Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Legends Horse Feeds

Anyone else feel foggy this weekend while following the new Olympic format at Boekelo? If so, your first stop should be this article. Tilly Berendt breaks down the team format with easy to follow examples. So if you’re wondering: why are they jumping after being eliminated? How did that team get 100 points? Where’s the fourth rider? Then read up. You’ve got 10 months until Tokyo.

[Much Ado About Boekelo: Your Essential Guide to the New Format and the Golden Ticket]

National Holiday: National Cheese Curd Day

Events Opening This Week: Pine Top Thanksgiving H.T.

Events Closing This Week: The VHT International H.T.Rocking Horse Fall H.T.Galway Downs International Event & H.T.

Tuesday News: 

Our thoughts continue to be with French rider Thibault Fournier, who is in a coma after suffering a serious fall at an event in Pompadour, France over the weekend. 24-year-old Thibault memorably won Pau CCI5*-L last year in his first attempt at the level. His family posted to Facebook yesterday: “Thibault thanks you all for your support and your friendly thoughts. He can’t do it himself because he’s in a deep coma. He is in good hands and fights as usual to come back to your side. He still has so much to tell you, so much love, advice and attention to you.” [Thibault Fournier Eventing]

Horse owners can breathe a sigh of relief as they’ve officially gotten the green light for equine travel in the event of a no-deal Brexit on October 31. EU members granted the UK listed status, which recognizes high biosecurity and animal health standards. [Horse movement receives green light post-Brexit]

Those decorative alligators seen at water complexes around the country? Well Maryland International Horse Trials took that one step further with a living, breathing alligator on grounds last weekend. [The Great Loch Moy Gator Caper]

New in the equine science community: Zebra-like stripes on cattle deter biting flies, say researchers

Hot on Horse Nation: The 7 Trainers You’ll Encounter in Your Life

Tuesday Video:

Monday Video: Bruce Davidson Rocks Radnor Novice

Yes, that’s THE Bruce Davidson Sr.! Eventing never ceases to amaze us — what other sport out there can you stumble upon such a decorated athlete who shaped the sport out there popping around with everyone else?

The man, the myth, the legend himself was out eventing at the Radnor Hunt Horse Trials in Malvern, Pennsylvania, this weekend, showing the ropes to 6-year-old homebred Chesterland’s Jif (Keltic Lion x Jam) in the Open Novice division. They added just one stadium rail to their dressage score for a 5th place finish.

Thanks to C Square Farm for sharing this video!

Radnor Hunt H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Nothing on Earth That Compares

Photo by Beth Rice.

I was just going to say, let’s all just take a breath, and stop being crazy — when a tragedy occurs, and it’s all going sideways again.

Because death affects us all very deeply.

After Ashley’s death in July, my very first cross country ride was at Loch Moy, and after a fairly good show jumping round, we went directly to cross country. Up there, in warmup, I was trying to not get too excited, and was sweating because it was really hot, and feeling a bit weak — then it hit me.

This could be it.

This could be the last time I do this. Right here. Right now. It makes you really stop to breath for a few seconds and think about what you are about to do, where you are going, and what is coming.

So all the sweating and anxiety may not have been from the heat.

I don’t know how my horse just goes and jumps all these things for me. I am grateful he does, and I’m grateful he knows to somehow squiggle, hop, step over, or negotiate an obstacle when I’m really stupid up there on his back.

So I looked down at the mane of my horse, my wonderful, super, loyal friend who has always looked out for me and done everything I have ever asked him to do. And I am grateful for his friendship. And I touched his wither with my hand, and petted him, and soothed myself. “It’s all right,” he said to me. “I know how you feel.”

And I asked him if he was OK to go today. And he said “Sure. Whatever you want, mom,” as he has been trained to do, and I have schooled and lessoned and jumped and galloped and walked on trails in the woods with him. “Sure. Whatever you want, Mom.”

And all this stuff goes through your head literally 30 seconds before start. So you find a way to concentrate on what you are doing, on getting your reins shorter, getting the whip straight in your hand, a push to the watch button, a look at the volunteer starting you with a “Thank you,” and you may as well get on with it.

So you start off. And you say, well, if it’s not good, I’ll quit. So you jump fence 1. And it’s alright so far. And you head toward the big table that is fence 2 and you say, if I am going to jump this, I am not going to approach it or jump it scared or thinking I can quit, or want to stop. That’s not the right attitude here. I need to get my head in this game right now – because it really is all or nothing.

So I channel my inner Scarlett O’Hara, and decide I’ll think about it tomorrow. And you saw my distance, sucked my leg on, softened my hand, poked my butt in the saddle and my chin up.  And when I landed, I thought, “There,” and looked for fence 3.

