Classic Eventing Nation

Badminton in the Rearview: A Movie Script Ending for Badminton Rookies Libby Head and Sir Rockstar

This week, in lieu of hanging out in a field in Gloucestershire ourselves, we’re going to be sharing some of our favourite Badminton content of years gone by, as well as some new pieces to keep the nostalgia train going strong. Today, we remember Libby Head and Sir Rockstar’s Badminton journey, originally published on May 8, 2016.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar have now fully completed the story arc of their forthcoming Lifetime Original Movie.

The plot: shy, teenage girl meets small, rogue, down-on-its-luck off-track Thoroughbred that nobody else wants to ride for several very legitimate reasons. There’s a montage of the girl getting bucked off, repeatedly, and close-up shots of a horrified dressage judge’s face when the pair comes jigging up the centerline sideways.

But over fences the horse is a natural talent, and the girl is undeterred by his antics. With the help of her trainer, a crusty, washed-up eventing version of The Black Stallion‘s Henry Dailey, she gradually earns the horse’s respect. Suggested soundtrack: the Rocky theme song.

To the astonishment of cranky old dressage judges everywhere they begin successfully advancing up the levels. Eight years into their hard-earned relationship, the girl and her horse are faced with the biggest challenge of their life: the legendary Badminton Horse Trials, where they’ll go toe-to-toe with the best eventers in the world.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Because it wouldn’t be as powerful a story if they just waltzed overseas and blew Badminton off the map — the climax has to have a bit of suspense — they find themselves near the bottom of the scoreboard after dressage, like the good old days. (Read more.)

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

The cross country course is a monster, and the girl’s terror grows as she watches it swallow up competitor after competitor. But with her trusty coach at her side, she turns her attention away from the carnage: she knows what she has to do.

They leave the start box and never look back. It’s the ride of their lives, and they come home clear, a big grin on her face as they clear the final jump. Thanks to their gutsy performance they make a huge jump up the leaderboard, from 73rd to 33rd place heading into show jumping. (Read more.)

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

On the final day of the competition, all eyes are them as the girl and her horse trot onto the world stage. Cue dramatic music as the camera pans the crowd, hovering for a moment on an American journalist in the stands who is nervously biting her nails.

The girl gazes out upon the sea of colorful jumps as the horse picks up a canter, his dark chocolate coat glistening beneath the bright sun. They begin leaping the fences, the 18-year-old horse looking spryer than ever.

No. 1, no. 2… then a gasp from the crowd as they lose a bit of rhythm, taking down the front rail of the no. 3 oxer.

Undeterred, the pair doubles down on their effort. The horse is now jumping his heart out; the girl’s determination is written all over her face.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

There’s a tense split second when they have a rub, but the pole stays in its cups, and jump by jump they make their way around the course. As they cross the finish flags a huge cheer goes up from the crowd, almost as big as the smile on the girl’s face.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar. Photo by Shannon Brinkman.

Just before the credits roll there’s a teaser for the sequel. Working title: “Burghley 2016.”

Pretty great plot for a movie, right? By the way, it’s based on a true story.

We talk to Libby Head, who has just completed Badminton with her phenomenal partner Sir Rockstar, about her weekend and her plans for the future:

Libby’s crusty, washed-up trainer took a moment to recap the weekend with us well. (Just kidding! Kyle Carter is a well-groomed person who just ran a four-star himself last week at Rolex. We’re currently in negotiations with Robert Pattinson to play his role in the movie.)

Here’s Kyle after Libby’s ride:

Best of luck to Libby and Rocky as they embark upon the next chapter in their already epic story, which includes staying in Europe for the next six months and aiming for Burghley! See you guys in September.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar, Badminton Horse Trial graduates, class of 2016. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

Libby Head and Sir Rockstar, Badminton Horse Trial graduates, class of 2016. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

End-of-the-day update: Libby and Rocky’s final score of 89.4 was good for 31st place overall. They also won a saddle from Worshipful Company of Saddlers for being the top placed 25 and under rider.

Go Libby. Go Rocky. Go Eventing.

Mother’s Day Links from One K Helmets

To all the horse moms out there, but especially to my horse mom, thank you! Thank you for encouraging and supporting us in a sport and in a career with horses. Happy Mother’s Day!

National Holiday: Happy Mother’s Day!

