrow we unleash the beast and see what happens!”

Chris Burton and Shadow Man. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Unleashing the beast is no doubt exactly what Burto, historically dubbed ‘the fastest event rider in the world’, has in mind with his new partner, the former Ben Hobday ride Shadow Man. The fourteen-year-old Belgian Warmblood (Fidjy of Colors x Favorite van de Keezerswinning, by Winningmood) joined his string just before the mid-winter Olympic transfer deadline, and marked Burto’s return to eventing after swapping to pure showjumping for several seasons – and getting himself shortlisted for the Australian showjumping team here, to boot.

Today’s 22 was the horse’s career-best international score – and the key to it, it appears, was riding the wave of the colossal buzz in the ring after the previous rider, Michael Jung, laid down a game-changing score.

“Shadow Man was on his toes,” laughs Burto. “He’s a very relaxed horse, and he got really excited because some guy went before me that the crowd liked to cheer for, but then I was just delighted with him — he went back to work, showing what a lovely gentleman he is and showing how well-schooled he is. That was a real treat for me, and it’s always a buzz to be at the Olympics. He’s a pretty cool guy — if they are a good nature, they’re a good nature.”

Taking on the gelding, who Ben rode up to five-star, was a no-brainer for his return to the sport, he says.

“I said to my vet when we went up to Ben’s to ride him and vet him — in the same day! — I said, ‘I feel like I know him already,’” he explains. “We were made for each other the day we were both born. This horse came over the tables, like: ‘Would this be a suitable one for that client that someone was speaking about the other day, for a Championships?’ I said, ‘No,’ and walked straight in and saw my wife, and said, ‘How do you feel about going eventing again?’ She said ‘No, absolutely not. No way.’ I rang our High Performance Manager, Chris Webb, and thanks to the support of Geoffrey Guy at Chedington Equestrian, I was able to secure the ride on Shadow Man for the season, and it’s been a delight. I’ve loved it – I really enjoy eventing him.”

The strength of the partnership has been a massive boon in his return to eventing, but ultimately, says Burto, “riding doesn’t change, does it? Riding horses is riding horses. I was away from [eventing] for a while, and I was delighted when I got back to it. Your skill set doesn’t leave you. I got very nervous at Aachen actually, because I thought, ‘What if I ruin my career and what if I’m old and I can’t go fast anymore?’ But that was nice to see that it doesn’t leave you. I am old, though.”

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

This is a truly international top ten – which is particularly nice to see in the flag-collecting atmosphere of an Olympics – and at this point in the competition, we’ve got nine different nations within the top ten. One of those is Switzerland, whose ongoing upward trajectory is led by five-star winner Felix Vogg, who rides the relatively inexperienced Dao de l’Ocean this week. Today, the eleven-year-old gelding (Kannan x Heddy, by Heraldik) posted a best-ever international result – yes, another one – to sit fifth overnight.

“He gives me so much confidence, because I know when I do it right, he’s doing it right, and I give him some confidence, I think,” says Felix, who has had the Olympics in sight for this horse, rather than his more experienced team horses Colero or Cartania, since last season.

So far, that call is paying off.

“It was pretty awesome. I think I could have done some stuff a little bit better, but it’s always like this,” says Felix. “I think what we had outside, I got 90% inside, and that’s all I could ask him. I know he’s not as far as other horses here, maybe like Chipmunk or London, a horse like that — he still needs the strength and everything — but I’m happy to think about the future now.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After those huge tests from Laura and Michi, there was plenty of buzz throughout the stands about what British team anchor – and reigning European Champion – Ros Canter might throw down with Lordships Graffalo. The pair posted a 21.3 at last year’s European Championships en route to the win, and there was plenty of speculation that they could dip into the teens for the first time today – but no such luck.

Their test, though, was smart, polished, and cadence, with just one slightly laboured flying change and a late halt dropping their marks down slightly. They ended up on a final score of 23.4, good enough to clinch overnight sixth place.

“Mark-wise, I had no expectations,” says Ros. “I kept in my own little bubble, really, apart from watching my guys and a couple this morning. I’ve very much tried to stay process-driven today.”

With a competitive start in the bag, she says, “I’m over the moon with him. We all forget that ‘Walter’s’ actually only twelve years old; that, yes, he’s won Badminton and the Europeans and everything else, but he is still a green horse. I still very much feel like we’re only scratching the surface, particularly in a test like that, which is significantly harder than the tests we normally see. I’m absolutely delighted that he got all four changes and everything, because he’s still not fully matured yet, and I do think there’s much more to come from him. We halted a bit late and it had a bit of an effect, unfortunately, on the two movements. But these things happen with horses, and the rest of it, he was spot on.”

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The imposing grandstands towering overhead – and the vocal British cheering sections scattered around them – worked in favour of the British-bred gelding (Birkhof’s Grafenstolz x Cornish Queen, by Rock King).

“He absolutely loves attention. So, yes, he lifted, but only ever so slightly; he just seems to kind of revel in it, and he’s so self-confident and so self-assured that I think he thought he was well up for being there,” laughs Ros. “He was quite happy. I think when I finished him patted him, he had a little scratch, and then looked up and thought, ‘Yeah, I’m all right.’”

While she may have been able to avoid the pressure of trying to mark-match today, Ros has certainly felt the effects of expectation in the longer term as she’s approached an Olympics at which she’s a hot favourite to win.

“Oh yes, I’ve had plenty of wobbles — but actually, the closer it’s got, the better I felt,” she says. “Everybody knows me so well; we’re so grateful to the National Lottery for all the funding we get and the staff that we have around us — Ian Woodhead, Chris Bartle, Richard Waygood — they know me inside out, they know what the wobbles mean. Ian was delighted that I snapped at him yesterday, apparently, because apparently that means that I’m getting towards being on my A game. So I’ve had a few wobbles, but once I got on today, I felt very clear minded.”

Over the last few seasons, Ros has taken more and more of the pressure off her top horses at home, and Walter, like Pau winner Izilot DHI, spends more time hacking than he does schooling. But nailing a test like today’s does still take mileage in the ring running through the movements, and Ros has a secret weapon in her pocket where that’s concerned.

“I’m very lucky I’ve got my old five-star horse Zenshera at home — he’s 20 years old now, so he’s always in work, but often only light work. The last month, he’s been working hard as well, helping me to practice the test and make sure I know it inside out. He’s absolutely amazing, and to be quite honest, I think he would have stood in for Walter if we needed him this week, he thought he was about ready to go!”

Overnight seventh place goes the way of Olympic debutant Stephane Landois, who is the best of the home nation at this stage of the competition, and whose 24.4 with Chaman Dumontceau was arguably the most poignant moment of the day. He took the ride on after the tragic death of the gelding’s former owner and rider, Thaïs Meheust, who lost her life at the age of 22 in 2019 while contesting the French seven-year-old national championship with the horse.

Since then, they’ve been part of the bronze-medal-winning French team at the European Championships last year on their Senior Championship debut, won Chatsworth’s tough CCI4*-S last spring, and now, made Thaïs’ dream come true by representing her, and their country, at the Paris Olympics – a competition she had dreamed of for so long.

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau ride for Thaïs. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Stephane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As they finished their test, Stephane bowed his head down to Chaman’s gleaming grey neck, held him in a tight embrace for a moment, and then looked up, somewhere beyond the low-hanging cloud cover, and blew a kiss into the sky as the crowd roared for him, for his horse, for France, and for their much-missed Thaïs.

“I am very, very happy with my ride. There’s a lot of emotion in this place, so coming here has been really quite special — all of us are feeling it,” says Stephane, who guides his team into overnight bronze medal position with his result. “There’s really an emotion that we’re all feeling as we come into the arena. I was really emotional, but proud that there’s a crowd out there that really appreciate the sport and appreciate everybody that comes in. I’m just full of emotion for it, and actually, [the significance of this selection with this horse] has probably given me more strength to come out and to perform well, knowing the history of all of this and the ride.”

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

Japan’s Yoshiaki Oiwa is very familiar with the business end of Olympic leaderboards – he made history in 2012 by leading the first phase at the Olympics and making the first steps towards putting Japan on the map as an eventing nation. These days, they’re much closer to superstar status – they currently sit fifth of sixteen as a team – and Yoshi’s still here, making it all happen for himself and his country. He sits eighth overnight on a score of 25.5 with MGH Grafton Street, the former ride of Pippa Funnell, with whom he won Burghley in 2019.

“He knew that today, it was the time, you have to show something, so I’m very happy with this,” says Yoshi, who has just four FEI runs under his belt with the sixteen-year-old (OBOS Quality 004 x unknown dam). “It’s a very new partnership, actually. My first competition with him was this year — February or March — so only a few months. It was challenging for us, but it went well, so I’m very, very pleased.”

Yoshiaki Oiwa celebrates his test. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While ‘Squirrel’ has historically been a mercurial ride, the ability for the pair to build a solid partnership so fast has come down to a couple of factors – Yoshi’s experience, of course, but also the help of Pippa, whose condition for the sale was that the horse would have to stay on her yard, where Yoshi, too, is now based after years in Germany at the yard of Dirk Schrade.

“I went to the previous rider’s place, so the system, everything is the same. She is kind of a legend, Pippa Funnell — so she is the coach for me now, and so his routine is the same as before,” says Yoshi. “Basically, all the team members have been based in Europe for a long time now. We don’t have big shows in Japan, so we all have to come to Europe or another country. This is something that makes it difficult for us to make it. But we all came to Europe long enough now, and everybody is a very experienced rider now. So we hope we can do something here.”

Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

New Zealand’s Clarke Johnstone and his 2022 World Championships ride Menlo Park (Berlin x Faerie Queen, by Rock King) put a 25.7 on the board, bettering their four-star personal best of 27 and guiding the Kiwi team into overnight fourth, to boot.

“He’s been training so well. He’s so with me, he feels amazing in his body, he’s fit but calm, and I’ve been thinking he could do a test like that — to actually do it, I’m just so, so proud of him,” says Clarke. “He’s been to the World Championships, but that was nothing like this. I bravely decided not to pre-ride him this morning, because that’s normally what I would do to get the best out of him — he’s really solid, he always walks — and after I watched the first few go, I thought, ‘Well, that looks very electric in there. Maybe I should pre-ride it.’”

Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But, he says, “we decided to stick with what we’ve been doing, which has been steadily getting the scores lower and lower over the last couple of years – and he was just so with me. He did have a little look at the gate stewards when I went about to go into the ring, and I thought, ‘Don’t let me down, Jacko.’ He pulled it back, and he was just a delight to ride in there, really on the aids, and just giving me everything.”

That puts him into equal ninth place with Italy’s Giovanni Ugolotti, who has been on an undeniable upward trajectory with the elegant – if slightly inelegantly named – Swirly Temptress. Though this is her first test at the five-star level, their 25.5 bests their form across her four-star career, too, and gave Italy much to celebrate after a heartbreaking morning following Emiliano Portale’s elimination after his ride, Future, bit his tongue in one of the half-passes.

The individual top ten at the culmination of the first phase at Paris 2024.

The North American Update

The U.S. riders delivered solid tests today, though certainly some points were left on the board. A collective three-rider score of 88.9 sees them slot into sixth place in team competition, sitting just 7.7 penalties off the podium and 22.2 penalties behind Great Britain in current gold position. Despite any marks left in the dressage ring today, we all well know by now that those could well be long forgotten when the dust and leftover mud from today’s rain settles after cross country.

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Latecomer Liz Halliday, who was added to the team after Will Coleman’s withdrawal of Diabolo, secured the top standing for the Americans with The Nutcracker Syndicate’s Nutcracker on a score of 28.0 as the second pair to go for the team. You can read more from Liz’s ride, as well as our pathfinder Caroline Pamukcu, in our midday report here. After starting the day within the top 10, the Liz will be the top-placed in 19th individually, followed by Caroline in 25th and Boyd Martin in 26th.

Boyd Martin and Fedarman B. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd was the sole U.S. rider of the afternoon rotations, securing a 30.5 to sit just behind Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake in 19th overnight. After enjoying a trending score hovering in the mid-70s percentage during the trot work, Boyd lost ground with two mistakes in the four flying changes that feature in the test. Boyd admits he’s “probably done 20,000 flying changes” in practice, but has historically struggled with the left to right change on this horse.

“We’ve been getting it really good at home and in training, but just when the atmosphere is a bit electric out there,” Boyd said. “He’s got a bit of anxiety, and I think I’ve mistimed my aids a little bit. The same thing happened a Pau. He does get a little bit more electric in the flying changes and it’s a shame. I felt like I gave my all, and it would have been awesome to have four great changes, but it wasn’t to be today. I felt like we still came out of it with a respectable score. But today wasn’t our day in the flying change department. Other than the flying change, I think it was our best work ever.”

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Overall our horses did some very fine work, but it was very competitive and I think it showed that we just weren’t going to be in the top tier today, but I’m still very proud of our athletes and horses,” U.S. chef d’equipe Bobby Costello commented. “The amount of work that they’ve put in this year has been immense and all of these horses will just keep getting better and they will have to be because the world is getting better as well.”

The riders will follow the same rotation they did today on cross country. Bobby explained a bit about the strategy behind the U.S. running order. “I believe that the first two slots in the running order could be very much interchangeable between Caroline and Liz. I think Caroline actually quite likes not to have too much information in her head going out there, so I think that would be a great slot for her, and Liz you could honestly put anywhere and she’s going to perform. I don’t think it was ever a question that Boyd would be our anchor rider with all of his experience of being in that position.”

Mike Winter and El Mundo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Canada currently sits in 14th position as a team on a collective score of 106.4, with Mike Winter and Jonathan Nelson, Emma Winter and his own El Mundo (Numero Uno – Calvaro’s Bria Z, by Calvaro Z) currently the top-placed of the team in 42nd on a score of 35.2. Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS are in 43rd on a score of 35.4 and Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo sit in 46th on a 35.8.

Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I was so proud of the composure that she had going into that ring,” Jessie said of the 14-year-old Freedom GS (Humble GS – Friedel GS, by Fidertanz), who is owned by longtime supporter Charlotte Schickedanz. “It’s her first time doing a test at the five star level, and it is by far the biggest atmosphere she’s ever felt. And I was over the moon with how much composure she showed in there, and honestly, how much brilliance she showed in the movements that she’s really solid in. Her future looks bright. She’s one of the most straightforward, competitive thinking mares I’ve ever ridden. Like she fights to do the right thing, and sometimes she just doesn’t have the strength to be able to carry through the movement yet. But like she has the heart, she’s 100% in it, and she’s mentally fighting for you.”

Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I was pleased with [Hot Bobo], she was such a good girl — she held it together,” Karl Slezak said of his test with Hot Bobo (Arkansas VDL – Taneys Leader xx, by Supreme Leader xx). “We all know that she can get a bit spooky in the dressage ring, and I thought that she held it together really, really well… Just a little tension [in the flying changes], and specifically the left lead to right lead.”

In terms of the cross country, we’ll have more from the U.S. riders and beyond in Cheg’s Cross Country Riders React column coming later. We’ll be back tomorrow with another Companion Guide to cross country, as well as much more from Paris. In the meantime, you can check out the cross-country ride times in full here and have a walk around the course with us in our full preview here. Cross-country will begin at 10.30 a.m. CET (9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST) with Germany’s Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 (15th on a 26.9) pathfinding. This is a tightly packed field with 22 horses and riders sitting sub-30, so we’ll be expecting a huge amount of movement across the leaderboard throughout the day.

Stay tuned, and Go Eventing.

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Super Seven for Oliver Townend at Burgham

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent. Photo by 1st Class Images.

Oliver Townend and Cooley Rosalent strolled to victory in the Holme Dodsworth Metals CCI4*-S at Burgham International Horse Trials, supported by Project Pony – Oliver’s seventh win in Burgham’s feature class in the past decade.

Oliver added four faults for one showjump down to his leading dressage score of 19.8 on Paul and Diana Ridgeon’s 10-year-old grey mare, but still topped the 104-strong class going into cross-country. The pair, who won the Kentucky CCI5* in May, made light work of David Evans’s cross-country course and galloped home clear and inside the time allowed to hold off second-placed Wills Oakden (Keep It Cooley) by 3.1 penalties.

