Classic Eventing Nation

ERM Wiesbaden Preview + How to Watch

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Fernhill By Night will be repping for the U.S. at Wiesbaden. Photo courtesy of ERM.

As if you didn’t have enough four-star eventing action to keep up with this weekend already, Leg Two of the 2019 Event Rider Masters series is taking place as well at Germany’s Longines PfingstTurnier Wiesbaden. The 15-strong lineup is as star-studded as it gets, including the two previous winners of the ERM leg at Wiesbaden along with five other past ERM leg victors.

THE FIELD

  • Australia: Last year’s ERM Series Champion Chris Burton will lead the way for Australia aboard Lawtown Chloe. Fan favorite Bill Levett will look to return to an ERM podium for the second time with his stalwart partner Shannondale Titan. Keep an eye out for Katja Weimann and BP Escapade as well.
  • Germany: Ingrid Klimke  and SAP Hale Bob OLD took the win at Wiesbaden last year and will look to defend the title. Michael Jung returns to the ERM series with Star Connection, winner of the Haras de Jardy leg in 2017, which was also the last time the horse competed at the CCI4*-S level. Julia Krajewski and Samourai du Thot finished third at Wiesbaden last year and will look to improve on their performance as they hunt for their first ERM win. Andreas Ostholt will perform the final test of Pennsylvania 28’s career. Peter Thomsen with Horseware Nobleman and Jan Matthias with Granulin 2 round out the formidable home turf contingent.
  • Great Britain: The 2017 Wiesbaden champions Sarah “Cutty” Cohen and Treason will look to return the trophy to Great Britain.
  • New Zealand: Power couple Tim and Jonelle Price have both basked in five-star victory, but both have yet to win an ERM leg. Tim, who is one of only two riders to have made the time previously in an ERM leg at Wiesbaden, comes forward with Wesko, who finished second at Haras de Jardy last year. Jonelle rides Grovine de Reve in the horse’s ERM debut.
  • Sweden: Sweden has yet to claim an ERM podium finish, and Ludwig Svennerstal will put the pressure on with speedy Stinger, who won the non-ERM section at Wiesbaden last year as one of the only horses to catch the optimum time on cross country. Louise Romeike will ride her 2018 World Equestrian Games partner Waikiki 207.
  • United States: Liz Halliday-Sharp will be one to watch as the sole rider representing the U.S. with CCI4*-S specialist Fernhill By Night, who has been on flying form in the States, winning two of his last three runs at the level.

Check out a video of the live draw here.

Julia Krajewski and Samourai du Thot. Photo courtesy of ERM.

THE COMPETITION

The competition kicks off with dressage on Friday, June 7, which will be broadcast from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. CEST (4:30 to 7:30 a.m. EST). Fifteen combinations representing six different nations will face the ground jury of Nick Burton (GBR), Dr. Katrin Eichinger-Kniely (AUT) and Dr. Joachim Dimmek (GER). See the dressage times here.

Show jumping follows dressage on Friday beginning at 4:45 p.m. CEST (10:30 a.m. EST). View show jumping times here.

The field will tackle Rüdiger Schwarz’s challenging cross country track amidst the backdrop of the stunning Biebrich Palace on Saturday beginning at 3:20 p.m. CEST (9:20 a.m. EST) — view cross country times here.

The second leg of the ERM series runs alongside four days of international show jumping, Grand Prix dressage and vaulting competition at Longines PfingstTurnier Wiesbaden.

 

Can Ingrid take the ERM win for a second consecutive year? All will be revealed in due time. Watch live and for free on www.eventridermasters.tv!

Wiesbaden: ERM Website, Event WebsiteStart Times, Live Scores, Live Stream

Bromont Day One: Alyssa Phillips Assails CCIU253*-L, Lauren Kieffer Tops CCI2*-L

Alyssa Phillips and Oskar. Photo by Jenni Autry.

There are two under-25 divisions running here at the MARS EQUESTRIAN Bromont CCI-Three-Day Event, and Alyssa Phillips and Oskar top the CCIU253*-L leaderboard on a personal best score of 25.7 at the conclusion of dressage here in Quebec.

Oskar, a 10-year-old Holsteiner gelding (Coriando X Nicole, by Marlo) owned by Julia Phillips, has had a strong spring season in the lead-up to Bromont, finishing fourth in the CCI3*-S at Carolina International and second at Fair Hill.

“It was probably the best work (he’s done), overall. He’s really coming up more through his shoulders in the trot work. In the canter work, he’s really sitting down now, which has taken a long time to build his strength up to that (point),” Alyssa said. “There were a couple bobbles here and there, but to still get the score that he did means we are on the right track. He loves performing; he’s a great boy, and I’m really proud of him. I’m looking forward to the rest of the weekend.”

Alyssa and Oskar are competing as part of Leslie Law’s team for the USEF/USET Foundation North American Team Challenge, along with Alex Baugh and Ballingowan Pizazz, Cosby Green and Highly Suspicious, and Mallory Hogan and Clarissa Purisma. Leslie’s team score of 88.5 has them topping the leaderboard tonight.

