Classic Eventing Nation

Archie Rocks Euthanised After Fall at Les 5 Etoiles de Pau

Felix Vogg and Archie Rocks on course at Pau. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

We’re devastated to report that Archie Rocks, ridden by Switzerland’s Felix Vogg, has been euthanised following a fall late on course at Les 5 Etoiles de Pau yesterday. The pair had enjoyed a clear round up until the final water on course, which featured a hanging log in at 28A and a skinny in the water at 28B. After navigating the first element successfully, the gelding appeared to stumble in the water, falling just in front of the second and sustaining a catastrophic injury to his shoulder.

The event has released a statement, which reads: “It is with a great sadness that we announce that Archie Rocks, ridden by Switzerland’s Felix Vogg and owned by Phoenix Eventing S.à.r.l., was put down on Saturday, October 26, following a fall on the cross-country, while competing at the CCI5*-L of les 5 Etoiles de Pau, France. The fall occurred on fence 28B.

The decision to put the horse down was taken by the owner, in consultation with the show veterinarians.”

“Archie Rocks suffered an irreparable shoulder fracture, considered to be severe by the veterinarians on the site,” says Felix, who co-owned the gelding, in the statement. “Despite all efforts to save him, we have had to take the difficult decision to put him to sleep. Archie was a very special horse in many respects. Special thoughts go to all his American fans, who have given him their support throughout his career. He was outstanding on the cross-country, a sweet horse who gave his best to his rider.”

Archie Rocks enjoyed a brief career as a racehorse, winning over $30,000 over 30 starts in the States before embarking upon his second career as an eventer. He was bought from Chris Talley by Maya Simmons, who renamed the horse – then called Smittys Messiah – to honour her grandfather, who served during World War II. Maya campaigned the gelding to CCI4*-S before Buck Davidson took the reins, partnering Archie to top ten finishes in all four of their international runs together, including Fair Hill CCI4*-L, Jersey Fresh CCI4*-L, and a win in the CCI4*-S at Plantation Field. Felix bought the eleven-year-old at the end of 2018, and in their brief but illustrious partnership together, they finished in the top ten in the CCIO4*-S at Pratoni, the CCI4*-L at Strzegom, and represented Switzerland at this summer’s European Championships.

Eventing Nation’s team sends its deepest consolations to Felix and all of Archie’s connections and many fans. Archie Rocks was not only a much-loved ambassador for retrained racehorses worldwide, he was also a firm favourite among the teams he was a part of, and will be much missed.

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Jack Pinkney Speaks Out After Pau Fall: “I Was So Angry With Myself”

Jack Pinkney and Raphael tackle fence 11. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

If you’ve been following along with Les 5 Etoiles de Pau – or, indeed, have nipped onto social media over the last 24 hours – it’s likely you’ve come across a widely-shared video of an incident that occurred over yesterday’s cross-country horse. Today, we spoke to 27-year-old Jack Pinkney, the British debutante who was eliminated when his mount, 15-year-old Raphael, attempted to jump a large dividing wall in the final section of the course, and who has been at the centre of heated criticism as the clip has gained traction.

“It started brilliantly – he was flying, as always, and he made everything in the beginning feel like it was easy. He was cruising around, and it felt like you’d want it to,” reflects 27-year-old Jack, who runs his own yard in Andover, Hampshire after several years working for Padraig and Lucy McCarthy and latterly, Austin O’Connor. He took the ride on Julia Plaisted’s Raphael, who was a working hunter until the age of ten, five years ago, and has produced the Irish Sport Horse through the levels as he, too, has made his debut at the upper echelons of the sport. Promising results, including tenth place in a CCI4*-S at Chatsworth and a fast clear at Blenheim’s CCI4*-L, led to the decision to head to the south of France’s for the pair’s first five-star.

The early section of the course proved uneventful for the seasoned partnership. But after jumping neatly through the first part of the course’s first water complex, Jack turned back for the second passage through, made up of fences 10 – a reasonably skinny arrowhead – and 11, a brush swan in the water. As the pair touched down from fence 10 and aimed for the left-handed turn to 11, Jack’s left rein snapped partway through the rubber section, and with the balance and steering momentarily lost, they slipped by fence 11, picking up 20 penalties. Jack quickly regained purchase on the broken left rein, which allowed enough length for him to comfortably use it, circled back, and popped fence 11.