Sunday Links: 

Grid Pro Quo with Eric Dierks

USEA and US Equestrian to Host Joint Webinar for Eventing: A Safe Return to Competition

‘He’s so grumpy at not going out!’ 23-year-old event horse aiming at four-star level once competitions restart

James C. Wofford’s COVID-19 Quarantine Guide: Go Back To School

Cultivating Positivity Amidst A Pandemic

Sunday Video: 

Badminton in the Rearview: Oliver Townend Sets a Dazzling Dressage Record

This week, in lieu of hanging out in a field in Gloucestershire ourselves, we’re going to be sharing some of our favourite Badminton content of years gone by, as well as some new pieces to keep the nostalgia train going strong. In this flashback, we revisit last year’s competition, at which Oliver Townend broke the record for the best-ever dressage test. Here’s an excerpt from our reports that day, plus a video of the history-making test…

Oliver Townend's record breaking dressage test

Watch Oliver Townend (Official) & Cillnabradden Evo's incredible dressage test in full here or via our Watch Again Livestream service: https://www.badminton-horse.co.uk/badminton-live They delivered the best dressage score at the Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials in 19 years (19.7)! The record here until this point was Andrew Hoy & Darien Powers was 20.5. Facts courtesy of @EquiRatings

Posted by Badminton Horse Trials on Thursday, May 2, 2019

When the entry list for Badminton came out so many moons ago, there was a surprise on it: Oliver Townend had put forward four of his horses, and one of them was the rogue contender Cillnabradden Evo. Gary, as he’s known at home, is a horse whose career peaks and troughs, if diagrammed, would probably closely resemble his rider’s heart rate when he runs him across the country. On his day, Sally-Anne Egginton’s thirteen-year-old gelding (S. Creevagh Ferro x Willow Garden) is just about unbeatable. He’s earned himself a remarkable record in CCI4*-S (formerly CIC3*) competitions, partly because he’s so capable of delivering an eye-wateringly good dressage test. Then, he can back it up – usually – across the country, and he’s an out-and-out showjumper at short format. But in long format competitions, or at the five-star level? He’s a bit of an unknown quantity. His first long-format competition since 2016 came last season, when he made his five-star debut at Pau – after taking an easy lead in the first phase, he stormed around three quarters of the course before leaving a leg and, ultimately, leaving Oliver on the ground.

Oliver Townend celebrates with the crowd after setting a new standard at Badminton with Cillnabradden Evo. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

So was it a surprise that Oliver brought him here? Sure – no one, after all, would have questioned Oliver’s judgment if he’d decided to keep the horse as a CCI4*-S specialist. But just as Cillnabradden Evo is an all-or-nothing horse, Oliver Townend is an all-or-nothing rider. He doesn’t come to play – he comes to win. This week, he’s willing to take his chances and rely on both his undeniable experience and the valuable information he picked up at Pau to make it happen.

What happens next is much less of a surprise. In this sport, we often talk about Thursday morning as being a bit of a tough slot – yes, it’s a bit quieter in the ring, which can be a bonus for an inexperienced or tense horse, but many consider the scoring in the first session to be a bit stuffier and a bit less generous than in the prime-time Friday afternoon slot. To lead here, you have to fire on all cylinders. And that’s just what Oliver Townend and Cillnabradden Evo did.

Cillnabradden Evo: forever inching his way towards a sub-10 dressage. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Their score of 19.7 isn’t just a five-star personal best for the horse. It isn’t just a five-star personal best for the rider. It is, in fact, the best dressage score ever recorded at Badminton, nearly a full mark ahead of the 20.5 delivered by Andrew Hoy and Darien Powers in 2000.

“We’ve had him a while, and so I know him inside-out,” said a typically stoic Oliver after the remarkable test. “Everyone has a lot to say about him, but so far, so good! I went to bed thinking 19 last night; it’s a lot of shit and hard work to get there, but now we just hope that he stays on his feet in the next bit.”

Despite having been out of the country for a week to win a certain competition in Kentucky, Oliver has quiet confidence in the way the horse has been managed and prepared for the biggest competition of his life. Ironically, he tells us with a laugh, “there’s been no prep at all – we’ve just been to the gallops a few times. He does it all himself.”

Time and time again, we’ve seen Oliver display his knack for creating champions out of the most unlikely of horses – in Gary he has, perhaps, the most stark duality between freakish ability and sporadic heartbreak. But if Badminton comes down to trying to win each moment, then he’s off to a flying start.

Oliver Townend and Cillnabradden Evo make history at Badminton. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

But it’s not all records and glamour: “Normally I’m struggling away with a set of mirrors and the floodlights on, but that’s just what we do,” he explained. “I don’t actually have a dressage trainer, embarrassingly – I have the set of mirrors, and I have some DVDs, so you could say I’m pretty close with Carl Hester. That’s not me coming out, by the way!”

Oliver also relies on the help of his friend, manager, and business partner Karyn Schuter: “I trust her implicitly – you can see her speaking to me down a microphone, but you wouldn’t always want to hear what she’s saying! She’s my best mate and she always lets me know how the other riders are looking and whether we’re looking good.”

Although overnight leader Cillnabradden Evo is a bit of a riskier proposition across the country, Oliver is quick to acknowledge and own this fact. And, despite the horse failing to complete his debut five-star at Pau last year, Oliver considers the trip to France a positive one – it was, as he termed it, a ‘fact-finding mission’, and until the late wobble that ended their day, those discoveries certainly looked positive.

“The aim will be to get him home. I’ve been quite hungry for quite a long time to have him here, so it’d be nice if he put his best foot forward,” said Oliver. “[Ballaghmor Class] has been here, he’s been to Burghley twice, and so he’s battle-hardened, and he’s a lot stronger both physically, but especially mentally. We’d had no spring season last year [when he finished fifth], and we did a lot on the gallops at home, but nothing does it for them like a good event. This spring, he’s had a good run at Burnham Market, where he ran away with me up the hill [and won the CCI4*-S], and he’s feeling great. We’d have more hope for him this weekend.”

