Classic Eventing Nation

Tuesday News & Notes from Kentucky Performance Products

If you’ve ever wanted to take a riding holiday that also gives you some exposure to some quality instruction and training, look no further than Italy and Vittoria Pannizon, who regularly hosts riding holidays at her home base. I see the posts on social media frequently and always find myself counting my nonexistent pennies to see how I could partake, but for now I’ll leave it to you so I can live vicariously!

Events Opening This Week

Millbrook H.T. (NY); Hunt Club Farms H.T. (VA)

Events Closing Today

Twin Rivers Summer H.T. (CA); Inavale Farm H.T. (OR); Summer Coconino I (AZ); Bouckaert Equestrian H.T. and Area III Championships (GA); Full Moon Farm H.T. (MD); Larkin Hill H.T. (NY)

Tuesday News & Reading

Get to know Tomora Horse Trials, located in Greeley, CO! This family-run facility has hosted horses and competitions for three decades, and now they’ll be hosting Area IX championships through next year. [Events A-Z: Tomora Horse Trials]

The U.S. Olympic eventing team is busy making their final preparations for Paris. Catch up with them and how they’re dotting their i’s in this read from The Chronicle of the Horse.

Speaking of which, don’t forget to come out to Stable View in two weeks’ time for a send-off at the Mandatory Outing for the team and alternates. Find out more information on what’s happening and how you can participate at Stable View here.

Ian Stark may be in his final year of course designing, but he’s got plenty to keep him busy as he’s just wrapped up Bramham in the UK and will also be thinking hard about the Maryland 5 Star in the fall. Hear from Ian on his thoughts about Bramham and the future here.

Sponsor Corner

A great testimonial from a Kentucky Performance Products supplements user! ““My horse was diagnosed with high ringbone in the right foot and low vitamin E. He was no longer playful in the field, rarely trotted, even. 😢 My vet said low E can result in soreness and recommended Elevate. My horse was noticeably less sore, trotting more or less even when he does … less favoring of the right foot … I decided to try another KPP product, Joint Armor, and he now canters in from the field.”

Video Break

Ride around Stable View with Elisa Wallace and Lissavora Quality.

Ireland Announces Nominated Entries for Paris Olympics

Horse Sport Ireland is delighted to nominate the athlete/horse combinations for consideration by the Olympic Federation of Ireland (OFI) to represent Team Ireland in Eventing at the Paris Olympic Games.

Eventing High Performance Director Dag Albert has chosen to nominate Susie Berry with Wellfields Lincoln, Sarah Ennis with the Irish Sport Horse Action Lady M and Austin O’Connor with Colorado Blue for the Games,  with the competition taking place in late July.

The P Alternate Athlete/Horse combination will be Aoife Clark with Sportsfield Freelance, and reserve combinations also nominated are listed below.

Dag Albert said: “It is an honour and privilege to be leading the Irish team into the Paris Olympic Games this summer and I’m absolutely delighted with the athletes and their horses, who have been raising their performances week-on-week as we have gotten to this point in the selection process.

“The strength and depth we have in Irish eventing currently is probably at its highest ever and it made the decision difficult, as the athletes and their horses really pushed each other to make it to Paris.

“It is a huge undertaking for themselves to reach this level and also their teams at home to have the horses performing at the levels required to reach an Olympic Games – I’m extremely proud of them all.

“I must thank Horse Sport Ireland, Sport Ireland and the OFI for all their support of the team and riders, and of course the eventing community in Ireland for always backing us.”

The combinations nominated for consideration for selection, in alphabetical by the OFI are:

Susie Berry (Co. Down) with Wellfields Lincoln, owned by Sue Wilkinson and Anne Marling.

Sarah Ennis (Co. Dublin) with Action Lady M, owned by Andrew Cox and Susanne Macken.

Austin O’Connor (Co. Cork) with Colorado Blue, owned by the Salty Syndicate, Gill Watson, Philippa Smith, Jenny Burall.

The following combination has been selected as P Alternate:

Aoife Clark (Co. Kildare) with Sportsfield Freelance, owned by the Freelance Syndicate.

Lucy Latta and RCA Patron Saint. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The following combinations have been selected as team alternates and are listed in alphabetical order:

Ian Cassells (Co. Dublin) with Millridge Atlantis (ISH), owned by Fiona and Gerry Leahy.

Robbie Kearns (Co. Limerick) with Ballyvillane OBOS (ISH), owned by Richard Ames.

Jennifer Kuehnle (Co. Laois) with Polly Blue Eyes, owned by Hans Kuehnle.

Lucy Latta (Co. Wexford) with RCA Patron Saint, owned by Lesley, David and Alison Crampton.

Padraig McCarthy (Co. Tipperary) with Pomp N Circumstance, owned by Rachel and Sarah Gough.

Joseph Murphy (Co. Westmeath) with Calmaro, owned by Richard and Tanya Ames, Claire and Charlie Mayne, and Annette O’Callaghan.

Austin O’Connor (Co. Cork) with Isazsa, owned by Lesley Rose.

Sam Watson (Co. Carlow) with Ballyneety Rocketman (ISH), owned by Hannah and Sam Watson.

BREEDING:

Action Lady M (ISH) – 2014 mare by Pilot Blue (KWPN) out of Action G (ISH) by Acorado (HOLST). Breeder: Susanne Macken. Owner: Andrew Cox. Rider: Sarah Ennis (IRL)

BALLYVILLANE OBOS (ISH) – 2013 gelding by OBOS Quality 004 (OLD) out of Gleesons Coolcorran (ISH) by Young Convinced (TB). Breeder: Tim Gleeson Owner: Richard Ames. Rider: Robbie Kearns

BALLYNEETY ROCKETMAN (ISH) – 2014 bay stallion by Diamond Discovery (USA TB) out of Ballyneety Macrocket (ISH) by Errigal Flight (ISH). Bred by James Hickey, Co Limerick. Owner: Hannah & Sam Watson. Rider: Sam Watson (IRL).

MILLRIDGE ATLANTIS (ISH) – 2014 gelding by Dinan Cascaletto (ISH) out of Kereen Sue (ISH) by Warrenstown You 2 (ISH). Breeder: Sean O’Loughlin, Co Kilkenny. Owner: Fiona Leahy and Gerry Leahy. Rider: Ian Cassells (IRL)

View more of EN’s coverage of the Paris Olympics here.

Taxiing for Takeoff: Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight Head to Luhmühlen

Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight. Photo by Shelby Allen.