“I’m so grateful for the opportunity,” Alyssa said. “It has been really eye-opening because I have been on past NAYC teams, and just to see how things worked then and how things have carried over to this competition — I have loved every minute of it, meeting new people and connections, and working with such awesome people. It has been a great week so far, and I’m looking forward to the coming days and getting their input about what they say about the cross country course and show jumping.”

Erik Duvander’s team of Kimmy Cecere and Landmark’s MonacoSydney Conley Elliott and QC DiamantaireAllie Knowles and Business Class, and Kylie Lyman and Xuanatu are close behind on a score of 92.7.

Looking to the rest of the leaderboard, Alex Baugh and Altorac Farm’s Ballingowan Pizazz, a 17-year-old Irish Sport Horse (OBOS Quality X Rocklea, by Leabag), were the first pair to go down centerline in the CCIU253*-L and sit in second place on 28.8.

Sydney Solomon and and Laurie Cameron’s homebred Qui Luma CBF, an 11-year-old Swedish Warmblood mare (Quite Easy X Uma Corwin CBF, by Cor Noir), round out the top three on 29.0 in their debut at the level.

Click here for full scores in the CCIU253*-L after dressage.

Lauren Kieffer and Get Gaudi. Photo by Cealey Tetley.

Lauren Kieffer Leads the Way in CCI2*-L

Lauren Kieffer and Get Gaudi, an 8-year-old KWPN mare (Alicante HBC X Second Floor, by Faram) owned by Jacqueline Mars, scored 28.4 to lead the CCI2*-L at the conclusion of dressage. “Gaudi” won her CCI2*-L debut at the Ocala Jockey Club in April on her dressage score of 27.7 and makes her second career international start here at Bromont.

“I’m really happy with Gaudi. She’s a lovely mare that Ms. Mars picked out a few years ago at a competition, and when Matt Flynn offered her for sale the year after that, we jumped on it,” Lauren said.

“We’ve been slow producing her; she’s always been super flashy, but she’s such a lanky powerhouse, and quite careful, so I thought there was the risk of her jumping herself into trouble until she got stronge,r and didn’t want her to develop any baggage. Luckily, Ms Mars. is very patient with the development of the young ones, and she’s really come out this year a real competitor. I’m very excited about her and her future.”

Sondra Shantz and Unique, a flashy skewbald KWPN/Thoroughbred mare (Fuhler X Abydos Maya, by Judge TC) bred in Canada by Tonya Cummins, scored 29.1 for second place in their second appearance at the CCI2*-L level.

Lizzy Jahnke and Light Speed Equestrian’s Colenomer, an 11-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Ghareeb X Riverside Furryoso) produced to the CCI2*-L level in Ireland by Andrew Turley, round out the top three on 30.1.

Click here for full results in the CCI2*-L following dressage.

The second day of dressage action kicks off with the CCI3*-S starting at 9 a.m. and the CCI4*-L starting at 9:30 a.m. EST. Click here for start times for the CCI4*-L and here for the CCI3*-S.

We are so incredibly lucky to have this event serving as one of North America’s six CCI4*-L events, as well as hosting five other international divisions, including two for under-25 riders. Dom Schramm perhaps said it best when he praised the event:

If you missed EN’s earlier report on who is leading the CCI3*-L and CCIU252*-L, click here to catch up. Be sure to read EN data analyst Maggie Deatrick’s report on which horse and rider she predicts will win the CCI4*-L.

Be sure to follow JJ Sillman on Facebook for beautiful photos from Bromont and follow Thehorsepester’s YouTube Channel for videos. Click here to catch up on all of EN’s Bromont coverage so far. Go Eventing.

#BromontCCI: WebsiteEntriesScheduleDressage Start TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Best of Bromont: Ellie O’Neal Leads CCI3*-L, Mike Pendleton Tops CCIU252*-L

Ellie O’Neal and Zick Zack. Photo by Jenni Autry.

We have a jam-packed schedule with six international divisions boasting a record 152 entries here at the MARS EQUESTRIAN Bromont CCI Three-Day Event, and we couldn’t have asked for more beautiful conditions to kick off the first day of dressage here in Quebec.

Ellie O’Neal and Sally Cox’s Zick Zack lead the CCI3*-L on a 27.0 in the mare’s debut at the level. Ellie said she was thrilled that “Rosie,” a 10-year-old Swedish Warmblood (Blue Hors Zack X Mercedes, by Master), stayed relaxed and rideable.

“She’s really sensitive and hot to ride, so it has to be her way a little bit,” Ellie said. “It’s finding that balance of getting her to do the more upper-level movements and be relaxed about it and not push her over the edge and be too hot.”

Ellie hasn’t been to Bromont in seven years, and she said she wanted to return to the venue with Rosie to test the mare’s mettle over Derek di Grazia’s challenging cross country track.

“I wanted to see where she would be at a tough three-star this year and gauge whether she is ready to move up to Advanced in the fall,” Ellie said. “The course is definitely big and it’s her first one, but she’s a really good cross country horse naturally. She’s really fast. I think she’s going to go out there and eat it up, but she’s green so I’ll still take care of her.”