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class keep the good times rolling. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The next day, Oliver would make history again – his dressage score of 21.1 with Ballaghmor Class would see him hold the top two positions going into cross-country, an unprecedented and enviable position to be in. 

“The night before last, I said to myself ’19, 19, 19′, and I just kept going over my test and drilling it. I didn’t think about it as much last night – maybe I should have,” he laughed. “I made one cock-up, which was a bit of a situation that he threw at me coming into the flying change, but we’re always happy to dream, and so far the dream’s coming true. If I went back in now, I could knock another three marks off, and he has the ability to come back and knock five off [in the future], but it’s all about keeping him relaxed so I can do a bit more and then a bit more. The thing about Badminton is that you have to do three clear rounds in three phases, but the more you push, the bigger the risk.”

“It’s a very good start, and I’m over the moon with both the horses – I have to keep myself under wraps because I get a quite emotional, and it’s not good for my image,” quipped Oliver. “People expect so much [from Ballaghmor Class], but they forget that he won Burghley [in 2017] as a novice. He’s beautiful to ride, and his work ethic fits into our system very well. There are plenty who don’t give you what these two have. Some people think of us as an eventing factory, but we know these horses inside out, more than anyone in the world – and the horses don’t lie.”

Cillnabradden Eva ultimately finished sixth after adding 12.4 time penalties across the country and dropping a pole on Sunday, while Ballaghmor Class finished in an achingly close second place after Oliver added a stride in the showjumping, costing him a fraction of a second and handing the victory to Piggy March, neé French, and Vanir Kamira. 

Sebastian Cavaillon Soars into Virtual Eventing Lead After an Utterly Bonkers Cross-Country

Sebastien Cavaillon takes the lead in the second phase of Virtual Eventing. Look how smug his dog is.

Poor Laura Collett – after delivering an eye-wateringly excellent test yesterday to hold the overnight lead with London 52, a bad case of the giggles – and a truly impressive dunking in the water complex – relegated her right down the leaderboard into 29th place after the cross-country phase of the NAF Virtual Eventing 5*.

Of course, with all the competitors locked down at their respective home bases around the world, this wasn’t 5* cross-country as we’re used to seeing it – instead, it was something considerably more insane. Each rider had to tackle a multipart obstacle course, accompanied by a dog, a teddy bear, or, in the case of Megan Jones, an impressively well-trained Shetland pony. Their mission? Come home clear and inside the optimum time of 5:02. Their challenges? Well…

  • #1: Unload the lorry. Competitors need to load a wheelbarrow with a bale of shavings, a haynes, and their tack, before weaving it through a line of feedbags to…
  • #2: The Pony Club games challenge. Turns out an egg and spoon race is a bit tougher with a badly-behaved dog attached to you.
  • #3: Walking the course. Sit down for a quick change out of riding boots and into wellies, before weaving through a set a jump wings at speed.
  • #4: The dog agility challenge. Time for those dogs (or Shetlands) to shine! There’s a cross pole to pop over, an upright to go under – rather like Gurgle the Greek of Badminton history – and another cross pole to pop, and then you’re at…
  • #5: The water complex. Crowds tend to gather here to see a dunking at the real deal, and they certainly got to see that today. Each competitor has to balance a bucket of water on top of a shavings bale in a wheelbarrow, navigate over a pole on the ground, and then decant the bucket into another full of apples. Then they need to bob for one of those apples with their arms behind their back, before sprinting over to the cocktail party to deposit it.
  • #6: We’re all used to a quick change to get ready for a cocktail party, but this takes the biscuit – each competitor must strip off their body protector, change into a rather fancier number, and down a pint (of water) before stumbling over a line of poles to…
  • #7: The lorry park challenge. They’ll need to get a duvet into its cover – or for those faint of heart souls, the black flag alternative of two pillows into their pillowcases. Then they need to lie down on top of them for three seconds before a final sprint to the finish line, where their last challenge is to take a selfie with their canine partner. Phew.

Tom Crisp took us for a walk through some of the challenges to come before he tackled his round with recalcitrant whippet Pretzel:

The day started with a smattering of good rounds from Warren LamperdJoe Meyer, and Arthur Chabert, each of whom recorded blazing fast clears to add nothing to their dressage scores. This lulled competitors and spectators alike into a false sense of security: would the time be too easily attained? Would Virtual Eventing turn out to be a dressage competition? Could slow and steady, in fact, win the race?