Shropshire-based Oliver, 41, was part of Britain’s Olympic gold medal-winning team at Tokyo 2021. He plans to take the Valent-sired Cooley Rosalent to Defender Burghley Horse Trials next, and will hope to notch up his third victory at the Lincolnshire CCI5*.

He said: “‘Rosie’ is probably one of the best horses I’ve had in all three phases and she makes it all feel very easy. The mistake in the showjumping was my mistake, not hers, but she jumped very well and it is all well within her comfort zone.

“You don’t ever feel like you’re going really quick on her across country; she covers the ground very nicely, and if you need to shorten, her stride still remains very quick, which is what makes her fast. And she’s not strong at all – she’s as easy a horse as I’ve had to ride across country.

“It’s lovely up here at Burgham; the team do a great job and they make everything as comfortable as possible for the riders, the horses and the owners. The ground is always safe here and we love using it for a preparation run for Burghley.”

Wills, who is based in Perthshire, was delighted with Geoff and Elspeth Adam’s nine-year-old Ramiro B gelding, who added nothing to his dressage mark of 26.9.

He said: “I’m so pleased for Geoff and Elspeth Adam. They bought ‘Michael’ coming into this season and they have been fantastic people to work for. They’ve been very patient and understanding It’s his first season at CCI4* and we think a lot of him, and haven’t wanted to rush him. They’ve given me space, they’ve given me time and they’ve given me support. It’s been brilliant, and it’s fantastic to reward them with days like this, and hopefully there are many more to come.

“He’s just a super horse to work with. He always wants to give you his best, he always wants to learn, and he’s a horse you can be seriously competitive on. We have a real emotional connection with him, so I hope he keeps improving and takes us to where we want to get to.”

In third place for the second year running were Emily King and Valmy Biats. Emily finished on her dressage score of 27.6 on her own, Phillipe Brivois and the Valmy Biats Syndicate’s French-bred 15-year-old.

Action at Burgham continues on Sunday with the jumping phases of the NIS Group Services Ltd CCI2*-S, plus British Eventing classes, a Thoroughbred and Ex-Racehorse Show – and great fun for families, friends and children. In the afternoon in the Burgham Park Arena, there will be dog agility, hobby horsing and the dog show.

Burgham also features great tradestands and lots of delicious, locally-produced food and drink and public bars. It is situated in beautiful, tranquil Northumbrian countryside not far from the A1 between Morpeth and Alnwick.

Visit www.burghaminternationalhorsetrials.co.uk to find out more and to buy tickets.

All four days of cross-country from Burgham – Thursday, 25 July to Sunday, 28 July – are being livestreamed on ClipMyHorse.tv – visit www.clipmyhorse.tv/en_GB/ to watch.

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‘He Has an Incredible Future Ahead of Him’: South Africa Well-Represented in Paris with Figaro des Premices

Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices (RSA). Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This may be the first Olympic Games for Figaro des Premices (Quidam de Revel – Acapela de Kreisker, by Felton du Mont), but it certainly won’t be his last if his rider, Alexander Peternell has his way.

“He’s got an amazing heart, and I think that he’s got an incredible future ahead of him,” he said, following their dressage test. Although he was a little disappointed with their performance in the first phase – a score of 39 left them in 56th position ahead of the cross country – Alex remained pragmatic about the situation: “He can produce a much tidier, better test. The atmosphere probably got to him a little bit, so he’s just a little bit distracted and not really into the bridle as you can be. I know he’s more than capable of producing a far better test…But he’s nine, he’s still very new to the level.”

At just nine years old, ‘Norman’ is one of the youngest horses in the field, though he and Alex have a strong and lengthy partnership. The South African rider, who first represented his country in 2012 at the London Olympics with Asish, has backed and produced this horse right from the very beginning.

“I bought him as a two and a half year old, so I backed him myself. So all his faults are my faults!” he laughed. Initially though, Alex was unsure as to whether he would even be able to buy the horse – much to his wife’s indignation! “We [my wife and I] nearly divorced over it — she found him, and we went to look at him and they pulled him out of the field, trailered him to an arena with jumps, and she was like ‘wow.’ But because I didn’t have a lot of funding, I offered a rather cheeky offer. For the whole four hours drive home, my wife was tearing into me because she didn’t think we would get him!”

Luckily, that ‘cheeky’ offer was accepted – not only saving Alex’s marriage, but setting he and Norman on the path to Paris.

Alex’s wife, Suze, has happy memories of Norman in those early days, fondly recounting how easy he was to back; “I think I came out to find Alex sat on him, when we were backing him, holding the lunge line. He just hopped on. He’s just a lovely character.” Add to that character a very trainable mind and an incredible talent for eventing – in their 11 FEI starts, he has only faulted cross country on one occasion – and the future looks very bright for young Norman. As Alex says, “This time in two years time, watch this horse.”

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Leipheimer Van’t Verahof: The Olympic Eventing Stallion Who Delivered Personal Best for Belgium

Karin Donckers and Leipheimer Van’t Verahof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

With seven Olympic Games, eight World Championships, and 14 European Championships on her resume, Belgium’s Karin Donckers has partnered with a slew of talented horses throughout her lengthy career, but this season brings Joris De Brabander’s talented stallion Leipheimer Van’t Verahof into the spotlight.

The name may sound awfully familiar, and it should. The 13-year-old Belgian Warmblood (Vigo d Arsouilles STX – Southern Queen xx, by South Gale xx) is a full brother to Karin’s former Olympic and World Championship partner Fletcher van’t Verahof. “Leip” is also the only stallion in Paris’ 64-entry field. He balances his busy competition schedule with an equally demanding breeding schedule, and so far, he’s got one offspring competing at International levels, the 6-year-old Next Level Leipeimer Dutch.

Fathered by 2010 Show Jumping World Champion Vigo d Arsouilles STX, Leip certainly boasts his sire’s athleticism over fences, while also benefiting from the blood of his dam, the Thoroughbred mare Southern Queen xx. 

Karin Donckers and Leipheimer Van’t Verahof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

All horses have their unique quirks, and that’s especially true of stallions in sport, but it’s no bother to Karin. “You have to respect the stallions the way they are. That’s what I have learned from them,” Karin said. And this lesson began early in life, as Karin rode whatever she could as a child. “It’s not the first time that I’ve ridden a stallion. I never had the choice to choose what I got to ride. I grew up on a farm where we didn’t have the money to buy nice ponies, so I’ve learned throughout my life to get the best out of the horse that you have.”

To date, Karin’s best CCI4*-L finish in fact has been thanks to a stallion, Lamicell Charizard, with whom she was third at Pau in 2014. 

“You have to respect them more and really accept how they are. If you have a good trust relationship with them, then you have to believe that they will fight for you,” she said. “But I find it a bit different then the mares or the geldings, the geldings are a bit more easy going. The mares are a bit more of the fighters. The stallions are a bit different.”

Karin Donckers and Leipheimer Van’t Verahof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Karin’s three-time World Championship partner “Fletch” may now be stepping aside to let his stablemate into the limelight, but the Belgian rider always knew what Leip could be capable of, as she brought him up the ranks herself. 

“We worked seven years with the stallion really towards this. Even at Le Lion d’Angers when he was seven year old that I felt that he was my next championship horse,” she said. 

Her Paris ride rose to the occasion today when it mattered most: delivering a personal best of 26.6 on the world’s biggest stage, a massive aid to the burgeoning Belgian team.

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Ronald Zabala Goetschel’s Found the Fountain of Youth with Wundermaske

Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One of the most incredible facets of equestrian sports remains the fact that they are, in many ways, ageless and nondiscriminatory toward elder athletes, both two- and four-legged. This year in Paris, the oldest horse across disciplines is 21 years old, making a new record as the oldest horse in the Olympics.

Many U.S. eventing fans will recall the name Wundermaske as a former CCI5* partner of Sharon White, earning two top-25 finishes at the then-4* level at Kentucky and Pau under her tutelage. Now, competing under the recently designated moniker Forever Young Wundermaske, “Patch” is set to make his Olympic debut this weekend in Paris with Ecuador’s Ronald Zabala Goetschel.

Sharon White and Wundermaske. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Truth be told, the Olympics weren’t necessarily on the plan for the Oldenburg gelding bred in the U.S. by Tracy Barbeito (he’s also the sole U.S.-bred horse in the Olympic field this year!). In fact, Ronald had tried to retire the gelding twice before, not due to injury but simply because he was getting older and Ronald had some younger horses to focus on. And also — Patch simply didn’t want to sit in a paddock.

“He has never had an injury — never pulled a tendon or a ligament, not even a common cold,” Ronald told me. “When I tried to retire him, he would just run his paddock.”

Ronald did try to qualify for Tokyo, but with the postponement and also a slew of injuries to contend with, including a concussion, the Olympics weren’t meant to be for Patch. As Ronald prepared to travel to Europe from his home base in Florida as he sought qualification for Paris, his team made a suggestion. Why not bring Patch along?

“I had retired him again and I was going in September of 2022 to buy horses, and my groom started telling me, why don’t you bring Patch?,” he said.

And so Ronald’s grand European adventure began, starting with a flight from Miami in February to Holland, where he spent two weeks. Since then, he’s traveled to Italy, Poland, Germany, and Switzerland, competing his string of horses which also includes Charly van ter Heiden, the former ride of and 5* winner for Britain’s Mollie Summerland. Charly was originally intended to be Ronald’s horse for Paris, but an untimely bout of ulcers meant the horse would not be able to obtain sufficient qualification. Ronald’s other horses were a bit too inexperienced to shoot for Paris, and so the torch once more fell to Wundermaske.

Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Wundermaske (ECU). Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

“Out of my three horses, it would be whoever was feeling the best that would go to Paris,” he explained. “The mare I had, she is only turning nine in April and so I didn’t want to put the additional pressure on her. There was no favorite, though Charly would have been my most competitive horse maybe. Patch with the new rules had to do a confirmation event, so we did that at Sopot [Poland] in May and had a clear round there. Patch deserves this. He has qualified for three Olympics now.”

How do you keep a horse that’s been going at this level sound for so long? For Ronald, it comes down to selection of events and when to run. “I withdraw a lot,” he said. “Because I go and if I don’t like the footing — too wet or too hard — I don’t compete. I am not a commercial rider, so if the ground is not good I don’t feel obligations to compete.”

Ronald also described his training regimen with Patch, which at this point in his career doesn’t involve a lot of hard, intensive training. “He goes to the walker and trots on good footing,” he explained. “And we have a pool when we’re in Pennsylvania or he goes swimming in Ocala. I ride him a few times a week, I pretty much never jump — maybe once a month. He knows his job. I keep him happy. I will gallop him every five days when it’s time for competition, and if not I will just keep riding him like normal and making sure he is on good footing and he stays sound.”

One has only to watch Ronald’s latest cross country round at Avenches (Switzerland) to see this intentional preparation pay off with a smooth and clear trip. It’s left Ronald feeling as prepared as ever for what lies ahead.

 

WUNDERMASKE – “PATCHITO” – TO PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS !!

At 21 years young confirms his qualification to the Paris 2024 Olympics!

My amazing Patchito is always there for me. Has qualified for 3 Olympics:

– Rio 2016 Olympics – didn’t compete because of politics – no fault of his own.

– Tokyo 2020 – 2021 Olympics – didn’t compete much in 2019, the qualifying year, and could not get enough points to earn the Olympic spot as I got injured twice falling off of another horse in March and spent 3 months in bed with a concussion. Then on August on my second fall, my left hip was destroyed and could not ride well to get points – no fault of Patchito.

– Paris 2024 – qualifies and gets enough points to compete at this Olympics.

No other horse of mine deserves more than him to compete at this Olympics !! He never gets sick… never has had an injury in his life… never calls in sick (hahaha). He is always there for me !!

Thanking GOD everyday for letting me be part of the story of this amazing horse.

THANK YOU – THANK YOU – THANK YOU PATCHITO !!

Posted by Ronald Zabala Goetschel on Saturday, June 29, 2024

“I’m going to be honest, we have jumped so many big, technical courses here in Europe so I think we are very prepared,” he said. “With Patch I only competed twice, at Sopot and Avenches, and with the other horses I did more. I think I am readier than ever. I’ve never been that ready for a competition, and Patch is feeling fantastic. Adding in the gallops on the hills of England has him feeling super fit.”

The Games will be a special and a bittersweet one for Ronald, who has confirmed that this will be his one of his final major eventing competitions as he will then switch to focus on dressage. The decision comes out of a desire to spend more time with his 19 month old son, Ronito (who is also a huge fan of Patch himself).

“He is the love of my life,” Ronald said of his son. “After this, I will just focus on the Bolivarian Games in Peru in 2025, which will be my last competition in eventing. This is a dangerous sport. I want to be here for my son always. It’s been hard because I’ve been away for six months. I talk with him every day. And he will have these pictures when he grows up so he knows I was always thinking about him. He changed my life.”

Ronald Zabala Goestchel and Forever Young Wundermaske. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That being said, the Olympic dream will remain alive and well for Ronald, who says he’d love to get to the Los Angeles Games in 2028 in dressage. He also plans to get back into show jumping, as he did compete at the Grand Prix level before switching full-time to eventing. With dressage, though, he could conceivably compete and qualify for an Olympics on the U.S. circuit, whereas with show jumping he would potentially have to travel overseas more.

As for his goals for Wundermaske this weekend, Ronald remains realistic but positive. “Patch is not the best horse in dressage. He’s not built to do it,” he explained. “He’s about 76 percent Thoroughbred, so it’s difficult. I need to ride him very carefully and tactfully, and I can’t put too much pressure on him. However in 2020 when I brought him back, he gave me a 29 at four-star, so if he has a good day and is relaxed he can give me a good test. This test is very difficult, it’s very fast. So we’ve been working on it and I will do the best I can with him. But I’m sure he will give me his heart as always.”

Catching up with Ronald after his test in Paris, which earned him a score of 37.7, which is relatively consistent with this pair’s typical scores, he was pleased with his efforts and already focused on the cross country task at hand. For his part, “Patchito” tried to spin his way back up the ramp after the test — “he says, ‘where’s the cross country??’,” Ronald laughed — as if to further prove that age is just a number.

Dale Clabaugh and Wundermaske share some bonding time. Photo courtesy of Dale Clabaugh.

Making the weekend all the more special is the fact that one of Patch’s original connections, Dale Clabaugh, will be in attendance to watch. Dale actually bred Patch for herself originally, working with Tracy Barbeito to produce a horse that she could ride and compete herself.

“I wanted a foal by Weltbekannt, a Hanoverian stallion owned by Suzanne Quarles of SomeDaySoon Farm,” Dale told me. “My friend, Tracy, wanted to purchase a Thoroughbred mare to expand her breeding program from Quarter Horses to Appendix Quarter Horses, and we collaborated on tis breeding so that I would have a foal I wanted. An unexpected divorce changed my plans, and I gave Wundermaske to Sharon White as a gift. I was blessed with an amazing horse who has been a blessing to both Sharon and Ronald. His talents would have been wasted on me, but I am living the dream with my dear pony.”

“We are very proud and no matter what, I know he will give me his best like he always does,” Ronald echoed. And truly, no matter what, the story of “Patchito” will also stay “forever young”.

Go Eventing.

Tom McEwen is the Early Leader on Paris Dressage Day

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We certainly had a fair idea of who we’d see clustering at the top of the board today as we kicked off a marathon of 64 dressage tests in Paris, and it’s unsurprising to see British stalwart Tom McEwen out in the front at the lunch break. The Tokyo individual silver and team gold medalist piloted JL Dublin (Diarado – Zarinna, by Canto), who is owned by James & Jo Lambert & Dierdre Johnston, to a 25.8 as the first rider out for the Brits, not quite slipping down to the 23 or 24 we know this pair is capable of but delivering enough to sit ahead of six-time Olympian Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof (26.6).