The phone rang twice before I hear an accented “Hello?” on the other end. I could tell Ryan is somewhere active – the background noise brings an excitement and energy to the call. “Let me find a quiet place in the airport,” he said. Ryan was on his way to Germany, to Luhmühlen specifically, where he’ll be contesting his own and Linda Ledray’s Cooley Flight (Plot Blue – Making Moments, by Laughton’s Flight) in the 4* this coming week.

Despite this being the first time competing at Luhmühlen for Ryan, the good reports he’s heard about the venue drew him to the event. Additionally, as the last selection event for Australian riders looking for a ticket to Paris, there’s a level of excitement and anticipation to continue building on the success of 2024 so far.

Reaching this point has been a journey for Ryan and Cooley Flight, one that has required continuous commitment to horsemanship, riding, and training. Ryan, originally from Australia, came to the United States in 2008 to be based in Chester County, Pennsylvania, in the heart of Eventing Country. Surrounded by some of the best, Ryan spent years working with Bruce Davidson, and with Phillip and Evie Dutton, to kick start his goals to reach the upper levels of the sport.

“Being in a place like Chester County has been instrumental to bounce ideas off of each other, and to see what it takes to get the job done. I’m forever grateful for having that platform to kick off of,” Ryan expressed.

Here, he was also able to connect with his vet, Kevin Keane, who assisted in finding Cooley Flight (“Blue”) during a horse shopping trip to Ireland. While at Cooley Farm, Ryan and Kevin found “raw and Irish looking” 5-year-old Blue to have big movement and a big, scopey jump. “He’s always been a strong cross country horse. His strength is certainly the cross country, but he’s a good show jumper as well. We’ve been spending the last twelve months working on the dressage… and are making great headway with both the horse and the jockey,” Ryan chuckled.

“The dressage has been the hold back for a better result, but it’s getting there – the trend is in the right direction,” Ryan commented. “At the last three FEI events, we’ve dropped two points in the dressage at each one. We’ll be trying to drop another two at Luhmühlen.”

“We’ve been going through huge lengths to crack through to the next level and be more competitive after the first day. This winter, I spent some time in Wellington working on the dressage with Jacqueline Brooks. Now that we’re back in Pennsylvania, I’ve been training in the dressage with Silva Martin, working with her two or three times a week.”

“We’re still keeping up on the other phases too, working with Peter Wylde in show jumping and Phillip Dutton on cross country. And we spend time on the incredible hills in the county for fitness. Chester County offers access to incredible hills and gallops that you dream about. They’re a real reason behind the success in our area in the sport, thanks to the land owners for the access to [that resource].”

Putting in the work seems to be paying off. As Ryan commented, their dressage has been improving over the last few FEI events, where we saw them score a 39 in the Nations Cup at Boekelo April 2023, a 37.7 in the 4*S at TerraNova in March 2024, and a 35 in the 4*S at Kentucky this April. After the 35 in dressage, 2.4 cross country time penalties, and a rail in show jumping, Ryan and Blue finished 11th at Kentucky.

Ryan and Blue schooling in Germany. Photo from Ryan Wood.

As Luhmühlen is the final selection event for the Australian riders aiming for Paris, there are quite a few good partnerships heading to Germany to compete. Other Australian riders include Andrew Barnett, Christopher Burton, Isabel English, Andrew Hoy, William Levett, Kevin McNab, and Kenya Wilson.“We’ll be aiming for our personal best,” Ryan responded in consideration of the competitive field.

Ryan has met up with Blue and groom Caitlin Reamy at Andreas Dibowski’s farm prior to heading to Luhmühlen. We’ll be keeping an eye on this team in Germany, as they bring forward the work that they’ve put in over the last seven years in partnership with Blue. You can follow Ryan’s journey on his Facebook and Instagram accounts, as well as keep an eye on Eventing Nation for latest reports on the event.

All Eyes on Paris: Swiss Olympic Hopefuls Dominate at Home Event

Switzerland tops the Avenches podium. Photo via the FEI.

With the Paris Olympics just around the corner, Team Switzerland could prove a serious medal-contender if recent results are anything to go by. An experienced home-side took decisive win at the fourth leg of the FEI Eventing Nations Cup™ this week, with three of the four team members finishing in the top four of this CCIO4*-Nations Cup held in Avenches (SUI). Leading throughout the competition, their final score of 134.6 put them way out in front of Italy who finished on a score of 160.0 and Germany who were third with 231.9.

The Swiss team was made up of three riders who competed in the last Olympics in Tokyo and are hopeful of representing their nation in Paris in just over a month’s time. Robin Godel’s fantastic partnership with his evergreen performer, Grandeur de Lully CH looked as strong as ever in Avenches. The pair finished in first place individually after riding one of the fastest cross-country rounds of the day, in a competition which saw no combinations go clear inside the time. Godel and the lovely Swiss-bred gelding have been a mainstay of the Swiss team and competed in a number of Nations Cup events with success.

Robin Godel and Grandeur de Lully. Photo via the FEI.

Speaking after the prize giving, Gödel summed up what it meant for them and the benefits that come with competing as a team in these competitions. “It is a wonderful result for the team and to win at home. It is very important to see how the team reacts and connects together. It was the last preparation for Paris and it is always beneficial for the team to perform together and a good preparation for the Games. It is also important for a championship where a team result counts. It is always a pleasure to compete in a Nations Cup.”

Godel was joined by his experienced Swiss teammate Felix Vogg on Dao de l’Ocean who finished second individually; together with Mélody Johner with her equine partner for Tokyo and the FEI World Championships in Pratoni, Toubleu de Rueire, who at seventeen years old looked as good as ever whilst contesting the undulating terrain of the cross-country course. The final rider hoping to head to Paris was Nadia Minder, riding the Polish bred gelding, Top Job’s Jalisco, who climbed the leaderboard from 26th after the dressage to 11th overall, after a positive cross-country performance.

The cross-country time proved the biggest challenge for most riders, explained Godel. “Nobody ended up the cross country in time. This cross is famous for turning a lot and we did not have a lot of long line to gallop and gain some time. I was very happy with my horse because we have good consistency. For a few years we met some difficulties for the jumping, now it’s under control and it is from there we chaise some good results. We could see it today he did a lot of progress in this discipline. I am very happy because it was his last event before Paris. It was very close to my heart to perform well and achieve a good result to have confidence for this event.

Felix Vogg and Dao de L’Ocean. Photo via the FEI.