The sense of security wouldn’t last for long. Dogs were lost, refusals racked up, and an astonishing amount of cheating started stacking the penalties on the scoreboard, and as the trouble mounted, so did the time faults. For Joseph Murphy, 20th overnight after adding 10 penalties, the time was made tougher when his tiny accomplice, daughter Daisy and her pooch Tatts, had a rider fall en route to fence six, the cocktail party. But she was swiftly back up on her feet and downing her drink, and in the old style of things was allowed to continue on – and she and Dad would make it home without adding any time, thanks to some speedy bed-making. Truly a heart-in-mouth moment of sporting action:

By the end of the day, the leaderboard had started to look very different indeed, with mistakes and slow rounds from many of the dressage dominators opening the door for swift, accurate course navigation. France’s Sebastien Cavaillon, 13th after dressage with Sarah d’Argouges, took to the course with Offset and delivered a masterclass in interpretive cross-country negotiation, blazing home in a remarkable 3:26. We hope someone’s icing his legs tonight.

Impressively, his wouldn’t be the fastest round of the day – the Netherlands’ Andy Heffernan blitzed through in 2:47, though a smattering of mistakes earned him 20 penalties, and he’ll almost certainly be subjected to a verbal warning at the very least for his excessive speed on course.

Gemma Tattersall, third after dressage with Quicklook V, added just five penalties to move up into second place going into tomorrow’s third and final phase, though former runner-up Yasmin Ingham dropped down to 9th after adding ten penalties. Third place is now held by Matt Heath, who rode the former Dickie Waygood mount Askari in yesterday’s competition, while a clear round with just 1.4 time penalties sees Louisa Lockwood sit fourth, closely followed by Vittoria Panizzon, competing for Italy and not letting anyone forget it for a moment.

Honourary Yank (but actually a Kiwi) Joe Meyer heads up the fight for the contingent across the pond, moving into seventh place after an impressive performance in the scorching Ocala sunshine, while Katherine Coleman and Boyd Martin were both inside the time but unfortunately not penalty free, languishing behind in 21st and 22nd place, respectively. Poor Hallie Coon dropped to 26th place after picking up a total of 8.5 penalties, possibly as a result of her overambitious decision to tie two dogs with their own ideas to her belt loops. Bad luck, Hallie – we’re sure you’ll refine your tactics for the next one. Hannah Sue Burnett sits 35th after clocking up 20 penalties, while EN old faithful Tom Crisp – our diligent course-walker – is nowhere to be seen in 38th place, though surely earns a nod for his commitment to running cross-country in an inflatable unicorn suit.

Let’s have a look at how some of the competitors fared…

Tomorrow sees the third and final phase get underway from 2pm BST/9am Eastern time, and you can get your first peek at the course to come here. Fancy rewatching all of today’s action – or, indeed, the dressage and trot-up action from the previous days? It’s all available on demand here. And don’t forget – you can support your favourite rider’s certain descent into insanity by throwing some coins in their charity coffers here. Over £130,000 has been drummed up so far, and all money raised will go to each rider’s home nation’s medical charity to support in the fight against COVID-19. After that? Join us at the cocktail party – it’s on until 11pm BST/6pm Eastern time tonight and is heating up nicely. I’m in the kitchen flirting with the host if you need me.

The top ten after an action-packed day of interpretive cross-country.

Saturday Links from Nupafeed USA

THANK YOU… to everyone who has donated! ⭐️We want to help our front line workers world-wide and we can't do it…

Posted by Virtual Eventing on Friday, May 8, 2020

Have you been tuning into the NAF Virtual Eventing 5* over the past few days? It’s no replacement for Badminton, which should have been this weekend, I know, but it proven to be highly hysterical (see Wednesday’s virtual trot up) and even a bit educational, as one of Badminton’s regular dressage commentators Pammy Hutton bequeaths her knowledge to us by way of our virtual competitors. Not to mention it’s all for a heck of a good cause!

The “cross country” phase (no, we don’t know exactly what madness is in store either) live stream begins at 11:00 BST/ 6:00 AM EST and can be viewed here.

National Holiday: National Lost Sock Memorial Day

Saturday Links:

James C. Wofford’s COVID-19 Quarantine Guide: Go Back To School

Throwback — Badminton first-timers: Cathal Daniels — ‘She doesn’t know the fences are bigger than her’

Gail Greenough’s Tips on Getting Through Quarantine: ‘Be Proud of How You Spent This Journey’

‘I love them, even when I stink of their pee’: young riders’ school reports on their ponies

AAEP: Routine Vaccinations Considered Essential During COVID-19 Pandemic

Hot on Horse Nation: Horse Riders’ COVID-19 Wellness Chart

Saturday Video:

Jak working on his fancy foot work. We are excited to get things rolling again!

Posted by Buck Davidson Eventing on Friday, May 8, 2020

#FlashbackFriday Video from SmartPak: Behind the Scenes at Badminton

The more eagle-eyed among you may have already spotted something amiss – namely, that it’s not actually Friday. Our excuse? It’s always Friday at EN, baby. Except when it’s Saturday. And that only counts when there’s cross-country happening. Right now? Days are meaningless – but Badminton memories certainly aren’t.

Today’s video comes to you from the New Zealand eventing crew and takes you behind the scenes at 2018’s renewal of Badminton – a big year for the Kiwis. Enjoy a snoop around the stables, a sneak peek at what the grooms get up to, and lots and lots of footage of the indomitable Classic Moet. It’s almost like being there. Almost.