Rosie has never picked up more than 2.8 time penalties on cross country in her six international runs and caught the optimum time in three of them, so she will definitely be a speedy horse to watch on Saturday.

Looking to the rest of the CCI3*-L leaderboard, Kylie Lyman and Da Vinci Code, a 12-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Master Imp X Clovers Apollo, by Clover Hill) owned by Joan Nichols, scored 28.3 for second place. “Da Vinci” last completed an international here at Bromont in the CCI4*-L in 2017, when he finished fifth, and has been steadily making a comeback from injury ever since.

Allie Knowles and Business Class, a 9-year-old Irish Sport Horse gelding (Harlequin du Carel X Modela, by Quick Star) owned by Katherine O’Brien, scored 28.7 for third place in the CCI3*-L. Allie and “Oso” are one of the four pairs competing on Erik Duvander’s team for the North American Futures Team Challenge.

Click here to view full scores in the CCI3*-L after dressage.

Mike Pendleton and Carlsburg. Photo by Jenni Autry.

The Rise and Rise of Mike Pendleton

Mike Pendleton and Carlsburg, a 7-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Puissance X Flame and Passion, by Cruising) owned by Boyd Martin and Steve Blauner, lead the CCIU252*-L in the horse’s debut at the level. Mike produced “Carl” from a 5-year-old and secured his first international win with the horse in the Plantation Field CCI2*-S last year.

“He’s just such a professional,” Mike said. “He was a little bit wild when we got here on Monday, and I could hardly hack him down the hacking path. Then yesterday when I took him in the ring for familiarization, he went straight to business. He knew when I got on him this morning that we were going to the test.”

Mike has worked as a rider and groom for Boyd Martin since 2013 and has now competed eight different horses at the FEI level for Boyd and his owners — a testament to where a dogged work ethic and persistent gumption can take one in life. (Did we mention Mike also competed Neville Bardos? Lucky guy!)

After spending six weeks in Germany at the end of the 2018 season working for Michael Jung, Mike got the ride on Boyd’s former five-star partner Steady Eddie, owned by Denise Lahey and Pierre Colin and George and Gretchen Wintersteen. Mike completed the first CCI3*-S of his career with “Eddie” at Jersey Fresh last month and finished ninth at Virginia in their final run before coming to Bromont to make his CCI3*-L debut.

The inaugural Bromont Rising Program participants. Photo courtesy of Maxine Preston.

Mike said he had a solid preparation this week thanks to participating in the inaugural Bromont Rising Program, which offered three days of intensive training for select under-25 athletes with Kerry Millikin, Peter Gray and Doug Payne in the lead-up to competing. (Stay tuned for much more about the program.)

“It’s been good to have so much help all week,” Mike said. “When Boyd is busy I can be off on my own a little bit, so it’s been nice to have a lesson for each ride and have a strategy. It would be awesome to see more events doing this.”

Looking to the rest of the CCIU252*-L leaderboard, Alice Roosevelt and Get It Together, a 10-year-old Irish Sport Horse (Deanes San Ciro Hit X The Lapdancer, by Crosstown Dancer) owned by Simon Roosevelt, scored 32.0 for second place.

Ashlyn Dorsey and RF Kinetic, a 13-year-old Hanoverian (Chico’s Boy X Fleur R, by First Flair R) owned by Marcel Dorsey, are here all the way from California to contest the mare’s first international since 2017, and sit in third on 33.1.

Click here for full scores in the CCIU252*-L after dressage.

The CCIU253*-L and CCI2*-L are wrapping up dressage now, so stay tuned for the full report on those divisions.

(As a side note, please accept my apologies for the lack of photos in reports. This is my first event back taking photos since breaking my arm in April, so I will be shooting dressage sparingly to save it for cross country and show jumping. Please follow JJ Sillman on Facebook for beautiful photos from Bromont. Follow Thehorsepester’s YouTube Channel for videos.)

Stay tuned for much more from Bromont. Go Eventing.

#BromontCCI: WebsiteEntriesScheduleDressage Start TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Bramham: Golden Performance from Iron IV and Selina Milnes

Selina Milnes and Iron IV take the lead after the first day of CCI4*-L dressage. Photo by First Class Images.

Amongst the household names of last year’s Blenheim field, there was one horse and rider combination who snuck into the upper echelons of the leaderboard and made everyone watching sit up and pay attention in the process. Selina Milnes and Iron IV didn’t just make the serious track look easy – they made it look enormously fun, too, and everyone, commentators, photographers, journalists, and fellow riders alike, got stuck into some good-spirited bickering about who might have the best chance of stealing the striking Irish gelding. They ultimately finished fourth in the CCI4*-L there, and today, they proved that their performance then was no fluke. Coming into the arena as one of the last competitors of the day, they posted a 29.2 to take over the lead from Sweden’s Jonna Britse.

“He’s still got so much more to give – he just sort of backs off me a bit in the arena,” says Selina, who finished 11th here last year in the CCI4*-S. “But in the way he moves, and his frame, he’s just a lovely type. He catches the eye, doesn’t he?”