“It snapped on the rubber section of the rein, which was odd, but I managed to pick up what I could in the water to then ride out over 11 and 12,” says Jack. “Again, [Raphael] showed how class he was, because he just did it. Then I had a bit of thinking time, because I had a bit of a gallop to a straightforward table, and I was addressing what I had at that time: I had a left rein, so I decided that I had control of the horse. We jumped the table at 13 and he felt good, and so I addressed it again.”

Jack assessed the length of rein he was afforded, and tested the controls to see whether he felt he could assert enough influence for the next, more open, part of the course.

“I had to have my left hand more forward, but I had a rein – it wasn’t like there was nothing there. I had a bit of rein to play with, and I could ride it. I shut the canter down, I shut the whole plan down then – I stopped my watch, because I thought, ‘let’s just try to give him a nice round with what I can do.’ I just wanted to get him home; I thought I was safe to go on because he’d been so easy and he felt brilliant.”

“We then did lots of technical parts [from fences 14 to 26]; I added in a couple of places because I changed my riding to try to get there and make it easier for the horse,” continues Jack. “Where there were long routes I took them. From then on, he was cruising and it was going well – he did the tricky turn to the left where you have two angled brushes [at 25 and 26] amazingly.”

The next fence was one of Pau’s myriad let-up tables – an innocuous obstacle after the skinnies and turns that the pair had already conquered. But this jump – fence 27, just prior to the final water and only a handful of fences from home – proved to be enormously influential to the pair, who had settled into a comfortable rhythm.

“He just jumped so well over [27] that it took the rein completely out of my hand,” explains Jack, who  leaned down to try to regain it. “I could never catch it again – I tried to pull on the martingale to slow him, and that’s where you see me trying to reach for the rein [in the video]. But the rein was hanging, and I couldn’t catch it.”

Just beyond fence 27, a large dividing wall – roughly ten feet high – opened into an archway to usher horses and riders into the final wooded section of the course. Still without his left rein, Jack felt Raphael lock onto the wall as though it was an obstacle.

“Being a very brave horse with confidence in our partnership, he eyed up the wooden dividing wall between two parts of the course, and there was nothing I could do. He took off at it, I fell off backwards and he galloped off,” says Jack, who landed on his feet as his horse attempted to clear the wall, instead crashing into it and landing on his hindquarters, quickly uprighting himself and cantering away.

Much of the criticism on social media has been directed at the two seconds of footage immediately after the fall, which show Jack throwing his whip to the ground as his horse canters away. But this, he says, isn’t indicative of any anger towards his horse – instead, it was a visceral reaction to how the situation could have panned out.

“At that moment, I was so angry with myself – I thought, ‘I could have hurt my horse’. Any reaction from me was just upset with myself,” he explains. “I made a massive mistake – your adrenaline’s up, you’re going, and you’re wanting to finish, and as a competitor that’s what you do. But then, if you could take a breath when you finish it, you start to think that would could have happened could have been so much worse, and that’s when you think, ‘I should have pulled up.’”

After tending to his mount, Jack took himself to the ground jury, professing his responsibility for the entire incident. He has received an official warning.

“I told them that I’m completely guilty; I have nothing to hide,” he says. “I made a mistake, and I’ve learnt from it – I won’t ever do it again.”

Despite the intensity of the backlash, Jack tells us that his overwhelming feeling is relief that his partner, Raphael is unhurt.

“He’s totally sound and happy, with just a small cut on his face,” he says. “We trotted him up this morning and he was absolutely fine, so I’m so relieved. He’s such a gent, and he just wants to please – I’ll probably never ride a horse like him again, and I know him so well. If I’d been on something else, I’d have thought differently. From the bottom of my heart, I didn’t want it to be dangerous, and I’m so sorry.”

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Overnight Leader Held in Pau Final Horse Inspection

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

And so the final battle commences, but not before Sunday’s horse inspection – and true to Pau form, that, too, brought its fair share of drama. After the overnight withdrawal of Gemma Tattersall‘s two rides, Jalapeno and Chilli Knight, 27 horses came forward in front of the assembled ground jury of Katrin Eichinger-KnielyTim Downes, and Nathalie Carriere. After yesterday’s sizzling highs of 27 Celsius, it was a joy to see a field of fit, happy, and occasionally rambunctious horses presented on the strip, which rather bizarrely abutted the tail end of the combined driving marathon course. Hashtag danger trot-up, anyone?

Just one would be held throughout the course of the trot-up, but it was one that quickened a fair few pulses: Tom McEwen‘s two-phase leader, Toledo de Kerser, was sent to the holding box, but subsequently passed upon reinspection. He’ll be our last horse to jump this afternoon in today’s showjumping finale, which begins at 15.00 local time/14.00 British time/10.00 a.m. Eastern. Full times can be found here, while a free live-stream can be found on Horse&Country TV.