FEI European Championships in Olympic & Paralympic Disciplines Canceled for 2021

The FEI European Championships in the Olympic and Paralympic disciplines of Jumping, Eventing, Dressage and Para Dressage will not be held in 2021 due to the revised dates for the Tokyo Games next year. European Championships in the non-Olympic disciplines will still be organised in 2021.

The Hungarian capital of Budapest had been due to play host to five disciplines next summer – Jumping, Dressage, Para Dressage, Driving and Vaulting – from 23 August to 5 September. However, the proximity of the Championships to the rescheduled Olympic and Paralympic Games has meant that it is no longer feasible to run Jumping, Dressage and Para Dressage. As part of its 50th anniversary celebrations of the first FEI European Driving Championships in Budapest back in 1971, the Organisers will maintain both Driving and Vaulting next year.

The FEI European Eventing Championships 2021 were scheduled to take place from 11-15 August at Haras du Pin (FRA), venue for the Eventing test of the FEI World Equestrian Games™ 2014, but the decision has been made to cancel the Championships following the postponement of Tokyo 2020.

The new dates for the Tokyo Olympic Games are 23 July to 8 August 2021 and the Paralympic Games will run from 24 August through to 5 September 2021.

The FEI Board has agreed that the bid process for the European Championships 2021 in these four disciplines will not be reopened, as all organisers would face the same challenges of trying to host major Championships so close to the Tokyo Games.

“Together with the Organising Committees of both Budapest and Haras du Pin, as well as the Hungarian and French National Federations, we have examined every possible option to try and save the Championships in 2021,” FEI Secretary General Sabrina Ibáñez said, “but we have reached the regrettable decision that it simply is not possible to have these important events so close to the Olympic and Paralympic Games next year.

“While there are some nations that have enough horsepower to send strong teams to the Olympic and Paralympic Games and also to the European Championships across the four disciplines, we have to offer a level playing field to all eligible countries and we simply cannot do that in this case, so we have agreed that the focus should be on Tokyo next year.

“Of course it is desperately disappointing to lose these Championships from the 2021 Calendar, but we will continue to support Budapest with their double Europeans for Driving and Vaulting.”

The FEI Secretary General has overall responsibility for the FEI Calendar and is currently chairing the eight discipline-specific Task Forces that have been set up to seek ways of mitigating the effect of the current Covid-19 pandemic on the FEI Calendar, including the knock-on effects into 2021.

“It was the very first time that a Central European country had won the opportunity to organise the prestigious FEI multidiscipline European Championships, Dorottya Stróbl, Member of the Managing Board of the Budapest Organising Committee and Secretary General of the Hungarian National Federation, said.

“We strongly believed that the event would serve as a high motivation for the owners and sponsors in Hungary and in the neighbouring countries and promote the sport towards the elite level, but we understand that the significant challenges of holding major FEI Championships in the Olympic and Paralympic disciplines in the year of the Olympic and Paralympic Games, has meant that unfortunately cancellation was inevitable. However, we will continue to work to ensure the very highest level of FEI Driving and Vaulting European sport in Budapest next year.”

Valérie Moulin, President of the Ustica Organising Committee at Haras du Pin, also expressed her disappointment: “We are very disappointed that the rescheduling of Tokyo 2020 has led to the cancellation of the Championships in Haras du Pin, but unfortunately we were unable to find alternative dates outside August 2021. We had gathered a lot of local partners and we were financially invested. All riders counted on this date, nevertheless we understand that the situation has changed over the last months with the postponement of the Olympic Games. We have made a proposal to the FEI about potentially hosting the Championships in 2023 and we look forward to hearing about that.”

Discussions around other FEI Championships, including the Europeans in 2023, will be held during next month’s FEI Board videoconference meeting, which is set for 23-25 June.

[FEI European Championships in Olympic & Paralympic Disciplines Canceled for 2021]

 

10 Random Facts About Badminton

The author with Harry Meade. Photo courtesy of Jodie Neill.

Here are 10 random fact you didn’t know about Badminton … or maybe you did, but it’s fun!

1. Badminton was first held in 1949 by the 10th Duke of Beaufort in order to let the British riders train for international events.

2. The smallest horses to ever win Badminton were 15hh (Our Solo in 1960 and Our Nobby in 1968). ⁣

3. Only seven mares have ever won Badminton: Emily Little, Bambi V, Peggoty, Headley Britannia and Paulank Brockagh, Classic Moët and Vanir Kamira.