William Rucker’s eleven-year-old gelding (Aquilino x Ushuaia) was sourced from Richard Sheane’s Cooley Farm. He made the step up to four-star in 2017, finishing 20th in Blenheim’s eight-and-nine year old CCI4*-S.

“I’ve taken it steady, really – he’s so rangy in his stride that I’ve had to, otherwise on cross-country he just gets bigger and bigger and bolder and bolder,” explains Selina. “But he’s lovely, he’s got everything you’d want. He’d definitely make a five-star horse.”

Zimbabwe’s Camilla Kruger and her Rio mount, Biarritz II, step into second place overnight. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“I’m feeling a little bit emotional!” laughs a damp-eyed Camilla Kruger as she exits the ring with Biarritz II. It’s hard to blame her: the road she’s travelled with ‘Sam’, the Dutch Warmblood gelding with whom she made history at Rio, has been a winding one, replete with ups, downs, and everything in between.

As Zimbabwe’s first-ever Olympic competitors in the equestrian disciplines, Camilla and Sam’s clear cross-country round in Rio meant something extra-special. It wasn’t a chance to prove what they were made of; it was also a chance to help build the profile of the sport in Zimbabwe and beyond, where eventing is slowly beginning to gain in popularity. Camilla, for her part, is active in its development, heading back each winter to contribute her extensive experience and knowledge to the planning of the Azaluna CCI2*-L in Harare, which makes up part of the African ‘Nations Cup’ series.

Since Rio, though, it hasn’t all been plain sailing. Though undeniably talented, Sam has had a run of bad luck at the top level, retiring on course at both Luhmühlen in 2017 and Pau last year. He also had a surprise 20 in Blenheim’s CCI4*-L last year, but interspersed with the bad were the flashes of brilliance: the sterling performance here last year, which saw them finish just outside the top twenty, and the clear rounds over Chatsworth’s fiendishly tricky tracks.

“I’d always said that I didn’t think Sam was a Bramham horse, because he’s not very blood,” she says, recalling last year’s run. “But we needed to get a WEG qualification, and so we came here, and he loved it.”

A moment of quiet celebration for Camilla Kruger and Biarritz II. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

They may only have one phase in the books thus far, but yesterday’s best-dressed winner rightfully considers the 29.4, for overnight second place, a very good start indeed.

“Getting into the 20s was the plan, but things don’t always go to plan. In fact,” says Camilla with a wry smile, “things never really go to plan! But I knew he could do it, and he did, so I’m really chuffed with him. There’s a serious dressage diva in this horse, but he’s just never believed in himself in there – it’s been a case of spending so much time doing the same thing and being really consistent with him. Once he starts to realise that it’s easy, he builds in confidence. At home he’s unbelievable, but he’s still learning how to deal with atmosphere; he’s got huge amounts of experience and he’s been around the world, but he did everything at quite a young age. He’s only thirteen this year – so there’s so much more left to come.”

Sweden’s Jonna Britse and Quattrino sacrifice their early lead, but remain in third place overnight. Photo by Tim Wilkinson/Eventing Images.

Young Swedish rider Jonna Britse is making the most of a first trip to England with her sole horse, the talented fourteen-year-old mare Quattrino. They’ve tackled Chatsworth and Houghton’s CCI4*-S classes so far, logging clear rounds at both, in preparation for what is a CCI4*-L debut for both horse and rider.

And what a start to make in a debut performance: the duo put a score of 29.9 on the board, holding the lead for much of the day and ultimately sitting in third place overnight. Jonna, who studied sports psychology at university, has clearly taken her learnings to heart – but for a small mistake, she would have delivered a personal best, too.

James Avery and Mr Sneezy. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Coral Keen and Total Belief sit in overnight fourth place on a score of 30.6, closely followed by Wiltshire-based Kiwi James Avery and Ian and Heidi Woodhead and Tiny Clapham’s Mr Sneezy, fifth on 30.9. Formerly ridden by Holly Woodhead, Mr Sneezy joined James’ string in 2018 and since then, the eleven-year-old Irish Sport Horse has gone from strength to strength. Today, he overcame his first-phase weaknesses, plummeting his usual high-30s dressage mark to a creditable 30.9.

“I was really pleased with the horse; he’s been a bit fresh with me before, and today I could ride him,” says James. “There were a couple of little mistakes, but nothing major, which is a good start.”

For Mr Sneezy, this Bramham run is something of a litmus test: if it goes well, as it ought to, the team can start to seriously consider scheduling in a five-star debut for both horse and rider at Burghley.

Emily Philp and Fallulah: consistent between the boards. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sixth place is held overnight by Ian Wills’ exciting young mare Fallulah who, with Emily Philp in the irons, has been building up a solid string of good form over the last year. In that time, the ten-year-old has run at five CCI4*-S competitions, jumping clear and quick across the country in all but one. Last month, she lodged a fifth-place finish in her Event Rider Masters debut at Chatsworth and today, in her first CCI4*-L, she put a 32.4 on the board to sit comfortably within the top ten overnight.

The top ten after the first day of dressage in Bramham’s Equi-Trek CCI4*-L.