Here’s a refresher of the leaderboard after cross-country:

The top ten at the culmination of cross-country at Pau.

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Sunday Links from One K Helmets

Holly Jacks-Smither and More Inspiration. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

That’s the face of pure adrenaline-based fun from Holly Jacks-Smither and More Inspiration, our sole North American representative at Pau. A clear cross country round saw them launch from 29th to 12th place going into the final phase. Best of luck to them in the final day!

National Holiday: National Tennessee Day

Major Events:

5 Etoiles de Pau: WebsiteEntriesForm GuideLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Waredaca 3DE & H.T. [Website] [HT Entry Status] [3DE Entry Status] [HT Ride Times] [3DE Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Windermere Run H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website]  [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Holly Hill H.T. [Website]  [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Sunday Links: 

Tokyo Talk: Who, When, Where?

2020 Eventing 25 Applications Now Open

A Glimpse Into the ICP Faculty Teaching Days

Rare wild horses use abandoned Chernobyl buildings for shelter

British rider on track for first CCI5* win at Pau: ‘My horse was unbelievable’

Lafite On The Mend After Freak Accident At Fair Hill International

Sunday Video: 

Tom McEwen Tops the Bill in Pau Cross-Country

Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

A curious thing happens at the beginning of cross-country day at a major three-day event: either the first riders out of the box make the whole shebang look laughably easy, and then a false sense of ease settles upon the rest of the pack and it all unravels again – or the first few fail to make it to the finish, and everyone begins to pay very close attention to every stride. The latter is what we saw today at Pau, where 29 of the 41 starters completed the course, but just 16 did so without adding jumping or flag penalties. Throughout the day, we saw problems scattered evenly across the course, with the myriad skinnies providing ample opportunity for drive-bys.

At the end of the day, though, dressage leader Tom McEwen would prevail, romping home just two seconds over the optimum time with Toledo de Kerser.

“Usually I don’t get that excited about things, but I was in that round,” laughs Tom, who piloted Figaro van het Broekxhof to a completion – albeit with a 20 – earlier in the day. “It’s been a long day for me; we’ve been to our Burghleys, and our Europeans, and so on, but it’s a strong field here and it’s just caused problem after problem all day. It’s a long old wait until the end of the day, and the first one wasn’t as precise as we’d like, although he went well. But Toledo was ready to go to the Europeans and he’s carried that over, so we were very fresh out of the start box. We just got into the flow of it – we were right down out the back and he just picked it back up, and as the round went on he just got smoother and smoother. For a horse with not much blood, he can run well enough.”

Though this is the first time Tom will go into the final phase with this amount of pressure, one thing must surely make him breathe a little more easily: Toledo de Kerser has one of the most impeccable showjumping records in the field.

Alex Bragg and Zagreb. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

The fastest round of the day – and the only round to stop the clock under the optimum time of 11:15 – was that of Alex Bragg and Zagreb, who finished with three seconds to spare and climbed from eighth to second place. For the pair, who have twice been fifth here on double-clear performances, making the time at Pau is a first.

“I think it shows the improvement in both of us along this journey,” says Alex. “He doesn’t have the biggest stride, considering he’s such a big horse, but he does have a lot of experience now and I’m able to ride up to fences without interfering or setting up too much, so I could keep a good pace and rhythm all the way around the track.”

Watching the riders before him impressed upon Alex the importance of finding that rhythm.

“I watched Tim [Price and Ascona M] and thought they looked like they were travelling well, but suddenly they were 40 seconds up on the clock,” he says. “It was clear to me that you were going to lose time in the last part of the course because the horses would be tired, and you’d be able to run straight past fences. You don’t want to be pulling their heads off and killing their power; you needed to relax to the fence and let them slow up themselves. Then, when you put your leg on, you’d get a response – and that’s the crucial thing.”

Alex roundly praised Michelet’s course design, which exerted considerable influence: “When I walked the course I knew it would have accumulative effect on horse and rider – you needed to make a decision about adding or leaving out before you got to a combination,” he explains. “If you were indecisive you had a slip-up – but that’s why it’s a clever course. You didn’t have major incidents and injuries, but it had an effect. This is a three-phase competition, after all.”

Chris Burton and Quality Purdey. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

The fastest man in the world didn’t quite deliver the fastest round of the day today, but Chris Burton couldn’t fault five-star debutante Quality Purdey, who added just 2 time penalties to move up to third place from sixth.