4. In 1973, Rachel Bayliss and Gurgle the Greek went underneath the Stockholm fence and were deemed still clear as they went between the flags!⁣

5. Lucinda Green’s (formerly Prior-Palmer) horse, Wideawake, who won in 1976, died of a heart attack on his victory lap. She won the event an incredible six times on six different horses!!⁣

6. Andrew Nicholson holds the record for the most completions — he won his first in 2017 on his 37th completion!

7. In 1963, the event was downgraded to a one-day event due to bad weather.

8. Sheila Wilcox is the only person to have won three times in a row.

9. Ian Stark still holds the record from 1988 for coming 1st (Sir Wattie) and 2nd (Glenburnie).

10. Last year Oliver Townend beat Andrew Hoy’s dressage test record of 20.5 (2000) with a score of 19.7!

Laura Collett Leads Virtual Eventing Dressage; Approximately No One is Surprised

 

In one of the least surprising moments in sporting history, Laura Collett and London 52 – a horse who Just. Wants. To. Dance., damnit – swooped into the lead in the second and final day of dressage in the NAF Virtual Eventing 5* today. Their 24.9 puts them nearly a mark and a half ahead of yesterday’s leaders Yasmin Ingham and Sandman 7, now relegated to second place, though their impressive score comes despite a significant judging discrepancy – while both Jane Tolley and Les Smith had Laura in the 77th percentile, Annabel Scrimgeour awarded them a 70.93% (which is still a very good mark, mind you). This has been a particularly interesting insight into the subjectivity of judging, because all three of the hugely experienced assembled judges are scoring from the same viewpoint, rather than from separate points of the arena.

At any rate, though, Laura and London 52 – known to his friends as ‘Dan’ – managed to rack up 9s for all three gaits plus the halt, which seems almost unfair to this writer, who has never actually seen a 9 on any of her scoresheets and is concerned that perhaps she never will. Laura, if you want to share, you know where to find me. Please do consider sending over some of that impressive trot, too.

Though much of the top ten remains untouched after a slew of impressive performances yesterday, a 27.3 saw Boyd Martin and his US National Champion Tsetserleg take overnight fifth. Unlike some of his competitors, ‘Thomas’ – or, colloquially, ‘Sexy Legs’ – is no stranger to this level; to secure his National Champ title, he recorded a close second place finish at 2019’s renewal of the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event, losing out on the win to that pesky Townend bloke. Would this have been their year? We’ll never know – but we do know that Boyd comes into this competition with something to prove (and a mullet), and that could make tomorrow very interesting indeed.

Those viewers partial to a dishy French export were in for a treat today: both Tom Carlile and Sebastian Cavaillon sashayed their way into their respective arenas, casting brooding glances down the centreline and generally bringing a bit of joy to our lonely, locked-down lives. For his part, Tom made an impression on the judges and not just bored and lonely journalists, earning a score of 29.4 with the nine-year-old mare Birmane to sit eighth at the culmination of dressage.

If the wider eventing public hadn’t noticed Tom’s delightful up-and-comer before now, they certainly did today, aided by the enthusiastic admiration of commentator Spencer Sturmey. In her first 4*-L last season at Boekelo, Birmane finished in the top ten and looked considerably more mature than her eight years would have suggested. For the French team, who took the gold medal at Rio but have since sold on or retired half their remarkable mounts there, the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics could be something of a blessing in disguise – much of their most exciting talent is young and not yet established, and while the lack of competitive opportunities this year doesn’t foster an ideal learning environment, an extra year of focused training and strength-building could see them create a formidable team next summer, stocked with the likes of Birmane, Astier Nicolas’s Babylon de Gamma, and Mathieu Lemoine’s Tzinga d’Auzay. Fellow Virtual Eventing competitor Sebastian Cavaillon, 13th overnight on the smokey-eyed Sarah d’Argouges, also looks a strong contender on recent form, as does Christopher Six, who was impressive as an individual competitor at last year’s European Championships with Totem de Brecey, finishing fourth.

But enough speculation about the French, charming as they are – this week’s all about eventing in cyberspace, man. The final new entrant onto the leaderboard was the USA’s Hannah Sue Burnett, who rode Lukeswell – though there was some fierce online debate about whether this was, in fact, actually Lukeswell – to a 30.5 to round out the top ten.

Tomorrow’s competition takes us into the cross-country phase from 11am BST/6am Eastern time – but with our competitors under lockdown orders around the world, this is going to be cross-country like you’ve never seen it before. The only thing we can advise? Expect the unexpected – and maybe crack open a beer or two, too. It’s going to be a wild and weird sort of day. Let’s take a look at the leaderboard – could we see a major shake-up tomorrow? Will Virtual Eventing award its own version of the Glentrool Trophy for the highest climber through the competition? All remains to be seen:

The top ten at the conclusion of dressage.

You can rewatch all of yesterday and today’s action on Virtual Eventing’s Facebook page or website. Fancy a bit of guilt-free shopping? Head on over to the Virtual Trade Village, jam-packed with amazing deals (hello, 20% off a custom Voltaire saddle! Hi, £170 off a bespoke tailcoat!), or pick up your Virtual Eventing merch. Want to share your pennies for a good cause? Chuck a little something in the pot of your favourite rider – each competitor is raising vital funds for their country’s medical charity. Can you help them get to £150,000 by the end of the week? And more importantly, will you be joining us at the riders’ party tomorrow evening?