California Dreaming at Bramham

Elsewhere on site, Richard Coney and Kananaskis lead the under-25 CCI4*-L. Fresh off the back of their senior squad debut at last month’s Houghton International, they’re obviously feeling full of confidence and ready to embrace all the big leagues have to offer. A strong CCI4*-S class got underway today too, with Nicola Wilson taking an early, unassailable lead with the impressive young horse JL Dublin. Together, they scored 25.1, giving them nearly a full penalty margin ahead of second-placed Ben Hobday and Shadow Man II, who posted a 26.

We caught up with Tamie Smith, who comes forward with her experienced partner Wembley III. Tamie and Wembley initially made the journey to the UK to contest Badminton this spring, but an ill-timed abscess led to their withdrawal at the first horse inspection. Undeterred, Tamie left Wembley in the safe hands of Rodney Powell and Alex Franklin and headed back to the States to keep the rest of her string on the go. Now, with the end goal of Burghley, she brings the great grey to Yorkshire for a short four-star run.

“It’s not a bad plan B to have, really,” she laughs. “My vet back home told me that this is what horses are here for: to torture us, to break our hearts, and then to give us an amazing amount of joy, too. He knows his job, so he doesn’t really need to practice it too much. It’s mostly his fitness and his flatwork – and Alex is fantastic on the flat, so we’re really lucky to have access to her. And I’m at home practicing, too, so it’s easy to come back and fit back into it like a hand in a glove.”

Although Tamie had considered a reroute to Luhmühlen, she knew that deep down, she wanted to pursue a competitive goal that would set her heart alight. Bramham, she explains, is the perfect track to help amp the gelding’s fitness back up, while giving him enough of a challenge to sink his teeth into. “There are some skinnies that are skinnier than he is, but luckily we practice a lot of that,” she says. “And it’s funny, people always say it’s hilly here, but until you get here … to me, these are mountains! It’s all about your perspective. But he’s a big galloping horse, and it’s a beautiful place to be. It’s a really fun step down from Badminton – but it wouldn’t be much of a step down!”

Tamie Smith and Wembley III enjoy a revised early-summer competitive plan. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The pair sit in 14th place overnight on a score of 32 at the halfway point of dressage.

“The atmosphere was massive in there, but I was so pleased with him – he was really workmanlike,” says Tamie. “There are still some places we can work on things, but overall, he’s producing some really beautiful work.”

Tamie credits supergroom Monique Coston with making it possible for her to continue to chase the dream, despite a change in plans: “she’s so much more than just a groom; she does everything. She does all the fitness work, the day-to-day, all the gallops – she’s wonderful, irreplaceable!”

Dressage resumes tomorrow morning at 9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST. Stay tuned for a full breakdown of all tomorrow’s action, plus a look at the two tough Ian Stark-designed courses awaiting our competitors this weekend.

Go Eventing!

The top ten after the first day of dressage in the Land Rover CCI4*-S.

Bramham: Website, Entries and Ride Times, Cross-Country Live Stream, EN’s CoverageEN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter

Thursday Video from Ecovet: Happy Retirement, NZB Campino

Mark Todd announced last week the retirement of his five-star partner, NZB Campino. “Kinky,” a 17-year-old Hanoverian, had an uncharacteristic stop early in the Badminton cross country course earlier this season, and the New Zealand Olympian decided it was time for retirement from International competition.

Mark Todd’s statement:

“Having made the wise call to ‘pull himself up’ at Badminton early on and not being sound back at the stables we have done some further investigation and whilst Kinky is now sound and happily out in the paddock we have made the decision to retire him from International Eventing. He has been and remains a wonderful friend and he will now be Carolyn’s hack and look after the youngsters on the farm. And be pampered by Jess Wilson!”

Between an Olympic team bronze medal in 2012 and six CCI5*-L completions, Kinky had one hell of a career. Take a look back through these videos.

Ecovet fly spray recently introduced an improved scent based on customer feedback: an herbal blend of lavender with a hint of tea. The updated scent does not impact Ecovet’s well-known effectiveness in the fight against flies. Learn more at eco-vet.com

By the Numbers: MARS EQUESTRIAN Bromont CCI4*-L

With the MARS EQUESTRIAN Bromont CCI Three-Day Event serving as the last CCI4*-L of the North American spring season, the competitors are a mixture of newcomers to the level, experienced horses taking a crack at a Pan American Games qualifier, and combinations re-routing after hiccups at the Land Rover Kentucky Three-Day Event or the Jersey Fresh International Three-Day Event. With an unusually large percentage of seasoned horses here, it’s likely that the winner will be an experienced combination.

THE EVENT

Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

  • No one has ever broken the 75% mark (25.0 penalties) in dressage in the CCI4*-L at Bromont.
  • With the jumping phases always proving influential at Bromont, recent winners have won the CCI4*-L from as low as eighth place after dressage.
  • In the last four runnings of this division, only two pairs have finished on their dressage score, both in 2016: Ryan Wood and Woodstock Bennett and Kylie Lyman and Sacramento.