“I’m so proud of her – she’s a lovely mare, and I’m so lucky to have the ride on this horse,” says Chris. “She got a bit tired like they all did; Pierre Michelet does a great job of slowing us down in that last and second-last minute. It’s just impossible to take the fences out of a gallop and be quick. There’s a lot going on. But she’s really astonishing in how she looks for the jumps and wants to jump them – she steals my heart.”

Quality Purdey’s success is something of a miracle for her connections, who nursed her back from an injury last season.

“She broke her pedal bone after Aachen last year, and she’s come back from that getting better and better,” says Chris. “She’s amazing; she’s defied all the odds, and our team vet just can’t believe it – he’s absolutely in love with her.”

Chris and his team affectionately refer to the mare as ‘the dragon’ – despite her placid, sweet nature at home, she starts to breathe fire (though not literally, one must hope) at events.

“She must count down the days to an event – she knows when it’s cross-country day,” laughs Chris. “At Lignières we couldn’t get near her in the stable – she was wild, snorting fire, and she did a little bit in the dressage there, too. But she’s a lovely mare and we absolutely love her. You’ve never met a horse who wants to do it so much.”

Ros Canter and Zenshera. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

Reigning World Champion Ros Canter made good on her postpartum five-star comeback, cruising around with 15.2hh Zenshera. Though small, the fifteen-year-old gelding has become a mighty Pau specialist, finishing in the top ten on both his runs here – and today, both he and Ros showed us exactly why, adding a relatively tiny 6 time penalties to their 27.2 dressage to sit fourth overnight.

“We didn’t have a bad jump – he was just fantastic,” says Ros, who gave birth to her daughter, Ziggy, in July. “He’s such an honest horse, and he turns easily, and he comes back easily, and I don’t have to set him up too much, so from that point of view, he’s great. He just doesn’t have the gallop – you get out onto the racecourse and you think ‘right, now we can go’, and we don’t go any faster. I just have to be chugging away the whole time – he just doesn’t take me. It’s really hard if you have to slow down, because it takes quite a while to get back up again. I’ve got used to it now, though. The first time I came here I was slogging away at minute two, and so I slowed down thinking, ‘I’ve got all this way to go and he’s already tired’ – but he wasn’t getting tired, he’s just level in his rhythm and he doesn’t get any faster. But you know what? We didn’t buy him ever thinking he’d go around something like this, and I can live with a few time faults – I wouldn’t want to be on any other horse coming back. He and Allstar B are extremely special to me.”

Despite this, Ros admits that she felt the prickle of nerves this morning.

“I thought of just having a word with my partner and saying, ‘is this a stupid idea?’,” she says. “I had a bit of a wobble this morning – I went out early to have a practice fence, for my benefit not the horse’s, because I just haven’t been doing it like everyone else has this year. But I ended up pulling out of a brush fence that was only about a metre high, and I thought, ‘what the hell am I doing?! Come on, woman, buck your ideas up!’ And I just found it really hard out there this morning. So I had to give myself a bit of a talking to, but actually, in the warm-up the second time around, I was fine.”

Helping her along were some sage and simple words of wisdom from British chef d’equipe Chris Bartle.

“He always gives me the best advice, and he just said ‘stick to the system – it’s all about the eyes,'” she explains. “You’ve got to be on the ball with these types of courses, and you’ve got to almost be looking at part C when you’re jumping part A, and almost go through part B. You’ve got to have long reins and be strong with your body, and that’s so important for me right now because I’m not that strong. When I think I’m sitting up, I’m not – so I was trying to get out the back today.”

Shane Rose and Virgil. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

You know you’re speaking to a true competitor when they lament their 1.6 time penalties as a slow round, but that’s just what Shane Rose did after coming home with Virgil, who steps up to fifth place from 14th.

“I probably went out a little bit more conservative than I would normally, just because no one had gone close to the time when I left,” says Shane. “The plan was to be a little bit further up at the two-minute mark, but other than that early change to the plan, all the distances that I’d planned came off. It’s been five weeks since he’s had a start, so he was just a little keen and I had to touch his mouth a couple of times, about which he wasn’t as obliging as he can be. But he was great.”

Unusually on a Pierre Michelet course, the Australian rider – who travelled for five days with his horse to get here – opted to add a stride in one of the major combinations, the rolltop-corner-skinny combination spiralling down a mound.