“For me it is always a bit special because I feel at home. It is very different because a lot of close family came to support me. It is always a pleasure. Since the beginning of the international championship in Avenches we did not miss any championship. It is always a goal that I have in my schedule. Being able to win gives some great feelings.”

There were just three teams competing at Avenches, a picturesque event held at the National Equestrian Institute (IENA). Italy, who claimed the final team ticket for Paris by being the highest place team in the Nations Cup Series, not already qualified, also sent an experienced team of riders who are vying for a place in Paris. Whilst Germany had just three riders looking to gain invaluable team experience.

Switzerland and Italy are in joint first in the Nations Cup standings at this halfway point. Both nations have 180 points. The Series will now move to Strzegom in Poland later this month (20-23 June), for the fifth event in this eight-leg Series which concludes at Boekelo (NED) in October.

Monday News & Notes from Futuretrack

Allison Springer hugs her longtime groom, Paige Ansaldi, on finding out she’d won Bromont’s 4*-L. Photo by Sally Spickard.

I wanted to take a moment this morning to send a shout to those who go mostly unseen within our sport, though not at all unappreciated. This isn’t the best photo I’ve ever taken, but I wanted to capture the moment Allison Springer found out she’d won the Bromont CCI4*-L, hugging and high-fiving her longtime groom, Paige Ansaldi. There is so much effort that goes into winning an event — heck, forget winning, just think about getting to an event, period. There are so many people involved in the care of the horses, the organization of the events, the planning of the logistics – the list is endless. So, to each and every one of you involved in these weekends and all of their highs and lows: thank you. This sport is nothing without you.

Weekend Results

Golden Spike H.T. (Ogden, UT) [Website] [Scores]

Cobblestone Farms H.T. I (Chelsea, MI) [Website] [Scores]

Middleburg H.T. (The Plains, VA) [Website] [Scores]

Mill Creek Pony Club Horse Trials (Kansas City, MO) [Website] [Scores]

Apple Knoll Farm H.T. (Millis, MA) [Website] [Scores]

Major International Events

MARS Bromont CCI (Quebec, CA) [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays]

Bramham International (West Yorkshire, UK) [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays]

FEI Nations Cup Avenches (Avenches, SUI) [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays]

Melbourne International Three Day Event (Melbourne, AUS) [Website] [Scores]

Monday News & Reading

The USEA is excited to announce that coach applications are now being accepted for the 2025 USEA Emerging Athlete U21 Program (EA21). One additional coach will be selected and hired for a three-year term for the EA21 program, teaching one two-day summertime regional clinic annually throughout the term. [Read more here]

Not eventing related, but a cool sidesaddle story out of the picturesque Upperville Colt & Horse Show. [Read it here]

Mia Farley has had a stellar debut at the 5* level, and she’s also got some exciting young horses up and coming. Catch up with her in the latest edition of the Practical Horseman podcast here.

Scratches are among the most obnoxious things to manage on a prone horse. What are some best practices for managing chronic scratches? Find some aid here.

Video Break

A fun take on Who Jumped It Best? from the Melbourne International Three-Day Event!

Allison Springer Jumps to MARS Bromont CCI4*-L Victory

Allison Springer and No May Moon. Photo by Sally Spickard.

It’s not every day you see a Connemara/Thoroughbred pinging around the upper levels of eventing, though of course there have been plenty of examples of this sturdy and athletic cross within our sport. This weekend, Allison Springer showed us all just what a spicy, athletic, “dirt bike crossed with a mountain goat” can do: win at the CCI4*-L level, and at one of the toughest events in North America, to boot.

Nancy Winter, the breeder and owner of the newly-crowned MARS Bromont CCI4*-L champion, No May Moon (Catherston Dazzler – Ebony Moon, by Mystic Replica) was actually short-listed for the 1984 Olympics with a Connemara herself. She’s spent the bulk of her breeding career now influencing the Connemara lines with more and more sporthorse prowess — and No May Moon was one of two horses into which Nancy infused some prime genetics for eventing, along with full brother Crystal Crescent Moon.

“Their mother Ebony Moon was by Mystic Replica, so a good Thoroughbred blood mare, and then we bred her to Catherston Dazzler, who is now deceased, but he was an English Warmblood who’s produced a number of top event horses,” Allison told The Chronicle of the Horse last year. “They’re known to be incredibly athletic, good jumpers, maybe a little on the hot side, but I think it was a really nice blend.”

Allison Springer and No May Moon. Photo by Sally Spickard.

But getting to this point hasn’t been a quick process for Allison, who’s always garnered respect within the sport for her tact in producing horses and working with “quirky” individuals. “Mayzie” is no exception to this, a bit of a later bloomer as Allison describes her, and one whose future at the top levels wasn’t entirely clear until much further into her eventing career.

“She’s little, but she’s really, really well bred,” Allison said. “She’s bred to jump and she’s bred to run, and that’s exactly what she does. It’s just been really getting her mind and getting her to understand the job and focus. She’s such an athlete but I really feel like now, in her final bit of time at the three-star level and then now at the Advanced level, she knows this job.”

As I wrote yesterday, Allison described the process of producing the mare to this point, opting not to push her into Young Event Horse competition as a 5-year-old and instead choosing to give her time to settle in her brain and mature. Once she moved up to the Intermediate and three-star level, Allison kept her there for two full seasons.

“I think that it’s like anything — you get experience by potentially not doing it right in the past,” Allison mused. “You know, I’ve had a couple of careful horses that were great at the three-star level and started out great Advanced but were a little careful, so I sort of learned from that and I just really wanted [No May Moon] to tell me every step of the way. We as riders get excited and we have our goals, but you have to know and the people around you, they get excited for the goals too and sometimes you just have to pause and figure out what’s best. And Nancy is just an incredible horsewoman anyway, so she gets it — she gets the process. I’ve certainly had people in the past that just want to show up the party no matter what and have a result, but she really understands producing the horse so I’m so incredibly happy for Nancy and so grateful to her because these are this is definitely dreams coming true for her as well. So hopefully this mare will take her some more places.”

Allison Springer and No May Moon. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Believe it or not, this win is Allison’s first one at the CCI4*-L level or old CCI3* level. She’d won twice at the former CIC3* (now know as a CCI4*-S) before with her beloved former partner, the late Arthur, but the closest she’d come to date was a third place finish at Fair Hill in 2014 with Copycat Chloe.

She came into the ring, in second place after cross country behind Canada’s Waylon Roberts, to tackle Marc Donovan’s show jumping track knowing that it had exerted its fair share of influence to that point. Just two pairs had jumped double clear so far: Shannon Lilley and Eindhoven Garette and Boyd Martin and Miss Lulu Herself.