DRESSAGE DIVAS

Buck Davidson and Carlevo. Photo by Jenni Autry.

  • Carlevo and Buck Davidson hold the best two-year dressage average at the Advanced/4* levels; they haven’t scored below 70% since 2017. They hold the only two-year average in the field that sits in the sub-30 range.
  • Copper Beach is hot on the heels of his stablemate though, averaging 30.0 over the same time period. He’s scored sub-30 in each of his Advanced tests in 2018/2019 but hasn’t cracked that threshold in his 4* starts.
  • Boyd Martin hit the 20s in two of On Cue‘s first three Advanced starts but has only achieved low thirties in her two 4*-S starts.
  • Lauren Kieffer and D.A. Duras achieved the 75% mark at Little Downham in the Advanced division in 2017, but haven’t quite broken 70% in the horse’s six starts since.
  • Katherine Coleman and Monte Classico have been chipping away at the first phase. Although their two-year average sits at 32.5, they’ve scored in the 20s in their last three consecutive starts.

CROSS COUNTRY MACHINES

Sabrina Glaser and Rembrandt. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

  • Sabrina Glaser and Rembrandt have been quietly gaining experience on the West Coast. In eight career runs at the level, they’ve never had a cross country penalty. Over the last year, they’ve finished within 10 seconds of the optimum time or the fastest time of the day in every single run.
  • Landmark’s Monte Carlo has a reputation for fast rounds at the long format. In six clear career runs at the 4/5*-L levels, he and Lauren Kieffer have finished within five seconds of either optimum time or the fastest time of the day in every single one of them.

SHOW JUMPING POWERHOUSES

Jennie Brannigan and I Bella. Photo by Shelby Allen.

  • I Bella has been lightly competed at the Advanced/4* level, but in three show jumping rounds at the top level, she and Jennie Brannigan have yet to have a rail.
  • D.A. Duras has jumped clean in nine of his last 10 consecutive stadium rounds at the Advanced/4* levels. He and Lauren Kieffer have had only one rail since 2016.
  • Jakobi and Emilee Libby had one rail in the horse’s first Advanced and have since jumped clear in four consecutive Advanced/4* rounds.
  • In nine rounds at Advanced/4* together, Katherine Coleman and Monte Classico have only tipped a rail on two occasions.

PREDICTED WINNER: BUCK DAVIDSON AND COPPER BEACH

Buck Davidson and Copper Beach. Photo by Leslie Threlkeld.

Keep an eye on:
  • Buck Davidson and Carlevo
  • Katherine Coleman and Monte Classico
  • Lauren Kieffer and Landmark’s Monte Carlo
  • Lauren Kieffer and D.A. Duras

#BromontCCI: WebsiteEntriesScheduleDressage Start TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Thursday News & Notes from Taylor Harris Insurance Services (THIS)

 

Midweek motivation from Taylor Harris Insurance Services FB page.

Ok quick rant time: when did show jumping warmup in the lower levels become such a maniacal time? I’ve been away from the lower levels for a hot second, and I’m surprised that Training level is a situation where I need to bring 1-2 people with me to the ring in order to have a jump that I can use that isn’t being owned by another rider. I learned my lesson at VHT, and this weekend I’ll be sure to bring a helper, but PSA to everyone out there, please be nice and share your jumps with me even though I don’t have a ground crew following me around!

National Holiday: National Yo Yo Day

Major Events:

#BromontCCI: WebsiteEntriesScheduleDressage Start TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

U.S. Weekend Preview:

Plantation Field H.T. [Website]  [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

The Middleburg H.T. [Website] [Entry Status] [Ride Times] [Live Scores]

River Glen H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

Queeny Park H.T. [Website] [Entry Status/Ride Times/Live Scores]

News From Around the Globe:

Hey friends across the pond, are you heading to Bramham this weekend? If you’re not already planning on attending the 2019 Equi-Trek Bramham Three Day Event, clear your schedule because it’s a bucket list item. With both senior and under-25 divisions of the CCI4*-L, the event boasts some of the biggest names in Eventing in the world. [8 Reasons to Go to Bramham]

We love hearing Mark Todd tell us about the happy retirement of his longtime partner, NZB Campino. “Kinky” as he is known around the barn, has stepped away from competition at the age of 17, but remains in Mark’s yard enjoying his retirement by being pampered out of his mind. A quirky boy but highly successful with several FEI wins on his record, Kinky is definitely one for the record books. [Mark Todd Reflects on Olympic Partner]

With no Triple Crown in sight this year, the Belmont Stakes is a wide open field with a big win at stake. Ten top class contenders will duke it out this Saturday, and my pick is Everfast for three reasons. He just had a great Preakness with a second place, he’s got a good inside post position, and also he has a perfect name for racing. [Belmont Stats & Odds]

Best of Blogs: Minding the Rider’s Body & Mind

ALL the jogs from Bromont from The Horse Pesterer!

All 115 Horses Pass First Inspection at Bromont CCI Three-Day Event

Bobby Meyerhoff and Lumumba. Photo by Jenni Autry.