And so it goes. One jump, one obstacle, one question at a time. Concentrate. Adjust. Get the job done right – not just done. If you’re going to do it, do it as well as you can, be as ready as possible, train hard, school hard, think, prepare, ride to the top of your game. Every jump. Every single cross rail.

If you have done it a million times. Or if it’s the first time.

Of course, there will be bad, sad, horrible days we can’t even.

And there’s no reason for it and there’s no explanation that makes sense or gives any comfort. We don’t know when our Maker says, “time’s up.” We just don’t.

And then there will be days that there is nothing on earth that compares to a great ride on a stiff course that you really nailed, that your horse and you grew a little on. You think about it as you work or drive or wait somewhere, and ride those jumps again. Over and over. And your day is bad, your work sucks, your life is crap, but you have that.

There will be days that there is nothing on earth that compares.

In honor of my friend Melanie Tallent.

Photo Gallery: Team USA Tackles Boekelo Show Jumping

Team USA capped off a great weekend in the Netherlands with some show jumping action yesterday for all team riders plus our traveling reserve, Matt Flynn and Wizzerd. If you missed out on all of Tilly’s excellent reporting, you can catch up with EN’s Boekelo coverage here. In the meantime, we’re not quite ready to leave Boekelo behind, so please enjoy these images from our good friend Sherry Stewart.

Military Boekelo: WebsiteScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Nupafeed Weekend Winners: Ocala Fall Photo Gallery, MDHT & More!

Yet another busy weekend is in the books for eventers nationwide. As we gear up for a big week at Fair Hill and look ahead to a few more busy weekends to close out the 2019 season, let’s take a look at the results from the weekend, all the way from Ocala to New Mexico and everywhere in between!

Major Event Results:

FEI Nations Cup at Military Boekelo: WebsiteFinal ScoresEN’s Coverage

U.S. Weekend Results:

Maryland at Loch Moy H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

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So proud of my entire #teambascule and the #glittersquad from this weekend!! Isabel and Rascal clinched their 7th place standing as well as 3rd in the Young Riders program with a #doubleclear show jumping round in the #BN3DE to finish on their dressage score!! So proud of this awesome pair, and huge thanks to Carolyn and the AMAZING crew and volunteers at Loch Moy for putting on such an incredible event and learning experience!!Izzy and Rook had a steady dressage test and super clear SJ round in their move up to training, with just a green moment as a stumbling block out XC, but they will be competitive with some more experience!! Sophie and Luna had a super consistent Novice dressage test and really got into the groove in the jumping, really figuring each other out!! Can’t wait for the winter boot camp with all my phenomenal students and their unicorns!! #loveallmykids #andtheirunicorns #sparklepower #fods #learningexperience #everytime #turninggreentopro #wooh #werkwerkwerk #getitgirl #slayqueen #dathindendtho #noscopenohope #werideunicorns #wedontsweatwesparkle #soproud

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Open Intermediate: Phillip Dutton and Carlchen (39.2)
Open Preliminary: Phillip Dutton and Quasi Cool (25.3)
Preliminary Rider: Megan Tardiff and Vindakova (37.0)
Modified A: Kimmy Cecere and Carrowgar Crannagh Hugo (28.5)
Modified B: Kevin Keane and HH Ontario (30.7)
Modified Championship: Elizabeth Stewart and Innsbruck VDO (31.2)
Junior Open Training: Olivia Dutton and Icabad Crane (32.4)
Open Training A: Caitlin Kuczynski and Fernhill Blueprint (27.9)
Open Training B: Megan Loughnane and Flamenco Ping (33.1)
Training Rider: Jackson Dillard and Layla Q (30.5)
Junior Open Novice: Olivia Dutton and Iniesta (19.8)
Novice Rider A: Christina Feaga and In The Mick of Time (31.2)
Novice Rider B: Lindsay Berreth and Oh So Extreme (27.6)
Open Novice A: Francesca Broggini and Cooley High Flyer (21.4)
Open Novice B: Rose Agard and Oberon Van Heiste (28.6)
Beginner Novice Three-Day: Lisa Hannan and Lowenbrau (28.0)
Beginner Novice Rider: Shannon Bower and Tale as Old As Time (32.2)
Junior Beginner Novice: Cierra Miller and Denis the Menace (28.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Suzannah Cornue and Karerra (29.2)

Hitching Post Farm H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Preliminary: Anna Loschiavo and Fernhill Holeshot (30.1)
Junior Training: Annabelle Sprague and Meadowlark (31.0)
Training: Mickey Rathbun and Bramble (27.4)
Junior Novice: Ryleigh Doyle and Encore Brulant (26.4)
Novice: Katherine Cooper and Gigi (23.6)
Beginner Novice: Alyssa Birt and Jack (28.6)
Junior Beginner Novice: Hannah Williams and Turnup (24.7)