The efforts of a 10+ minute gallop at a Long format can certainly take some energy from even the fittest of horses, which is one thing that makes the sport of eventing just so exciting and intense, as well as a test of preparation. It can also make for poles down on Sundays, but Allison needn’t have worried. No May Moon jumped with springs in her feet, not giving a single pole a rub and securing at least second place with a finishing score of 46.1.

Waylon Roberts and OKE Ruby R. Photo by Sally Spickard.

It was then Waylon Roberts’ turn with John and Michelle Koppin’s OKE Ruby R (Namelus R – B. Termie R 6, by Germus R). Waylon did not have a pole in hand to secure the victory, and halfway around the track, it looked like we would be crowning our first Canadian 4*-L champion at Bromont in 10 years. But it wasn’t to be: OKE Ruby R lightly touched the pole on an oxer, and Allison’s victory came to fruition.

But to talk to Waylon afterward, you’d not know he’d just lost out on a big win. For him, the win wasn’t going to be the only mark of success on what has been a stellar weekend for him and the rangy 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse mare. He told me he’s done much work on his own headspace over the last year, which led to him feeling calm and not as under pressure as one might otherwise feel this morning.

“This is the best headspace I’ve been in in my entire life,” he told me. “I’ve done a lot of work on that in the last year, just getting help with getting me feeling better and that has made me a better horseman, a better competitor, and I think a better person to be around. So I didn’t feel any pressure today. Obviously I wanted to go in and do well. We all want to win, but I really went in thinking I wanted to do well by her. And she felt super, she jumped one of the best rounds that I think she’s ever jumped, and she just did that after running for 10 and a half minutes yesterday, so I couldn’t be happier. We’ve come a long way in three years with her. It’s been a little bit of a rocky road at times, as it is with any horse. But she’s trending in the right direction for right now. She’s the best horse I’ve ever had at this level.”

OKE Ruby R was also awarded Best Conditioned Horse by the Ground Jury, wrapping up her weekend on a final score of 50.0. Waylon hopes to aim her at the Morven Park CCI4*-L in the fall and is hopeful that “Ruby” will end up being a five-star horse for him and the Koppins.

Boyd Martin and Miss Lulu Herself. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Coming third in the 4*-L are Boyd Martin with Bonnie Stedt’s Miss Lulu Herself (Stolzenfels – Noisette, by Nobre XX), another mare to complete the trifecta of ladies on the podium. Thanks to a double clear show jumping effort that we’ve nearly come to expect from Boyd at this level, Lulu moved from fourth into third place on a final score of 50.7.

Boyd has also taken his time producing the chestnut Hanoverian mare, who’s come to this event as her third CCI4*-L. This is her best result at the level, and Boyd’s feeling like he’s perhaps got another 5* horse in the making.

“She’s been a very, very careful jumper, and I just find with those super careful jumpers it just takes a little bit longer to produce them just because the cross country, if you rush them they can be a bit unsure,” Boyd said. “Confidence is key with Lulu, and I was just absolutely thrilled with her performance this weekend.”

Boyd’s eyeing a potential 5* move-up for Lulu, but will prioritize taking her to one with a bit less terrain for her first go, similar to his approach with Fedarman B, who went to Luhmühlen for his debut. She’ll likely do one more 4*-L before he takes that next step.

Boyd also went wire-to-wire in the CCI2*-L with Fetiche des Rouges and Kolbeinn in second place.

Slezak Seals the Deal

Karl Slezak and Hot Bobo. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Karl Slezak raised the Canadian flag for the CCI4*-S win this weekend, defending the lead he took over after cross country with a double clear show jumping effort aboard Hot Bobo (Arkansas VDL – Taneys Leader xx, by Supreme Leader xx). This pair finished their weekend with a score of 44.0, and Karl’s keeping his fingers crossed that he’s done enough to convince the Canadian selection panel to give him a spot on the team heading to Paris.

But, as he says realistically, “what will be, will be.” This result, yes, was intended to impress the selectors, but Karl’s also looking beyond this summer to the future of a very special mare. “Today we’re on top of the world and very excited,” he said. “She feels great. She’s jumping really well. And I feel like I’m back in the game, so definitely excited about her going forward. Fingers crossed about Paris. But if nothing else, I know she’s back on top going into the fall.”

Karl is followed by Hannah Sue Hollberg and Christa Schmidt’s Capitol H I M, who defended their second place on the podium and finished on a score of 51.5 with one pole down today. Ariel Grald rode Annie Eldridge’s Isla de Coco through, surely, some pretty intense pain as she did a good number on her face falling from Diara on cross country yesterday. But she’s one tough cookie, as all of these riders are, and she put in a stellar effort with the absolute stunner of a mare, adding two seconds of time on show jumping and finishing on a score of 51.8 in third place.

Arden Wildasin and Sunday Times. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Before I wrap up, I wanted to give a shout to Arden Wildsasin, who finished fourth in the 4*-L with Sunday Times and won the 3*-L with Billy Beaufort, a very new ride that she’s only had since the beginning of this year. Arden leapt – literally – from 13th into first place following cross country yesterday, and delivered a double clear under leader’s pressure to seal the victory.

Arden is an amateur rider who does much of the work at home and with her horses herself, enlisting the help of coach Heidi White a couple years ago so that she could firm up her foundational skills. That effort has really paid off this year, and she’s excited for the future with all of the horses she brought to Bromont this weekend. But for her, similarly to Waylon in the 4*, it wasn’t so much about the prospect of a (surprising even to her) win, it was about how she was setting herself up and how she was riding.

“It was actually my first time kind of being in the lead,” she laughed. “So I had to take that out of the equation because you ride the horse that you’re on that day, no matter where you were placed. Because in a sense, it’s about yourself and that partnership. Yeah, there is a leaderboard at the end of the week, but it’s not, ‘where am I in that leaderboard?’ Yeah, I knew I was sitting in first. But again, that’s not helping my riding. What’s helping my riding is [asking myself], ‘what’s underneath me? Where are my shoulders? Where’s the hind end? What distance am I seeing?’ And just believing and having that confidence of riding, day in, day out, riding what’s underneath you and in a sense, blocking out what’s there is something that everything you learn from. So it’s the partnership again. It’s not about placing — it’s within yourself to be better.”

Arden Wildasin and Sunday Times. Photo by Sally Spickard.