All 115 horses that presented in the long format divisions at the MARS EQUESTRIAN Bromont CCI Three-Day Event were accepted on an overcast afternoon here at the Parc Équestre Olympique de Bromont in Quebec, Canada.

The CCI2*-L ground jury of Sandor Fulop (HUN), Marilyn Payne (USA) and Sukhdev Rathore (IND) sent two horses to the holding box: Natasha Erschen‘s mount Chai Tea Latte and Matthew Kidney’s mount Fuzion. Both horses were accepted upon reinspection. A total of 42 horses are competing in the CCI2*-L divisions: 26 in the senior section and 16 in the under-25 section.

Kendal Lehari and Audacious. Photo by Jenni Autry.

The CCI3*-L horses presented next to the ground jury of Christian Steiner (AUT), Delano Bastos De Miranda (BRA) and Cara Whitham (CAN) without issue. A total of 49 horses are competing in the CCI3*-L divisions: 24 in the senior section and 25 in the under-25 section.

Brandon McMechan withdrew Oscar’s Wild from the CCI4*-L prior to the trot up. All 24 horses in the CCI4*-L that presented to the ground jury of Marilyn Payne (USA), Sandor Fulop (HUN) and Gretchen Butts (USA) were accepted.

Lauren Kieffer and Get Gaudi. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Show secretary extraordinaire Jeanette Leask told EN that Bromont typically averages about 110 entries for this event. With a further 37 horses competing in the CCI3*-S, Jeanette confirmed that 152 horses is a record high for entries in the 33-year history of Bromont’s three-day event. Riders representing six countries are competing: Canada, U.S., Barbados, Australia, New Zealand and Zimbabwe.

In addition to hosting five FEI divisions, Bromont kicked off the week with the inaugural Bromont Rising Program. A select group of under-25 athletes received grants to compete, as well as train with Kerry Millikin, Peter Gray and Doug Payne in the lead-up to the event. Boyd Martin and Jessica Phoenix also served as speakers for the educational component of the program.

Katherine Coleman and Monte Classic. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Greta Schwickert and Emily Lehman, both of whom are competing in the CCI3*-S, praised the Bromont Rising program as “immensely helpful” and thanked the Organizing Committee for their enormous effort in executing an educational three days. Stay tuned for much more on the Bromont Rising program.

Bromont is also playing host to the North American Futures Team Challenge. Established with the USET Foundation and administered by USEF, the North American Futures Team Challenge is designed to complement the Eventing High Performance Program, which recently rolled out the new U.S. Eventing Pathway Program.

Alyssa Phillips and Oskar. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Two teams of four combinations, one coached by U.S. Eventing Director of High Performance Erik Duvander and one coached by USEF Eventing Emerging Athlete Coach Leslie Law, participated in training in the lead-up to the event and will contest an unofficial simulated team competition.

Erik’s team is Kimmy Cecere and Landmark’s Monaco, Sydney Conley Elliott and QC Diamantaire, Allie Knowles and Business Class, and Kylie Lyman and Xuanatu. Leslie’s team is Alex Baugh and Ballingowan Pizazz, Cosby Green and Highly Suspicious, Mallory Hogan and Clarissa Purisma, and Alyssa Phillips and Oskar.

Bromont is also serving as the final selection trial for the U.S. Pan American Games team, which will be announced no later than June 19. Click here to read more about U.S. team selection process for the Pan American Games, which will take place Aug. 1-4 in Lima, Peru.

Colleen Loach and FE Golden Eye. Go Raptors! Photo by Jenni Autry.

Canada will also name their Pan American Games team following Bromont. Monique Archer is also competing in the CCI3*-L with Camross Diamond in the hopes of securing her Pan Ams qualifier to represent Barbados in Peru — please join the EN team in cheering her on.

Looking ahead to the competition, dressage starts tomorrow for the CCI3*-L and CCI2*-L divisions, with both rings running at 8:30 a.m. CCI3*-S dressage starts at 9 a.m. EST on Friday, with CCI4*-L dressage starting at 9:30 a.m. EST. Click here for dressage start times.

The Bromont area has been inundated with rain in the days leading up to the event, but today was mercifully dry — sans a few sprinkles during the trot up — and the rest of the forecast leading up to Saturday’s cross country looks promising. Bromont organizer Sue Ockendon told EN the CCI4*-L horses will go first on Saturday to give them the very best of the ground.

Jennie Brannigan and I Bella. Photo by Jenni Autry.

There is no live stream for dressage or cross country, but we are delighted to confirm that show jumping will be shown live on Bromont’s Facebook page and here on EN for all divisions on Sunday.

Keep checking back for more photos from today’s first horse inspection. Our friendly neighborhood videographer Thehorsepester is also uploading jog videos to his YouTube channel. We are looking forward to a fantastic week at Bromont! Thank you for following along with EN’s coverage. Go Eventing.