Radnor Hunt H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]


Open Preliminary A: Ryan Wood and MK’s Concord Dawn (26.3)
Open Preliminary B: Kira Statue and Goodtimes (35.1)
Open Preliminary C: Dominic Schramm and Quadrocana (25.7)
Junior Training Rider: Maggie Buchanan and 3,2,1, Blastoff (30.5)
Open Training: Ryan Wood and The Optimist (30.5)
Training Rider: Drew Wicas and Killernan Prince (31.5)
Junior Novice Rider: Emma Humble and My Painted Princess (28.3)
Novice Rider: Teresa Martinoli and Loughnatousa Caprice (27.4)
Open Novice A: Jane Jennings and Larano 5 (28.6)
Open Novice B: Emily Lehman and Cooley On The Con (28.1)

Paradise Farm H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]


Open Preliminary: John Michael Durr and Perkunos (30.5)
Preliminary Rider: Kristen Schuitema and One Sly Fox (30.2)
Open Preliminary/Training: Kristen Schuitema and Reginald McDougal (35.0)
Open Training: Kimberly Steinbuch and Classiro (26.3)
Training Rider: Kerry Tracey and Excel Star Kate (41.9)
Novice Rider: Finley Habenicht and Aleta NSF (27.9)
Open Novice: Rebecca von Schweinitz and Sky Road (32.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Danielle Moore and Tenth Rendition (26.8)
Open Beginner Novice: Mary Carol Harsch and Theodore alCoda (31.5)
Starter: Annie Goodwin and Judicious (31.4)

Ocala Fall H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Many thanks are in order for Lisa Madren, who sent in these great photos from a busy weekend in Ocala. Enjoy!

Advanced/Intermediate: Leslie Law and LCC Vogue (36.6)
Open Intermediate: Jonathan Holling and Prophet (31.5)
Open Preliminary: Leslie Law and Typically Fernhill (28.1)
Preliminary Rider: Sydney Rovira and Oakdale (37.8)
Modified: Rain Anderson and Wimpy Kid (31.1)
Open Training A: Clayton Fredericks and FE Clooney (24.1)
Open Training B: Lesley Grant-Law and Fernhill Finalist (22.9)
Training Rider: Amelia Ebhardt and Fernhill Celebrity (23.3)
Novice Rider: Erin Walker and MTH Shannondale Khaleesi (22.1)
Open Novice: Justine Dutton and Super Steve (27.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Sophia Carattini and Artax (23.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Brenda Hutton and WYO Dun Maid (27.5)

Fleur de Leap H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

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Talk about a comeback! Tiny led his division start to finish on a 21.8 (that’s a 78.2% for you dressage folks), going clean xc and fault free in stadium to take the win in a competitive Beginner Novice division! Proud does not even begin to cover how I feel. It’s absolutely insane to think that this time last year, I was so close to selling him and leaving the eventing world. We couldn’t get over fences, we couldn’t steer, and I couldn’t stop him no matter how hard I tried. I am so, so, so incredibly grateful to the ladies that have been willing to take on my little kracken and I: @harrison_eq , @dmdressage81 , and @thoroughbredcharmschool . The hard work is finally paying off and I am so in love with my horse. Tiny will be taking a well deserved quiet week while I die my way through midterms, and then it’s back in swing for our next recognized dressage show in November. #releasethekracken #irishsporthorsesofinstagram #irishsporthorsesdoitbest #howtotrainyourkracken #eventing #goeventing #eventersofinstagram #eventhorsesofinstagram #dressagehorsesofinstagram #bestirishhorseintheworld #krackenrider #teamtiny #teamharrisoneq #sweett #everythingscomingupkracken #tinygoestotexas #bronzemedalorbust #dmdressage

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Preliminary/Training: Stephanie Tyler Wright and Madison Avenue (34.6)
Training: Madeleine Snell and Flagmount’s Rebel (28.9)
Novice A: Sierra Fishell and Regal Reagan (22.9)
Novice B: Kelley Kays-Everett and Falconwood’s Good Karma (31.2)
Beginner Novice A: Isabella Rodwig and Dempsey (21.8)
Beginner Novice B: Allison Gill and Island Girl (34.3)
Beginner Novice C: Kalie Beckers and Madoc Mari (23.8)
Starter: Lynn Quast and My High Roller (33.6)

Las Cruces H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

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This weekend went very well to say the least! Blue and I got a 33 in dressage because he was a little tense and didn’t feel like listening but made up for it with an AMAZING xc and finished the weekend with one of our most confident sj rounds yet to finished in third! Peter was entered VERY last minute and he was amazing! This was his first event and his third time on xc and he handled himself so well! We scored a 31 in dressage which is way better than I thought considering he was trying to take off with me for most of it😅 he was a little spooky on xc but after the first few jumps he was perfect and then had a double clear sj round to finish in second at his very first show! Now on to my first training three day at Galway!