Even disregarding the results on the board, Arden’s got herself well-horsed for the future. Her mother, Sarah, actually has a hand in selecting horses that have quality potential for Arden, and the Wildasin family on a whole are stellar supporters of the sport. As a demonstration of this, they donated Arden’s prize monies back to Bromont as a show of support.

“We just want to do what we can support Bromont,” Jim Wildsasin said. “I think Bromont is one of – I can’t imagine the eventing calendar without Bromont, so anything we can do at any time to help them, is something we’re not going to hesitate to do. It’s nice to see results come because Arden’s just been working and getting better and it’s started. We love the community, we know everybody and we’re always rooting for everybody. We love Bromont, period, end of story.”

And with that, another year at the incredible MARS Bromont CCI comes to a close. If you haven’t been here before, I highly encourage you to add it to your list. Prepare well, because the standards are high here, but you will leave with a greater sense of education and partnership with your horse if you cross your t’s and dot your i’s. I hope to see you back here next year, and until then and as always – Go Eventing.

MARS Bromont CCI (Quebec, CA) [Website] [Scores] [Live Stream Replays]

“It’s an Event That Reminds Me Why I Wanted to Become an Event Rider”: Harry Meade Takes Bramham CCI4*-L

Harry Meade tops the Bramham podium. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

There are few riders in the modern sport of eventing that evoke its history quite as clearly as Harry Meade when he rides into an arena, wearing the long red hunting coat, baggy-thighed breeches, and red-topped boots that have become his hallmark.

But the outfit isn’t a bid to mimic a huntsman in a Munnings painting, or a statement based in fashion at all, really. Instead, it’s an homage to lineage: his father, Richard Meade, was one of Britain’s preeminent event riders, and when you look closely at that well-worn red coat, you can see little emblems of history all over it. Not least, of course, in the Olympic buttons it bears. Tiny delicate engraved inscriptions ascribe them further: 1972, reads one, for the Munich Games at which Richard won team and individual gold; 1964, reads another, for the Tokyo Games. There is, no doubt, a button for 1968 – Mexico City, where Richard was again part of the gold-medal winning team – and for 1976, where he took part, and maybe even for 1980, when the Moscow Games were boycotted but Richard and the Brits, and most of the rest of the eventing world, rerouted to Fontainebleau instead. I can neither confirm nor deny the existence of those additional buttons, because I didn’t make Harry do a twirl, but the others are absolutely, definitely in situ.

And so we see the past and the present meld together in one man when Harry comes forward – a fitting visual, really, on this, Bramham’s 50th birthday. Even more fitting, of course, when it’s paired with a win. Today, it was.

As two-phase leader Tom Jackson rode into the ring on Ask For Manchier, it was to the sound of ring commentator John Kyle pointing out that he didn’t have a rail in hand – and, in fact, that a single rail down would knock him off the podium entirely.

As if on cue, Tom and his CCI4*-L debutant toppled the first fence before delivering a smart clear effort over every single other fence. Horses! Eventing! Who’d have ‘em!

But fifth and seventh place, which former under-25 champion Tom ultimately took with Ask For Manchier and Plot Twist B, respectively, isn’t too shabby – and for newly-instated event title sponsor Defender, there’s plenty to celebrate. They’ve long been supporters of Harry, who rode in a Defender-branded saddle pad today – and HRH Princess Anne, who presented the prizes, certainly looked to enjoy her chance for a catch-up with the son of her former teammate, who won the title himself back in 1975 with Jacob Jones.

All smiles for Harry Meade  – your 2024 Bramham champion. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

It’s a first Bramham win for Harry, though, who held second place overnight with the former Sam Griffiths ride Annaghmore Valoner, ultimately finishing on the mare’s dressage score of 31.3.

For Harry, winning here is one of the high points in a career filled with major accomplishments.

“Bramham is an enormous stepping stone for horses, and there’s not many events that we look forward to as much,” he says. “It’s the real deal in terms of the course, and the atmosphere, and the big stage, but it’s also just from sheer fun and enjoyment. It’s the kind of event that reminds me why I wanted to become an event rider. It’s a special event that I’ve grown up wanting to ride at, and then wanting to win.”

Though he was guaranteed second place at worst after his fault-free round with Annaghmore Valoner, Harry wasn’t aware of the exact margin Tom had in hand – nor was he even watching to see if he might stand a chance of winning. Just producing the round itself, he admits, felt like a win enough.

“I actually don’t really look at the score boards. I just knew that I had to go in, and I knew the time was tight,” he says. “So I just focused on my game plan, and I was so pleased when I came out that we’d nailed it, in terms of the warmup and the performance in the ring. That, to me, was the success, and I’d sort of forgotten about the competition itself. I’d been so focused on delivering that performance that I came out and I was thrilled.”

Then, he says, “I was with my wife and Jess and Molly, my senior grooms, and then Oliver Townend came up and said, ‘you’ve won! Tom’s had the first fence down’ — and my first thought was, ‘oh no! Poor Tom!’  And then I realised.

“But that’s one of the reasons I don’t focus on the scoreboard, and I just try to focus on myself, because particularly when it’s a friend [ahead of you], you don’t like willing it.”

Harry Meade and Annaghmor Valoner. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry is particularly fond of the mare, who he’s been riding for about a year now.

“I totally love her,” he grins. “I’ve had a real soft spot for her; I just feel she’s really talented, and just a lovely, lovely person. There’s not an ounce of malice in her. She’s very sensitive; she’s a worrier; she’s one that you try and hold her hand, and therefore, to give her the chance for any latent talent to come to fruition, that feels as rewarding as any win or placing.”

This result, plus a third place finish in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L last September, confirms Harry’s belief that she could be his next top-level star – but even so, he’s keeping the horse, and her own unique needs, at the forefront of his priorities.

“You don’t get a much better preparation than to go via Blenheim and Bramham. For me, she has all the ingredients to be a five-star horse; she’s got the speed, the stamina, the bravery, the scope, and the training in all three phases. The one thing is she can get rattled very easily, so even on cross-country, if you have to squeeze her anywhere or change speed, that can slightly rattle her. It changes her breathing and it changes her heart rate, so I try to give her the smoothest possible ride everywhere. I’m very conscious that the higher you go up the grades, the more resilient they have to be in terms of coping with things going slightly wrong.”

A very happy ending: Harry Meade wins Bramham. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

We’ve seen a dip in entries for both CCI4*-L classes here at Bramham this year, which is likely due to a combination of factors, including tougher qualification requirements for the level, the upcoming Olympics, and some riders’ preference for a more continental style of event. But, Harry says, it’s a hugely important part of the calendar.