#BromontCCI: WebsiteEntries, Schedule, Dressage Start TimesLive ScoresEN’s CoverageEN’s TwitterEN’s Instagram

Wednesday Video from Kentucky Performance Products: Poplar Place Helmet Cams

Poplar Place Farm has been an iconic name on the Area III calendar since 2001, and though it’s seen a chance of ownership since then, it’s popularity has remained. This weekend, they welcomed the best of the southeast for the USEA Area III Championships. Elisa Wallace took three rides: Munson Slew, who won the Preliminary Championships, Sharp Decision, and Play Big. Ride along as she gallops around the Hamilton, Georgia venue.

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Bramham First Horse Inspection: One Horse Spun as CCI4*-L Classes Kick Off

Zara Tindall and Class Affair. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

From rugged Ireland, with its jolly ginger men (plentiful) and pots of gold (less so), Team EN heads in wildly different directions this week. Your loyal British correspondent (that’s me!) heads to the Equi-Trek Bramham International Horse Trials, set in sumptuous Yorkshire, a locale with slightly fewer tired stereotypes, but perhaps a few more beetle-browed men slamming their heads into trees and shouting “Cathy!” Jenni, for her part, is en route to Bromont – because you can never have too many ‘B’ events – where she is, presumably, going to become a mountie, or a piece of Mounty Bounty, or something.

Harry Meade and the delicious Tenareze. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Last year, I made the grievous error of trusting southern England’s balmy temperatures to follow me north, and by the time I parked up in front of Bramham’s impressive 18th century Palladian manor house, my shorts-clad thighs had turned a few blotchy shades of purple, and I was wearing every piece of clothing I could easily grab whilst traversing a motorway on my upper half. This year, I wasn’t going to be caught out. This year, I was going to be warm and smug, stationed at the end of the jog strip behind the absolutely colossal lens I cart around to these sorts of things like the pack-mule I am.

Except I wasn’t. The M1 – that gloriously inglorious strip of motorway that bisects approximately THE ENTIRE CONTINENT with nary a Starbucks to break up the skyline – decided that today was the day to send some of its constituent roadgoers pinging over the grass verges, and so I found myself stuck, my car in park and a truly grim audiobook on the go, for what felt like half my life. By the time I rolled into Bramham, red-faced and bearing an R-rating for prolonged and almost incomprehensible profanity, the whole sodding thing had finished. And so I come bearing a consolation prize, which is probably better than what I could have offered you anyway – a smattering of images from Actual Professional Photographer Nico Morgan. Thanks, Nico. I’ll show you the best head-slamming tree later.

Gaby Vaughan and Cufflink present for the CCI4*-L. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

First, though, the actual news. 77 horses came forward to present for the Equi-Trek CCI4*-L, down one after Britain’s Alex Whewall didn’t present Ellfield Voyager. Two of them were sent to the hold box, and both were subsequently withdrawn without presenting a second time – those were Alex Postolowsky and Richard Skelt, both representing Great Britain, with Howick Freedom and Man Hunt, respectively. 75 horses will proceed to dressage, which begins tomorrow at 9.00 a.m. BST/4.00 a.m. EST, and six flags will be represented: Great Britain, France, New Zealand, Sweden, Ireland, and Zimbabwe each have riders in the class.

27 horses were presented for the British Horse Feeds CCILu25-4*, which serves as the Under-25 National Championship. Again, two horses were held – but while Indie Vaughan-Jones‘ Quob Dynamic was passed upon re-presentation, Rebelle de Neuville, the ride of France’s Thomas Piejos was spun. 26 horse-and-rider combinations representing four nations – Great Britain, France, Ireland, and the Netherlands – will continue forth to the competition proper, which commences tomorrow at 2.37 p.m. BST/9.37 a.m. EST.

We’ll also be keeping an eye on the Land Rover CCI4*-S, which is chock-full of fantastic horses and riders. Most excitingly, we’ll get our first look at the brand-new partnership of Ryuzo Kitajima, one of Japan’s rising stars, and Cekatinka, the incredibly talented mare with whom Tim Price contested last year’s World Equestrian Games. The stars and stripes are also represented in this class: Lexi Scovil, who has been based with William Fox-Pitt this spring, rides her Chico’s Man VDF Z, while Tamie Smith reroutes Wembley III here after a Badminton that didn’t quite go to plan.

Millie Kruger is best turned out in Bramham’s first horse inspection. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

The best-dressed competition was judged by representatives from Hiho Silver and Land Rover, as well as Bramham’s owner, Rachel Lane Fox. The ladies’ prize was awarded to Zimbabwe’s Camilla Kruger, who rides her Rio mount Biarritz II in the CCI4*-L, while Richard Coney scooped the gents’ honours. He’ll be piloting Kananaskis, the horse with whom he made his Nations Cup debut two weeks ago, in the CCI4*-L for under-25s.

Richard Coney and Kananaskis. Photo by Nico Morgan Media.

Can’t make the trip north of the Wall? No matter – this year, Bramham will be live-streaming all three classes’ cross-country phases for free through their website. (You might want to set your Saturday plans aside, mind – the action begins at 9.30 a.m. BST/4.30 a.m. EST and continues until 6.00 p.m. BST/1.00 p.m. EST.)

Bramham: Website, Entries and Ride Times, Cross-Country Live Stream, EN’s CoverageEN’s Instagram, EN’s Twitter