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Open Preliminary: Heather Drager and Noblesse Oblige (31.5)
Open Training: Jennifer Miller and Bon Bon (26.2)
Open Novice A: Laura Worl Kober and Sterling Impression (25.7)
Open Novice B: Ashley Armijo and Encore RC (30.2)
Open Beginner Novice A: Donna Hayden and FlynnStone (30.8)
Open Beginner Novice B: Denise Aamodt and Spotlight II (22.0)
Pre-Competition: Stacey Cameron and Sucre De Carlier (27.5)
Starter: Bella Albersons and Striking Compadre (29.7)

Harry Meade and Superstition Sweep Strzegom CCI4*-L

Harry Meade and Superstition. Photo by Leszek Wójcik.

The winner of the CCI4*-L class, the feature class of the Strzegom October Festival, was Harry Meade with the 10-year-old Superstition.
The Brit took the lead after a clear round in the cross-country. Even one knockdown and a slight tardiness in the showjumping could not threaten his leading position.
Second place went to the four-time Olympic champion – Andrew Hoy (AUS) with Vassily de Lassos. The pair went clear in the cross-country and jumped up from the 10th to second position before the jumping. Maxime Livio (FRA) with Vegas des Boursons finished third.
The leader after dressage – Kylie Roddy (GBR) with Carden Earl Grey – was not as fast in the cross-country and the time penalties decided that she would finish as eighth.
The best Polish rider in the class was Małgorzata Korycka riding Canvalencia, as they finished at the 14th position.
Strzegom October Festival had record-breaking entries this year. Over 440 horses have galloped through the hippodrome in Morawa. During four days, the audiences had the chance to see riders from 28 countries, including, for the first time, Mexico and Turkey. Athletes competed in seven international and three national classes at various difficulty levels.

Andreas Dibowski and Butts Avedon. Photo by Mariusz Chmieliński.

The best rider of the CCI4*-S was Andreas Dibowski with the 16-year-old FRH Butts Avedon. A clear round in the show jumping gave him the lead in the class, despite having picked up time penalties on cross-country. Second place went to Nicolas Wettstein (ECU) with Meyer’s Happy, and third – to Lea Siegl (AUT) with Fighting Line.
The CCI3*-L podium was dominated by Germany. First place, after a clear cross-country, went to Ann-Catrin Bierlein riding Auf Geht’s Fraeulein Hummel. Calvin Böckmann with Altair de la Cense was second, and Nadine Marzahl with Victoria 108 were third.
For the first time in Strzegom, we had a rider from India as the winner of the CCI3*-S class. Fouaad Mirza and Dajara 4 took home the first place, beating Swedish athletes – Sandra Gustafsson with Kaminskij and Aminda Ingulfson with Hot Cup VH.
The CCI2*-L was divided into two sections. The best rider of section A was Jrina Giesswein (SUI) with Chester SP, and the winner of section B was Brandon Schäfer-Gehrau with Florentine. The CCI1*-Intro belonged to Hanna Jensen (GER) with EH Clara.
The CCIP2*-L class for ponies was dominated by German riders. The best of them was Jule Krueger riding Mas Que Dos.
The national one-star class win went to Miroslav Trunda (CZE) with Teqila Ruf. Jule Krueger (GER) with Hulingshofs Winchester was the best in CNC L. The best result of the CNC L18 class was of Julia Kałużyńska (POL) with Kalma. The easiest class of the show – CNC LL – went to Eliška Orctova (CZE) with Kirea.
Click here for results.

Monday News & Notes from Fleeceworks

Thibault Fornier and Siniani de Lathus. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We are incredibly saddened to report that French rider Thibault Fournier is currently hospitalized after suffering a serious fall at an event in Pompadour, France. He is currently in a coma, but reported to be stable. 24-year-old Thibault memorably won Pau CCI5*-L last year in his first attempt at the level. We’re sending our very best wishes for recovery to Thibault.