“Dubs was awesome. He loves an atmosphere and I must say, he really lit up in the trot a little bit more than I was expecting, and then was actually super relaxed in the walk, which then caught me out from the first change,” Tom said of JL Dublin. We did see spectators filing in this morning, rain gear at the ready as we’ve been met with some very, err, British weather, if I might say, but the early rotations of riders didn’t have large crowds to content with. It nearly doesn’t matter though, as the towering stands that have been constructed here certainly create a buzz unlike anywhere except perhaps Kentucky or Aachen in terms of atmosphere. “I was expecting, when I picked up the canter to have a little bit more electricity underneath me — Dubs always is very relaxed and very happy. So sadly missed that first change, but then after that, we picked it right back up where we left off, but hopefully putting Great Britain in a great, strong starting position, which is our main goal. Now my aim is to support the girls and finish on that score.

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As we’ve written about before, the Olympic test is incredibly unique. While technically a 5* test, the run time is set at just 3 minutes, 50 seconds, and the movements begin in earnest just as soon as a rider turns off of centerline. Indeed, a horse that has a competitive walk is somewhat at a disadvantage (unless, of course, you’re blessed with a horse who’s equally gifted in all gaits) as there are just two movements at the walk, and on short diagonals to boot. This opens to door to see some points slip away, and in such an abbreviated test every movement counts more than ever.

It was more just concentrating,” Tom concurred. “This test is so different to our normal ones — if we take a five-star test, this just comes so much quicker, and it’s intense. Dubs got a fantastic walk, but you’ve got the split second to show it off before it’s gone. With the mistake in the change, having a horse that was full of energy and pumped underneath me to actually being very relaxed, it can change very, very quickly. I think the girls told me that a few horses have been spooking at the cameras, so actually, for me, it was actually me concentrating.”

Tom McEwen and JL Dublin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’re also in a unique position here in that we will know the full standings of the first phase today, versus other major events where we typically have dressage split over two days. So while Tom’s score is undoubtedly competitive, the door is still quite open for a low-20s to come in and steal the lead — and there are more than a few horses yet to come who could do the task.

Belgian rider Karin Donckers is not short on championship experience: with six (now seven, this weekend counting) Olympics and seven World Championships to her impressive resume, she’s the most experienced rider in the field in terms of these high-pressure atmospheres. And the pressure, if she felt any, didn’t affect her nor the Belgian Warmblood stallion Leipheimer van’t Verahof (Vigo d Arsouilles STX – Southern Queen xx, by South Gale xx). As the pathfinder for the team-to-watch Belgians, Karin laid down a 26.6, which is something of a best for this pair who typically hover closer to the 30 mark.

Karin Donckers and Leipheimer Van’t Verahof. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ve of course got a large French contingent crowd here today, and Karin was tasked with riding after home team rider Karim Laghouag.

I’m happy that we did it so far, because of course we have two more days to go!” Karin said. “I can even say that I have experience with riding Olympics — that helps! You get a bit more mature, you get a bit older, you know what’s what they expect from you, and you know how the crowd is going to be — of course when you ride behind the French one!”

Leipheimer van’t Verahof, who’s actually a full sibling to Karin’s former Olympic and World Championship horse Fletcha van’t Verahof, is the sole stallion in this year’s eventing field.

Team Belgium celebrates a stellar test from pathfinder Karin Donckers. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

You have to respect the stallions the way they are — that’s what I have learned from them,” she said. “It’s not the first time that I’ve ridden a stallion. I never had the choice to choose what I got to ride; I grew up on a farm where I started already as a kid… So I’ve learned throughout my life to get the best out of the horse that you have and what you get… You have to respect them more and really accept how they are. If you have a good trust relation with them, then you have to believe that they will fight for you. I find it a bit different than the mares or the geldings –the geldings are a bit more easy going, the mares are a bit more of the fighters. The stallion’s are a bit different. My stallion was sleeping yesterday in his stall!”

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

As the first to go today (and a late addition to the German team just earlier this week) was defending individual gold medalist Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 (Numero Uno – Orchidee V, by Lorentin), who held on to an early lead for several rides with a score of 26.9. She’s currently in third at the lunch break now.

Nickel 21 is a horse that really wasn’t intended for these Games earlier in his career; he was ridden by a young rider previously and then Julia took over and used him for Arena Eventing but didn’t initially have major plans for him. Nearly as if he’s got a bit of a chip on his shoulder now, he’s really flourished in the lead-up to these games, most notably winning the CCIO4*-S at Aachen earlier in July.

Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Julia has remained pragmatic about the Olympics this year. “To be honest, I didn’t have the Olympics marked in my calendar as ‘I’m probably going’ — it was more like, ‘Okay, that’s the Olympics, don’t book an expensive holiday there, just in case.’ I’m going next week now; didn’t want to jinx it!” she said. “And then Nickel, I really planned the season for the horse, and turned out that he just now felt ready, and proved in Aachen that he’s really able to play with the big boys.”

“He’s very genuine, and very, very honest,” she continued about the 10-year-old Holsteiner owned by Sophia Rössel. “I think he never did anything wrong, never had a run out or anything because he really tries to figure out what I tell him to do. It’s a mix of either he’s a little bit excited or he’s pretty chill and laid back, but he’s really just a very, very genuine, honest horse, and that makes me confident for tomorrow.”

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We have two U.S. riders currently inside the top 10 at the lunch break, and last-minute call-up Liz Halliday has certainly made good on her Olympic debut thus far as the top-placed, currently in fourth with Nutcracker (Tolan R – Ballyshan Cleopatra, by Cobra), who is owned by the Nutcracker Syndicate. Caroline Pamukcu and Sherrie Martin and Mollie Hoff’s HSH Blake (Tolan R – Doughiska Lass, by Kannan) were the first to see this morning and scored a 30.4 to currently sit ninth. 

By now, most of you will know that Liz has had quite the last 48 hours. After the late withdrawal of Will Coleman and Diabolo due to a suspected abscess, Liz was slotted up to the team slot after initially being named Traveling Reserve.

For Liz, it’s a lot of mixed emotions; on one hand, she’s ready and eager to finally have her Olympic shot (she was selected for the Tokyo team and had to withdraw Deniro Z before the Games), but on the other, heavier hand, she’s gutted for Will.

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s a really odd place to be in emotionally, because the first thing I felt was devastation for Will, because I’ve been there,” she said. “Before Tokyo. I was in the spot, and I didn’t get to go and so you’re overwhelmed with the fact that you move into the spot and also overwhelmed with sadness for your teammate, who equally earned his spot here. And then it’s time to sort of get to business, and it goes from shock to, ‘Oh my gosh’, to ‘Okay, now I’m going to just be a competitor again.'”

A competitor she certainly is, piloting Nutcracker, who debuted in 8th place at his first 5* at Kentucky this spring, to a 28.0, besting his only other 5* score of 30.6. Liz commented that she’s used cavaletti and poles a lot in her preparation for this test to encourage straightness and relaxation over the horse’s back, and she felt that work paid off today.

He was spectacular,” she said. “I think he’s actually really taken a big leap forward in just the last two weeks in some of his work; I’ve sort of changed around some things, just tried to make him more relaxed and just really let it flow, and I think that’s helped. He still needs a little bit of work on the changes, of course, but they are breathing and this is a difficult test for a 10-year-old horse. I’m thrilled with him.”

Liz Halliday and Nutcracker. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Recently, I’ve just been practicing the movements, especially in the canter work, so he wasn’t surprised,” Liz continued. “I think I wanted him thinking, ‘Oh yes, I’m gonna half-pass, change, half pass again; just getting him really comfortable with how things went. I have practiced a lot with poles on the ground to keep him straight, because when he’s nervous, he jumps sideways a little — I think those are helping the changes –just trying to do whatever I can to help him learn to do [the changes] in a relaxed, happy way… It’s improving and I’m pleased that he’s getting the clean change every time, but that would be a little bit where he gets slightly nervous and is feeling the atmosphere a little bit. It’s a work in progress — it will be there.”

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Fifth in the early going and representing Switzerland are Robin Godel and his longtime partner, Jean-Jacques Fünfschilling’s Grandeur de Lully CH (Greco de Lully CH – Miola, by Apartos) who earned a 29.1 today from the judging panel. This is a partnership that’s quite experienced and well-established; they’ve done two World Championships together and four Europeans, including one when Robin was a junior rider.

He’s now 16, so we have a lot of experience together,” Robin said.”We did a lot of championships from the Young Riders [to now], so we know each other very well. He’s not the fastest one, but he’s good in the dressage, good on the jumps in the cross country, and then if we can stay clear in the show jumping, we can get a good result. He was one of my choices for Paris — I always hoped to have other horses to be ready for that level, but we have prepared him a long time, and we don’t do too much with him to keep him motivated. He knows his job well by now.”

Robin had set a goal to earn a sub-30 today, and he has done so before at a championship with this horse, but he was nonetheless pleased with his efforts today. “He can be a bit spooky and looking around — we saw that before the center line because he was looking, but then inside [the ring], he was more with me,” he elaborated. “Still a bit tense, but very happy with how he was today. My goal was to be under 30; we can always do better, but I’m still very happy with it.”

Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

You can view the rest of the lunch break top 10 below or in the live scores here. At this juncture, Germany is currently in the top spot, but it’s quite wide open at this phase with still half the field yet to see today.

We did also see one Elimination today for the Italians. Emiliano Portale and Future initially delivered a lovely, expressive  and competitive test, but were later eliminated for blood in the horse’s mouth. When Emiliano came through the mixed zone, he said he felt the horse bit his lip but at that juncture he did not think he had been eliminated.

Emilano Portale and Future. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The FEI released the following statement regarding the elimination: “The horse, Future, ridden by athlete No. 13, Emiliano Portale (ITA) was eliminated during the Eventing Dressage test after blood was found in the horse’s mouth during the post-competition check on July 27. Elimination under this Rule does not imply that there was intention to hurt or harm the horse, but the FEI discipline rules have been put in place to ensure that horse welfare is protected at all times.”

I hate to refer to a 2,000-word report as a “quick” lunch update, but we’ve only got a short turnaround before the afternoon sessions, so stay tuned for much more coming later on this evening, Paris time. In the meantime, you can always keep up with the action and the need-to-know on each pair in our Form Guide as well as Cheg Darlington’s incredibly Companion Guide here.

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

 

One, Two, Oui! Let the Games Commence! Your Follow-Along Companion Guide to the Olympic Eventing in Paris – Dressage Day

Let the Games begin. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Oh yes! Here oui go! It’s Olympic dressage day in Paris and here at EN oui’ve been chinchilla-ing away to bring you all the stats, facts and form for every competitor oui’ll see up the center line. (OK, I’ll stop it now.)

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 in the ring, 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 to their Olympic test, courtesy of our roving reporters extraordinaire – Sally Spickard and Tilly Berendt – who are waiting with baited/garlic infused breath in the Chat Zone. 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.

But it’s not going to be all about the competitors today, oh no. Show your faces eventing die-hards and get in on the EN action.

Have you sniffed out and wrangled together a watch party with all the eventing fans in your town (and any unsuspecting future fans you could find – willingly or not, it’s all the same to us)? Are there any furries, or feathereds, or scaleys along for the ride? How is your horse getting in on the equestrian frivolities in France? Do you, like me, have an Olympic flag flying on your front porch? We want to see everything. Head over to our Facebook page (which you’ll find right here) to share all your Olympic geekiness – look for the relevant post and leave a comment. Show yourselves eventing nerds! Please remember to include who took the photo, and if you’re not of the selfie variety, don’t fret – let us know how you’re celebrating the Games and I’ll try and give you a shout-out. And if you miss out due to it being basically the middle of the night in your time zone, share away anyway and I’ll try and include you at some point over the weekend. Scroll down to the ‘Fan Zone’ at the bottom of the post to see your shares.

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

▶️ The Olympic dressage test is a little different to what we’re used to seeing at CCI5*s – for one, it’s a whole minute or so shorter. EN asked the experts to come onboard to explain just what’s required of the horses and riders in this, fairly unique, test. Find out more here.

▶️ Check out everything you need to know about the Olympic eventing in Paris – and much more besides – in our Ultimate Guide.

▶️ It’s fair to say that we’ve been typing our fingers to the bone to bring you all the Paris content you can handle, and we’re not done yet. For now though, click here to view all our blood, sweat and tears thus far.

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 test as they come in, so keep flicking through to gather all the goodies.

Scores will be included in this companion guide later, but you can follow along with the live leaderboard as things happen here.

It’s time to adjust your beret to a jaunty angle, perhaps sample a snail or two, and go eventing! Let the Games commence!

#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.

Coming in hot 🌶️ Julia was actually in Block 3 on the German squad list, but a superb win at Aachen a few weeks ago bumped her right up the order and she was due to come to Paris with this exciting young horse as traveling reserve. However… the withdrawal of Sandra Auffarth has meant that Julia is there to defend her Olympic title, and she’s got a pretty good shot. It’s going to be an exciting few days, that’s for sure.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Julia’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Julia’s win in Tokyo made her the first woman Olympic eventing champion, and, as far as we can tell from sometimes patchy records, we believe that Amande de B’neville was the first mare to win gold.

Dressage 📈 This guy really is something special in the first phase. He put down a 23.9 at Aachen on his way to the win, and almost has a clean sweep of sub-30 scores on his card. He does tend to swing between the low- and high-20s but, seriously, what a problem to have.

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Incoming from Julia Krajewski after her ride on Nickel 22, one she wasn’t expecting having headed to Paris in the traveling reserve spot:

“To be honest, I didn’t have the Olympics marked in my calendar as ‘I’m probably going’ — it was more like, ‘Okay, that’s the Olympics, don’t book an expensive holiday then, just in case … [Nickel 22] proved in Aachen that he’s really able to play with the big boys.”

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Score for Julia Krajewski and Nickel 21 – 26.9.

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🇦🇺 Shane Rose and Virgil

After a bit of a bumpy ride recently, Shane has made it to Paris and it must feel good to be sat on his old pal of many years, 19-year-old ‘Virg’, particularly given that they’re here off the back of three consecutive wins, including Adelaide 5* and the Horse of the Year Event in New Zealand – that’s some hot form right there 🌶️

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.)

🔴 Safe to say, Shane is one of the more battered and bruised eventers on the circuit. He defied the odds to be here after a nasty fall at home a few months ago, has had facial reconstruction in the past after being kicked by a horse, as well as having defeated thyroid cancer. He’s one tough cookie, that’s for sure.

Dressage 📈 These veterans of the sport knows his way around a championships dressage ring, that’s for sure. They put down a 31.5 at Pratoni and a 31.7 in Tokyo, and generally hover around the 30-mark in the first phase. They went sub-30 at Adelaide 5* last season, where they very nearly finished on their dressage score of 28.1, adding just 1 second of cross country time on their way to the win. They’ve just had the one run this year, due to Shane being off games, but what a run to have, winning the Horse of the Year event in New Zealand in style and finishing on their dressage score of 30.8.

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Shane and Virgil might be veterans of the sport, but that doesn’t mean they rest on their laurels:

“I thought he was in a better way of going; I think his frame was really good, something that we’ve been working on.”

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He elaborated further about how things went for them in the ring:

“I think he sometimes starts a little slow and doesn’t get into his medium trot. I felt lucky; he really started in a positive way. I think his walk was really good, he was reaching for the contact and stayed forward.There was lots to be happy with, but certainly some things that I could do better.”

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Score for Shane Rose and Virgil – 34.6.

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🇨🇦 Michael Winter and El Mundo

Mike’s here with his World Championships and Pan-Ams ride, El Mundo. They got a taste for taking home medals when they won team gold in Santiago and there’s no doubt that’s given them a hankering for more. ‘Roberto’ has been with Mike since he was a six-year-old and the pair have a really close relationship after Mike spent a good while tending to the gelding’s every need, 24-hours a day, whilst he was on box rest following an injury. Safe to say, that bond will stand them in good stead as they take on Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mike’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Mike is an outspoken advocate for diversity and anti-racism in the sport, as well as speaking up for equality issues such as access to clean drinking water, education and health care.

Dressage 📈 This pair have one sub-30 score on their card, which came at the pop-up 5* at Bicton in 2021. At their three other 5* runs they’ve been low- to mid-30s – their highest is 34.6. It was a 32.3 for them at the Pan-Ams in Santiago, where they were fifth individually and won team gold. At the World Championships in Pratoni, they put down 33.3 in the first phase.