Badminton in the Rearview: The Birth of Badminton

This week, in lieu of hanging out in a field in Gloucestershire ourselves, we’re going to be sharing some of our favourite Badminton content of years gone by, as well as some new pieces to keep the nostalgia train going strong. Today, we look back at the history of Badminton in a post originally published on February 28, 2019…

Sixth at the very first running of Badminton, Captain Tony Collings and Remus would return a year later to take the title. Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trials.

The Birth of Eventing

Despite Great Britain’s reputation as the mecca of three-day-eventing, the country was actually a bit of a slow burner when it came to adopting the sport. In fact, it’s the French who can boast of the earliest iteration of it; their military competition, the Championnat du Cheval d’Armes, featured challenges resembling modern eventing as early as 1902. But it wasn’t until the king of Sweden’s Master of the Horse, Count Clarence von Rosen, got ahold of it in 1912 that the first true event was staged at the Stockholm Olympics, because why spend a few years ironing out the details of a sport when you could just chuck it into the most prestigious championships in the world and figure it out as you go along?

Open only to active military men on military horses, the ‘Militaire’ began with a 33-mile endurance ride, followed by a three-mile cross country course. The second day was a rest day, followed by steeplechase on day three, while day four was devoted to the showjumping test. Only on the fifth day did horse and rider enter the dressage arena — there, they would perform a 10-minute long test to a panel of seven judges, ostensibly to demonstrate their ability to perform in important military displays such as the changing of the guard, or in the parades that were often used to celebrate the country’s monarchy.

The test, called ‘Prize Riding,’ bore little resemblance to modern-day dressage: many riders rode one-handed, showing off movements such as ‘fast walk’ (a perennial favourite among over-fit event horses, even back then), Spanish walk, and gallop. Bafflingly, the test included five show jumps of roughly 1.10m (3’7), and one instance of Don’t-Try-This-At-Home: horse and rider had to jump an overturned barrel while someone rolled it towards them. Yeah, we don’t know either.

Sweden’s Axel Nordlander survives all 862 phases to take the individual eventing title at the 1912 Olympics. Many horses and riders would contest more than one discipline. Show-offs. Photo via Public Domain/IOC.

By the time the Antwerp Games rolled around in 1920, the decision had been made to scrap dressage altogether, proving that eventers are made of the same fundamental stuff, no matter which decade you find us in. But by 1924, some sadist decided it probably ought to be slotted back in.

The organisers of the 1912 Games had had a pretty appealing reason to pop dressage in at the end of the competition: “With respect to the order in which the various tests should be executed, it was thought best to place the prize riding last, as the clearest obedience-test could thereby be obtained. A well-trained horse that has been severely taxed should, even after taking part in the previous tests, be able to do itself justice in the final one too.” Paris, clearly laughing in the face of danger, reintroduced everyone’s least favourite phase at the beginning of the competition, and modern-day eventing was born, sort of.

Eventing Comes to England

Despite fielding a team at every Games, Great Britain had only managed to medal once in the equestrian disciplines, when they clinched a team bronze for eventing at the 1936 Berlin Games. But this wasn’t, perhaps, something to write home about — the fourth-placed Czechoslovakian team finished on an incredible score of 18,952 after one of their riders got lost on cross country, and then misplaced his horse, and took three hours to find his errant nag and his way home. There was a lot to be done, but outside of the military barracks, no one in the UK knew, or cared, about eventing. Berlin’s Games — known, colloquially, as the Nazi Games —  would be the last Olympics for two cycles: both the 1940 and the 1944 Games were scheduled and ultimately abandoned because of World War Two. In 1948, though, the Olympics were back — and this time, they were heading to London.

The three-day eventing competition was held at Tweseldown Racecourse, part of the Aldershot military complex and, to this day, one of the most popular one-day event venues in Britain. The host nation, with its rich equestrian history, expected itself to do very well in these disciplines, despite a shortage of equine talent — and far too little training time — after the ravages of the Second World War.

They categorically did not. Riding horses they’d only begun to school that spring, the British eventing team had just one finisher — Major Borwick made it to the end of the competition, while Brigadier Lyndon Bolton hit the deck twice and Major Stewart’s horse went lame before it could even begin the cross country. The competition was a wash-out for the Brits, but it did have one enormously important legacy: it introduced eventing to a hungry audience who had grown up on the hunting field and saw success in this exciting new triathlon-of-sorts as a birthright.

“It came as a rude awakening to find that we were not very good,” mused The Horseman’s Year some 11 years later, pointing out that “there is nothing which so gets under the skin of an Englishman as to be told he does not know how to ride.”

One Englishman and Olympic committee member in particular thought something ought to be done — and his conviction set the wheels in motion to create the heart of the sport in his home country.

A Star is Born

His Grace the 10th Duke of Beaufort, Henry Hugh Arthur Fitzroy Somerset, or ‘Master’ to his nearest and dearest, was a man of enormously high esteem. His sprawling Gloucestershire estate was home to one of the country’s most famous packs of hounds, and when he wasn’t carrying out his duties as Master of the Hunt, the Duke could be found serving as Master of the Horse to the royal family, a position he would hold for a record-breaking 42 years, serving under three sovereigns. He took equestrian sport incredibly seriously; in 1933 he headed up a committee that would establish the London International Horse Show at Olympia, which remains one of the country’s most beloved horsey establishments, and he was Vice President of the FEI and the BHS, too.