“Without Bramham we’d be completely lost,” he says. “How would we produce horses for the big five-stars without it? It’s a fairly lone stepping stone, and it’s interesting that the entries aren’t huge – maybe some people avoid coming here, but I do the opposite. I like every horse to come via Bramham.”

Plus, he says, “it’s just so fun and beautiful! I drive in and I find myself saying, ‘god, I love this event’. And then I get out and say, ‘god, I love this event’ – and I keep saying it all day, every day, right to the end, and then I go home again! That’s a combination of a few things – it’s a beautiful time of year, a beautiful park, a beautifully-presented event, and everyone’s just so friendly. It’s horse-friendly and competitor-friendly – a happy, relaxed atmosphere with a real buzz. You can feel all of Yorkshire behind you.”

The main draw, though, remains the course.

“It’s the type of course and the type of questions in it,” he says. “That’s why we do the sport — to be tested with things that are tough, and it’s a proper, meaty test, a proper meaty challenge that you can hope to get your teeth stuck into and demonstrate how good you are.”

25 horses and riders ultimately went forward into the showjumping, down from the 26 that made it through this morning’s final horse inspection. That diminishment came as the result of the withdrawal of Aimee Penny and Freshman HH, who had been held but subsequently accepted at the trot up. They pulled themselves from contention shortly thereafter.

Clear rounds were neatly scattered throughout the class; the first rider in the ring, Emma Hyslop-Webb with GSA Lance, put a smart finish on a tricky week by delivering a faultless trip. But the tightly-packed scores also meant that even a one-rail round would prove to be expensive, and with twenty total rails falling across the twenty-five rounds, there was no shortage of movement.

Max Warburton and Deerpairc Revelry. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

25-year-old Max Warburton and his ten-year-old Deerpairc Revelry delivered one of the eleven clears inside the time today, and became one of six combinations to finish on their dressage score – an accomplishment that allowed him to complete his climb from first-phase fourth place to a final second place.

“I wasn’t quite expecting that result, but I’m absolutely thrilled,” says Max, who recorded his first-ever Bramham long-format cross-country clear yesterday after delivering a very respectable 31.5 in the first phase.

“I was thrilled with the dressage – it’s just always been a little bit of a weak phase,” he says. “We’ve put a lot of time, a lot of effort in, and that was definitely a personal best. And then yesterday’s course was fab; it was a joy to ride around Ian’s track, and the horse just ate it up. He was phenomenal.”

Max has long had the biggest of tracks in mind for the gelding, and this weekend’s performance gives him further confidence that he’s sitting on something that will, ultimately, become a Burghley horse.

“He’s a big rangy horse, and I’ve always said he’s felt like a very good one, but it would take a big, bold course to really suit him. And that was that – it really suited him, down to a tee,” he says.

The final result, he says, “is a dream – you work day in day out, and this is what you ride them for and what the hard work is for.”

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen, who had been overnight leaders on the first day of dressage, took third place after finishing a formative weekend for the inexperienced horse with a smart clear round.

That, though, is no surprise to Ros: “He’s an amazing jumper,” she smiles. “He’s probably the best I’ve ever had showjumping, and the last fence I did just before I went in, I think everybody stopped and watched him. So he does fill you with confidence, and he’s getting better and better. He used to be a little bit careful, a bit stiff, but now he’s getting really fluent as well. He’s just good fun to ride.”

Yesterday saw the pair add just 2 time penalties after a round that started reasonably green and gained in confidence and competence as it unfolded.

“I was absolutely over the moon with him yesterday,” she says. “He’s such a careful horse, and so it was always going to be quite a big ask of him going around Bramham, but I really wanted to come here and see what he was made of.  We had a couple of jumps, in the rail-ditch-rail and in the water, where he went a bit green but what I was so thrilled about was the way that he carried on afterwards and gained in confidence all the way around.”

Ros Canter and MHS Seventeen. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though reigning European Champion Ros often refers to herself as not being a particularly brave rider, she, too, is a huge fan of Bramham and the unique development opportunity it offers for horses.

“I love the big bold course, although I suppose in a way I look at them and think, ‘gee, they’re everything I don’t like!’,” she laughs.  “But in a lot of ways, it brings out the best in me, because you just go out there and you know there’s only one way to ride, and that’s positively. So that’s why I love it so much.”

Tiana Coudray and D’Artagnan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Selina Milnes and her 2023 CCI4*-S champion Cooley Snapchat put a cap on a super week, finishing on their dressage score of fourth place ahead of Tom Jackson and Ask For Manchier. Sixth place went to Aaron Millar and Friendship VDL, who added nothing to their dressage score of 35.1, seventh place was the domain of Tom Jackson’s first ride, Plot Twist B, and Felicity Collins and her five-star partner RSH Contend Or were excellent all week for eighth place. Harry Meade took ninth, too, with Et Hop du Matz, who deputised for Annaghmore Valoner in the prizegiving, and the US had a double-hander in tenth and eleventh places, with Tiana Coudray taking her spot in the prizegiving aboard young, exciting D’Artagnan and Allie Knowles closing out a positive week with Morswood for eleventh.

Allie Knowles and Morswood. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bramham’s 50th birthday isn’t the only milestone being celebrated this week: it’s also the final time we’ll enjoy an Ian Stark-designed course here, as the beloved Scotsman steps into something a bit more like retirement. Kind of, anyway.

And how does he feel about it, now that it’s all done and dusted?

“I’m relieved, first and foremost,” he laughs. “I was kind of dreading this week, and now that it’s over, I’m kind of resigned to it. It’s definitely happening. And that’s it. I’m happy about that.”

The dread, and subsequent relief, he says, came down to having had such a positive 2023 season.

“By the time I got to Maryland last year I thought, ‘oh, this has been a really good year’,” he says. “And I rang [my wife] Jenny, who was still in Scotland, and I said, ‘there’s a huge part of me that wants to bring my retirement forward a year, because it’s been such a good year that it can only go downhill!’ So it’s just a relief that it’s gone well, and there were good results, and people enjoyed it.”

Princess Anne and Ian Stark. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The closing of the course-designing chapter of Ian’s story represents the wrapping up of another long, happy opportunity to delve into the nitty-gritty of the sport he loves, and which he was at the top of as a rider for so long.

“It doesn’t matter how old you get to,  you’ll never stop learning about horses – and people, for that matter,” he says. That learning – and his devotion to passing on learning to other people – certainly isn’t ending, though.