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Score for Michael Winter and El Mundo – 35.2.

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🇮🇪 Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M

“Action by name and action by nature,” Sarah says about this mare on her IG account. She describes her as feisty, and a true performer with grit and determination, which pretty much sums up everything you want in an event horse, really.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sarah’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Action Lady M is called ‘Lottie’ in the barn.

Dressage 📈 This pair posted their best dressage score at 4* in their most recent run so Sarah must coming to Paris full of confidence. They generally tend to swing between low- to mid-30s scores in the first phase. They finished on their dressage score of 32.9 in the 8-and-9-year-old class at Blenheim in 2022, where they were sixth.

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Score for Sarah Ennis and Action Lady M – 38.

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🇨🇭 Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair very nearly finished on their dressage score at Tokyo (if we ignore the second round of show jumping), which has got to have Melódy chomping at the bit as she bids to better her individual 17th place.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Mélody’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Mélody’s had the ride on this seventeen-year-old gelding since 2020.

Dressage 📈 They put down a 36.1 in Tokyo and added just one second of cross country time across the entire event, up until the second round of show jumping, when things kind of fell apart a little, but we’re focusing on dressage right now. They posted a 36.7 at the European Championships last season and a 35.9 at the Worlds in Pratoni, and we can see from those scores that they’re generally pretty consistently mid-30s in the first phase.

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Score for Mélody Johner and Toubleu de Rueire – 38.4.

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🇺🇸 Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Pan-Ams individual gold and team silver winner Caroline is making her Olympic debut with exciting talent HSH Blake. Seriously, this guy is total class. He’s been first or second in 50% of his FEI runs and has only been outside the top-10 twice. That’s the kind of quality we’re dealing with here.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Caroline was just 14 when she became a full-time eventer! She won team and individual gold at the North American Young Rider Championships in 2013 and left school the next day, continuing her education at home, but mostly riding.

Dressage 📈 This guy has only ever been out of the 20s in the first phase twice. He posted a 26.8 on his way to individual honors in Santiago, that was 3*, and has generally been 27 or 28 at 4*. How will he handle the step up to the Olympic test, which is essentially a short 5*? Eyes on 👀

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Listen up! Sally and Tilly caught up with Caroline and here’s what she had to say about her very exciting young talent, HSH Blake, and the priority in the US camp for the Games:

“He’s such a little unicorn at only nine-years-old — and that much atmosphere, he couldn’t care less… The big goal is a good team score.”

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Caroline went on to talk about what her and ‘Blake’ get up to at home:

“Blake is my best friend … I take him for bareback hacks; I’m with him every single day.”

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Score for Caroline Pamukcu and HSH Blake – 30.4.

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🇵🇱 Malgorzata Korycka and Canvalencia

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Malgorzata is here to contest her first Olympic Games, but she comes with the experience of European and World Championships appearances under her belt. She’s in Paris with her Pratoni mount, Canvalencia.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Malgorzata’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Malgorzata is engaged to fellow Paris Olympian, Jan Kaminski.

Dressage 📈 This pair put down a 35.7 in the dressage phase at the World Championships in Pratoni, which is about where they tend to be in the first phase – mid- to high-30s.

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Malgorzata’s making her Olympic debut, but it’s not her first championships rodeo – she’s been to the Worlds and Europeans:

“I feel strange — the Olympics are not the same as the World Championships, or European Championships. The arena here is huge.”

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If you’re watching the livestream, you’ll have noticed that the Olympic test is really pretty short. Malgortzada talks a little about what it’s like to ride:

“I think it’s pretty nice to ride; it’s really short. Just when I opened my eyes, I was in the middle of it, almost done! I think it’s good — good for the rider and good for the horse. I am happy with [Canvalencia] even if I had some mistakes.”

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Score for Malgorzata Korycka and Canvalencia – 39.4.

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🇸🇪 Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z

Sofia brings her World Championships ride forward on her Olympic debut, but she’ll have had a heap of advice from Olympic veterans and fellow Paris competitors Tim and Jonelle Price, who she’s based with in the UK.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sofia’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Sofia spent three years training with fellow Paris Olympian – and former Olympic Champion – Michael Jung. Talk about learning from the best.

Dressage 📈 This pair can have a bit of a tricky time in the dressage phase, with scores this season ranging from 37.1 to 51.7. They put down a career-best score of 32.8 at the World Championships in Pratoni – what a time to break out a PB. A championships thing perhaps?

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Here’s what Sofia had to say after her Olympic test:

“I just was overwhelmed. It’s been a long road — I’ve had the horse since she was at the end of her four-year-old year; I’ve done all her events with her.”

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And how she found the atmosphere in the Olympic ring:

“The dressage, she [the mare] hasn’t always found easiest. She’s quite hot, she’s very forward-going — she’s great cross country, but dressage, she’s had to learn to keep a lid on it a bit and listen. I was just so proud — she’s never seen anything like this, with the atmosphere. She got a bit fed up when they started clapping at the beginning. I kind of went in thinking, ‘Just get through,’ but then she came back to me and she listened and tried.

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Score for Sofia Sjöborg and Bryjamolga van het Marienshof Z – 33.3.

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🇬🇧 Tom McEwen and JL Dublin

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tom knows what it’s like to take a haul of medals home from a Games, with a team gold and individual silver from Tokyo stashed away in his bling cabinet. He’s here with relatively new ride JL Dublin, who he took on from Nicola Wilson, and Tom is very vocal in his praise of Nicola’s work with ‘Dubs’ each time he’s had success with the lovely gelding. Which is a lot, really, hence they bagged an elusive spot on the very competitive British team.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Tom’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Tom was awarded an MBE from the late Queen of England following his success in Tokyo.

Dressage 📈 Since Tom took on the ride in 2022, they’ve had dressage scores ranging from 20.9 to 29.8. They were second at Kentucky 5* in the spring, where the posed a 24.6 in the first phase and third at Pau last fall, where they put down a 23.1, so their best scores do tend to come on the big occasions, like an Olympics, say. Eyes on this one 👀

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Incoming from Tom McEwen:

“Dubs was awesome … [He’s] always very relaxed and very happy.”

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Tom went on to talk about his lovely test:

“He loves an atmosphere and I must say, he really lit up in the trot a little bit more than I was expecting, and then was actually super relaxed in the walk, which then caught me out for the first change. I was expecting, when I picked up the canter, to have a little bit more electricity underneath me, so sadly missed that first change, but then after that, we picked it right back up where we left off. [We’ve] hopefully put Great Britain in a great, strong starting position, which is our main goal. Now my aim is to support the girls and finish on that score.”

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Score for Tom McEwen and JL Dublin – 25.8.

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🇧🇷 Carlos Parro and Safira

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Carlos made his Olympic debut back in 2000 at the Sydney Games and has a hattrick of Olympic experiences under his belt. The Brazilian team are in Paris off the back of a team bronze medal at the Pan-Ams last season, where Carlos and Safira played their part and gained valuable experience ahead of the test they face 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 has won Best Eventing Rider of the Year awarded by Olympic Brazil three times.

Dressage 📈 They put down a 34 at the Pan-Ams in Santiago on their way to team bronze. This season they’ve had two FEI 4* runs; they scored 33.4 in Strzegom, Poland, and 34 in Sopot, also in Poland.

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Carlos was pragmatic when he talked about his test:

“There was a chance that the changes weren’t going happen, and half of them didn’t quite happen the way we planned — the atmosphere shook her concentration little bit. But I’m happy with her attitude. I’m not going to say I’m happy with the result, but I’m happy with the attitude, and I’m happy with the horse. It could have been better, but it just didn’t happen today.”

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Score for Carlos Parro and Safira – 37.7.

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🇳🇿 Jonelle Price and Hiarado

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Jonelle Price sure knows a thing or two about championships appearances, having made her Olympic debut back in 2012 at the London Games. She took home a team bronze medal that time around, and has since added another, at the World Championships in Pratoni in 2022. Her Paris ride is relatively new to her, but they’ve already shown they’re a great partnership with a top-10 finish on the mare’s 5* debut.

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 broke her arm 5 weeks before the London Games but bounced back to make her Olympic debut for New Zealand.

Dressage 📈 This mare put down a 30.4 in the first phase on her 5* debut at Pau last season, where she finished seventh. They’re very much a low-30s pair, their best being 30.2 and highest 34.5.

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This is what Jonelle had to say about her mare, who’s a relatively new ride for her:

“She’s not the finished product yet … 95% I’m delighted.”

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She elaborated on how her test went and how she came about having Hiarado in her string, :

She’s had a steep learning trajectory this year, since we only bought her two years ago and she been playing catch up ever since. This test is another step up, in technicality. She has such a beautiful walk, it feels like a crying shame to give marks away on the walk, but that’s the tension that showed, and such is the nature of the big arena like that.

I sort of thought I was going to be a bit light on the ground for Paris, and I thought maybe I should get a little bit proactive. I happened to ring up Jodie Amos and said, ‘Have you got any seven-year-olds?’ because I didn’t think I could probably afford anything else. She said, ‘Well, I haven’t got a seven-year-old, but I’ve got a ten-year old-mare that I think would really suit you’. So I went and had a look at her, and I hopped on her and just loved her from the minute I sat on her. She’s right up my street. She’s a little angry, feisty, determined.

She’s just got better and better in everything … I think in another year to two years, we’ll see the end product. She’s a natural talent for sure.”

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Score for Jonelle Price and Hiarado – 30.8.

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🇯🇵 Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka

Ryuzo has represented Japan at the Olympics, World Championships and Asian Games, where he finished fourth individually in 2018. Cekatinka was purchased especially for the Tokyo Olympics but didn’t go; Ryuzo was selected as traveling reserve with his other ride, Feroza Niewmoed, stepping up in the final phase as a substitute. But he’s here now, and ready to do it for Japan in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ryuzo’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Cekatinka was 8th individually at Tryon WC 2018 with fellow Paris Olympian Tim Price.

Dressage 📈 This pair are capable of going sub-30 in the first phase, but they’re more likely to drop in somewhere in the low-30s. They scored 32.2 at the World Championships in Pratoni and 31.5 in their most recent run prior to Paris, the 4*-L in Ballindenisk, where they finished second.

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Score for Ryuzo Kitajima and Cekatinka – 34.5.

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🇮🇹 Emiliano Portale and Future

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Emiliano’s making his championships debut and what a competition to get your first Senior call-up at. This pairing is relatively new, with Emiliano taking on the ride last season. They’ve had their fair share of success since getting together though, so it’ll be interesting to see their performance in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Emiliano has been a selector for the Italian pony team.

Dressage 📈 They’re proving to be a low- to mid-30s kind of pair, with a 33.3 in the European Championships last season and, more recently, a 31.7 in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in Montelibretti this spring, where they finished fifth.

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Emiliano Portale and Future – EL.

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🇳🇱 Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Janneke’s back at the Olympics for another go, this time as part of the Dutch team after competing as an individual in Tokyo. This pair didn’t have the happiest of times on their Olympic debut, after being eliminated for a technical refusal on the cross country, but they’re here to put all that right this time around à Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Janneke’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Ind.)

🔴 Janneke’s sporting philosophy is one we can all get behind: “Having fun together is one of the keys to success” 💪

Dressage 📈 They put down a score of 33 in the first phase at Tokyo and a 32.5 at the European Championships last season, but have a smattering of sub-30 scores scattered through their record also, notably in their most recent run, where they posted a 27.8.

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Janneke’s ride was feeling the Olympic spirit:

“Phwoop, go!”

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She seemed to have a great time in the Olympic ring:

“I really enjoyed it. He was focused and relaxed. When I’m working him I’m really also in a bubble myself — I’m really focused on the horse. He was going with me and that was was really nice. I came in and I really felt, okay, he was with me, and I made a turn to the medium trot and he was like, ‘Phwoop, go!’ And I was like, ‘Okay, I don’t have to give that much leg. Wow.’

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Score for Janneke Boonzaaijer and Champ de Tailleur – 31.9.

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🇫🇷 Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Karim’s known for being quite the character on the European eventing circuit and I have it on good authority from EN’s roving reporter, Tilly Berendt, that he’s deserving of a gold medal for being the friendliest person in the sport. He’s got tons of championships experience and was part of the bronze medal success for France at Tokyo with his Paris mount, Triton Fontaine.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karim’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Karim was honored with the title Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur after being part of the French team which won gold in Rio.

Dressage 📈 This pair scored 31.4 at Pau 5* on their way to second place, a relevant result in terms of what they’ll face at the Olympics. The dressage test is 5* level but shorter than a usual 5*. In Tokyo the put down a 32.4 in the first phase. They can sneak sub-30 at 4*, as they did in the 4*-S Nations Cup at Montelibretti last season on their way to third place.

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Karim is, shall we say, one of the more advanced in years athletes at the Olympics. We really do have a cool sport, with long careers for both the horses and the riders:

“When I’m in the Olympic village, they think I’m the physiotherapist — everyone else who’s there is so young and I’m like the old man walking around; they don’t think I’m an athlete!”

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Safe to say, we’re all looking forward to hearing the home crowd cheer their riders ‘round the course tomorrow. Karim talked a little about the atmosphere for the French athletes in Paris:

“We’re loving the crowd, and I’m loving being here as well — talking to everyone, being in the whole atmosphere. It’s going to be the same when we go into the jumping — I’ll hear the crowd and they’ll all be wild. We have to get our heads into this, but once we start, we’ll be fine. [Translated]”

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He had a ‘Mary King’ moment when he rode into the arena, apparently:

“It’s probably like the English — in London, how they felt — but when I went in, I felt like Mary King saying to the crowd, ‘Everyone settle down, everyone be quiet.”

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Score for Karim Laghouag and Triton Fontaine – 29.6.

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🇧🇪 Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s fair to say that Karin has been a valuable representative of Belgium over the years, with six Olympic and eight World Championship appearances. All in a day’s work, hey Karin?! She’s here with the only stallion in the field, who was fourth in the Young Horse Championships as a seven-year-old. He’s got championships experience via the Europeans in 2021, and has been a regular on the Nations Cup circuit.

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.)

🔴 Karin was named the 2021 Sportswoman of the Year in Hoogstraten, Belgium.

Dressage 📈 This pair tend to hover around the 30 mark, with an almost 50:50 just over, just under rate. In their last run, the 4*-S in Luhmühlen, they put down a 32.2 in the first phase; in their run before that, the 4*-S in Kronenberg, it was a 29.6. Their best score at 4* is 26.7; that came in 2022. Their highest 4* score is a 35.7 in 2021.

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Tilly and Sally caught up with six-time Olympian Karin after her superb test:

“Of course, we have two more days to go! I have experience with riding Olympics — that helps! You get a bit more mature, you get a bit older, you know what they expect from you, and you know how the crowd is going to be.”

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Karin explained how going eventing with a stallion is different from a mare or gelding:

You have to respect the stallions the way they are — that’s what I have learned from them. It’s not the first time that I’ve ridden a stallion. I never had the choice to choose what I got to ride; I grew up on a farm where I started [riding] as a kid, so I’ve learned throughout my life to get the best out of the horse that you have.. You have to respect [stallions] more and really accept how they are. If you have a good trusting relationship with them, then you have to believe that they will fight for you. I find it a bit different than the mares or the geldings — the geldings are a bit more easy going, the mares are a bit more of the fighters. The stallions are a bit different. My stallion was sleeping yesterday in his stall.

The plan is to breed with him, and I have two very nice foals from him — one I hope to qualify for Le Lion d’Angers, she’s six years old. I’m very excited for him also as a future stallion for eventing horses.”

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Score for Karin Donckers and Liepheimer Van’t Verahof – 26.6.

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INDIVIDUAL RIDERS

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🇪🇸 Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Carlos may be making his Olympic debut in Paris, but he’s got plenty of championship experience under his belt, with three World and four European Championships on his card. He’s taking to the Olympic stage with his 2022 World Championships ride, eleven-year-old ‘Taraje’.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Carlos’ championships experience:

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

🔴 Carlos had a scary time at the European Championships in 2013 when a dog chased him round the cross country course for a whole minute. Puppers on leashes, please! 🐶

Dressage 📈 This pair put down a 30.5 in their most recent run, the 4*-S Nations Cup event at Montelibretti, where they finished third. They went sub-30 at the same venue in the fall, scoring 29.8 in the 4*-L and placing sixth. At the World Championships in Pratoni they scored a 32.5.