National Holiday: Columbus Day

Major Events:

FEI Nations Cup at Military Boekelo: WebsiteEntriesRide TimesLive StreamLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Results:

Maryland at Loch Moy H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Hitching Post Farm H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Radnor Hunt H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Paradise Farm H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Ocala Fall H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Fleur de Leap H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Las Cruces H.T. [Website] [Final Scores]

Monday News & Notes:

Some good news: Kevin Babington has been transferred to a rehabilitation facility. The Irish show jumper suffered a life-changing fall on August 30th at the Hampton Classic. Kevin still have a very long road to recovery ahead, but his transfer our of the hospital is a good sign. The extent of paralysis is still not known, but Kevin is now able to eat and drink on his own and his voice is getting stronger. [Update on Kevin Babington and Fundraising Options]

There are many rules that dictate the cross-country obstacles, from the height of the roof above a fence to the types of flags that must be used on certain types of jumps. It is important to understand these rules so that, as a competitor, you can be aware of what is and is not permitted on the cross-country course. [Rule Refresher: Cross-Country Obstacles]

Back pain is the worst. And it’s fairly common among riders. Back pain can stem from a number of things, including but not limited to poor posture, muscle weaknesses and misuse, saddle type, or trauma related to falls. Here are a few exercises to help you bullet-proof your back. [How to Maintain a Strong Back and Prevent Soreness]

Monday Featured Video:

Laura Collett Takes Boekelo; Switzerland Qualify for Olympics

Laura Collett ends her season on a high win a victory at Boekelo with London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

What a year it’s been for Laura Collett and London 52. After a promising start – they took the win in the Chatsworth leg of the Event Rider Masters, getting the 2019 season off to a good start after a win in the Blenheim eight- and nine-year-old class in 2018 – it all started to go a little bit awry. An uncharacteristic blip at Blenheim set them on the back foot, and Laura acknowledged that under the weight of his previous and projected performances, she’d put the horse on a pedestal.

Aachen offered the pair an opportunity to put the wheels back on the bus, and when they went into the final phase in the lead, it looked as though they might just do it – but a minor overcorrection just a couple of fences from home saw them pick up another 20 penalties for their record sheet. Finally, there was the Europeans, and again, it all looked like it was going the right way: well in with a shout of an individual medal, Laura and ‘Dan’ set out looking focused, efficient, and ready to put their back luck to bed – until they met the bird.

They certainly weren’t the only pair to come to grief at the final water, where a colourful bird-shaped fence threw many experienced pairs for a loop, but when London 52 left a leg, tipping Laura into the drink, it was the mouldy cherry on top of a colossal layer cake of, well, crap.

Laura Collett and London 52. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But though she is but little, she is fierce – and determined not to finish the horse’s year on a bad note, Laura opted to bring him to Boekelo, where he’d finished in second place in his first CCI4*-L the year prior. The goal? A nice run and a happy time for the ten-year-old gelding, so that he could come back out with all guns blazing next year. The result? An emotional and long-awaited victory, proving that sometimes, these things really do come in threes. For the first time this season, all the luck appeared to play in their favour: a 26 dressage saw them tied for third after the first phase with Chris Burton and Clever Louis, and when both combinations came home fault-free and inside the optimum time, Laura won the tie-break for having come closer to the time than Burto, who was two seconds faster.

When she then went on to deliver one of just eleven clear rounds inside the time today over Boekelo’s notoriously tough showjumping track, all she could do was wait: Germany’s Sandra Auffarth and Let’s Dance 73, who had led throughout, were less than a pole ahead of her in their first long-format combination as a partnership.

Overnight leaders Sandra Auffarth and new ride Let’s Dance 73. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

She’d have a long wait, as it happened, as all the team riders jumped after the individuals, which meant that Laura had two agonising hours to see her fate decided.

“I’d just assumed we’d be second again,” she laughs. “I never thought [Let’s Dance] would have a rail – he was jumping amazingly. I half looked away but then Camilla [Spiers] grabbed me, and I nearly fell off the railing!”

“He deserves it” – Laura Collett credits London 52 after a superb clear. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sandra had tipped the penultimate fence, the final element of a treble combination that proved fickle throughout the day. The German former World Champion was relegated to fourth place and Laura, with lady luck – and more than a modicum of formidable talent – firmly in situ, was the winner.

“I can’t believe it – second would be good, but there’s nothing quite like winning,” says an emotional Laura. “I’m just delighted for the horse – he deserves it so much.”

Chris Burton and Clever Louis. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Second place went to Australia’s Chris Burton, who also took home an Olympic qualification with Clever Louis, finishing on his dressage score of 26 despite only running in their second competition together.

Michael Jung and fifth-placed fischerRocana FST. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Third place, meanwhile, was the domain of Michael Jung, who climbed five places throughout the week with new ride Creevagh Cooley. He also finished fifth on former Kentucky winner fischerRocana FST, who makes her return to competition this autumn after over a year out due to joint issues. She added a solitary rail today to her 26.1 dressage.