“The plan was to do four and four, but he got quite close to the rolltop on the hill and he actually waited more than I expected him to, so I did five and four,” explains Shane. “I think I could have done either, but I decided to play it a bit safe and add.”

Kevin McNab and Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

Australia’s Kevin McNab soared up the leaderboard from 15th to 6th with Scuderia 1918 Don Quidam, adding 10.4 time penalties and enjoying a successful return to the level, at which we last saw him in 2015. It was an impressive debut for the eleven-year-old gelding, too, who finished eleventh in Hartpury’s CCI4*-S at the tail end of the summer.

Tim Price and Ascona M. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

It’s been a day of two halves for Tim Price, who had a chance to recapture the World Number One title after finding himself in the top ten with both Wesko and Ascona M. But fortune didn’t quite play in his favour: though Ascona M, who fell in the water here last year after an exuberant jump, finished clear, Tim took an extraordinarily unlucky dunking when Wesko, placed second after dressage, stumbled en route to the final element of the last water combination on course – a nasty moment of deja-vu after Tim’s similar fall from Ringwood Sky Boy at Burghley.

His ride on Ascona M, who won Luhmühlen this summer, wasn’t plain sailing either. They added 16.4 time penalties after some lapses in communication on course, which forced Tim to change his plan of attack and focus on giving the eleven-year-old mare an educational round.

“She’s been particularly feisty this week,” says Tim with a laugh. “She was just wanting the job, and it’s really difficult with her because she’s got so much talent, and scope, and ability there that I need to take away a bit of the gallop at the fences to do the job, and that costs time. I was aware of that, but it was important to jump the jumps first, and so I did that. It wasn’t probably the most suited to her, this track – it’s particularly twisty this year, and there’s a lot of places you’ve got to be quite nimble. I would have to say ‘right, you need to stay like this,’ and she’d argue a bit, so I’d take away some of the canter and we’d pop the fence and leave one out. I wanted to focus on some fences and then have another look at the clock, then jump a few out of the gallop and try to get her on a bit. That’s my normal way of riding, and the guys who make the time make it look smooth – but it’s not like that when you have to do a little bit of work. On balance, though, she’s still young, and I’m not disappointed – I know who she is, and I’m well used to not being able to always harness her ability.”

Andreas Dibowski and FRH Butts Avedon. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

Though we haven’t seen FRH Butts Avedon at his peak in some time, Germany’s Andreas Dibowski knew that the sixteen-year-old’s time at the top level was coming to a close – and so, spurred on by a win in a CCI4*-S at Strzegom, he decided to bring his formerly prolific five-star mount out for one last shot at a great run.

“He’s the most beautiful horse in the eventing world,” says Andreas fondly of his long-time partner. “I decided very late to come here, but he gave me such a good feeling in the last competition so I made this decision. For me, it was only to enjoy this ride – we will see what happens after this competition, but I think he’s sixteen-years-old and he’s done everything, and for me it’s important to give him a good last competition.”

It paid off. Despite failing to complete here last year, the stalwart Hanoverian picked his way neatly around the troublesome track, adding 16.8 time penalties to climb one spot to eighth.

“He was really motivated and he jumped very well,” says Andreas, who stuck to his guns and went long at the final major combination at 31ABC. “This is his last big competition, and for me, a good result was more important than winning. He had one moment only in the first water, where he didn’t really jump over – he jumped on the top – but then he reacted immediately and the rest was really perfect. At the end, it’s a tough course with all the turns and it needs a lot of power. After every turn, you have to go back to the speed, and that costs a lot of power from the horse.”

Mathieu Lemoine and Tzinga d’Auzay. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

Rio team member Mathieu Lemoine snuck his way into the top ten, finishing in ninth place at the end of the day with the young debutante Tzinga d’Auzay. They added 14.8 time penalties, necessitated by the 10-year-old Selle Français mare’s tiredness at the tail end of the course.

“I nursed Tzinga home after the eighth minute, and it was an obvious choice to take the long route at the final major combination,” he says. “But I’m really pleased with what she’s shown today in her first five-star.”

It’s certainly good news for followers of the much-lauded French rider: after the sale of his Rio mount, Bart L, to Japan’s Yoshi Oiwa, his horsepower has looked thin on the ground. But Tzinga – who he admits isn’t always the easiest horse to ride in the showjumping – looks quite the part at this fledgling stage of her career.

Regis Prud’Hon and Tarastro. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

There was plenty of scope for big move-ups today, and buoyed along by an extraordinarily enthusiastic home crowd, Regis Prud’Hon and Tarastro got the job done, adding 20.4 time penalties and moving up 23 places to round out the top ten overnight in the horse’s first five-star, despite a 20 in their final run at Waregem.