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Carlos had a dream come true in the Olympic ring this morning. [Quote translated by H&H]:

“Before I went into the test, I dreamed of getting below 30, but my Chef told me I’d get a 27, so I’m very happy with 29.”

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Score for Carlos Diaz Fernandez and Taraje CP 21.10 – 30.2.

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🇭🇺 Balász Kaizinger and Herr Cooles Classico

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Balász comes to Paris with a World Championships completion in his locker, which came courtesy of his other ride, Clover. He’s piloted Herr Cooles Classico since 2022, stepping the gelding up to 4* last season. He’s here as Hungary’s first eventing representative since 1996.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Balász’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Balász is pronounced ‘Balash’, in case you were wondering.

Dressage 📈 Safe to say, this pair are not here to win the dressage. They’d probably rather we just scrapped the first phase altogether and get straight down to the nitty gritty of things. But alas, dressage we must in order to earn the right to ride cross country. They put down a 48.9 in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen last month and a 43.5 in the 4*-S at Sopot in May. Since stepping up to 4*, their best score is 41.1 and their highest is 50.5.

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Score for Balász Kaizinger and Herr Cooles Classico – 45.8.

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🇨🇿 Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke

Photo by Sally Spickard.

Miroslav and Shutterflyke are back at the Games after contesting Tokyo three years ago. They’ve gained World Championship experience since then, with an appearance representing the Czech Republic in Pratoni.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Miroslav’s championships experience:

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

🔴 As well as being an Olympic eventer, Miroslav is a veterinarian, taking care of top-level horses and working at the race track.

Dressage 📈 This pair aren’t here to win the dressage, Shutterflyke is an out-and-out cross country girl at heart. At Tokyo they put down a 46.1 in the first phase and at the World Championships in Pratoni a 43.2. They do have scores in the 30s at 4*, but they’re high-30s.

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Score for Miroslav Trunda and Shutterflyke – 53.

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🇨🇳 Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’t Moerven Z

Huadong comes to Paris with his Tokyo horse, with whom he was fourth at the Asian Games in Hangzhou last year.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Huadong’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)

🔴 This combination won team gold at the Hangzhou Asian Games last season, the first time the People’s Republic of China have taken the title.

Dressage 📈 They put down a 35.2 in the first phase at Tokyo but there have been a few competitions since then where they’ve had their hooves in the 20s, notably at their most recent FEI run, the 4*-S Nations Cup leg in Strzegom, where they posted a 29.9. It was a 37 at their run before that though, so it’s safe to say that we don’t really know where this pair are going to land.

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Tilly and Sally caught up with Huadong Sun after his test:

“I am really happy. Last year with my horse, I won the Asian Games, so I was really happy last year. This year, we will try to do better. Today, there was a lot of noise and a lot of people. My horse always gets excited with the noise. I try to focus myself on my test and then try to help my horse to focus with me.”

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Score for Huadong Sun and Lady Chin V’t Moerven Z – 33.6.

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🇪🇨 Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske

Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Wundermaske sure is true to his prefix – he’s 21-years-young and contesting his first Olympic Games. Ronald is a pretty amazing guy, and not just because he clearly has a program at home which has allowed for this veteran horse to stay in peak performance into his twenties. He taught himself to ride as a little kid, jumping over a fallen log to practice his cross country skills. He has confirmed that he is totally horse crazy.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Ronald’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Ronald was the first rider to represent Ecuador at the Olympics when he made it to London 2012.

Dressage 📈 So far this season, this pair have put down dressage scores of between 37.4 and 49. Last season they were regularly mid- to high-30s.

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Ronald’s horse, Forever Young Wundermaske, is true to his name:

“This guy is 21 and he’s flying.”

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Ronald pays tribute to his awesome, history making, campaigner:

“He is the oldest horse in the world to ever compete at the Olympic Games. He is 21 — the next oldest horse in eventing was 19 years old, with Caroline Powell, and then a show jumper in 1972. There was a dressage horse that was 20-years-old in the last Olympics, but they didn’t start — so the oldest in eventing has been 19, and this guy is 21 and he’s flying. He never gets tired, never gets sick, and never had an injury in his life.”

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Score for Ronald Zabala Goetschel and Forever Young Wundermaske – 37.7.

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🇫🇮 Veera Manninen and Sir Greg

Amazingly, Sir Greg partnered Veera at the European Young Rider Championships in 2021 and now here they are at the Olympics. We can all agree that’s pretty awesome.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 At 24, Veera’s certainly at the younger end of the scale when it comes to Olympic eventers.

Dressage 📈 This pair are consistently mid-30s in the first phase, posting two scores of 34 and a 36.3 this season.

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Score for Veera Manninen and Sir Greg – 36.8.

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🇩🇰 Peter T. Flarup and Fascination

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Hugely experienced Danish eventer Peter Flarup is in Paris with his Tokyo ride. This is Peter’s third Games, and he’s got the experience of four World Championships under his belt too, so he knew what he was getting into when he decided to step down as the head trainer for the national eventing team to focus on getting to Paris.

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)

🔴 This pair have been going arena eventing together over the winter – every little helps when you’re on the road to Paris.

Dressage 📈 This pairing scored 33.7 in the first phase at Tokyo, which has been their form there-or-thereabouts this season. They went sub-30 in he 4*-S at Maarsbergen last season, a personal best at the level, and contributing to them taking the win. But generally we’re looking at 32 or 33, they’re pretty consistent overall.

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Peter’s wife is along for the Olympic ride in her role as groom for Fascination:

“It’s really good — we are in it together, the whole family. We have been doing this for 25 years, so I know everything in the stable is tip top.”

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Peter also talked about the relationship he has with his horse:

“We have had him since he was five. I know him really, really well and that is actually what makes him this good now. We don’t have to train him hard or anything like that, we just have to keep him happy. I know him, and he knows me.”

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Score for Peter T. Flarup and Fascination – 32.4.

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🇪🇸 Esteban Benitez Valle and Utrera AA 35 1

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Esteban is making his Olympic debut, but he’s got World and European Championships caps in his locker. Spain were really hoping to have a team in Paris, and fought hard for it, but unfortunately it wasn’t to be and they bagged two individual slots instead.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Esteban’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Esteban was selector for the Spanish University team and was president of the Spanish University Riders Association.

Dressage 📈 Recently, this pair have been producing tests in the low- to mid-30s. They scored 33.8 in the 4*-S Nations Cup event at Montelibretti in their most recent run this year, where they finished fourth, and a 31 in the 4*-S in Strzegom at the end of last season, where they were also fourth.

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Esteban is a little disappointed with his mark, but is super happy with his mare:

“I have been so long waiting to be here, and to be honest, today she was nervous. It is the first time she’s performed in this kind of arena. She was nervous and I was trying to manage it as good as possible. The flying changes, normally she does very good, and today, I think she only did one good — but I’m very happy with her. She deserves a better mark, but it doesn’t matter — we need experience in this kind of big atmosphere.”

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Score for Esteban Benitez Valle and Utrera AA 35 1 – 39.9.

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SECOND TEAM ROTATION

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🇩🇪 Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This pair know what it’s like to win a team gold medal at a major championships, and I’m pretty sure they’d like another one. They’ve got a ton of experience together, with 48 FEI competitions under their cinch, despite Christoph’s relatively young age. They’re here in hot form, off the back of a win, which must be a very nice confidence boost right before an Olympic Games.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Christoph’s championships experience:

🗺️ Team 🥇 Pratoni 2022

🔴 In 2020, Christoph took over the management of his family’s breeding operation, founded by his grandfather and known to have bred some of the world’s best Trakehners.

Dressage 📈 Across this season and last, this pair only have one dressage score in the 30s on their record. They’ve been super consistent so far this year, with three FEI runs and 28, 28.7 and 28 in the first phase in each of them. They were all 4*-S competitions; at the World Championships in Pratoni in 2022 they scored a 32.8, and at Badminton the same year they put down a 32.5. So high-20s to low-30s is where we’re looking, probably towards the higher end given that the Olympic test is 5* level, albeit a bit shorter than we’re used to seeing at Kentucky, Badminton and the like.

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Christoph is living the dream on his Olympic debut:

“It’s very, very cool. I’ve been dreaming — I think my whole team, we’ve all been dreaming about this for a while now, and going into the village, seeing all the other athletes last night, being part of all this is a dream come true.”

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There was a little wobble in there but it all came good in the end:

“Coming into the arena, he felt seriously good; I had the feeling he was absolutely with me. He was waiting for me to tell him what to do through the first part of the trot work, also the halt and the rein back. I had the feeling that everything was going to plan, as if finally, everything’s coming together. Then he started off very well in the walk; in the extended walk, I had the feeling he was totally relaxed — then just with that little turn to the to the medium walk, I sort of lost his attention for a couple of seconds, and then he just wanted to go to cross country mode. But then, bless him, once I was striding into cancer, he came back and he let me ride him as if nothing happened — he was totally with me again.”

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Carjatan thinks he did a mighty fine job at the Olympics:

“He left the arena absolutely pleased with himself. So am I!”

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Score for Christoph Wahler and Carjatan S – 29.4.

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🇦🇺 Kevin McNab and Don Quidam

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Kevin brings his Tokyo Olympics and Pratoni World Championships horse to Paris. He knows just how it feels to board the plane home from a Games with a medal ‘round his neck, having won team silver in Tokyo, and he’ll be gunning to improve on his 14th place individually from three years ago. They wowed with a 25.7 in Pratoni, but it was closer to their norm in Tokyo at 32.1. How will they fare à Paris?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kevin’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥈 Tokyo 2020; 14th individually
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Kevin was initially named as reserve for Tokyo, but was drafted in at the last minute when Stuart Tinney’s horse was injured. He came home with a silver medal.

Dressage 📈 At the World Championships in Pratoni, this pair put down a 25.7 in the first phase, his third best score of his career. At Tokyo it was a 32.1. More recently, he’s had a bit of a mixed bag of results, going just about sub-30 at the Nations Cup 4*-S in Strzegom but scoring 38.3 in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen, his highest score since 2018. He was pretty consistent in his first two runs of the season, with a 33.5 and a 33.9 respectively.

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Kevin sums up his time in the Olympic ring:

“It was a lot of fun. It would have been even more fun without the mistakes.”

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He elaborates on what went down:

“Some of the stuff we did was fantastic, but I had a few costly mistakes, and unfortunately in a test like this one, you really need a clear round because costly mistakes will pull your score down quite quickly. [Don Quidam] actually was really good. He had a little bit more energy probably than was ideal for him, he just slipped a little bit with the atmosphere. He was actually super to ride in there; he felt really springy off the surface.”

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Score for Kevin McNab and Don Quidam – 34.9.

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🇨🇦 Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo

Part of the gold medal winning team at the Pan-Ams in Santiago, where they took individual 4th place, Karl and Hot Bobo are here to try and make their mark on Paris. Hot Bobo’s in hot form 🌶️ coming to the Games off the back of a win in the 4*-S at Bromont a few weeks ago, where she put down a personal best dressage score – what a time to do it. No doubt Karl’s here full of confidence with this gutsy mare.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Karl’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Hot Bobo became a mom this year via embryo transfer. What do you call a Hot Bobo baby? Hot Tamale of course.

Dressage 📈 Hot Bobo pulled out a PB in her most recent run, the 4*-S at Bromont on her way to the win. It was a 27.6 that day for her and Karl, and a second sub-30 score since stepping up to 4*, the other one coming in the 4*-S at Kentucky last season, which they won. They put down a 32.7 at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last year, on their way to team gold and fourth place individually. They are very consistently low-30s, with a couple of welcome anomalies in their form.

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Karl often refers to Hot Bobo as ‘the bestest mare’:

“She was such a good girl.”

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Karl filled us in on his test:

“We all know that she can get a bit spooky in the dressage ring, and I thought that she held it together really, really well. Just a little tension in the flying changes, and specifically the left lead to right lead. There’s just one thing after another [in the test]; it takes a lot of focus on the horse’s part to stay confident in it. That left lead to right lead change has always a bit of our nemesis, so we were hoping for the best today but it wan’t quite there.”

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Karl was particularly complimentary about the Olympic venue:

“[Versailles] is breathtaking. It’s such a beautiful venue — they’ve thought of everything. They have all the amenities that we need to make it the best experience possible for us.”

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Score for Karl Sleazak and Hot Bobo – 35.8.

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🇮🇪 Susie Berry and Wellfields Lincoln

Hoping for the luck of the Irish, Susie’s making her Olympic debut with ‘Slinky’. They come to Paris on good form, having finished top-10 in two out of their three FEI runs this season. She may have had her first call-up for the Games this time around, but she’s got World and European Championships experience under her belt with other horses in her string. Slinky may be one of Susie’s less-experienced campaigners, but thus far in his career he’s looking to be sound in all three phases, which has got to have Susie feeling good as she takes on Paris, and beyond.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Susie’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Susie relocated from Ireland to England in 2014 when she went to work for one of her eventing idols, Piggy March (you guessed it, her other hero is Pippa Funnell). She set up her own yard in 2020.

Dressage 📈 They posted a career-best dressage score this season when they went sub-30 in the 4*-L at Kronenberg on their way to third place – what a time to pull that out of the bag. They’ve been between 28.7 and 34.2 so far this year, with low-30s tending to be their norm.

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Susie’s having a grand ol’ Olympics time:

“I’ve had messages from people I went to school with, not heard from for 10 years! The Olympics is just a totally different ballgame, and an incredible experience to be a part of.”

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Wellfields Lincoln knows there’s something a little different about this show:

“It’s just a surreal experience. I was thrilled with him. He is quite a spooky horse, so he really felt quite alert today. Even from this morning, it was like he knew that it was something different; he really tried to keep it together. I thought his trot work felt peaceful, it was just when I picked up the canter that he felt a little bit tense through his back, and so we just lost a few moves that usually I’d find that he’d do really naturally and easily — but it’s his first time to be in an atmosphere like that.”

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Susie explains what it’s like to ride in the Olympic ring:

“They cheer before you start, and I was just halting at the end and they were cheering. The grandstands are so tall and the horses feel really like they’re looking up at the very top all the time. It is an incredible arena.”

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Score for Susie Berry and Wellfields Lincoln – 33.

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🇨🇭 Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Don’t be fooled by Robin’s young age into thinking that he’s inexperienced, because, despite being just 26, he’s already been Swiss national champion six times. He comes to Paris for his second Olympics and brings his two-time World and three-time European Championships horse.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Robin’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Robin and ‘Grandeur’ have been together since Robin was 17.

Dressage 📈 This pair posted a 26.8 in the first phase at the World Championships in Pratoni, very close to their personal best of 26. So they know when to pull the good stuff out of the bag. It didn’t quite happen for them at the Europeans last season, where they scored 33. So, dressage scores tend to swing from the mid-20s to the low-30s but there are definitely more sub-30 scores on their record than anything higher.

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Robin talked to Sally and Tilly after his test:

“I’m very pleased, he was super good. He can be a bit spooky and looking around — we saw that before the center line because he was looking, but then inside [the ring], he was more with me. Still a bit tense, but I’m very happy with how he was today. My goal was to be under 30; we can always do better, but I’m still very happy with it.”

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Score for Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH – 29.1.

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🇺🇸 Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Liz Halliday had the final, final hour call-up to the team from the traveling reserve spot, after the late withdrawal of Will Coleman’s second ride (his first had already been withdrawn). Liz is a fearless competitor who’s sure to relish the chance to compete with the US team at the Olympics, particularly after being part of the silver medal winning team at the Pan-Ams in Santiago.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Liz’s horse, Nutcracker, will be more commonly known to eventing fans as having the Cooley prefix, but due to the commercial laws at the Olympics it’s had to be dropped, so Nutcracker it is.

Dressage 📈 Since stepping up to 4*, Nutcracker has produced seven sub-30 dressage tests, going as low as 22.6 for a PB last season. He put down a 30.6 on his 5* debut at Kentucky, where he was eighth.