Kazuma Tomoto and Bernadette Utopia. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Japan’s Kazuma Tomoto and Bernadette Utopia executed an impressive climb up the leaderboard from 23rd, where they found themselves after their 30.8 dressage, to 12th after cross-country, and finally to sixth place, on the strength of their showjumping performance. They produced a clear round inside the time to finish on their dressage score, proving once again that Kazu’s background as a World Cup showjumper will be one of the not-so-secret weapons of Japan’s crack eventing team in Tokyo next year.

Zara Tindall and Class Affair. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Former World Champion Zara Tindall and Class Affair, who had cheeky cross-country run-outs at both Burghley and Blenheim, followed Kazu up the leaderboard, moving from nineteenth to eventual seventh, while France’s Nicolas Touzaint – the 2008 Badminton winner – and Vendee Globe’Jac HDC stormed from 18th to eighth after an exuberant clear round today. For Nicolas, the pressure was amplified – not only had he been subbed in to jump for the French team in Karim Laghouag Florent‘s place, he had also spent the season working to overcome some cross-country wobbles, which saw them clock up 40 penalties here last year and lodge faults at both Saumur and Jardy this season.

Nicolas Touzaint and Vendee Globe’Jac HDC. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“He did a 62% dressage last year and had two run-outs cross-country, but he came back this year to do a 70% dressage, jump clear, and very nearly make the time,” says Nicolas. “The progression of the horse is very encouraging. I haven’t changed anything in particular; the horse showjumped until late and has only evented for a couple of years, so he’s needed time to understand the sport. I’m looking forward to what’s to come.”

Mollie Summerland and Charly van ter Heiden. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Young British team member Mollie Summerland wouldn’t just record the biggest climb to the top ten – though she did do just that, moving from 29th to ninth through the week – she would also earn the title of best Boekelo first-timer, finishing on a score of 31.5 with Charly van ter Heiden, the impressive Belgian-bred gelding that she’s produced herself.

“It’s just incredible to be here on a team with riders like Laura [Collett] and Izzy [Taylor],” says the exciting up-and-comer, who was the best of the British team in the Nations Cup at Waregem last month, too.

Tom Carlile and Birmane. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

France’s Tom Carlile rounded out the top ten with the eight-year-old Birmane, whose 26.9 dressage and fault-free cross-country round was good enough to stop them from slipping lower when they tipped a rail and added two time penalties.

“It’s always frustrating to finish on four faults, but I’m really proud of how she ran this final in her first time at this level,” he says. “She did really well for her age – she suffered a bit with the atmosphere, and where we had to turn tight, the ground was getting quite loose. I’m not making excuses, but it wasn’t ideal. I had one down, which was a pain, because the mare was jumping really well. But it’s still top ten, so it’s really promising.”

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum finished the week as the best of the US contingent in eleventh place, dropping from seventh after tipping a rail and adding a time fault.

“The time was hard to make, and that horse has a big step – I haven’t ridden him in a long-format four-star in a few years, and I just needed to take one more tug,” she says. “I would have gotten away with it had it been a short-format – but hindsight is a beautiful thing. He jumped fantastic, and he barely touched it.”

Now, she says, the plan for next season is up in the air – with Tokyo on the horizon, much will come down to team orders, but Tamie hasn’t ruled out a trip to Kentucky with the gelding, who she describes as “magic to ride.”

Merel Blom and Ceda. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

24th placed Merel Blom and Ceda were the best of the home front, earning them the title of Dutch National Champions, a win that was almost in the bag after yesterday’s competition, which saw them sit 20 penalties ahead of Jordy Wilken and Burry Spirit, who held their place to become reserve national champions.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Quicksilver. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Two rails fell for Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Quicksilver, who dropped six places to finish thirtieth overall, adding to the eight-year-old’s comprehensive education.

Matt Flynn and Wizzerd. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Matt Flynn and Wizzerd finished 52nd after a single rail and 2.8 time penalties, while Jennie Brannigan, who fell yesterday but was able to jump for the team score with Stella Artois, per the new Olympic system, didn’t finish with a spot on the individual leaderboard, but contributed a fault-free round to the team.

Jennie Brannigan and Stella Artois. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“It’s certainly not the way I thought I’d be getting a pinque coat,” says Jennie wryly. “But I love showjumping, and the track was tough – my coach always says it’s good to practice high pressure with low pressure. I still wanted to do a good job for the team, and I feel horrible about what happened yesterday, but I think at the end of the day, it’s just something that happened. She’s a great horse. Life kicks you down, but I try to prove that you’ve got to try to keep fighting. I’d love to be able to base over here for a bit – that’s probably something I should try to make happen for myself.”