“Every time I come out, I’m learning, and at home, I’m helping riders. I’m helping a Grand Prix rider and I’m riding that horse, and I’ve ridden others, and although I’m helping her, riding her horses has taught me even more. It’s great – I’m still learning!”

As for what’s next, Ian has two firm plans.

“I’m going to keep coaching, although I don’t know if I’ll sign up for another four years with America – we’ll see how Paris goes,” he says with a twinkle in his eye. “I’ll be 75 when I stop – maybe I’ll be dead! But when you turn 75 you can get a free ski lift pass, so I’m holding out for that.”

That’s all from us from a bumper week at Bramham. We’ll see you next week auf Deutschland for the fourth CCI5* of the year, and stay tuned for lots more from Bromont today. Until then: Go Eventing!

The final top ten in the 2024 Defender Bramham CCI4*-L.

Defender Bramham: Website | Entries and Live Scores | Cross-Country Preview | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

“He’s My Old Pair of Slippers”: Emma Thomas Takes Bramham’s Under-25 Title

Emma Thomas and The Buzz Factor. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

After a short but sweet morning session of showjumping here at the Defender Bramham International Horse Trials, we’ve crowned our third winner of the week: overnight leader Emma Thomas become the British Under-25 National Champion after jumping one of just two clears inside the time in today’s showjumping finale. She adds her name to a weeklong roll of honour that includes Kitty King and Vendredi Biats, winners of the CCI4*-S yesterday, and Rachel Littlewood and Fiancee, who took the win in the BE80 National Championship earlier in the week. And beyond that? Emma’s name goes onto a prestigious list of under-25 winners that includes Zara Tindall, Will Coleman, Piggy March, Astier Nicholas, Tom McEwen – and current CCI4*-L leader Tom Jackson, among others.

Emma’s win came after a first-phase score of 37.2 put her into fifth out of an original nine starters, while her other ride, Icarus, was seventh on a 41.9. But Ian Stark’s top-of-the-level tracks did just what they were meant to and exerted no shortage of influence on the leaderboard yesterday; at the end of the day, Emma would find herself down to one horse after retiring Icarus mid-round, but her first ride, The Buzz Factor, stepped into the lead after adding just 3.2 time penalties in the quickest round of the class.

Today, the 13-year-old Irish-bred gelding, who previously competed here in 2022 but picked up 20 penalties on cross-country, came out looking wholly unaffected by his exertions yesterday and jumped a classy clear – and one that came with no shortage of pressure, thanks to second-placed Cassie Sanger’s faultless round with Fernhill Zoro, which meant that Emma didn’t have a rail to spare.

But from the moment Emma jumped her first warm-up fence with him, she was filled with confidence.

“He felt so good and so sharp – even in the warm up, he was really quick off the floor, and then the atmosphere [in the ring] just lifted him again,” says Emma, who turns 25 next month. “He’s just amazing. We know each other so well – actually, he’s like my old pair of slippers! – and I just love jumping him.”

Emma Thomas and The Buzz Factor. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Emma, who stepped up to five-star last year with a successful run at Burghley with Icarus, has long held Bramham in high regard, but her luck here hasn’t always matched her regard for the event – in her two previous attempts at this class, she’s picked up cross-country jumping penalties, and in her CCI4*-S entry two years ago, she fell in the showjumping. To vanquish those demons, she explains, is a huge boost.

“It means a hell of a lot. I love Bramham, but I haven’t always been sure if Bramham loves me quite so much,” she laughs. “I remember watching Badminton as a kid on TV, and they’d always go on about this class in particular — if somebody won it and was going on to Badminton, they said they were going to be a star. So it really means quite a lot, actually.”

That certainly will have added to the tension as Emma rode up from the collecting ring – but she was determined not to let nerves become the architect of her day.

“All day I was saying to everyone, ‘please don’t tell them what I have or have not got in hand’,” she says. “I was obviously looking at the scores, but when I went in, I just wanted to get into a forward rhythm. And of course, when I heard everyone cheer that loudly [after Cassie’s round] it was like, ‘oh, god!’ Once I jumped the first fence, it was fine, but on the way into the chute, I was fairly nervous!”

Emma celebrates her winning round with The Buzz Factor. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Emma has a degree in Biology and had planned to become a Forensic Anthropologist, but has ‘accidentally’ become a full-time rider instead – and now, in her third season doing it professionally, she reckons she’s finding her groove.

“I never planned to do it full time,” she says with a grin. “It took me until this year to find my way with it a bit, because there’s obviously a lot more pressure on it when you do it full time. The first season, I  just put so much pressure on myself to do everything perfectly, and actually, that never pans out. I just let myself enjoy it a bit more this time, and I think that’s coming through in the results as well.”

Emma’s had Buzz since she was sixteen and he was five years old, and so their partnership runs remarkably deep – but even now, she says, she’s finding new ways to work with him and develop their joint education.

“He’s just kept going and he’s forged this whole career for me, and I’ve been lucky to be on some amazing programmes as well,” says the former Wesko Equestrian Foundation participant. “I’m in the Performance Mentoring Programme with Caroline Moore at the moment, and she gave me so much of her time last week to really make sure I nailed it this week – it was amazing.”

That help – and those all-important marginal gains – came, she explains, from a laser-focus on the finer details.

“We did a lot of test riding. I couldn’t do a shoulder-in on a straight line, apparently – it’s my least favourite movement,” she laughs. “But we really nailed my accuracy, and just in between the movements exactly what to do with him, because he can do a lovely test, and he did. Actually having a system to work with takes the nerves away from me, because I’m like, ‘I just do this here, this here, and this here’, while still being a little bit reactive.”

Cassie Sanger and Fernhill Zoro. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Nineteen-year-old Cassie Sanger finished her day with a faultless clear about Fernhill Zoro, earning herself the runner-up position in this class, and a clear with 1.6 time penalties aboard her first ride, Redfield Fyre, who took fourth place. With just six horses to jump in this class, it was no small feat to get two horses warmed up and ready to compete – even with some creative spacing left between rounds by the organising team – but even trickier, Cassie says, is the fact that her two horses couldn’t be more different from one another.

“It’s definitely been a juggling act, because especially they’re so different — they’re polar opposites,” she says. “I’m pretty used to it now, because they’ve pretty much been going at the same level since I’ve had them —  but actually, I found it pretty difficult today, because it goes so quick. It was like, a fifteen minute turnaround, and to go from the 17.3hh horse to my 15.2hh little guy… it’s so different! So I did find my eye a little bit funky today on Zoro, but he just jumped out of his skin.”