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Liz on her Olympic horse, ‘Bali’ as he’s known to hid friends:

“He’s just become the most wonderful horse. We have a good partnership and I just think the world of him. I believe in him.”

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Liz elaborated on how she works on the first phase with Bali in order to produce lovely tests like the one today:

“I’m absolutely thrilled with how my young horse performed in there. He was spectacular. I think he’s actually really taken a big leap forward in just the last two weeks in some of his work; I’ve sort of changed around some things, just tried to make him more relaxed and just really let it flow, and I think that’s helped. He still needs a little bit of work on the changes, of course, but they are breathing and this is a difficult test for a 10-year-old horse. I’m thrilled with him.

Recently, I’ve just been practicing the movements, especially in the canter work, so he wasn’t surprised. I think I wanted him thinking, ‘Oh yes, I’m gonna half-pass, change, half pass again; just getting him really comfortable with how things went. I have practiced a lot with poles on the ground to keep him straight, because when he’s nervous, he jumps sideways a little — I think those are helping the changes — just trying to do whatever I can to help him learn to do [the changes] in a relaxed, happy way. It’s improving and I’m pleased that he’s getting the clean change every time, but that would be a little bit where he gets slightly nervous and is feeling the atmosphere a little bit. It’s a work in progress — it will be there.

He’s very, very sharp and sensitive and he’s desperate to do the right thing all the time, and sometimes that adds tension in his back. So that’s what we worked so hard on — I worked on that in the warm up, just having him go in and saying, ‘We’re cool, buddy!’ I think we’re heading the right way.”

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Score for Elisabeth Halliday and Nutcracker – 28.

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🇵🇱 Jan Kaminski and Jard

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s been a bit of a late call-up for Jan and long-time campaigner, Jard, with the confirmation coming just two days before the first horse inspection. But Jan’s got Olympic and World Championship experience in his locker and has been a stalwart representative for Poland on the Nations Cup circuit, so he’s not exactly coming in without knowing what’s what. Also, now he gets to really share the whole Olympic thang with his fiance, fellow teammate Malgorzata ☝️

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jan’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2010 (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Jan’s fiance is also part of the Poland team in Paris.

Dressage 📈 They put down a 33.1 in the first phase at Tokyo, and a 31.1 at the World Championships in Pratoni. They’ve been a bit higher thus far this season, with dressage scores ranging from 33.1 to 38.3.

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Score for Jan Kaminski and Jard – 35.8

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🇸🇪 Frida Andersén and Box Leo

Photo by Shelby Allen.

Frida’s in Paris for her second Olympic call-up for the Swedish team, but she’s looking for her first completion after withdrawing before the final horse inspection at Rio. She’s bringing forward former Ludwig Svennnestal ride, Box Leo, her European Championships partner.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Frida’s championships experience:

🔥 Rio (Team)
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Box Leo shares a sire with Irish Maryland winner and fellow Paris competitor, Colorado Blue.

Dressage 📈 They’re generally a low-30s kind of pair, but every so often a high-30s score slips onto their card. They scored 33.3 in the first phase at the European Championships last season but it was a 38.1 for them in their most recent run, the 4*-S at Luhmühlen. It was a 34.5 at the World Championships in Pratoni, where they finished top-20 individually.

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Score for Frida Andersén and Box Leo – 33.3.

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🇬🇧 Laura Collett and London 52

Part of the reigning gold medal winning team, Laura and London 52 are the only Tokyo combination in Paris. Laura has long heralded this horse as an absolute superstar and he’s totally proved himself over and over again. He’s won three different 5*s, for a start, and comes here in hot form off the back of two wins this season, but really, London 52’s always in hot form. In 40 FEI competitions he’s won 11 times and been runner-up six times. He’s been top-5 in more than half the events he’s done. Seriously 🌶️

Form, Facts & Stats:

Laura’s championships experience:

🔥 Team 🥇 Tokyo 2020
🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Team)

🔴 Laura has a hattrick of 5* wins in her locker – Badminton, Luhmühlen and Pau – all with London 52. She also has an MBE, awarded to her by England’s late Queen Elizabeth.

Dressage 📈 We’re definitely not going to count sub-30 scores for this one as we’d be here all day. We can however count sub-20 scores, of which there are three. That’s right, this guy is one to watch in the dressage ring, that’s for sure. He put down a 22.4 in the first phase at the European Championships last season, and has finished on his dressage at two 5*s and very nearly finished on it at a third, all of which he won; it was a 20.3 at Luhmühlen last year, a 21 at Badminton in 2022, and a 21.3 at Pau in 2020. A 19.3 at the World Championships was the stuff of dreams, until things went awry out on the cross country course. At Tokyo, they scored a more modest 25.8 on the way to team gold. Eyes on this one 👀

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Laura sums up what it takes to get a horse to the Olympics:

“It takes years and years of hard work.”

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She talked about the exceptional London 52, who, like a lot of the top horses, hasn’t always been easy. This horse thing truly is a journey:

“He’s a horse that’s actually very shy. In 2019, we had a roller coaster year, and at the end of the year, he won a four-star long and went into a prize giving, and that for me was the turning point. He really believed in himself; he had full trust in me, and I can feel it on top of him. He doesn’t like umbrellas and things like that, so it’s about reassuring him every step of the way and making him believe, because then you can go and do a performance like he did there.

You never really think you’re going to do it, but everything’s been gearing towards this. It’s been three years in the making, since the moment we stood on the podium in Tokyo. We thought there he’s still young enough to aim for Paris, and I’ve been very lucky that everything’s gone to plan in the lead up. He’s just a horse that, luckily, gets better and better with age.”

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Score for Laura Collett and London 52 – 17.5

OLYMPIC RECORD ALERT!!!

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🇧🇷 Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington

This combination are a recent pairing, only having been together since June last year, but they do have championships experience under their cinch courtesy of the Pan-Ams in Santiago, where they took home the team bronze. Rafael’s no stranger to the big time though, having competed at Tokyo when he was just 24 years old, so he’s well placed to show Withington the Olympic ropes.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Rafael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team)

🔴 Rafael is only 27, but he’s got almost a century of FEI starts under his belt.

Dressage 📈 They put down a 36.1 in the dressage at the Pan-Ams in Santiago last season, where they finished 9th individually and won team bronze. They put down a PB at 4* in their most recent FEI run – a 30.9 in the 4*-S at Marbach, but generally we’re looking at mid-30s for this pair.

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Sally caught up with Rafael after his ride:

“We worked so hard. He’s still a fairly new ride for me, we only purchased this horse twelve months ago. I’m delighted with him. He takes a lot of time and a lot of work, but he literally pulled it out of the bag last minute.”

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Score for Rafael Mamprim Losano and Withington – 32.4.

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🇳🇿 Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Clarke and Menlo Park (oh, cool, their names rhyme!) have been together since 2021 but have quickly forged a partnership in that relatively short time, finishing in the top-15 in all but two of their thirteen FEI starts and winning a team bronze medal at the World Championships in Pratoni.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Clarke’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Clarke was named New Zealand Eventer of the Year in 2013 Horse of the Year Show.

Dressage 📈 This pair are well capable of a sub-30 score in the first phase, as they proved at the World Championships in Pratoni when they posted a 27.4. This season they’ve had two scores in the high-20s and a 30.8.

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Clarke was, quite rightly, delighted with Menlo Park:

“He’s been training so well. He’s so with me, he feels amazing in his body, he’s fit but calm, and I’ve been thinking he could do a test like that — to actually do it, I’m just so, so proud of him.”

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He decided to stick with the plan, and it really paid off:

“He’s been to the World Championships, but that was nothing like this, and I guess Aachen, but no, nothing like this. I bravely decided not to pre-ride him this morning, because that’s normally what I would do to get the best out of him — he’s really solid, he always walks — and after I watched the first few go, I thought, ‘Well, that looks very electric in there. Maybe I should pre-ride it’. We decided to stick with what we’ve been doing, which has been steadily getting the scores lower and lower over the last couple of years. He was just so with me. He did have a little look at the gate stewards when I was about to go into the ring, and I thought, ‘Don’t let me down, Jacko.’ He pulled it back, and he was just a delight to right in there, really on the aids, and just giving me everything.”

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Score for Clarke Johnstone and Menlo Park – 25.7.

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🇯🇵 Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street

Yoshiaki is one of Japan’s most experienced eventers, having represented his nation at, now, five Olympics and four World Championships, as well as the Asian Games, which he’s won twice, in 2018 and 2006. Here’s some interesting Olympic eventing trivia: Yoshi was in the lead after the dressage in London.

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

🔴 When he’s not going eventing, Yoshi loves listening to music and fishing.

Dressage 📈 This gelding proved he’s a bright spark in the dressage ring with former rider Pippa Funnell, and three out of four sub-30 dressage scores this season with new rider Yoshi have shown that he’s very reliable in the first phase.

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Understatement from Yoshiaki:

“… kind of a legend, Pippa Funnell.”

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He’s talking about having taken over the reins on ‘Squirrel’ from Pippa Funnell. He’s moved to be based with Pippa, who’s now coaching him, which has meant that the horse’s routine has stayed the same despite a change in rider. He talked to Sally about his test:

“He knew that today, it was the time, you have to show something, so I’m very happy with this. It’s very new partnership, actually. My first competition with him was this year — February or March — so only a few months. It was challenging for us, but it went well, so I’m very, very pleased.”

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Score for Yoshiaki Oiwa and MGH Grafton Street – 25.5.

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🇮🇹 Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Evelina brings her Pratoni World Championships horse to Paris with some pretty solid dressage form recently that’s sure to have her feeling good about heading up the center line on her Olympic debut. Sub-30’s not outside this pair’s reach on their day – is today one of those days?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Evelina’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Evalina’s no one-trick pony – she’s also competed in modern pentathlon and was Italian Junior Champion in 2004 and 2005.

Dressage 📈 They went sub-30 at the World Championships in Pratoni where they put down a 29.8 in the first phase, and have scored a 29.9 at 4* this season. They’re incredibly consistent in terms of dressage scores, with their form hovering around the 30-mark.

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Evelina loved it in there:

“I am very pleased. The horse is very talented — she moves well, she can really do everything well — but the atmosphere for her could be a very serious problem. Today, it was okay — I worked her two times, this was the third time — and she was really focused. I loved riding this test because sometimes it’s very difficult to enter in the arena and the horse doesn’t listen to you, but today it was a really good feeling. I could ride my test normally, easily, and take the points, and that was really amazing.”

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Score for Evelina Bertoli and Fidjy des Melezes – 26.6.

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🇳🇱 Sanne de Jong and Enjoy

Sanne’s here with her homebred mare, who she started herself and with who she’s forged her eventing career. They’ve represented the Netherlands together at Nations Cups, European and World Championships and now Sanne’s at the Olympics with the horse she’s know since she was fifteen.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sanne’s championships experience:

🗺️ Pratoni 2022 (Ind.)

🔴 Sanne’s from a sporting family – her mom competed in international eventing, her dad designed cross country courses, and her brother has represented the Netherlands in handball.

Dressage 📈 This combination scored 33.4 in the first phase at the World Championships in Pratoni, and 33.9 at the Europeans last season. They’ve very consistently low-ish-30s (EquiRatings will be sweating at my descriptions), although every now and then they’ll throw up an anomaly – a high-30s, maybe a hoof in the 40s, or even a sub-30 score. They like to keep us on our toes, clearly.

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Score for Sanne de Jong and Enjoy – 34.8.

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🇫🇷 Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s a dream come true in the most poignant way for this pairing. Stéphane rides the gelding in honor of his friend, and former rider, Thaïs Meheust, who tragically lost her life in a cross country fall. It was Thaïs’ dream to compete at her home Olympics, and Stéphane is making that a reality as he comes up the center line today with Thaïs in his heart and the horse she loved as his partner.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Chaman Dumontceau’s name is usually styled with a ‘Ride for Thaïs’ prefix.

Dressage 📈 This gelding can pull some very smart scores out of the bag – a 22.8 in the 4*-S Nations Cup leg at Chatsworth last season (which he won). Hello. That was a PB by a fair stretch, but sub-30 is not a place that this guy’s a stranger to, although he can just have a hoof in the 30s. At last year’s 4*-L European Championships he put down a 31.8 in the first phase, on his way to sixth place. This season he’s had a 28.6 and a 33.3.

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It’s an emotional Olympic debut for Stéphane:

“There’s a lot of emotion in this place, so coming here has been really quite special — all of us are feeling it.”

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He spoke about his test with Caman Dumontceau:

“I am very, very happy with my ride … There’s really an emotion that we’re all feeling as we come into the arena. I was really emotional, but really proud that there’s a crowd out there that really appreciate the sport and appreciate everybody that comes in.

I watched Karim [Laghouag] and saw his score, but I actually didn’t watch anybody else or be aware of them because I was totally concentrating on my performance. I didn’t worry about the others, we just went in there and did our thing.”

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Score for Stéphane Landois and Chaman Dumontceau – 24.4.

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🇧🇪 Tine Magnus and Dia van het Lichterveld Z

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tine’s making her Olympic debut in Paris, although she has contested a number of Nations Cup events under the Belgian flag. She was national champion in 2022 and, with the mare she rides in Paris, was third with the team in the Nations Cup leg at Boekelo last season, helping to bump Belgium to the top of the overall standings and win the whole dang thing.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 When she’s not going eventing, Tine works at her family farm in Belgium.

Dressage 📈 They scored 32.6 in the first phase on the way to winning the 4*-S in Strzegom this season, and came back out with a 32.5 in the 4*-L at Saumur. In the 4*-S at Luhmühlen, their latest FEI run, they put down a 35.2. And that tends to be the story across their record: mid-30s-ish (I can feel EquiRatings rolling their eyes).

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Tine had a fair bit to manage in the ring, which wasn’t helped by going straight after a French rider (the home crowd are loud!):

“She was really perfect in the in the warm-up — I had her better than ever — but then you have to trot quite a long trip to the arena. Before me was a French guy, and there was a lot of noise, so on the way to the arena I felt already that she was getting nervous. Then inside there, I had nothing — I was on a bomb, she could explode at every second. I tried to manage.”

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Score for Tine Magnus and Dia van het Lichterveld Z – 44.

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INDIVIDUAL RIDERS

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🇫🇮 Sanna Siltakorpi and Bofey CLIck

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This combination have been together for almost ten years, for sure a boon as they make their Olympic debut together. Sanna’s represented Finland at World and European Championships, so she at least knows a bit about the championships atmosphere as she heads up the center line in Paris.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Sanna’s championships experience:

🗺️ Caen 2014 (Ind.) – Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 Sanna’s friend helped to fundraise so that Finland could make it to Paris.

Dressage 📈 We’re looking at low- to mid-30s scores in the first phase at 4*, but the Olympic test is a bit of a step up, with 5* movements in a shortened form. They put down a 32.3 in the 4*-L in Romania last season, where they were runners-up, and a 35.6 in the 4*-S at Strzegom in April.

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Sanna’s ride, Bofey ClIck, is anticipating tomorrow:

“My horse had quite a lot of energy. I think I still managed him okay; I hoped that he would be more calm and quiet. I think he’s healthy and happy to go cross country tomorrow.”

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Score for Sanna Siltakorpi and Bofey CLIck – 35.4.

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🇿🇦 Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex has represented South Africa at both the Olympics and World Championships, back in 2012 and 2014 respectively, and is in Paris with relative youngster, nine-year-old Figaro de Premices, or ‘Norman’ as he’s known to his friends. They’ll be gaining a whole heap of valuable experience in Paris, with their sights on LA and beyond.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Alexander’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Alexander trained as a ballet dancer for 12 years and danced professionally for the National School of Arts in South Africa.

Dressage 📈 This pair are putting down scores in the mid-30s, with a hoof toward the high-30s and a toe in the 40s very occasionally, at this stage in their career together. They scored 34.8 in their most recent run in the 4*-L at Strzegom on their way to fifth place. They’ve also had a 34.9 and a 38.4 this season.

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Alex is really passionate about representing South Africa in eventing and talked about the potential of a future team:

“The pool of riders coming from South Africa is ever increasing; the talent is incredible. There’s probably about four Junior riders that I can name that I would like to be able to compete on the team.”