The final top ten at Boekelo.

The Battle of the Nations

Germany head the Nations Cup. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The unassailable German team walked the win, despite clocking up 16 jumping faults between team members Sandra Auffarth and Let’s Dance 73Michael Jung and fischerRocana, and Ingrid Klimke and SAP Asha P. They finished on a score of 94.1, a remarkable 29.4 points ahead of second-placed Australia, who were led by the faultless performance of Chris Burton and Clever Louis, while Kevin McNab and Fernhill Tabasco added 5.2 penalties and Sammi Birch and Finduss PFB added a solitary rail.

Atsushi Negishi and Ventura de la Chaule JRA. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Team Japan confirmed a podium place when they added just four penalties across their team of Kazuma Tomoto and Bernadette UtopiaYoshi Oiwa and Bart L JRA, and Atsushi Negishi and Ventura de la Chaule JRA.

It was team New Zealand who delivered the leading performance of the day, adding just 1.6 time penalties across three superb rounds by James Avery and One Of A KindJesse Campbell and Cleveland, and Dan Jocelyn and Lissyegan Rory, who were substituted in to replace Samantha Lissington and Ricker Ridge Rui GNZ. Their final score of 130 saw them finish fourth place.

Sweden take the series title. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But really, the victors of the day were threefold: with Germany confirmed as winners, Sweden were able to bask in the glory of taking the 2019 FEI Nations Cup Series Championship, a testament to their hard work and consistency throughout the season.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been so happy to be tenth,” laughed a relieved Fred Bergendorff, chef d’equipe for the team of Hanna Berg and Quite SurvivorViktoria Carlerbäck and Zlatan, and Anna Nilsson and Candy Girl, who came forward to jump after an elimination on course yesterday.

Tiziana Realini and Toubleau du Rueire. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The battle for the final Tokyo ticket was a closely fought one, with Switzerland starting the day in fifth place and Belgium in third. Any movement in either direction would have changed the fortunes of both teams, who were led by Switzerland on a knife-edge – and their performances through the day remained on the similarly tight margin. Switzerland plummeted to seventh place after clocking up thirty penalties: Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully CH added 13.2, while Caroline Gerber and Tresor de Chignan CH raised team hopes once again when they added just a single time fault to their tally. But although final rider Tiziana Realini had a smart start to her round on Toubleau du Rueire, it all started to fall apart after one pole fell, and by the time she crossed the finish, she’d taken four and added a time penalty, too.

Constantin van Rijckevorsel and Beat It. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But Belgium didn’t have an easy day, either – they knew they had to aim for a podium finish to put themselves well in the hunt for qualification, but 30.8 penalties across the team of Constantin van Rijckevorsel and Beat ItSenne Vervaecke and Feebe van Alsingen, and Lara de Liedekerke-Meier and Alpaga d’Arville. They dropped to sixth place, and the deal was done: Switzerland will go to Tokyo.

Two further teams made use of the new substitution rule for this final phase: Ireland, who finished 12th, substituted Austin O’Connor and Kinnordy Rhondo for Padraig McCarthy and Leonidas II, who opted not to present at the final horse inspection this morning. France’s Karim Laghouag Florent suffered a horse fall with Triton Fontaine yesterday and was thus ineligible to jump today, and so Nicolas Touzaint and Vendee Globe’Jac HDC showjumped in their stead. The team ultimately finished ninth.

We’ll be taking a closer look at the new format as we saw it this weekend, plus the Olympic spot that could still be up for grabs, in the coming weeks. In the meantime, though, that’s a wrap from Boekelo – we hope you’ve enjoyed it as much as we have! Until next time, folks – Go Eventing.

The Nations Cup finale results.

Military Boekelo: Website, Entries, Ride Times, Live Stream, Live Scores, EN’s Coverage, EN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

In Memory of Melanie Tallent

Photo by AK Dragoo Photography.

We are extremely sad to report that Area II eventer Dr. Melanie Tallent passed away Friday, October 11, 2019 due to a traumatic brain injury sustained in a horse related fall the week before.

Melanie was a neuroscientist. She and her husband Gordon Lutz together co-founded the company LifeSplice Pharma, a biotech firm that develops RNA-based drugs to treat neurological disorders. In her field, she was well known for her work in the epilepsy research.

Melanie’s life was made sweeter through her connection with horses, especially her own Gadwall, a dutch harness horse, and Dunlin, a Paint/Percheron. Through her riding career, she embraced her educational opportunities to learn and grow her craft, and many friends have shared fond memories of her contagious work ethic. She also carved time to give back to the animals and sport she loved through volunteering with local events and with CANTER.