As such, he was one of the first people to see Great Britain’s immense potential for success in this exciting new discipline, and together with his close friend and British Horse Society council member Colonel Trevor Horn, he began to research the logistics and formalities of building an international-standard three-day eventing venue on his own Badminton estate. With the right infrastructure and a home competition at which to practise, he was sure that the British team could bring home a medal at the next Games. Somehow, he suspected, there was even a way to get past Britain’s deep suspicion of ‘dressage’, this ostentatiously continental pastime of silly circus tricks that seemed so thoroughly at odds with the fast and furious galloping and jumping the rest of the sport was based around.

He wasted no time. The BHS granted its approval and the Duke assembled an organising committee of military men, with Horn stepping into the daunting role of director. Horn’s legacy is, perhaps, one of the most overlooked — after all, he had just that one Olympic event to use as a reference point, and the FEI was yet to draft a set of rules for the sport, so he was working with the most raw of materials: a sprawling acreage, an end date, and a set of ideals. But that was all he’d need to create the blueprint for British eventing, and the rules he made up as he worked built the framework for the sport as we know it.

Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trials.

‘The Most Important Horse Event in Great Britain’

Britain in 1949 was an altogether different beast. Just a handful of years out of the devastation of World War Two, it was a nation rebuilding itself — and reexamining itself, too. The class system that had defined British society and culture for so long was unravelling; two long wars had shaken the country’s foundations and life was suddenly becoming much less Downton Abbey for all concerned. But it wasn’t quite there yet. Although it’s commonplace now to be able to walk into just about any stately country home you so choose, thanks to the ministrations of the National Trust and the need for the remaining ‘landed gentry’ to cover upkeep costs, back then, access to these upper echelons of society was restricted to a privileged few, even in this new dawn. In fact, it was in 1949 that the first of the country’s many manor houses was opened to the public — that was Longleat House, an Elizabethan prodigy house set in sumptuous Capability Brown-designed gardens. Its acreage would later become home to the UK’s foremost safari park.

Come one, come all: despite dressage’s limited popularity in Britain, and some arguably poor examples of the discipline, spectators still flocked to watch the first phase in its old location on the north side of Badminton House. Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trials.

When the public realised they’d get the chance to make merry on the very same grounds frequented by the who’s-who of British society, they jumped at the chance. The crowds at the very first ‘Badminton Three Days’ Event: The Most Important Horse Event in Great Britain’ were considerably larger than its organisers expected at roughly 6,000 people, and once inside, they were given free rein. The dreaded dressage and showjumping took place in front of the house in those days, where only the horse inspections take place now, and rather than piling into grandstands, spectators and judges alike stood atop their cars or sat on straw bales to watch. The cross-country course wasn’t roped, and instead, people were expected to keep their wits about them and get out of the way of an oncoming horse — tricky, perhaps, when riders were allowed to take whichever line they so choose from one fence to the next.

Judges oversee the final showjumping phase.

Making a Go of It

Forty-seven horse and rider combinations put in entries for this intriguing new competition on the spring calendar, among them military men, hunters, racing types, Thoroughbreds, cobs, and, though they weren’t yet allowed to compete at the Olympics, women. Of the twenty-two eventual starters, a quarter were female. The highest-placed of the 1949 girlpower contingent was Vivien Machin-Goodall, who would go on to be the first female three-day event winner.

The shopping was almost as good then as it is now. Almost. Photo courtesy of Badminton Horse Trials.

Even adjusted for inflation, entering the first iteration of the Badminton Horse Trials was as cheap as chips. The entry fee was just £2 per horse (roughly £69 in today’s money — a tenner less than an entry into Tweseldown’s BE80 class would cost you now), while the winner was promised a princely sum of £150 (£5190), a pittance compared to today’s first prize of £100,000.

But then again, the first Badminton was a gamble, with almost all of its first competitors admitting that they didn’t necessarily take it seriously — it was, in the words of David Somerset, who would go on to become the legendary 11th Duke of Beaufort, “just a sort of hunter trial” in that first year. But with its exciting and almost totally unprecedented sporting action, its friendly, laid-back feel — there was space to picnic at the Lake in those days, and you might find yourself eating your sarnies next to the royal family — and its promise of future Olympic glories, it would very quickly become a competition to be taken very seriously indeed.

For all its risks, the very first Badminton proved a hit with competitors and spectators alike, totting up a grand total of £20 (£694.25 today) in profit. Before too long, smaller events began to pop up around the country. Just as Badminton had been devised as a way to train for the ’52 Helsinki Olympics, these events were intended as a way for riders to train for Badminton, creating a funnel system that would eventually become a set of distinct levels. Badminton — the topmost echelon of eventing — led the way, and the rest of the sport was built down from there. Now, Britain holds the most one-day and three-day events prior to Badminton of any country in the world.