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He elaborated on the main problem that he sees for South African equestrians, and told us a little about his Paris ride, Figaro Des Premices:

“The pool of riders coming from South Africa is ever increasing; the talent is incredible. There’s probably about four Junior riders that I can name that I would like to be able to compete on the team. If they keep going, I wouldn’t be able to say no. I think there’s a lot South Africa can offer, but the problem is that South Africa has African Horse Sickness. We can’t export our horses — they’re working on it, and it’s improving.

It was a lot to take in, the atmosphere and everything like that, but [Figaro des Premices] has just got an amazing heart. He’s incredibly trainable and I think he’s got an incredible future ahead of him.”

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Score for Alexander Peternell and Figaro des Premices – 39.

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🇨🇳 Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Alex was determined to represent China at his home Games back in 2008, which he did. Three Olympics later and he’s in Paris with ‘Chocs’, or Jilsonne van Bareelhof if you want to be fancy about things. Alex has also represented China at three World Championships and three Asian Games, from which he has podium places at all three levels, most recently winning the individual title in Hangzhou last year.

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 was the first person to represent the People’s Republic of China in an Olympic equestrian event when he contested his home Games in 2008.

Dressage 📈 In 19 FEI competitions, this combination have posted just three scores in the 30s, that’s right, we’re looking at a solid sub-30 pairing. The put down a 23.8 in their most recent event, the 4*-S at Bramham, which is one heck of a time to pull out your best score at the level. More commonly they’re mid- to high-20s.

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Jilsonne Van Bareelhof is right at home at the Palace of Versailles:

“He was always going to trot in there and think, ‘Oh, I found a venue of similar majesty to myself.'”

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He told us more about this very cool-sounding guy:

“Chocs is the most talented horse I’ve ever sat on in my life.”

“He’s very extravagant, and he knows it, and he’s very arrogant; he loves the attention. That was either going to go this way, which thankfully it did, or it was going to go the other way, and he was going to get get over the top about it … He’s a horse that I always liken to a human athlete that’s at Olympic level — weightlifting, marathon running, and gymnastics — one body cannot have that much talent and that much range. There are other very talented horses that have been more consistent, more successful than him over years, but if you look at him in each phase, he just goes extra — and I think because of that, through his career he has picked up little bits and pieces on his way to big events, and so he’s quite often not made it. Last year, he was our first choice for the Asian Games, but picked up a little injury in the month beforehand, and that would be his his story. For me, this has always been his goal and his target.”

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“We’ve saved him for seven years to come here, and tomorrow we unleash the beast and see what happens.”

Bring it on!

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Score for Alex Hua Tian and Jilsonne van Bareelhof – 22.

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🇵🇹 Manuel Grave and Carat de Bremoy

Manuel is the first Portuguese event rider at the Olympics since his dad rode in Athens in 2004, and, his dad’s firmly by his son’s side in Paris, imparting all his Olympic experience as coach. He comes into the Games off the back of two third place finishes, on long- one short-format, which should have him feeling pretty confident as he makes his Olympic debut.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Manuel’s championships experience:

🗺️ Lexington 2010 (Ind.)

🔴 In real life, Manuel is a manager at an agricultural company.

Dressage 📈 Really, we’re looking at high-30s in the first phase for this pair, although they did put down a 4* PB of 34.6 in the spring.

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How does it feel to be the first representative in Olympic eventing for your country in two decades?

“… pride and honor to bring our sport to the Olympics, after 20 years of no one coming here. It’s a great honor. Of course, it comes with some pressure because at home we have a lot of people watching and I want to do the best for my country, and I’m going to try to do the best I can.”

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Score for Manuel Grave and Carat de Bremoy – 40.9.

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🇲🇦 Noor Slaoui and Cash In Hand

Noor is making her Olympic debut in Paris, but she’s making history at the same time. She’s the first rider from North Africa to compete in eventing at the Olympics, the first Arab woman to compete in eventing at the Olympics, and the first ever Moroccan international eventer. What a cool, inspirational story, and exactly what the Games are all about.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Noor has worked with Australian eventing stalwart Bill Levett.

Dressage 📈 This combination’s best dressage score at 4* is a 33, and their highest is 40.6. The 33 came in the 4*-S at Kilguilkey House in Ireland last season, where they finished tenth. Their most recent run was in the 4*-S Nations Cup event in Avenches, where they put down a 39.8 in the first phase.

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Noor tells it as it is:

“First phase down, two to go!”

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Noor explains what it’s like making her, historic, Olympic debut with her heart horse:

“At the end [of my test] there, I got very emotional. I had the little tears because I’ve been — like any athlete that’s here — we’ve been dreaming of it.

We’ve been working super hard to get here, so having it happen is just a big achievement in itself. I think we gave our all and I’m very, very happy with him and with how we have progressed over the years and what we’ve delivered today. Of course, there’s a lot of room for improvement, but I think it’s a super platform to move from.

You train, train, train, but once you get to the competition, it’s very different — you’ve got the stress, you’ve got the adrenaline, you’ve got the crowd, you’ve got the judges. So it’s very different from when you train at home, and this test is a lot harder than what we’ve done before — it’s our first 5* test. I think he handled it really well, and I’m looking forward to doing it again and again and again.

He’s not the flashiest but he’s got the best heart — everything you can wish for in a horse. For me, I’m still learning at my first Olympics. I’m super happy that I get to do that with him. We’re looking forward to the next two phases.”

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She shared with us the feeling of riding down that center line:

“It’s been amazing, the stadium atmosphere is electric. I think for me and my horse it was great, because usually he’s a little bit too chill so it woke him up a little bit. There’s no word for it, to be fair, riding down that center line was… I’m out of words.”

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Score for Noor Slaoui and Cash In Hand – 36.4.

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🇦🇹 Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harald’s in Paris for his fourth Olympic Games, bringing forward former Maxime Livio ride ‘Vitorio’, who was fifth at Pau in 2021 with the French rider. They may be a new partnership, but they’ve got three top-5 finishes on their card, from six FEI runs.

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

🔴 Open wide. Harald is a full-time dentist.

Dressage 📈 So far, this pair have been putting down mostly mid-30s dressage scores. There’s a 39 in the mix, and a 53, but their best score together came in their most recent run, the 4*-L in Baborowko, where they posted a 33.8 and came fourth overall.

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Score for Harald Ambros and Vitorio du Montet – 36.5.

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🇨🇿 Miroslav Příhoda and Ferreolus Lat

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Miroslav and Ferreolus Lat have an Olympics, World, and European Championships already in their locker, so they’re well-versed in what all this championship lark is all about. They get 10/10 for consistency across major championships in terms of dressage scores, posting exactly the same at Tokyo and Pratoni.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Miroslav’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Miroslav was Czech Republic Senior Eventing Rider of the Year 2016.

Dressage 📈 It was a 33.8 for this pair at both Tokyo and Pratoni, and that consistency tracks throughout their form; mid-30s. One exception is the European Championships in Avenches in 2021, where they posted a massive PB of 27.9.

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Score for Miroslav Příhoda and Ferreolus Lat – 35.7.

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🇪🇨 Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois

Paris has always been the goal for this horse, but it doesn’t hurt that he’s gained valuable experience via Tokyo, as well as a spin at the Pan-Ams in Santiago. Nicolas is in Paris for his third Olympics, and has three World Championships under his belt to boot. Oh yeah, in ‘real life’ he’s not even an eventer – he’s actually a full time CEO of a Pharmaceutical Distribution Company.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Nicolas’ championships experience:

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

🔴 In 2015, Nicholas was the first rider representing Ecuador to compete at Badminton.

Dressage 📈 This combination put down a 40.9 in the first phase at Tokyo and a 38 at the Pan-Ams in Santiago. Which is pretty indicative of their general form – high-30s, occasionally a hoof in the 40s.

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Someone give Nicolas a hug:

“I’m feeling disappointed. I tried after Tokyo to ride more brilliant, and sadly it didn’t work out.”

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But you’ll have to get in line because I’m guessing his horse already stepped up for the job:

“He’s a horse that had not such a good history before I bought him and he trusts me like no one ever. That’s very nice.”

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We’ll conclude this little exchange on a positive note, because, hello, three Olympic appearances is pretty darned good, no matter how things go on the day:

“I [was] very happy when I qualified for my first Olympics. I’m a completely amateur, and so, a really good achievement for sure.”

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Score for Nicolas Wettstein and Altier d’Aurois – 42.3.

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FINAL TEAM ROTATION

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🇩🇪 Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH

He’s been Olympic Champion, World Champion, European Champion, Kentucky Champion, Luhmühlen Champion, Badminton Champion, Burghley Champion… need I say more?

Form, Facts & Stats:

Michael’s championships experience:

🔥 Tokyo 2020 (Team); 8th individually – Team 🥈 & Individual 🥇- Rio 2016 – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥇 London 2012
🗺️ Team 🥇 Pratoni 2022; 5th individually – Team 🥇 & Individual 🥈 Caen 2014 – Individual 🥇 Lexington 2010

🔴 Michael held the Olympic, World and European titles simultaneously.

Dressage 📈 Ordinarily, we tend to herald the sub-30 marks when it comes to dressage form, however, for this combination that just won’t do. Since they got together in 2019, in 33 FEI competitions, there’s nary a score in the 30s on their record – not one or any, zero, zilch, none. So I find myself counting sub-20 scores and there are eight – eight sub-20 scores! One such score came at the World Championships in 2022, where they put down 18.8 in the first phase. At Kentucky 5* that year, they finished on their dressage score of 20.1 to take the win. They set themselves up nicely for an Olympic gold at Tokyo with a 21.1 in the dressage, but we all know what happened next. I have this pair as my EN team pick for the win this time around. Have I spoken too soon? Only time will tell.

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Even the former World, European and Olympic Champion is feeling the competition:

“… everything was training for this competition. I think everybody had the same idea because the Olympic Games are such a special competition and everyone is really, really well prepared.”

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And he’s got that “goosebump feeling”. Same, Michi, same. He also talked about what it was like riding ‘Chip’ today:

“It was an amazing feeling to gallop into the stadium — it was a goosebump feeling, but at the same time a really great feeling, because Chipmunk was so well concentrated and so good with me, so well listening. It was so nice to ride every second — and directly before I start with the dressage, I know I can take all the risk and I can try everything.”

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Michi and Chip have had their fair share of crappy luck at major competitions, but Michi’s characteristically pragmatic about that:

“At every competition, everything I did was experience and learning, trying to get a better partnership with him, get information.”

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Score for Michael Jung and Chipmunk FRH – 17.8.

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🇦🇺 Christopher Burton and Shadow Man

Burto’s back eventing after a hiatus spent in the show jumping ring, and comes forward for Australia with new ride this season, Shadow Man, formally piloted by Britain’s Ben Hobday. It’s a horse Chris has admired for a while, in fact, he’d already tried to buy him off Ben a while ago. When the opportunity arose, it was too good for Chris to pass up, and tempted him back to eventing. They’re here in hot form 🌶️ right off the back of a win in the 4*-S Nations Cup at Millstreet, Ireland, where they finished on their dressage score of 25.7.

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 given his first pony for his third birthday. Outside of horses, Chris enjoys skiing (on snow and water), golf, and playing the guitar.

Dressage 📈 They’ve been sub-30 in four of their five runs together, with scores ranging from 25.7 to 30.8 – impressive given the fact that they’ve only been together a matter of months. Shadow Man’s fancy and extravagant on the flat and has been pulling in sub-30 scores for most of his career, with the 25.7 at Millstreet a PB – what a time to pull that out of the bag, just before an Olympic Games.

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Safe to say, Chris looooooooves this horse:

“We were made for each other the day we were both born.”

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He had a bit of a tough draw, going into the ring as Michael Jung was coming out. But Shadow Man’s “a pretty cool guy”:

“I’m really happy! [Shadow Man] got on his toes! He’s a very relaxed horse and he got really excited because some guy went before me [Michael Jung] that the crowd liked to cheer for, but then I was just delighted with him — he went back to work, showing what a lovely gentleman he is and showing how well schooled he is. That was a real treat for me, and it’s always a buzz to be at the Olympics.

He is a pretty cool guy — if they are a good nature, they’re a good nature.

When we went up to Ben’s [Hobday] to ride him and vet him, I said, ‘I feel like I know him already.’”

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Score for Christopher Burton and Shadow Man – 22.

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🇨🇦 Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS

Photo by Sally Spickard.

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 complete at both Badminton and Burghley. This mare is not so experienced as long-time campaigner Wabbit, but Jessie knows her way ‘round a championships and will have her back.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Jessie’s championships experience:

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

🔴 We all know she’s an inspirational eventer, but did you know that Jessie has been the inspiration for a book and a song? The book details Jessie’s return from serious injury and country singer Elyse Saunders wrote the song ‘Rise’ based on it.

Dressage 📈 This mare’s showing up as a low- to mid-30s kind of gal thus far in her career. She put down a 34.6 in the 4*-S at TerraNova in the spring, on her way to second place. It was 34.6 in the 4*-S at Kentucky also. In her most recent run, the 4*-S at Bromont, she scored 32.5 in the first phase.

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There’s nothing quite like a good mare:

“She’s one of the most straightforward, competitive thinking mares I’ve ever ridden. Like, she fights to do the right thing … she has the heart, she’s 100% in it, and she’s mentally fighting for you.”

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Jessie talked a little about this very cool-sounding mare:

“I was so proud of the composure that she had going into that ring. It’s her first time doing a test at the five star level, and it is by far the biggest atmosphere she’s ever felt. And I was over the moon with how much composure she showed in there, and honestly, how much brilliance she showed in the movements that she’s really solid in. So yeah, her future looks bright. ”

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And what’s it like being part of Team Canada in Paris?

“It’s such a joy to be able to ride for your country and just be here with the group of people that we have here with us, from the riders to the support staff to all of our family and friends and owners. It’s a really cohesive group, and you can really feel that synergy when you’re in and around the gardens.”

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Score for Jessica Phoenix and Freedom GS – 35.4.

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🇮🇪 Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue

Photo by Sally Spickard.

Man of the hour at Maryland 5*, Austin won a million new fans when he and ‘Salty’ won their first 5* in the fall. Salty is not a horse who’s going to win the dressage, but that doesn’t matter, because he’ll darn well turn himself inside out to win the other two phases, and so far that approach to the sport hasn’t done him too badly. He was just outside the top-10 at Tokyo and after his successes last season, Austin’s got to be hoping to go even better this time around.

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 and Salty were originally traveling reserves for Tokyo, but stepped up last minute when Cathal Daniels’ horse wasn’t fit to compete.

Dressage 📈 Ever since he came third at Badminton last year – where he posted a very respectable but not top of the table 31.9 in the first phase – Salty has been in the form of his life. He won the Maryland 5*, where he added just 1.2 cross country time to his dressage of 33.7, and he comes to Paris off the back of posting a career-best score – a 26.4 – which he achieved in the 4*-S at Bramham in June, where he finished second. Generally though, we’re looking low- to mid-30s in the first phase, but Salty’s on a mission to prove the saying that ‘eventing’s not a dressage competition’, and so far he’s doing a grand ol’ job.

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We’ve had a record-breaking day in the dressage ring, which Austin has noted:

“… the standard is just going through the roof.”

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He was a little disappointed with his score, but very pleased with ‘Salty’, and they’ve made a huge leap since Tokyo:

“Obviously, I was trying to break the 30 barrier. It’s improved eight marks from Tokyo, realistically, and everything has got to be a bit realistic. I think a lot of his work was really quality. Obviously the changes didn’t quite come off as we hoped, but other than that, he didn’t put a foot wrong. He tried his best and it is what it is. I was obviously trying to do better — you’re always trying to do better — but at the end of the day, it is what it is and you move forward.”

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He concludes by saying what all eventing fans are thinking:

“Bring on tomorrow.”

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Score for Austin O’Connor and Colorado Blue – 31.7.

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🇨🇭 Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean

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

We’re so used to seeing Felix with his stalwart 5* campaigner, Colero, but he comes to Tokyo with exciting young talent Dao de l’Ocean, who has some very impressive form on his card already, and it’ll be very interesting to watch this pair over the next few days.