Today I lost my amazing friend and long time client, Melanie Tallent, to a TBI from a fall a week ago. Looking back, I realize Mel probably didn’t take lessons with me every single week on her horses because she thought she needed lessons from a Grand Prix Dressage rider for lower level eventing. I think she did that to support me so I could be successful. I am going to miss teaching her and riding her fabulous horses every week, but most of all her jokes and her incredible support. I am so devastated and heartbroken. I am going to keep living my life boldly like she did and as she would want me to. Miss and love you Mel 💔

Posted by Kymmy Pullen on Friday, October 11, 2019

“Melanie Tallent was one of the most genuine, kind hearted people I have ever met. She deeply cared for and loved her horses; her work ethic, passion for the sport, and tenderness shone through her interactions across friends, family and fellow eventers,” said Sara Gumbiner, who was a friend and coach to Melanie.

“Melanie was an outspoken advocate for human rights, and along side her husband, Gordon, was working on developing treatment options for neurologic disease and brain injury. Her passing has left a void in my heart, a place in my soul that was filled with the presence of strong woman, and close friend. I am blessed that she was a part of my life, the past 10 years has brought me great joy, and fulfillment in my work, to watch her grow with her horses as a team, the effort she poured into science and advocated for the respect and dignity of people: always seeking continual improvement.”

On behalf of the eventing community, we extend our deepest condolences to Melanie’s friends and family.

Babies on Board: Entries for Le Lion Go Live

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Moonshine at Le Lion d’Angers 2018. Photo by EquusPix.

The FEI World Breeding Eventing Championships, otherwise known as Mondial du Lion, will take place next week from Oct. 17-20 at at Le Lion d’Angers. It’s a highlight of the global fall eventing calendar as future eventing superstars take centerstage.

As usual, the 6-year-olds will contest a CCIYH2*-L and 7-year-olds will contest the CCIYH3*-L. 22 different countries will be represented across the competition, ranging from eventing powerhouses such as France, Great Britain, and Ireland – who each have 15 horses competing – to ones we don’t see as often like Lithuania and Estonia. 19 countries and 40 pairs are entered in the two-star division for 6-year-olds, while 15 countries and 61 pairs will run the three-star for 7-year-olds.

One particularly notable name amongst the CCIYH2*-L entries is Piggy French, who’s having the most successful season on record. A win in the 6-year-old class with Cooley Lancer (Coeur De Nobless M X Tante Catoche Du Houssoit, by Ogano Sitte) would continue to grow her record of most international wins in a season.

The pair’s most recent outing came last weekend in the 6-year old division the British Eventing Young Horse National Championships at the Osberton International Horse Trials where they finished in second place out of 78 starters on their dressage score of 27.9. The Swiss-bred gelding hasn’t finished lower than 4th in any of his three previous 2*-S and has two Intermediate runs under his belt as well. Le Lion will be his first long-format event.

Last year’s 6-year-old champion, Cristal Fontaine (Chef Rouge x Nous Avons Gagne, by Griot de Mara) returns with rider Kitty King to try for back-to-back wins now as a 7-year-old. Though the Selle Français gelding finished 7th in the CCIYH-3*S at Osberton last weekend, he previously had not finished outside of the top three in his five internationals since Le Lion last year.

The competition will, of course, be fierce — particularly with several other top-placing 7-year-olds from the British Eventing Young Horse National Championships looking to steal the World Championship title and g us plenty of pairs to keep our eye on. William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht (Grafenstolz X Nachtigall, by Narew), Italy’s Giovanni Ugolotti and Swirly Temptress (For Ladies Only X Betty Barclay, by Brentano 11), Willa Newton and Cock A Doodle Doo (Clarimo X unknown), Heidi Coy and Russal Z (Russell II X Violet, by Darco) all finished in the top ten at Osberton as well.

Another horse returning to Le Lion as a 7-year old is Cooley Moonshine (Cobra X Kilpatrick Duchess, by Kings Master) with sole North American representative this year, Liz Halliday-Sharp. Liz and Cooley Moonshine very nearly won the 6-year old championship last year, but the Irish Sport Horse gelding knocked a single rail in the final phase to drop them to third. Can they come out on top this year?

Cooley Moonshine will have some competition even from his own stable, however, as Liz will ride Flash Cooley (CSF Mr Kroon X Castlefield Ruby, by OBOS Quality) in the three-star for 7-year-olds as well.

Other big name riders including Oliver TownendIngrid Klimke, and Tim Price will be ones to watch aboard their 7-year-olds as well.

Click here to view entries for the 6-year-old World Championships.

Click here to view entries for the 7-year-old World Championships.

[Le Lion d’Angers Website]