The height difference isn’t the only thing that makes the duo of geldings such opposites, she continues.

“Redfield Fyre is really funny — he likes to make the meanest faces to anyone. No matter if he loves you or not, he’ll try and bite you! He’s never really acted on that, but he’s just a grumpy guy until you ride him. And then the other one is so sweet in the barn. But riding-wise, they’re the same personality: they’re all heart and they just want to do their best.”

That heart helped both horses to climb after tricky first phases, making up ground as other riders in the class picked up faults over yesterday’s course.

“It was definitely a crazy ride. I came out there and I knew I was the last one to go [with Zoro], and I didn’t have the dressage I wanted at all, so that was a bit disappointing, and I had to get my head back in the game,” she says. “By the time I left the startbox I knew I had a chance to really make up for my mistakes, so I just went for it. It was a really hard course, and really big for him, but he’s just so gritty and he just does it for me. I’m really, really proud of how they both finished yesterday; definitely, they were tired but then they just came out so well and happy in their bodies today. So I’m really excited about that.”

Cassie Sanger and Redfield Fyre. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Bramham represents the culmination of Cassie’s sojourn overseas as part of the European Development Tour, which saw her cross the pond just before Badminton and base with Brazil’s Ruy Fonseca.

“I’m going back this coming week to America with the horses, and they’re going to have a vacation,” she says. “This was always my end goal; we were going to go to Chatsworth, too, but that got cancelled.”

Her month in the UK is the second trip she’s taken to Europe; she also enjoyed a stint on the continent last year, which finished with a successful trip to the Nations Cup finale at Military Boekelo.

“I’ve loved it. Every time I come over I feel like I’ve learned so much, because you’re at the biggest world stages with the best riders in the world,” she says. “You just watch and learn and I think that has been really important part for me.”

Isabel White and Icarus. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The entirety of the top three in this class actually remains unchanged from last night, and while Isabel White and Icarus didn’t manage a wholly fault-free round – they picked up 1.6 time penalties in their showjumping – they did leave all the poles in the cups, securing a podium finish on the gelding’s CCI4*-L debut and Isabel’s return to the level for the first time since making her debut four years ago.

“I’m absolutely thrilled with them,” beams the 25-year-old. “It’s such a big atmosphere, and for him to come out and jump like that – I’m over the moon. It’s definitely the biggest atmosphere he’s been in, but I think he loved it, and he loved the crowd watching him – he really rose to the occasion. He’s quite a timid character in the stable, but when you get on him, he comes to life.”

Isabel’s long-awaited return to the level is a welcome confidence boost as she continues to produce her string of horses as a young professional.

“I did a CCI4*-L a few years ago, but the horse had an injury — and obviously it takes so much time to get them back to this level. So I had to start again with young horses, and it’s really lovely to be back here and hopefully, come back again,” she says.

Tom Bird and Cowling Hot Gossip tipped two rails and added 2.8 time penalties to finish in fifth place, while first-phase leaders Molly Evans and Wellan Graffiti, the sole Irish competitors in the class, knocked four and added 2.4 time penalties to close the weekend out in sixth place.

The final leaderboard in the 2024 under-25 CCI4*-L.

Defender Bramham: Website | Entries and Live Scores | Cross-Country Preview | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage

 

All Pass Rainy Final Horse Inspection at MARS Bromont CCI

Waylon Roberts and OKE Ruby R. Photo by Sally Spickard.

We’re doing a rain dance today as the storms move into Bromont for the final day of competition, though truthfully I’d probably rather show jump in the rain versus run a Formula 1 race, which is also happening over in Montreal today.

All presented horses were passed by their respective division Ground Jury members, with one pair in the U25 CCI2*-L withdrawing before the inspection (Nicole Reynolds and Don’t Ask), and one pair held in the U25 CCI2*-L held but later accepted (Kelly Balenger and Murphy’s Got Charm).

Otherwise it was an uneventful jog and we now move ahead to show jumping, which is already underway with the CCI2* riders. The CCI3*-L will follow around 11:37 a.m., and then we’ll wrap up with the two CCI4* divisions starting at 1:16 p.m. Don’t forget that a free live stream is available on the Bromont YouTube channel as well as Horse & Country!

MARS Bromont CCI (Quebec, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Cross Country Times] [Scoring] [Live Stream]

One Horse Held, All Accepted in Remarkably Zen Bramham Final Horse Inspection

Two-phase CCI4*-L leaders Tom Jackson and Ask For Manchier present with their purple and white ribbons in honour of Georgie Campbell on display. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

Sunday morning at the Defender Bramham International Horse Trials is usually a bit of a tense affair – after battling the tough track and stamina-testing terrain of the day before, we generally see horses and riders met with seriously exacting standards by the ground jury. This morning, those exacting standards (exercised, capably, by president Nick Burton and his colleagues, Angela Tucker and Xavier Le Sauce) were no less firmly established, but, likely as a result of yesterday’s very good ground, they barely had to be exercised.

Just one horse was sent to the holding box during the two classes’ inspections, both of which took place under the same ground jury: Aimee Penny’s Freshman HH, who sits 22nd overnight after a steady clear yesterday, was sent for further examination but readily passed upon re-inspection.

Emma Thomas and The Buzz Factor hold the under-25 CCI4*-L lead going into showjumping. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

Six horses and riders will showjump for the under-25 CCI4*-L title today, which kicks off at 11.30 a.m. (6.30 a.m. EST) and sees Emma Thomas and The Buzz Factor hold a short lead ahead of the USA’s Cassie Sanger and Fernhill Zoro.

Cassie Sanger and Redfield Fyre. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

There’ll be 26 in it for the senior CCI4*-L class, led by a similarly tight margin by Tom Jackson and level debutant Ask For Manchier, who’s contesting his first long-format in three years this week and, as such, is something of a wild card for today’s final phase.

The USA’s Allie Knowles and Morswood, who sit just outside the top ten going into showjumping. Photo by Hannah Cole Photography.

The feature CCI4*-L will start at 13.30 local time (8.30 a.m. EST). Both classes will be live-streamed via Horse & Country TV, and we’ll be back later with reports from each.

In the meantime, here’s a look at how those leaderboards are stacking up:

The leaderboard following cross-country in the CCI4*-L for under-25s.

 

The top ten going into the final day in the main CCI4*-L.

Defender Bramham: Website | Entries and Live Scores | Cross-Country Preview | Live Stream | EN’s Coverage