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)

🔴 Not a one trick pony, Felix competed in alpine skiing at junior level.

Dressage 📈 You know how I usually talk about sub-30 scores? Well, with this pair they’re basically all sub-30. They put down a 29.4 in the 4*-L Nations Cup leg at Boekelo last season, where they finished top-10, and a 26 in the 4*-S at Wiesbaden this year, which they won. The Olympic test is a bit of a step up from the 4* they’ve been competing at, but this horse sure has all the quality needed for a pretty smart score.

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Felix sums up what it’s like to ride in the Olympic ring very nicely:

“It was pretty awesome.”

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He elaborated about how ‘Dao’ went in there:

“He gives me so much confidence because I know when I do it right, he’s doing it right, and I give him some confidence, I think. I think I could have done some stuff a little bit better, but it’s always like this. I think what we had outside, I got 90% inside, and that’s all I could ask of him.”

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Score for Felix Vogg and Dao de l’Ocean – 22.1.

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🇺🇸 Boyd Martin and Fedarman B

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Boyd’s in Paris with ‘Bruno’, who he rides in memory of Annie Goodwin. This fan favorite is instantly recognizable for his big white blaze, and truly does seem to be one of the sweetest horses on the circuit. Boyd has got heaps of championships experiences but this is Bruno’s first time, although he’s been well-prepared with European trips to Pau and Luhmühlen last year to contest the 5*s, finishing eighth in each.

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 well-placed for some dressage schooling, considering he’s married to dressage rider, Silva Martin.

Dressage 📈 This pair can go sub-30 but mostly hang out around the 30-mark. They put down a 31.7 at Pau last year and a 32.4 at Luhmühlen. Most recently they scored 31.7 in the 4*-S at Kentucky, where they finished up fourth.

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It’s an emotional and special Olympics for Boyd, who spoke to Sally after his test:

“I really felt like Bruno went in and was such a champion in there, and was with me every step of the way.”

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Not everything went exactly to plan for them in the ring; Boyd explains:

“Awesome test, except for two moments, which were disastrous. We’ve just got our left to right flying change — it has been a bit of a bit of a muddle. In the lead up to this event, we’ve been getting it really good at home and in training, but just when the atmosphere is a bit electric out there, he’s got a bit of anxiety, and I think I mistimed my aids a little bit. I felt like I gave my all, and it would have been awesome to have four great changes, but it wasn’t to be today. I felt like we still came out of it with a respectable score … I thought he was about perfect — he’s a quiet horse, I felt like I could ride him well, and he wasn’t distracted.”

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If you thought you spotted Boyd losing a stirrup in one of those changes, you were right:

“The same thing happened a Pau. He does get a little bit more electric in the flying changes and it’s a shame. We’ve probably done 20,000 flying changes in the last two months, and been working and working and working them and getting them in training. But today wasn’t our day in the flying change department. Other than the flying change, I think it was our best work ever.”

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“I always find championships emotional, just because so much of your heart and soul goes into it. I’ve just got to try and keep a good head and stay focused on the job.”

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He talked a little about the story behind him and ‘Bruno’:

“It’s a tough one, because [the emotional back story] is always at the back of your mind, and you feel like you’re riding for more than just yourself. At the same time, I’ve tried to block it out a little bit, and we’ll think about it and enjoy this moment once it’s behind us, but Annie’s dad is here, Pardo. We had a great dinner last night, and we’ve got the whole Annie Goodwin Syndicate here.”

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Score for Boyd Martin and Fedarman B – 30.5.

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🇵🇱 Robert Powala and Tosca del Castegno

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Robert’s got his first senior call-up and what a first for it to be. He’s in Paris with a mare he’s brought through the international levels himself, which will be a good foundation for them as they take on their biggest challenge yet.

Form, Facts & Stats:

🔴 Robert competed in Italy as a Junior and said he wanted to move there one day – and he did.

Dressage 📈 This pair are proving to be a mid-30s kind of combination, on the whole, although they put down the highest score of their career this season, a 39.6. They came back out at the 4*-S Nations Cup in Strzegom with a more usual 35.7.

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“I’m extremely proud of her.”

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All hats off to Robert for this amazing achievement – from foal to Olympic partner:

“I got her when she was six months old, so I’ve had her from the very beginning and now she’s 11. I’ve done everything with her, from the breaking until this point. Buying a foal, is always a question, but she was really special from the very, very beginning. This is a really good feeling for me, that I have produced her from the baby horse until now.”

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Score for Robert Powala and Tosca del Castegno – 34.7.

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🇸🇪 Louise Romeike and Caspian 15

This is Caspian 15’s first foray onto the big screen but Louise knows just what’s what at a championships, having been part of the Swedish team in Tokyo and at the World Championships in Pratoni.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Louise’s championships experience:

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

🔴 When Louise started out, she was a part-time eventer and full-time lingerie salesperson. Then she got the chance to work for German eventer Peter Thomsen – she was there one weekend before she resigned from her sales job and took up eventing full-time.

Dressage 📈 This pair are generally low-30s in the first phase, although sometimes their scores creep up a little; they posted a 31.7 in the 4*-S at Marbach this season and a 35.2 in their most recent FEI run, the 4*-S at Luhmühlen.

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There was a hint of the fireworks from yesterday’s opening ceremony in Louise’s test with Caspian 15:

“The first half I was quite happy with, but then the canter work got a little bit explosive. But it’s a super atmosphere in there. You come in and they’re already clapping and cheering you on, which is awesome, but that made him a little bit nervous today.”

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Score for Louise Romeike and Caspian 15 – 37.7.

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🇬🇧 Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo

Well, what can we say about ‘Walter’? Runner-up at his first 5*, winner of his second, finished on his dressage at the World Championships only to be pipped to the podium because he was too fast on the cross country. Ros heralds this gelding as equally good in all three phases, a triple threat if you will. And based on his form, she’s not wrong.

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 always been super sporty and played hockey and tennis at school.

Dressage 📈 Since getting together with Ros in 2020, it’s safe to say that Walter’s not really put a foot wrong in the dressage ring. They’ve had just one score in the 30s in 16 FEI runs – it was a 30.6 and came in 2021. He put down a PB of 21.3 at the European Championships last season, which he won, and has finished on his dressage at both a World Championships and a 5*. This guy is one to watch 👀

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“I’m over the moon with him.”

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Ros talked a little bit about her talented ride, ‘Walter’, and how their test went today:

“We all forget that Walter’s actually only 12-years-old. Yes, he’s won Badminton and the Europeans and everything else, but he is still a green horse. I still very much feel like we’re only scratching the surface, particularly in a test like that which is significantly harder than the tests we normally see. I’m absolutely delighted that he got all four changes and everything, because he’s still not fully matured yet, and I do think there’s much more to come from him. We halted a bit late and it had a bit of an effect, unfortunately, on the two movements. But these things happen with horses, and the rest of it, he was spot on … He is amazing. He absolutely loves attention, so yes, he lifted, but only ever so slightly; he just seems to kind of revel in it, and he’s so self confident and so self assured that I think he thought he was well up for being there. He was quite happy. I think when I finished him and patted him, he had a little scratch, and then looked up and thought, ‘Yeah, I’m all right’.”

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Ros is in the zone:

“Mark-wise [I had] no expectations. I kept in my own little bubble really, apart from watching my guys and a couple this morning, so I wouldn’t be able to tell you how it related to everybody else’s marks. I’ve very much tried to stay process-driven today. “

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And how do you prepare for an Olympics? With a little help from old friends:

“Practice, practice, practice, I guess! We’ve been practicing for a while now trying to fine tune it and get it right. I’m very lucky I’ve got my old five-star horse Zenshera at home — he’s 20 years old now, so he’s always in work, but often only light work. The last month, he’s been working hard as well, helping me to practice a test and make sure I know it inside out. He’s absolutely amazing, and to be quite honest, I think he would have stood in for Walter if we needed him this week, he thought he was about ready to go.”

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Score for Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalo – 23.4.

That puts Great Britain on an Olympic record-breaking team score of 66.7.

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🇧🇷 Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova

Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Is there a doctor in the house? Actually, yes, Marcio is, in real life, a trained doctor. But I digress. The Brazilian Olympic team are no strangers to contesting championships together, having won the bronze medal at the Pan-Ams last season, with Marcio and ‘Howard’ taking the individual silver to boot. He’s in Paris for his third Games, whilst relative new kid on the block, Howard, is making his Olympic debut after his success in Santiago.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Marcio’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Marcio has been named Eventing Rider of the Year three times by the Brazilian Olympic Committee.

Dressage 📈 This combination went sub-30 at the Pan-Ams last season, where they won individual silver, adding just a smidge of time penalties to their dressage score of 29.8. At 4*, they’re more a mid-30s pairing, but the test in Paris is a shortened 5*. They’ve been very consistent in their two FEI runs this season, with a 34.9 and a 34.4. They finished on their dressage score of 33.1 in the 4*-L at Sopot, Poland, last year on their way to second place.

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Score for Marcio Carvalho Jorge and Castle Howard Casanova – 33.3.

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🇳🇿 Tim Price and Falco

Photo by Eventing Nation.

Tim’s now on a hattrick of Olympic appearances and he comes to Paris with the very experienced Falco. It’s great to see this gelding back in top form after he didn’t make it to Maryland in the fall due to needing emergency colic surgery in the run-up to the event. But all’s well and here he is, making his Olympic debut. They’ve already got two World Championships medals under their cinch – team and individual bronze, from Pratoni – and Tim’ll be aiming to add some Olympic bling to that collection.

World Championships Pratoni horse – finished on dressage of 26.2

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

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

Dressage 📈 This pair finished on their dressage of 26.2 at the World Championships in Pratoni, and they added just one second of show jumping time to their career-best dressage score of 22.1 when they won Pau in 2021. They put down a 32.5 in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen in June, the highest dressage score they’ve had since June of 2019. In the five years between, they haven’t had the hint of a hoof in the 30s.

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It’s electric out there:

“… you just don’t get atmosphere like that anywhere else in the world – it’s an Olympic Games – but that makes it really exciting”

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Tim talked to Sally about his Olympic test with Falco:

“He’s [Falco] been fresh all week — not overwhelmed, he’s been rideable and things. It was a little bit that theme, he just wasn’t quite as soft and as rideable as I would normally have him, so that you can really show that lovely cadence and elegance; it was a little bit forced, I would say. But he’s such a quality little horse, I think he can still mop up a few marks and do okay.”

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We all know them as eventing’s power couple, but Tim points out that Team Price is very much made up of two individuals:

“Jonelle and I, we’re not like ‘Tim and Jonelle’, we’re individuals. It’s important for everyone within the team dynamic to understand that that’s how it is — we’re individuals in the way that we do things — and how we’ve got here needs to be considered a bit individual as well. We have a different approach.”

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Score for Tim Price and Falco – 26.5.

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🇯🇵 Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne

If you’re after an exciting combination, look no further. Kazuma’s in Paris with his Tokyo Olympics horse, the one he almost made the podium with at his home Games. This pair have proven themselves to be super consistent at major championships – their finishing score was 31.1 at Pratoni; at Tokyo it was 31.5 (31.9 including the second show jumping round).

Form, Facts & Stats:

Kazuma’s championships experience:

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

🔴 Kazuma represented Japan in show jumping before making the move to eventing, basing himself with none other than William Fox-Pitt – a smart stepping stone, for sure.

Dressage 📈 Mr consistent, Vinci de la Vigne posted a 25.9 in the first phase in Tokyo and a 25.9 at the World Championships in Pratoni. And if you can take your attention away from that interesting fact for a minute, you’ll notice that he’s pulled out two drool-inducing dressage scores at two major championships. This combination is one to watch, not just between the white boards, but across the whole competition 👀

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He was fourth individually in Tokyo, but Kazuma is very clear about his priority at the Games:

“Team first.”

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He elaborated on his test with Vince De La Vigne:

“He had a couple of mistakes, which is not like him, basically. He’s always relaxed, always could do everything perfectly. But this time, just a little bit, he got sharp when they clapped. So it wasn’t him, but it’s the Olympics.”

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Score for Kazuma Tomoto and Vinci de la Vigne – 27.4.

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🇮🇹 Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress

Photo by Eventing Nation.[/caption]

This fabulously named mare is just as you’d imagine she’ll be; feisty, extravagant, fearless – she’s one cool lady, that’s for sure. She probably wouldn’t be the easiest to manage, and Giovanni’ll have his hands full, but she’s brimming with talent and is an exciting one to watch.

Form, Facts & Stats:

Giovanni’s championships experience:

🗺️ Caen 2014 (Team)

🔴 Giovanni has worked with Australian eventing legend Andrew Nicholson.

Dressage 📈 This pair regularly post sub-30 dressage scores although they did creep over the line at the European Championships last season with a 30.6. Their best score came in the 4*-L at Boekelo in 2022, where they put down a 24.4 in the first phase, before Giovanni had an agonizing fall at the final fence.

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Geovanni and Swirly Temptress are “ready to rock and roll tomorrow” – us too, Geovanni, us too! But first, the small matter of the Olympic dressage test:

“Everything comes very quick and fast. It’s not like any other test that you can actually settle the horse back into it. If you make a mistake, you’re straight into the next move, and then straight into the next movement. Of course, we’ve been practicing but again, you don’t want to practice too much. Because the horses start to actually know what they’re doing, start to anticipate a little bit the movement. It’s not an easy test to ride, especially when the horses are ready to rock and roll tomorrow.”

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It was choices choices for Geovanni when it came to which one of his five qualified horses he would bring to Paris. What an enviable choice to have!

“At the beginning of the season, I had five horses qualified. When the season went on, I had two that I took to Luhmühlen that were my first choice. [Swirly Temptress] was 50/50 with my other horse and the Federation decided for me. [This mare] probably will be better in this phase; they’re both normally good cross country horses, and the other one will be a better show jumper than this one. It was decided [that Swirly Temptress] will be more experienced. I’ve been riding the other one only a season and I think they went for experience.”

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Score for Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress – 25.7.

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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. 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 switched from representing Belgium to the Netherlands through his Dutch father.

Dressage 📈 This pair went sub-30 in their first competition together, putting down a 27.3 followed by a 29.4. Admittedly, these scores both came at 3* and the Olympic test is 5*, albeit a shortened version than we’re used to seeing, although they did score 28.3 in the 4*-S at Bicton in May.

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Score for Raf Kooremans and Radar Love – 27.

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🇫🇷 Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

This guy leaped onto everyone’s radar when he won the Nations Cup event at Boekelo last season after finishing on his dressage of 25.4 (Diabolo Menthe, not Nicolas, we already knew about him). In his last ten FEI competitions he hasn’t been outside the top-5.

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)

🔴 Nicolas had a French sports center in Saint-Clement-de-la-Place named after him in 2007.

Dressage 📈 In 15 FEI competitions this horse has had a dressage score in the 30s on just three occasions – yes you read that right – and each one of those was variations on 31. Mid-20s is where he’s been at recently, with a 25.3 and a 26.7 at his two FEI runs this year. He’s as yet untested at 5*, which is where the Olympic dressage test lands, but there’s no doubting this gelding’s talent on the flat (and, if you’re wondering, he’s just as good in the other two phases too).

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Score for Nicolas Touzaint and Diabolo Menthe – 27.2.

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🇧🇪 Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi

Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Lara’s coming in hot off delivering Belgium’s first ever 5* win at Luhmühlen 🌶️ This pair have been in great form this season, with two fourth places and a fifth, after finishing up last season with a fourth and fifth place too. Origi is just a 10-year-old, and, although not the youngest horse in the field, is at the less-experienced end of the scale. He was top-10 at the Young Horse Championships in 2021 and has made the climb to 4* since then, finishing up at the Olympics with those five top-5 placings under his cinch.

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 parents were both eventers, so she got a double whammy of eventing genes 👖

Dressage 📈 This combination had their best score at 4* when they went sub-30 at Wiesbaden with a 29.9, on their way to 4th place. Generally they’re in the low-30s; they scored 32.7 in the 4*-S at Luhmühlen in their most recent FEI run.

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Score for Lara de Liederkerke-Meier and Origi – 30.

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