Holly Jacks and More Inspiration. Photo by Kingfisher Media Services.

Holly Jacks has long held the belief that Pau would suit her ex-racehorse More Inspiration, who she used to ride out as a two-year-old on the track, down to the ground – and that conviction proved true today, when they crossed the line with a clear under their belts. That they’d picked up 24.4 time penalties along the way would prove almost inconsequential as the day unfolded: such was the influence of today’s cross-country that they moved from 29th place up to 12th overnight.

“This horse has done so much for me – he’s come back from injury and been my first five-star horse,” says Holly, who describes her ride today as the best of her life. “I’ve always wanted to come here – the last three years I’ve tried to come, and I left the start box the calmest I’ve ever been. Once I jumped through the first water I just knew that we could get through the rest, and I think I did some things here that I didn’t know I could do – he’s always really short-strided, and a few times I saw the big one and just kicked him on. He just pricked his ears and went, and gave me more options than I’d ever had.”

For Ontario, Canada native Holly, this is affirmation of her decision to focus on her education over five-star tracks, rather than putting all her eggs in the championship basket.

“I really just want to get five-star miles, and I have a lot of amazing people behind me, so I wanted to ride with my coaches and follow my system,” she says. “It’s put me in a different mindframe to focus on that, rather than to chase teams.”

Tomorrow sees us head into the final horse inspection at 9.30 a.m. local time/8.30 a.m. BST/3.30 a.m. Eastern, followed by showjumping from 14.30 local/13.30 BST/8.30 a.m. Eastern. We’ll be bringing you all the news that’s fit to print – so join us tomorrow with plenty of French attitude. Until then – Go Eventing! (Or Pau eventing, we guess?)

The top ten at the culmination of cross-country at Pau.

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#EventerProblems Vol. 199, Presented by Haygain: Crapshoot

Photo courtesy of Martha Mitchell.

Lynnleigh Farm in Sandy, Utah has quite the sense of humor–as seen from their warning in the barn bathroom. According to Martha Mitchell,  “We would rather spend our money on horses than a new septic system.”

Said like a true eventer! Because who doesn’t enjoy pouring all your energy and financial assets into a 1,500-pound creature with a mind of its own and a clear dislike of dressage, as evidenced in this latest batch of #EventerProblems:

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Never in my wildest dreams did I expect to end my Fair Hill run at a single galloping fence early on course. Barry's jump finally got the best of me and sent me flying straight out of the tack at Fence 6 at the apparently well named "Sneaky Snake". On my way down to this fence I saw a bit of a long one and Barry saw the opposite. This led to him chipping in and then being the very careful horse that he is he put in a huge effort to clear it. He then proceeded to levitate straight up in the air and sent me flying even higher. While I was up there I went through all the ways I could try to stick this landing but unfortunately couldn't make it happen. Before I knew it I was on the ground with a deployed air vest and my horse was galloping off with his tail straight up in the air. This was a very silly thing to have happened and I am obviously disappointed but also grateful we are both just fine. We will be rerouting to Ocala and I might be investing in some sticky spray. I appreciate everyone who reached out to make sure I was ok. Also, huge thanks to my whole support crew for all of their help and always believing in me and Barry. ❤ P.S. If anyone got a picture of the unfortunate parting of ways I'd be very interested in seeing how it exactly went down for learning and entertainment purposes. #eventerproblems #bouncingbarry #eventing #eventersofinstagram

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Area IV Young Riders Swarm Midsouth Team Challenge

Area IV Young Riders. Photo courtesy of Cynthia Wiseman.

Hagyard Equine Midsouth Team Challenge has long been a staple of the fall eventing season. A premier destination event at the gorgeous Kentucky Horse Park, Midsouth Team Challenge provides a unique environment where all regular horse trial division riders are competing as individuals as well as on teams.

The Area IV Young Riders Program was looking to expand its Young Rider Advancement Program by providing new opportunities for its lower level competitors. Emily Beshear, former Area IV Young Rider Coach, suggested utilizing the Midsouth Team Challenge to give lower level competitors the feel of the team experience. The Area IV Young Riders Midsouth Team program kicked off in 2017 but was unable to field a full team. Area IV Young Riders Zoe Schroeder, Gabrielle Yashinsky and Isabella Marchioretto were partnered with Audrey Rosen from Area III for a single Training Level team. The program has more than quadrupled since its inception.

In 2019 Area IV Young Riders descended upon the Kentucky Horse Park in striking red jackets with the Area IV Young Riders logo emblazoned across the back; 20 riders + coaches + parents… it was a sea of red! You could see them in swarms walking across the cross-country course, standing at the in-gate, cheering each other on from the sidelines while riders with bold “IV” bonnets and saddle pads were overtaking the warm-up arenas and competition rings. Their teams names conjured up memories of the great event horses that had galloped these hallowed grounds before them; Winsome AdanteCourageous Comet, Windfall II, Little Tricky and Giltedge.

Comprised of two ten-year olds dressed as bumble bees and two teenagers as bee keepers with mounts decked out in yellow and black, the BN Giltedge Team of Claire Peters, Ava Friese, Lily Sutton and Sophie Schroeder placed 2nd of 25 teams against professionals, adult amateurs and other youth. Area IV Young Rider Claire Peters finished individually 3rd on a personal best dressage score of 28.5 with Lacey Lou Freebush, a 15.2h grey Quarter Horse mare. Ava Friese and the spotted Zepplin maintained a double clear despite a nasty flu bug to place 4th with Lily Sutton and Sullivan taking 6th.

The Winsome Adante Preliminary Team earned a 7th place finish, anchored by a 3rd place individual finish by CNT Shiloh Tails piloted by the Area IV Young Rider Coordinator Cynthia Wiseman and owned by former Area IV Young Rider member Riley Kemna. Becca Roth and Chapter Two, members of the Little Tricky Training Team, finished on their dressage score to place 2nd individually. The Courageous Comet Novice Team earned a strong 10th place finish with Maia Ramberg and CMF Cougar Roo taking 8th and Zoe Schroeder and Piedmont Sundance conquering their show jumping demons to finish on their dressage score for 10th.

Although the Area IV Young Riders brought home 8 individual ribbons and 3 team ribbons, perhaps the biggest story of the weekend is the team experience itself. Riders from age 10 – 18 donned the Area IV Young Rider Logo and joined forces competitively and socially to create a lifetime of memories. Twenty riders, from five Midwestern states (Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Kansas, and Missouri), coached by 12 different instructors, departed the Kentucky Horse Park having forged new friendships. Mission accomplished.

Here’s the Area IV Young Rider Teams:

Giltedge (Beginner Novice)
Claire Peters & Lacey Lou Freebush
Sophie Schroeder & Merrylegs
Lily Sutton & Sullivan
Ava Friese & Zepplin
Alternate: Libbey Shellenberger & Chibi

Courageous Comet (Novice)
Maia Ramberg & CMF Cougar Roo
Zoe Schroeder & Piedmont Sundance
Tatum Gray & Reds Loyal Flame

Windfall II (Novice)
Michaela Frye & Sugar Sam
Madi Page & Lady Leona
Emily Prettyman & Donadea Boy
Emma Buckley & Odds On

Little Tricky (Training)
Becca Roth & Chapter Two
Gabrielle Ortiz & The Chief
Abigail Brawley & Work of Art
Shannon Doan & Hurrikhana
Alternate: Kaylianna McMorris & Clifton Peekachu

Winsome Adante (Preliminary)
Benjamin Noonan & Bojangles
Mya Poulos & Guy’s Elegant Miss
Cynthia Wiseman & CNT Shiloh Tails ( Area IV YR Coordinator)
Fiona Cotter & Miltown Malbay (Area IV YR Alumnus)
Alternate: Benjamin Noonan & Keep Kitty

Area IV YR Groom: Kaylianna McMorris

For even more photos and updates, be sure to check out the USEA Area IV Young Riders Facebook Page

Watch Pau CCI5*-L Cross Country Live (in French!)

Cross country action is underway at Les 5 Etoiles de Pau, the final European five-star of the year, and while you need a subscription to Horse & Country TV to watch today’s phase with English commentary, the event is live streaming its French broadcast on YouTube (player embedded above.)

Make sure you familiarize yourself with the track via Tilly Berendt’s course preview as well. Amusez-vous bien!

5 Etoiles de Pau: WebsiteEntriesForm GuideLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Saturday Links from Nupafeed USA

This is what a family photo of eventers looks like:

Riding Rutledges! Ciana, Colleen and Cassie. Photo by Brian Rutledge.

Colleen Rutledge, mom and 5* rider, competed last weekend at Fair Hill International on C Me Fly (20th in 3*) and one of the top event horses in America, her own Covert Rights (18th in 4* with one of the very few double clear show jumping rounds of the competition). And with Global Absolute, Colleen was 7th in the Young Event Horse championship for 5-year-olds.

And here she is, this week, with her two daughters Ciana and Cassie, ready for the Classic Three-Day Event trot-up at Waredaca Horse Trials on Thursday.

(I think no adult in the Rutledge household needs any sleep at all. And I do not want to see what their laundry pile looks like on Monday morning, either.)

Ciana, 11, is riding Daybreak in the Novice Classic Three-Day Event. Colleen is riding Castaway in the Training Classic, and Cassie, 17, is riding Connect The Dots in the Training Classic.

On Saturday, Colleen will lead off the Endurance Day competition at 8:30 a.m. in the Training division, with Cassie scheduled for a 9:18 a.m. start, and Ciana begins at 10 a.m. in the Novice division.

Good luck, ladies!

Holiday: National Mule Day

Major Events:

5 Etoiles de Pau: WebsiteEntriesForm GuideLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Waredaca 3DE & H.T. [Website] [HT Entry Status] [3DE Entry Status] [HT Ride Times] [3DE Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Windermere Run H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. [Website]  [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Holly Hill H.T. [Website]  [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

Saturday Links:

Tributes paid to amateur eventer who died after schooling fall

Jonty Evans to inspire others as a speaker, a year after leaving hospital

Reassurance over equine joint injections after human study raises concerns

A Glimpse into the ICP Faculty Teaching Days

USEA Events A-Z: Sundance Farm Horse Trials

Featured Video: We’ve officially sucked Jumper Nation editor Meagan DeLisle over to the dark side. Here she is at Hagyard Midsouth H.T. with her tail-less wonder horse, Chasin Tail, tackling Beginner Novice last weekend.

Suck It In and Pray: Your Pau CCI5*-L Cross Country Preview

“I’ve eaten slices of pizza that were wider than this, y’all.” –Wylie. Photo courtesy of CrossCountryApp.

You’ve heard of show condition, but let us tell you something: there should be a spot on the equine body-scoring chart called Pau condition. This year’s course, designed by Pierre Michelet –– affectionately dubbed Michelet the Menace — is full of all the teeny-weeny, itsy-bitsy, thinner than a supermodel skinnies we’ve come to expect from France’s five-star … and then some. You wanna get through those flags and not take 15 penalties with you? You better suck it up, buttercup.

Check out this (not comprehensive) sampling of the course’s skinnies and corners:

Woof. Lots of technical stuff out there, straight from the dark, labyrinth depths of Michelet’s brain. But it’s not just the dimensions of the fences that make it difficult – and we’re certainly looking at some of the biggest, boldest questions we’ve ever seen at this event – it’s the go-kart turning, too.

There are a few things you need to know about the Pau course: first of all, it’s a city event, and so it has much less space to play with than the likes of Badminton, Burghley, and Kentucky. This means that the first and last third of the course wend their way through a tightly-packed wood, requiring horses and riders to be on their A-game — and their lines — from the word go. The middle section of the course opens up into the middle of the racecourse, where we’ll see our competitors try to make up the time they lost in the early slow minutes, and that they won’t be able to make up in the final slow ones, either. This means that the combinations in these first and last sections are as tricky as it gets: the waters, for example, require dizzying circles and hairpin turns to navigate the myriad obstacles placed within them. The second crucial detail is that the French favour a forward stride — their style is to open up, slip the reins, and ‘allez! Allez! Allez!‘ their way through. If something looks like a compact three, you better plan to land running and make that long two happen, baby. Positivity will be the watchword, and those catty pony types who can problem-solve on their quick little feet will have a ball.

But for all that the course looks like the devil’s playground at first glance, overnight leader Tom McEwen asserts that this course in three parts is actually rather fluid. We’ll certainly be looking forward to seeing his plan of attack in action with his two very different horses, Toledo de Kerser and the oversized Figaro van het Broekxhof.

The official length is 6,410 meters, with an optimum time of 11 minutes 15 seconds.

Here’s the course, via our friends at CrossCountry App. Many thanks to Paul Tapner for the recording.

Pau’s cross-country phase begins at 14.00 local time/13.00 BST/8.00 a.m. Eastern time, and will be live-streamed with English commentary through Horse&Country TV (dressage and show jumping are free; cross country requires a subscription) or here with French commentary (player embedded below). You can find ride times here.

Best of luck to all for a safe, happy day of cross country. Go Eventing!

5 Etoiles de Pau: WebsiteEntriesForm GuideLive ScoresLive StreamEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram