Tag Archives: Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s Marilyn Little and Corona 93 win final qualifier at Live Oak International in Ocala

In a picture-perfect setting, with a full crowd and a top-class, turf field, the United States’ Marilyn Little and Corona 93 executed a skillful double clear to win the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Live Oak International CSI3*-W in Ocala, Florida. In the final event of the inaugural North American League, the 34-year-old rider, and double-gold medalist in Eventing at the 2015 Pan American Games, showcased her multi-discipline talent by expertly answering all the tests in Leopoldo Palacios’ (VEN) course design aboard the 12-year-old, Hanoverian mare (Cordalme Z x Lenz XX), claiming victory over a starting field of 32.

The 1.40-metre to 1.60-metre course, with 14 obstacles and 17 jumping attempts, incorporated challenges like a wide, plank fence similar to the one at the legendary Hickstead and a big scope test in the design’s final three jumps. But it was a big wall to a wide triple bar and a steady double vertical combination that posed the biggest questions on course.

“I tried to do the best for the field,” said Palacios. “I have a good feel of the riders and the conditions were very good. I needed to build it strong for the conditions. When you have a ring with such good footing as we have here and we have very good set of fences and how the ring is now is way better after all the improvements that Live Oak did (like enclosing the ring); it’s fantastic.

“I had a lot of pressure. Walking the course, some riders complained it was too hard, but I believe that with the good footing, the conditions were super good, (the horses and riders) can jump harder courses.”

Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis have won the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Calgary (CAN), and are now setting their sights on Wellington and Ocala. (FEI/Aimee Makris)
Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis have won the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Calgary (CAN), and are now setting their sights on Wellington and Ocala. (FEI/Aimee Makris)

After the first two riders on course incurred time faults, the time allowed was extended by 3 seconds to a new limit of 90 seconds. Ten riders were clear in the first round to advance into the jump off.

“I thought the course was a little deceiving, a little on the low side,” said Little. “It was very progressive, and Leopoldo turned up the volume exponentially by the time you were midway through the course. By the end, there were a lot of technical, scope and stamina questions. It was a very long course, and the horses jumped to the best of their ability. It was a real thrill for both horse and rider.”

“There are no more challenging courses to jump than Leopoldo’s courses,” she added. “There’s always a number of tricks hiding in there and this was no different. It was brilliantly designed, and he had a beautiful, incredible field to work with in an electric atmosphere.”

All-female podium sweep

Out of the ten, talented horse-and-rider pairs, only three of America’s leading ladies went double clear to secure an all-female sweep of the top results. Little set the bar high as the first to leave the rails standing in the jump-off order, followed in hot pursuit by the youngest rider in the class, 19-year-old Chloe Reid, riding 9-year-old, Irish Sporthorse stallion Codarco (Darco x Orame). Last to go, 22-year-old Katie Dinan and 11-year-old, Irish Sporthorse gelding Dougie Douglas (Ard VDL Douglas x High Roller) chose a slightly more conservative track to finish in third.

“I’m set to graduate from Harvard in May and I’m going to be riding full time after graduation,” said Dinan. “I’m really looking forward to that. I’m going to try to take my riding further and focus on that full time. It’s really exciting.

“I’m in the process of making more definite plans, but over the last few years, I’ve been competing in Europe over the summers when on holiday from school and during the school year I’ve been in America. So when I graduate, I’ll have more flexibility. I’ll be able to choose my competitions around my horses rather than around school, and I’ll see what happens with that.”

Dinan acquired the horse that she rode to a podium finish in the final North American League event from the Goresbridge Supreme Sale of Showjumpers last November.

“I got Dougie at the end of last year and our first show together was at the beginning of January,” she said. “I believe this was our fifth competition together. I’m really grateful that so far, he’s been just wonderful. He’s so much fun to ride, he has a great personality, he seems to love show jumping, he has a lot of experience, which I feel very fortunate I can draw off of because he’s been to a lot of different venues.

“He’s jumped on a lot of grass fields, and that was one of the reasons why I decided to bring him to Live Oak because this is as beautiful as a grass field as there is to ride on, and I thought it would be a really good venue for him.”

 Longtime partners, and perennial crowd favorites, Rich Fellers (USA) and Flexible claimed victory at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League qualifier at Thunderbird Show Park in Langley, British Columbia, yesterday. (FEI/Rebecca Berry)
Longtime partners, and perennial crowd favorites, Rich Fellers (USA) and Flexible claimed victory at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League qualifier at Thunderbird Show Park in Langley, British Columbia, yesterday. (FEI/Rebecca Berry)

A family affair

The well-regarded, annual competition, Live Oak International, is held on second-place finisher Reid’s grandmother’s farm and is organised in partnership by her uncle, Chester Weber and her mother, Juliet Reid.

“I couldn’t ask for a better placing at a better venue than right now and to do it and sit up here (in the press conference) with my uncle and my mom is incredible,” said Reid. “It’s a dream come true today and everything that’s happened this week.

“I have to give my success to my family. Without their support behind me, I wouldn’t be where I am today. And also to the group of people, my trainers, grooms, everyone who has helped me to be able to bring my horses and be best prepared for this moment.”

The 2016 season is set to be a breakout year for the young, American rider, who trains with Germany’s Marcus Beerbaum and Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum. Last month, she was also the youngest entry in the $130,000 Adequan Grand Prix CSI3* and placed third.

“I was actually talking to my dad before we started the class today and I was like, ‘I hope the course is challenging enough this morning,’” Reid said. “Because if the first go around at a show is challenging, that just makes me ride even better, I think. I was looking for the additional pressure today, but anytime you enter a class with the amazing riders that were in the class today is always such an honor and today definitely proved to be.”

“I think that Juliet and I often talk about Aachen as a model for the best annual horse competition in the world and that’s something that we look to,” said Weber. “When we started the show jumping, we did that together with the team from Spruce Meadows because we felt like that they could help bring us knowledge. We learned a lot from them, we still call them if we have questions; they’re great at answering those kinds of things. We have a great team in place, and we are talking back and forth about perhaps adding eventing.”

“There are about 2,000 eventing horses in Ocala in the winter; it’s a kind of mecca for eventers,” he added. “We have some big challenges to work through and whether 2017 is the right time, or if the right time will come, but I think not unlike Aachen, you’ll see some other sports happen here, but they have to come at their own logical time.”

Double threat

Speaking of eventing, Little has based her winter operations out of Ocala for the last two winter seasons to best prepare her eventing and show jumping strings at the same time. During the warmer months, Little and her family’s Raylyn Farms return to Frederick, Maryland, where her parents settled 36 years ago.

“It’s easier to get the eventing horses fit in Ocala,” said Little. “And also, I have 28 horses in the stable at the moment, primarily between ages 5 and 7 that I’ve bred, and it was a financial decision to develop the young horses here in Ocala. I am looking to return to Wellington next year.”

The grand prix show jumper turned to eventing in 2010, quickly working her way to the 4* level, the highest level of competition. “Anytime you’re entering another world or learning another sport or language, the best way to do it is full immersion program,” she said. “The goals that I had in eventing, there was really no other way to do it other than to completely immerse yourself and put everything, your whole heart and whole head, into it and that has been a focus for five or six years now.”

“I think that there’s certainly a way to play both sports at a very high level, if you have the team behind you that’s helping you play that game,” she added. “Because we all know that this looks like an individual sport, but it’s far more a team sport than the public may realise. I do hope to be able to do both and believe that it’s possible.”

Little’s eventing experience played a role in her approach to today’s course, especially in the long gallop to final oxer in the jump-off round.

“There, I was lucky; I knew that when I landed from the second to last fence, I could ask her for some speed then kick her into her highest gear then back off,” said Little. “I hoped that I would see the distance as far off as I possibly could, going at 750 metres a minute and trying to see a distance 12 strides out – that was a bit of eventing.

“I think eventing makes me sharper (for show jumping), and there are things that I feel that I do better than I did before I evented, and I wouldn’t trade those things for anything. And I think that being here in the show jumping ring will help me stay sharp for what I hope is coming in the eventing arena.”
Rio dreams

But despite the recent success in show jumping, not only winning the Longines FEI World Cup™ qualifier but also the $35,000 Live Oak International the day before and finishing in second in the $10,000 speed class on Friday, Little’s 2016 plans of focusing on the Rio 2016 Olympic Games for eventing have not changed.

“I have a very special horse in RF Demeter for high-level, performance eventing,” Little said. “She is in top form, and I can’t help but look toward Rio with her. So I have to stay the course for her and her owners and for myself because we’ve had a lot of years preparing for this season. We’re heading into the final Olympic trials prepared and fit, so a lot will have to go into that to make sure she’s on point.

“In jumpers, things are evolving quickly, and I can’t say that I have a solid plan for what’s coming in the next few months. There are a few things on the table but the plans will have to be made with Demeter in mind and her goals.”

Little’s return to the international show jumping ring largely stemmed from Corona’s development since Little acquired the talented mare last year from American rider Lauren Tisbo.

“There’s no question that Corona wouldn’t be part of the eventing string because dressage wouldn’t be a part of her repertoire,” said Little. “I think the judges’ comments would be that she’s not submissive and I would have to agree with them. “She is an extraordinary woman and she knows it and we have to treat her as such. She is 12 years old, and she’s in a new program so we have to find our way and it’s give and take. But she is a wonderful competitor, and I know she’s going to give 150 percent when she walks through the in gate.”

Despite the win, Little’s late start to the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping season means she will not head to the Final in Gothenburg, Sweden next month but will keep the next Final in mind for planning after Rio. “That’s an incredible goal,” she said. “I have a very special horse that is telling me that she’s ready for that, and that’s a dream and I will work toward that. At this point, it’s still one show at a time, one class at a time and hopefully the road I’m part of leads to the World Cup Final.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s Marilyn Little and Corona 93 win final qualifier at Live Oak International in Ocala
Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s Marilyn Little and Corona 93 win final qualifier at Live Oak International in Ocala

Gothenburg calling

Following the final event of the North American League, the qualified U.S. riders are already planning the upcoming weeks that lead up to traveling to Europe.

“I am planning on going to the Final and will take Lucifer and New York,” said second-place finisher in the East Coast league, Hardin (Jack) Towell (USA).

The East Coast league’s third place finisher Quentin Judge (USA) finished in fifth in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Ocala with HH Whisky Royale, but plans to take HH Copin van de Broy to Sweden.

“I thought Whisky Royale was great today,” Judge said. “He jumped really well in the first round, very easy to jump clear. But in the jump off, I cut the turn to the first fence too tight and knocked the standard with my foot. He jumped double clear; the rail was my fault.

“I’m planning to go to the Final with Copin and will jump him in two small classes before we head over to Gothenburg in a few weeks, to make sure he’s fit and ready to go.”

Current Longines Rankings number four Beezie Madden (USA) also plans to head to the Final, despite missing the last two East Coast league events. “We’re hoping to be able to go, that’s for sure,” Madden said. “Right now, Simon and Cortes will not go, but we have two horses, Quister and Breitling, who are doing really well and we just have to see which ones of those two we’d like to take the Final. Breitling just jumped double clear at last week’s Nations Cup so we’re really excited about him.”

Kent Farrington and McLain Ward do not plan to travel to Europe next month, instead opting to focus on qualifying for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. In their place, it’s likely that alternate Dinan will receive a bid.

“I was waiting to see after today that if it does work out, I’d plan on taking Nougat du Vallet,” Dinan said. “He competed in the World Cup qualifier at the Wellington Masters two weeks ago. I will figure out what makes most sense because I’ll be qualified on multiple horses but that would be my plan.

“I jumped him in the World Cup Final at Gothenburg in 2013 and always wanted to go back there. I’m heading back to Boston right now and come back to Wellington to jump in Florida in the next two weeks. If I end up getting into the Final, then I’ll organise my schedule around that.”

In the West Coast league, all three top U.S. riders, Karl Cook, Rich Fellers and Richard Spooner plan to compete in the Final.

“I would like to do the World Cup Final with the horse because I really need to get to know (new horse, Big Red),” Spooner said. “I really want to feel confident on the horse and I want to feel 100 percent, if Rio were to be in his future, that I would feel 100 percent confident in our ability to do that and I have a short time to do it.”

“I just have a simple rule with what I do with my show jumpers, which is I just let them tell me how they feel and I go with that, and he feels really good,” Fellers said of 20-year-old stallion Flexible and their plans to travel to the Final. “I don’t have any explanation for it, but he just feels as good as ever.”

The Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final will be held in Gothenburg, Sweden, on 23-26 March (www.gothenburghorseshow.com/in-english).

See full Longines FEI World Cup Jumping North American League standings here: http://www.feiworldcup.org/jumping-north-american-league-standings.html

Results – Ocala:
1. Corona (Marilyn Little), USA, 0 faults/43.34 seconds (JO);
2. Codarco (Chloe Reid), USA, 0/45.19 (JO);
3. Dougie Douglas (Katie Dinan), USA, 0/48.61 (JO);
4. Uppie de Lis (Andrew Kocher), USA, 4/42.35 (JO);
5. HH Whisky Royale (Quentin Judge), USA, 4/44.64 (JO);
6. Indigo (Margie Goldstein-Engle), USA, 4/45.85 (JO);
7. Callisto (Cian O’Connor), IRL, 4/47.03 (JO);
8. Casper (Sharn Wordley), NZL, 4/47.61 (JO).

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Egypt’s Nayel Nassar and Lordan win last West Coast qualifier at HITS Thermal

Under the desert sun, Egypt’s Nayel Nassar showcased his close partnership with longtime mount Lordan to win in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Thermal CSI3*-W. In the seventh and final event on the West Coast, the 25-year-old rider guided the 12-year-old, Hanoverian gelding (Lordanos x Landor) to a double clear that bested a field of 20.

Competing over a sprawling course designed by Germany’s Martin Otto, the riders tested their skills and their horses’ scope against the demanding double and triple combinations, short distances, wide oxers, and problematic shadows. From walking the course, competitors noted that the course would jump with difficulties, which ultimately proved true when only three pairs finished the first round without faults.

“Today was the final World Cup qualifier on the West Coast so I designed the course to be more like one in an indoor because the Final is in an indoor,” said Otto. “We had top level riders and horses so I was really fine with the outcome of three in the jump off.”

FEI

Risky business

France’s Eric Navet and Catypso (Catoki x Calypso II) and the United States’ Jamie Barge and Luebbo (Lord Pezi x Stakkato) joined Nassar and Lordan in the final round. First to go, Navet had an uncharacteristic misjudgment of strides in the course’s first line, and the 9-year-old, Hanoverian gelding forced a rail down.

“All three of us were fighters, and I was lucky enough to go last, and Eric had to go first and he had to take a big risk,” said Nassar.

“I’ve ridden Catypso since he was 6,” said Navet. “He’s come a long way. It took a good time to get him to understand (jumping clear). He has unbelievable, with easy scope, and I feel like I can jump anything; he just needed to figure it out and improve his technique.

“I’m very proud of him and very satisfied to have such a great finish in a challenging course. I really feel like he did that easily (today) which makes me optimistic for the rest of the year and the rest of his career.”

On the rise

Next in the jump-off order, Barge continued to build her consistency in delivering clear rounds, leaving all the rails standing aboard her 11-year-old, Oldenburg gelding. A long gallop to the final Longines oxer also helped her take seconds off the clock to finish in 49.64 seconds, but a more conservative track left the door open.

“I worked with him a lot on his flatwork and his rideability in the summer,” said Barge about her partner for the last two years. “If I can get the rideability, he’s got the scope and the heart to do it. I’m excited that it’s come together.”

In November, the 29-year-old rider finished second to McLain Ward (USA) in the $100,000 Coachella Valley Classic at HITS Sunshine Series II CSI5*, also held at the HITS Desert Horse Park.

“My horse is a really good horse,” she added. “He’s a little bit spunky and has some attitude but that’s what I love about him. This was his first World Cup qualifier class, and it was the biggest class that I’ve seen here in three or four years that I’ve been coming (to Thermal).”

Back with a bang

But it was Nassar with his deceptively fast gelding that managed to stop the timers at 48.19 seconds, despite adding an extra stride in the second line. An inside turn and a faster gallop proved strategy enough to steal the lead and seal the victory.

“I only kind of saw Jamie go, but people said that she didn’t go inside the Longines oxer, going away from the gate, so I knew if I slipped inside there, I didn’t have to go crazy to catch her,” Nassar said. “I did six strides in the first line, eight in the second line; my horse has small stride. But then it was just a matter of jumping the last two jumps clean.”

So as the palm trees dotted the skyline and the California temperatures soared, he returned to the winter circuit showgrounds of his formative, junior years by making a big mark, after a year spent developing young horses and bringing Lordan back from an injury.

“I graduated Stanford in 2013, and I’ve been based in San Diego with my own horse business,” he said. “I’m mostly a horse trainer, with one client that I teach; I like to work with horses more than people. I’ve been lucky so far, with a great group of horses that I’ve been able to produce to the top level.

“We bought Lordan at the end of his 6-year-old year and started him as a 7-year-old. He’s coming off an injury. He was off almost all of last year. I’ve basically been without my best horse for an entire year, but I was able to build up the string behind him. Now he’s back, and Thermal is just his second show. I took him to the World Cup qualifier in Mexico, and he was in great form. I was just rusty, and we had one down. He’s missed the sport just as much as I missed him.”

Although Nassar and Lordan have had a late start to the World Cup season, the pair still hope to qualify for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Gothenburg, Sweden, for Egypt. “I’ve gone twice already to the World Cup Final, and I hope to go again,” he said. “I really love Gothenburg. Lordan’s jumped there before, and it was unbelievable there.”

Egypt’s Nayel Nassar and Lordan claim victory of the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Thermal. (FEI/Bret St Clair)
Egypt’s Nayel Nassar and Lordan claim victory of the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Thermal. (FEI/Bret St Clair)

West Coast growth

The top three finishers are frequent visitors to the HITS Desert Horse Park, and President and Chief Executive Officer of HITS, Inc., Tom Struzzieri voiced his excitement for the area’s growth in the sport.

“It was super to have Longines here for the World Cup qualifier,” he said. “I was excited to have Longines here because the presence of sponsorship raises the bar, it raises our game. It was an afternoon class, but it had an electric, almost evening atmosphere. Hats off to Longines for being involved in the sport. It’s really exceptional. Great sponsors make for a great class.”

Struzzieri also expressed his high expectations for the coming years of the newly launched North American League and its stop in Thermal. “Especially next year, with the World Cup Final being in the United States and later in the season, that’s going to make for great sport here,” he added. “Those particulars are going to make next year very cool for us.”

Results
1. Lordan (Nayel Nassar), EGY, 0 faults/48.19 seconds (JO);
2. Luebbo (Jamie Barge), USA, 0/49.64 (JO);
3. Catypso (Eric Navet), FRA, 4/81.59 (JO);
4. Flexible (Rich Fellers), USA, 4/76.31;
5. Tembla (Karl Cook), USA, 4/77.27;
6. Chacna (Enrique Gonzalez), MEX, 4/80.80;
7. NKH Quanto (Christian Heineking), GER, 8/76.86;
8. Cat Balou (Tamie Phillips), CAN, 8/78.67.

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Kent Farrington and Uceko Speed to Victory at Wellington Masters

A field of 40 of the world’s best set their sights on Sunday’s $200,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Wellington, but it was Kent Farrington (USA) who claimed top honors aboard Uceko at the inaugural Wellington Masters CSI3*-W. Beating a jump-off field of 14, the seasoned horse-and-rider pair expertly omitted strides throughout the track designed by Alan Wade (IRL) to finish just over two-and-a-half seconds ahead of Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum (GER) and Fibonacci.

“My horse is very experienced, and I know he has a giant stride,” said Farrington. “I left out a step from jump one to two, and I think for sure, I did one less (than third place finisher Richard Spooner) in the rollback to the combination. Also, to the next one (after the double combination), I was really aggressive in using his gallop. I think knowing that horse like I do, I can take advantage of his stride early on in the course.”

As much as Farrington could use his jump-off strategy for his horse, the overall plan to use Uceko for the FEI World Cup™ qualifier stemmed from the show’s early proposal to hold the class on the turf field. But inclement weather interfered and forced organisers to move the penultimate East Coast event to the sand arena.

“Originally, it was going to go on the grass, and he’s really well suited to grass arenas, so that was my plan,” Farrington said. “Obviously that changed. I was a little concerned that that wouldn’t play to his strengths, but he proved me wrong.

“He usually goes best with a really impressive ring, or in an intimidating setting for most horses, and this is usually where he shines so that’s why I try to pick spookier venues or grass arenas that have bigger, impressive jumps. It wasn’t really playing to his strengths today, but he pulled it off anyway, so I’m really happy with him.”

“I kept the distances normal,” said Wade. “As you can see, some of the better horses and riders over two rounds came to the top. We had a few too many clear rounds, but I think that the conditions, windy and wet last night, followed up with good sport.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

Olympic dreams

With the Rio 2016 Olympics a few months away, all three podium finishers referred to upcoming schedules that allowed for the possibility to travel to Brazil.

“Rio would definitely be my goal,” said Michaels-Beerbaum. “(Fibonacci is) shortlisted for the German team at the moment, so I’ll make a plan together with the Chef d’Equipe about what he should do to keep going. He showed great form today and we just hope to keep that going.”

A newer partnership, Spooner (USA) and Big Red are also making a play to be considered for the U.S. Team, although the veteran rider is keeping realistic expectations.

“I got him the middle of the first week (in Wellington), so it’s a fresh partnership, and I couldn’t be any happier with the result today,” he said. “When he got here, I thought, ‘Well, I’m going to be very aggressive. It would be nice if I could have four faults and have a nice result and maybe have a point or two at this class.’ So to go out and go double clear far exceeds my expectations.”

“We would be a longshot for the Team but I’m gearing him for the Team,” he added. “I think he’s a Team horse; he’s impressed me incredibly in a very short period of time, and round after round, he’s been consistently clear. I’m learning a bit with him in the jump off, as well as the first round, but he has all the scope, he’s super careful, he’s fit and ready to go, so it will be a little bit about what (U.S. Chef d’Euipe) Robert Ridland wants to do and if he gears me in that direction or not. But that would be my dream for that horse.”

Spooner revealed plans to qualify for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Final in Gothenburg (SWE) and to use the major championship event as an additional opportunity to learn the horse in advance of the Olympics. “I really want to feel confident on the horse, and that if Rio were to be in his future I would feel 100 percent confident in our ability to do that,” he said.

Top-level management

Although Farrington didn’t specify his Olympic plans, he hinted at the possibility from his decision to not travel to Gothenburg (SWE) in March for FEI World Cup™ Final.

“I’ll probably give him (Uceko) a bit of a rest now and do a class here and there and save him for the summer, Calgary and Europe,” he said. “I try to pick the venues where he’ll really shine.

“I just work him at home. He’s getting really fit and he doesn’t really need to practice in the ring. He’s been around the world a couple times. He’s better the less he shows, so I just try to have him fit and feeling good, and pull him out at some of the bigger events.”

The careful management of his string of horses is a key factor in the success for Farrington, who is currently ranked world number 3 in the Longines Rankings.

“He’s learned to be a fast horse,” he said of his winning mount. “He actually was not a fast horse when I started with him. He has a long stride and sort of a slow canter, and as I’ve gotten to know him really well, he’s been able to turn really short to the fences and leave out strides where other horses can’t. Now for a jump off, I really have his plan and I’m very confident about what he can do and I try to execute to the best of my abilities. And usually, if I don’t make a big error, he pulls it off.”

New venue for a new League

The Wellington leg of the inaugural season for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League was hosted by Deeridge Farms, a private property owned by the Jacobs family since 1980. Rarely used for competitions, the riders applauded the event’s organisers for handling the week’s unexpected weather issues and for executing the unique and top-level event.

“It’s a three-year commitment to host the World Cup qualifier here at Deeridge Farms, so we’re looking forward to next year,” said Louis Jacobs (USA), co-president of the event. “We learned a lot this year, and we all had fun. It was a great family endeavor. So we’re excited about what’s in the future.”

The vision behind the event stemmed from acknowledging Wellington as the country’s capital of high-performance horse sport through the winter months and providing competitors with an opportunity to earn World Cup points at the centre of the action.

Jacobs’ brother, Charlie, also served as co-president, in addition to competing throughout the week and in the FEI World Cup™ qualifier class.

“It’s a beautiful event here at Deeridge Farms,” Farrington said. “I think these facilities are amazing and really exciting for our sport and for show jumping in Florida for us to have this competition. This calibre of competition is really exciting for all of us as riders.”

“I’m delighted to be here,” Michaels-Beerbaum said. “This was a great honor to be able to ride here today. I thank the Jacobs family. This was their first event, and it’s amazing how beautifully it was put on and professionally, as well. We’re excited about coming back next year and perhaps getting to go on the grass field. I think all the riders feel the same that this has been a great event.”

“I had a great time, and the Jacobs family did a great job with the competition,” said Spooner. “There were some difficult decisions that they had to make with the weather and the facility, and they made all of them spot on. The footing in the sand arena was flawless. I’m looking forward to coming back next year – sand or grass or whatever you have, we’ll be here.”

Show organisers decided to postpone the use of the turf to next year’s event, after addressing drainage issues this summer. The goal is for the field to ride the same for the first rider as it does for the last in an order of 40 entries.

“It’s a team effort, and I hope it’s going to come out as a better product next year because of it,” said Charlie Jacobs (USA). “I think the new North American League is so important, with its special, unique, one-of-a-kind events. I’ve been fortunate to jump in every event on the East Coast, and I hope to go to the final event at Live Oak in a couple weeks.”

The United States’ Kent Farrington and Uceko claim the win in the $200,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Wellington. (FEI/Anthony Trollope)
The United States’ Kent Farrington and Uceko claim the win in the $200,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping in Wellington. (FEI/Anthony Trollope)

Results
1. Uceko (Kent Farrington), USA, 0 faults/40.30 seconds (JO);
2. Fibonacci (Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum), GER, 0/42.83 (JO);
3. Big Red (Richard Spoonder), USA, 0/42.89 (JO);
4. Adare (Paris Sellon), USA, 0/43.50 (JO);
5. Dixson (Ian Millar), CAN, 0/43.54 (JO);
6. VDL Wizard (Callan Solem), USA, 0/3.80 (JO);
7. Nougat du Vallet (Katherine Dinan), USA, 0/48.64 (JO);
8. HH Carlos Z (McLain Ward), USA, 4/41.75 (JO)

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Uruguay’s Juan Manuel Luzardo And Stan Claim Victory In Valle De Bravo

Clear blue skies welcomed an international field to new facilities in Valle de Bravo, Mexico, where Juan Manuel Luzardo (URU) and Stan delivered a daring performance to win the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier at CSI4*-W Valle de Bravo. The first World Cup qualifier to be hosted on Mexican soil, the event thrilled the home crowd with four Mexican riders advancing into the ten-rider jump off from a startlist of 28 competitors.

“It’s a very important competition,” said Guilherme Nogueira Jorge (BRA), the course designer. “And even if it’s one of the last qualifying competitions, it’s still early in the year for a lot of horses, so I had to come up with a course that was suitable to the standards of the competition, but also took that into consideration.

“Today the height was 1.60-metre, so I tried to put up a course that was big enough but also nice to ride so that we could have a few clear rounds, and in the end the riders and the horses did a great job, and they jumped it much better than expected, and we had ten clear.”

Nogueira designed the World Cup qualifier course at the National Horse Show earlier in the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League schedule and will design the course at the upcoming Rio 2016 Summer Olympic Games.

“It was a very well designed track,” said third-place finisher Simon Nizri (ISR), a native of Mexico City. “It’s an international level, the kind you get when you go to any contest in the world. Probably the hardest parts were the options that the designer made for us, and choosing there was the hardest part.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

Twists and turns

The jump-off course with seven obstacles demanded tight turns and long gallops for riders to shave time off the clock. First in the order, Audrey Coulter (USA) set an impressive pace at 42.47 seconds with an efficient track aboard Alex (Arpeggio x Mon Cheri), emphasised by an incredibly tight rollback from the double combination to a single vertical.

But the winding course played in favour of the following horse-and-rider pair, Luzardo (URU) and 10-year-old Hanoverian gelding Stan (Stakkato x Sacramento Son). Riding a larger stride, Luzardo managed to finish through the Longines timers at 41.85 seconds, proving too fast to catch by the remaining eight riders. Coulter’s time also held on to finish in the runner-up position.

“I’m really happy,” said Luzardo, following his win. “My horse is really fast so I tried to do short turns, and we had luck and that’s it. He has a huge stride. He’s really hot blooded and he’s so brave and a little bit green but always doing his best.

“When I finished my turn, I went to a paddock back there. I was by myself. I didn’t want to see anybody. I visited my partner, and a man who is like my father came by. He came running, saying, ‘You just won!’ So I went down and hugged him and was really happy.”

Luzardo, who is based in Guadalajara, Mexico, and his partner, Mauricio Guerra Colorado, bought the horse three years ago, but he was sidelined with an injury for nearly a year. Two months after returning to competition, the pair won the first grand prix they entered. Since then, Luzardo has competed Stan at the Pan American Games and at Spruce Meadows. “He came back really good, and I’m really happy,” Luzardo added.

The day’s win was still unexpected for the 35-year-old rider, who plans to travel to compete in the United States or in Canada this summer. “I didn’t think about (going to the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final) because I didn’t expect this result, but I have to think about it now,” he said.

Chasing a World Cup dream

Audrey Coulter (USA) has crossed the Atlantic Ocean and the North American continent multiple times this season to achieve her goal of qualifying for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Gothenburg, Sweden, on 23-26 March 2016.

“I was a little nervous today,” she said. “I’ve been trying to qualify for the World Cup Final, and so we came here hoping to get some points, and succeeded.

“We had a little bad luck last week. I was in Leipzig, and you had to qualify for the qualifier, but 31 were prequalified and 40 can go, so 9 spots were to be filled but 19 were trying to qualify. I had a very nice round, but one unlucky rail. And so I didn’t get to compete in the qualifier last week. In Vegas we were second, also, so that was exciting. And in Madrid, I was 12th.”

Although Coulter is originally from San Francisco, Calif. (USA), she is based in Belgium, and is qualifying through the Western European League. She will compete in Zurich (SUI) next week in the League’s concluding event to secure her position in the top 18 that qualify for the Final.

“I’ve had Alex for a little over a year now,” she added. “He came with that name, and we sort of bought him more as a second horse actually, and toward the end of the summer we just clicked, and he’s been going really well for me. He’s very careful. He always wants to do well, so he’s been a great horse to have. But I think I’ll go to the Final on (number one horse) Domino.”

Level playing field

During the course walk, United States Olympian and top-ranked West Coast rider Will Simpson noted that the arena slanted slightly uphill across, making some of the oxers more difficult to clear. Although he was successful in clearing the wider obstacles, he and his mount The Dude (Carry Gold x Argentinus) knocked an unlucky rail at the first element of the triple combination.

Early favorites, Harrie Smolders (NED), Karl Cook (USA), Jaime Azcarraga (MEX), and Juan Pablo Gaspar Albanez (MEX), also accumulated unfortunate faults in the first round, thus proving the unexpected and exciting nature of the sport.

Uruguay’s Juan Manuel Luzardo and Stan are the winners of the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Valle de Bravo (MEX). (FEI/Paolo Ballarini)
Uruguay’s Juan Manuel Luzardo and Stan are the winners of the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Valle de Bravo (MEX). (FEI/Paolo Ballarini)

Raising the Mexican standard

“I got an email, with the information of the new North American League,” said Rafael David, International Director of the Mexican Equestrian Federation. “I just thought, ‘The option is there, we just have to be there.’ There is a possible place for Mexico. There were two people competing to get it. They let us know we got one of the 14 spots of the tour. We were so excited. Then of course with our main sponsor Scappino, who have been with this Cup for 12 years, since it started. They sent a contract. We signed and said, ‘Let it come.’

“In fact, bringing the riders from other countries and the good news that Longines was also title sponsor; without them it wouldn’t have been possible. The projection with international riders that came and to this kind of event obviously raises the posture of Mexico as an equestrian country. This is really important; we broke a record for an international contest in Latin America – as in the number of participants, as well as in the number of countries that came, which were 14.”

The competitors, both Mexican natives of the country and residents, also expressed their excitement for the country’s inclusion at the top level of the sport.

“I’m very happy to be here and very proud that Mexico is at this level of horse jumping – the international level,” said Nizri. “And the fact that we have so very good riders makes everybody get better at what they do.”

“This event is important for show jumping in Mexico and in all of Latin America,” Luzardo added. “I’m very proud that it’s here.”

Results
1. Stan (Juan Manuel Luzardo), URU, 0 faults/41.85 seconds (JO);
2. Alex (Audrey Coulter), USA, 0/42.47 (JO);
3. E Muze Yek (Simon Nizri), ISR, 0/42.52 (JO);
4. Cayetana (Nikolaj Hein Ruus), DEN, 0/43.59 (JO);
5. Escarlata LS (Fabian Sejanes), ARG, 0/46.87 (JO);
6. Red Gold (Alfredo Ramirez Piedra), MEX, 0/49.16 (JO);
7. Arc de Triomphe (Daniel Pedraza Littlewood), MEX, 0/49.77 (JO);
8. Prunella d’Ariel (Paola Amilibia Puig), ESP, 0/52.19 (JO).

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping: exciting race to North American League finish

Four events remain in the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League, setting an exciting stage for the race to the finish of this first season.

With just two more events on the East Coast and two on the West, top athletes will be competing with the goal of qualifying for the Final in Gothenburg (SWE) on 23-26 March 2016.

The new league was launched in the summer of 2015 to standardise the level of FEI World Cup™ competition in North America, with the luxury Swiss watchmaker Longines as title partner and supporting with data handling and timekeeping excellence.

With the top four results counting towards final scores, athletes in the North American League have been going all out to make the cut for the Final.

After a brief break for the month of December, the competition will resume at Valle de Bravo (MEX) presented by Scappino on 23 January. The West Coast will then conclude with a final event at HITS Thermal Desert Circuit CSI3*-W on 13 February. Meanwhile, the final two events on the East Coast will be held at Wellington presented by Sovaro and the Live Oak International CSI3*-W on 7 February and 28 February.

“It’s been an interesting process all the way, from limiting the number of events to having organisers bid to host qualifiers in order to elevate the quality of the league,” FEI 1st Vice-President and Chair of the FEI Jumping Committee John Madden said. “The sponsors and the organisers have really embraced the idea of having a unified league, and the best North American riders have been able to focus on attempting to qualify for the Final.”

Winter season heats up

Warmer climates will be a common theme when the North American League resumes at the end of January, when over 60 athletes and 140 horses will head to Valle de Bravo.

“Mexico is pleased to host a qualifier on the road to the Longines FEI World Cup Jumping Final,” said Ricardo Castañeda Chavez, spokesperson for the Valle de Bravo CSI4*-W competition. “The class is a proud addition to a show with a lot of tradition, the Triple Copa Scappino​, featuring three different sports, showjumping, golf and sailing at the same time, at the same venue​.”

Riders will be greeted by four arenas, fair weather and the hospitality of the Mexican fans in Valle de Bravo, an equestrian paradise nestled in the middle of a forest outside of Mexico City.

“I’ll be at the Mexico and Thermal events,” said Karl Cook (USA), current leader in the West Coast standings. “I’ll be taking Tembla. She’s the one I’ve ridden so far in the qualifiers and she’s doing great, always getting better. It’s my first time to the horse show in Valle de Bravo. I’m excited to check out a new show. I hear it’s beautiful.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

Two weeks after the league’s stop in Mexico, Wellington will host the qualifier at Deeridge Farms, the 300-acre oasis of serenity and beauty set in the heart of Wellington, Florida.

“I’m very excited for the show,” said Mason Phelps, Jr., spokesperson for Wellington. “The showgrounds are as pretty as they come, and the Grand Prix ring is grass with top notch footing in all arenas. It’s going to be as classy an event as possible.”

The show also provides variety during the 12-week Winter Equestrian Festival, which will serve riders and horses well for international competition, according to Madden.

“What’s different here in the US is that we also have outdoor events to qualify for indoor championships due to the nature of our sport in North America,” he said. “Everyone either moves to Thermal on the West Coast or Palm Beach on the East Coast, and Wellington is a different venue to where we compete for 12 weeks. It’s a breath of fresh air.

“One of our other qualifiers is in Ocala at Chester Weber’s farm, also a beautiful location. In preparing horses for major international competition, it’s very important to go to and be exposed to different venues. When riders go to Rotterdam, Dublin and Hickstead, they and their horses have to be ready to compete in a strange environment. Take Rio for example – no-one will have jumped in Rio until the Olympic Games.”

Top prospects

Veterans and rising stars alike continue to vie for top positions to qualify for March’s prestigious finale. Young talents Hardin Towell (USA) and Karl Cook (USA) lead their respective leagues with consistent performances, while Olympians Beezie Madden (USA) – who won the FEI World Cup™ in 2013 – and Will Simpson (USA) follow closely behind.

“The new league has helped America to be on par with Europe,” said Towell. “Longines has done a very good job bringing the league together, with FEI TV for every single qualifier and more media attention to help inform the public about the sport. There’s also double the prize money than in prior years, which makes jumping a tough 1.60-meter course worth the effort.”

Although Towell is positioning his top mount Lucifer for the Final, he plans to ride a younger horse, New York, at Wellington.

“Now that I feel pretty confident that I’ll make the Final, I’m trying to prepare more for it and to have my horses peak at the right time, especially now that it’s earlier in the season. The past year was my best year to date, and I feel more comfortable myself at this level.”

The West Coast leader Karl Cook also noted significant improvements to qualifiers in North America with the new league. “Fewer events was a smart plan,” he said. “It’s easier to fit into my show schedule, and the quality of the shows is better. With the support of Longines, the shows feel special in the way that they’re set up, which inspires me to do better.”

Close behind Cook is the seasoned competitor Simpson. Paired with a younger, inexperienced mount The Dude, he’s hopeful that two more solid results in Mexico and Thermal will secure them a position to travel to Sweden.

“I’m aiming for the Final,” Simpson said. “The new league is great. It brings together the West Coast nicely with Canada and Mexico. I competed at the first one (on the West Coast) at Thunderbird. I had never been there before, and the league got me to some new places. I’ve been really happy with the quality and the standards of the events. The Dude isn’t ready for the Final right now, but by March he’ll be ready.”

And for Madden, juggling separate strings for an Olympic year, the league and the Final offer the opportunity to develop the depth of her team of horses.

“I’m planning to compete at Wellington with a younger horse, Breitling LS,” she said. “He’s probably the one that I’ll take to the Final, if I qualify. I’m going to show him in a 2* at WEF then he’ll have a week off from showing before the qualifier. We’re designing his schedule around the qualifiers and the Final.

“The new league has had a great start. I like the fact that there are fewer events, because it makes each one more important with better competition.”

A total of 14 riders will qualify for the Final from North America: seven from the United States’ East Coast, three from the United States’ West Coast, two from Canada, and two from Mexico.

Beezie Madden, pictured here with Simon at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Las Vegas last April, is the most decorated US female equestrian athlete of all time. She is currently the highest placed female athlete in the North American League, lying second in the East Coast standings. (FEI/Arnd Bronkhorst)
Beezie Madden, pictured here with Simon at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Las Vegas last April, is the most decorated US female equestrian athlete of all time. She is currently the highest placed female athlete in the North American League, lying second in the East Coast standings. (FEI/Arnd Bronkhorst)

Raising standards

“I think, in a lot of ways, the World Cup leagues have played a significant role in the development of the sport and its athletes, over the years and around the world,” John Madden said. “The better the league, the more valuable it is for preparing for the Olympic Games and other major Championships.”

The show organisers have played a crucial role in talent development by capping the entry fees for qualifiers. And with over $1.8 million in prize money in the North American League’s qualifiers, and over $3 million when including the additional classes for each leg of the series, it’s a clear and notable jump in significance.

“Longines and the FEI truly understand that it’s about the sport and about offering opportunities in an objective way for riders and horses to develop,” Madden said. “Qualifying for the World Cup Final is an accomplishment that every rider cherishes, and there’s a lot of money in the World Cup competition because the classes and the title are important.”

And with the crown jewel of Longines FEI World Cup™ Champion at the end of the league’s inaugural journey, the best has been saved for last. Great expectations continue to mount as the final four legs approach. The major question hangs in the air: will the veterans prevail or is it a year for the young guns? Eight rounds of technical courses hold the answer, bringing North American riders one step closer to Longines glory.

Current Standings

East Coast
1. Jack (Hardin) Towell (USA) 50
2. Elizabeth (Beezie) Madden (USA) 45
3. Kent Farrington (USA) 43
4. Samuel Parot (CHI) 40
5. Laura Kraut (USA) 39
6. Quentin Judge (USA) 37
7. McLain Ward (USA) 36
8. Callan Solem (USA) 35

West Coast
1. Karl Cook (USA) 33
2. Will Simpson (USA) 30
3. Rich Fellers (USA) 28
4. Ben Asselin (CAN) 23
5. Richard Spooner (USA) 23
6. Allyssa Hecht (USA) 22
7. Lisa Carlsen (CAN) 21
8. Eric Navet (FRA) 15

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s McLain Ward and HH Azur win in Toronto

A heated, head-to-head battle between two experienced, international riders treated the spectators at the CSI4* Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto to the highest level of show jumping competition, but it was ultimately McLain Ward (USA) who claimed the victory of the $132,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier aboard HH Azur.

Sitting in the enviable position of going second in the jump off, Ward strategised a win that left the rails up, albeit with one time fault, after he had the opportunity to see Dermott Lennon (IRL) and 13-year-old Irish Sport Horse mare Loughview Lou-Lou (Limmerick x Jack of Diamonds) drop two rails in the final round that recorded a time of 42.04 seconds. This allowed Ward to utilise the scope of his 9-year-old Belgian Warmblood mare (Thunder van de Zuuthoeve x Sir Lui) to leave all the rails standing and with a time of 47.58 seconds.

“The course was big and challenging, but I was excited about that,” Ward said. “It suited my mare. She’s a spectacular talent. Obviously, when I saw Dermott going [directly before in Round 1], I could see what could and needed to be done.”

The course, designed by Richard Jeffrey (GBR), was over 13 obstacles with 16 jumping attempts and demanded the precision of both horse and rider at every step. The internationally acclaimed designer first built at The Royal in 1994 but had yet to return since 2001.

“I was very pleased with the course,” Jeffrey said. “I wouldn’t do anything different. I built it as a World Cup qualifier. It’s quite a nice size ring here, and really, if I had to do it again, for once I wouldn’t do anything different.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

King of The Royal

Ward has a long history of success at The Royal, earning the unofficial title as its king. Now with seven World Cup qualifier wins at the historic show, Ward had another successful trip across the border also winning a 1.40-meter grand prix aboard Carneyhaugh Manx (Ard VDL Douglas x Hampton Clover) earlier in the day.

“The Royal is a second home for me,” Ward said. “My daughter and wife are here. My father [Barney Ward] competed here for a number of years, and now for my daughter to come and be part of this, it’s very special and a bit emotional.

“I started coming here in my early years with Tim Grubb and Mark Leone, who are dear friends. I love it here, I love the atmosphere, I love the people we see. I remember asking years ago, if I won four times, if I get a lifetime invitation, especially if my performance goes down. I hope at seven, I can be grandfathered in.”

The iconic horse show is in its 93rd year, and although it has hosted World Cup qualifiers in the past, it is just as honored to be a part of the newly launched Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League.

“It’s a play on the history and heritage of The Royal with the new partnership,” said Charlie Johnston, CEO of The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. “It’s fabulous for this show to put on the ‘Best in Show’ in the ring for audience. To have these exceptional riders here at The Royal really is consistent with our mandate to deliver the number 1 horse show in North America and to continue to strive toward that. We’re honored to partner with Longines and the FEI for this year and for many years to come.”

A second Sapphire

As the only horse in the field to leave all the rails standing after two technical rounds, HH Azur has undoubtedly earned Ward’s praise.

“It’s a bit of a dream,” Ward said. “She’s a horse of a lifetime if I hadn’t had Sapphire, but to get a second one like this is pretty incredible. I hope I do her justice and manage her well.

“It’s kind of an amazing story. I probably missed the horse a few different ways and should never have ended up with her, and somehow she ended up with me anyway. Two very special people in my life own her, Mr. [Hunter] Harrison and Francois Mathy, who are both real father figures to me. And the horse is something unreal. Every time the horse goes in the ring, it’s better, it’s higher, it’s faster – she is incredible. The only time she has a fence down is if I have a terrible error.”

The mare also entered the ring feeling fresh after seeing the hitch horses in the warm-up arena, according to Ward. He also noted that although she jumps big, the most important aspect to controlling her ride is to manage her large stride, particularly indoors.

“We knew after Florida [circuit earlier in the year] that she was everything we thought she was, and she’s only gotten better through Calgary this summer,” Ward said. “For sure, we’ve already started thinking about Rio [Olympics] in the middle of the summer. She’ll jump one more class here on Saturday and then have a good rest, and everything she does starting in the spring will be working backwards from Rio.”

World Cup quality

An international start list of past Olympians and young, up-and-coming talent had difficulties at a variety of the course’s presented questions, but Jeffrey did not doubt that some of the six riders with four faults would go clear given another chance.

“A few of those four-fault rounds could have easily gone clean,” Jeffrey said. “But I didn’t expect more than three or four clean rounds. That’s what I wanted, and basically for once, it worked out that way.”

Rideability played a major role in Jeffrey’s design, with a focus on genuine height and width throughout the course and without an unduly tight time allowed.

“The two oxers on a forward stride then quickly to a plank on flat cups demonstrates the type of course it was,” Jeffrey said. “It meant being able to lengthen and shorten the horse while keeping the horse balanced.”

“I didn’t really have a strategy,” said Lennon, the only rider to travel directly from Europe. “I just came, and the horses traveled well. They jumped good tonight. It was a difficult course for her in the first round so I’m happy.”

Lennon has ridden the mare for four seasons now, getting her at the end of her nine-year-old year and after she came back from an early injury.

“She’s very competitive, she’s not the easiest to ride, and she’s a bit temperamental,” he said. “She came up with a new one this week. She always for the last three years that I’ve ridden her, hung her tongue out the right-hand side. This week, she’s holding it in the back of her month. It’s something to work out. She always wants to try and she’s a nice mare.”

Roberto Teran (COL) and 12-year-old, Dutch Warmblood mare Woklahoma (Sheraton x Calvados) rode to the fastest, four-fault score in the class.

“Toronto is like my second hometown,” Teran said. “And I always want to come here; I think it’s super special. Last year, I made a big mistake in the jump off. And I think today was a little unlucky, but I’m really happy with the result.”

McLain Ward (USA) and HH Azur, winners of the $132,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Toronto (CAN), were presented with a Longines watch by Ian Charbonneau, Longines brand manager, Canada. (FEI/Peter Llewellyn)
McLain Ward (USA) and HH Azur, winners of the $132,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Toronto (CAN), were presented with a Longines watch by Ian Charbonneau, Longines brand manager, Canada. (FEI/Peter Llewellyn)

Results
1. HH Azur (McLain Ward), USA, 1 faults/47.58 seconds (JO);
2. Loughview Lou-Lou (Dermott Lennon), IRL, 8/42.04(JO);
3. Woklahoma (Roberto Teran), COL, 4/73.65;
4. H&M Forever D Arco ter Linden (Nicola Philippaerts), BEL, 4/73.95;
5. Breitling LS (Elizabeth Madden), USA, 4/74.65;
6. VDL Wizard (Callan Solem), USA, 4/75.88;
7. Star Power (Jonathon Millar), CAN, 4/78.02;
8. Appy Cara (Erynn Ballard), CAN, 4/78.35.

Full results: http://bit.ly/1OG9EDy

Facts and Figures

In the first round, two horses went clear, six had 4 faults, four had 8, one had 10, four had 12, three had 16, and two retired.

The course designer was Richard Jeffrey (GBR).

The first round was contested over 13 obstacles with 16 jumping efforts. The jump-off round had seven obstacles with eight efforts. The maximum height was set at 1.60 metres.

Six nations were represented in the class: Belgium (three riders), Canada (six riders), Columbia (two riders), Ireland (two riders), New Zealand (one rider) and USA (eight riders).

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s Kent Farrington Speeds To Victory On Voyeur At Kentucky

The United States’ Kent Farrington and Voyeur used their long-term partnership to produce the fastest round in a 13-rider jump off, winning the $250,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League qualifier at the CSI4* CP National Horse Show. Already with a victory in a grand prix class earlier in the week, on a different horse Willow (Guidam x Little Rock), Farrington proved his close knowledge of his two mounts could deliver the fastest clears in competitive company.

“I know those horses really well and that’s my advantage this week,” Farrington said. “I brought two really experienced, qualified horses to compete and both went great. Both are owned by the Nusz family, and I’m really grateful to have horses of that caliber.”

For the North American League qualifier, Farrington chose the 13-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding (Tolano van’t Riethof x Goodwill) that he described as having a hot character, and which allowed Farrington to ride extremely tight turns to the jump-off design’s double combination and large oxer.

“The horse is very hot to ride,” Farrington said. “Physically, he’s very strong, and it’s taken a long time to get him rideable. And for him to add strides in an indoor ring, it’s due to his experience. It’s taken me a while to get him there.”

“I think the ring here is actually quite big so it gives course designers freedom to make what they want to build,” he continued. “I actually thought the time allowed [in the first round] was pretty generous. If it were a shorter time allowed, it could have been a different outcome.”

Course designer Guilherme Jorge (BRA) also noted that the time allowed played a factor in the outcome of the class.

“This is a fantastic venue and it’s a great group of riders and horses, and of course we want to start a little easier and make it tougher throughout the week,” Jorge said. “But it looks like the riders had the same kind of idea as I did because they kept jumping better and better. In this level, it’s a very fine line and I think the riders today jumped it great and that’s the reason why we had 13 clears in the jump off.”

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

An American product

With the Maclay Final, an American junior equitation division sharing the spotlight with the North American league qualifier on the final day of competition, Farrington had the opportunity to reflect on his own experiences coming through the riding ranks in the country.

“I think that today, I’m a product of a lot of different systems,” Farrington said. “Early on in my career, I did some equitation riding and the Finals. But even more than the riding, it was the experience of the pressure that was even more important at those events than anything else. You build up to a Final and then you build on a round and deliver it on a specific day,” he said. “There were only so many shots at it. I think all of that experience is the most beneficial thing. Of course, at the lower level, it was about building the fundamentals and the basics of learning how to ride, but the most important thing was just learning to deal with pressure and big shows and how to handle those situations.”

The ability to handle the pressure to deliver a step-perfect round played a factor in Farrington’s win, in addition to riding later in the order of go.

“Both [Laura Kraut and I] had a later draw so there were a lot in it but we got to watch the first couple – we actually watched them together,” Farrington said. “It really comes down to what plan is going to suit your horse at that time. The first line was seven strides to the wall, and I think we both did the same. And then it was really what suited your horse, how tight you could roll back to the vertical and how fast you could go to the double and the last fence. Today I was on a much more experienced horse than Laura and that was probably my advantage.”

It’s still too early in the season for Farrington to decide on a specific horse to qualify and take to the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Gothenburg (SWE) in April. Next on Farrington’s schedule is to fly to California to campaign a different string of horses, with a possible West Coast qualifier appearance in Las Vegas.

“I’m sort of shuffling around with different horses,” said Farrington. “I have really good owners behind my career, so I’m lucky I can map out a schedule where I’m showing horses in a few places.”

Longines

Modern-day jumper

Farrington and runner-up Laura Kraut (USA), who also earned the title of Leading Lady Rider at the show, credited their horses with the ability to perform in a variety of settings, including large, outdoor tracks and indoor arenas.

“I think that’s today’s modern show jumper,” Farrington said. “He’s a really versatile horse that’s rideable and fast and scopey and careful. That’s overall what most of the experienced horses are in this sport. They can usually do both. I think he’s better outside than indoors, but this indoor is quite big so that’s why I thought it would quite suit him to bring him here.”

“[Voyeur’s] pretty wild actually,” he added, when asked about what his horse was like in the barn. “Laura and I were joking around about what we consider a normal horse and what everyone else considers a normal horse. We’re both known for riding sort of erratic or special horses. He’s very fresh, so you usually have to be a little bit awake when you’re riding him because he can spin very quickly and he can spook at a lot of things. He’s a handful but I think most of the good ones are.”

Kraut picked up the ride on Deauville S (Diamant de Semilly x Lux) when her partner and British Jumping professional Nick Skelton did not match well with the Holsteiner gelding.

“Deauville actually came from Germany and the owner sent him for Nick to ride,” Kraut said. “So Nick started jumping him in Wellington this winter and about halfway through he didn’t have the right temperament for him. He said, ‘Why don’t you get on him and show him.’ So I jumped him in a 1.45-meter class and won the first class I rode him in, and he said, ‘Well, that’s it, I’m never riding him again.’ So that’s how I got him. I might add that my clients were wonderful in that they went ahead and purchased him for me and I’m so thankful for that.”

Much of Kraut’s strategy with Deauville comes from her experience with a Thoroughbred that she rode in the past.

“I’ve had some really special horses,” Kraut said. “I rode a Thoroughbred horse years and years ago called Simba Run, and [Deauville’s] as close to Simba as I’ve had since then. In the warm up, he’s really special. Again, I’ve learned he likes to just stop and stand. And if I just let him stand, you can then make him go to a fence and he’ll jump it then he likes to stand. As long as you don’t make him keep going, going, going, then he seems fine with that. In the stable, he’s a puppy, he’s very sweet and really a kind horse.”

Kent Farrington (USA) and Voyeur claimed the victory at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Kentucky (USA) after producing the fastest round in the jump-off. (FEI/StockImageServices.com)
Kent Farrington (USA) and Voyeur claimed the victory at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Kentucky (USA) after producing the fastest round in the jump-off. (FEI/StockImageServices.com)

Results

1. Voyeur (Kent Farrington), USA, 0 faults/33.19 seconds (JO);

2. Deauville S (Laura Kraut), USA, 0/34.05 (JO);

3. H&M Challenge vd Begijnakker (xx), BEL, 0/34.07 (JO);

4. Breitling LS (Beezie Madden), USA, 0/34.26 (JO);

5. Emilie de Diamant A S (Hardin Towell), USA, 0/34.32 (JO);

6. Sunshine (Jos Verlooy), BEL, 0/34.36 (JO);

7. Viva Colombia (Conor Swail), IRL, 0/34.76 (JO);

8. HH Azur (McLain Ward), USA, 0/35.40 (JO).

Full results: http://bit.ly/1ixpLEL

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Chile’s Samuel Parot And Atlantis Continue Hot Streak

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis continue hot streak to win at Calgary…

Chile’s Samuel Parot continued his recent winning streak by adding the $132,200 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier at the CSI3* Royal West in Calgary to his growing list of grand prix victories. Already with one North American League win under his belt at the Sacramento International Horse Show in September, Parot partnered again with Atlantis (Andiamo x Royal Bravour L) to deliver the fastest clear of 39.23 seconds in a three-man jump off.

Following their win in Sacramento, the successful pair also notched up a CSI4* win at the Del Mar International Horse Show before Parot and his horses made their way to Calgary. During the ten days of the Royal West, Parot on Atlantis and his two other mounts, Couscous Van Orti (Nabab de Reve x Cash) and Tailormade Anna Chacca (Chacco Blue x Andiamo), made a clean sweep of the top three places in an early speed class. Parot then won three more speed classes ahead of his win in the FEI World Cup™ qualifier.

“My horse is very fast, very careful, and I saw from the first rider in the jump off that it would be very easy for my horse to make the better time,” Parot said. “The course was very technical and for this, there were only three clears.”

“In the jump off, Atlantis is a little excited,” he added. “In the first round, he’s quiet and jumps so good. He’s very fast, and he likes the jump off.”

“It’s very important [that I do well in the North American League],” said Parot. “I jump for this league and not for the South American League and I think with this win, I have a very good position [to qualify for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final]. I think with the two wins that I have a very good chance.”

Parot and his horses will travel from Calgary to their home base in Wellington, Florida, where the horses will have time off and a few more shows before Parot competes in the last two East Coast qualifiers in Wellington and Ocala in February.

Longines

New rides

The technical and challenging course designed by Werner Deeg (GER) kept nineteen riders from faultless first rounds. But in addition to Parot, seasoned Canadian competitors, Yann Candele and Jill Henselwood, jumped two double-clear rounds to finish second and third, respectively, both aboard unfamiliar horses.

Candele’s runner-up result came aboard Granit S (Faust Z x Graf Grannus), a 10-year-old gelding on loan from John Anderson, the Royal West Chairman, and one that Candele had only ridden since Monday.

“John [Anderson] tried to bring me here for quite a while, but with my schedule it was difficult and at the end, I had an opening,” Candele said. “So I took on the offer and came at the beginning of the week and had a little ride with the horse and for whatever reason, we matched because the horse is great and really trying and that’s why we’ve had a great week.”

“You just go day by day,” he continued. “I came on Monday night, very late. I rode the horse a little bit Monday on the flat, jumped him, and it was good chemistry. It was already clear on the first day, and after you go through the process, repeat the same thing: flat him every day, and he jumped clear actually through the whole week. It’s just a sign of a fantastic horse who’s trying his heart out and accepted my riding so that’s all it is. At the end of the day, it’s the quality of the horse that makes what happened to me this week.”

Henselwood also rode a fairly new mount, Farfelu du Printemps (Action Breaker x Darco), in the Longines FEI World Cup™ qualifier after she decided that her initial choice, Quidam Blue (Quidam’s Rubin x Come On), wasn’t fully up to the task this week.

“Farfelu is a new acquisition for a 19-year-old Canadian that I train,” Henselwood said. “She’s in engineering at Queen’s [University] so she’s tucked in with a full course load, and I have Farfelu so that was good planning. I didn’t really know what to expect. He’s got some good results from his Swiss rider, up to 1.55 [meters] and I’ve ridden him now for a few weeks. I kept inching up the bar, and my responsibility is to make sure that I develop him more as a girl’s ride and to protect him. So to go to the World Cup, normally I would have done the stallion, but he was a little bit off form this week so I thought, ‘Yeah, Farfelu should try.’ And then actually, ‘I think Farfeleu’s going to win, a lot.’”

Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis have won the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Calgary (CAN), and are now setting their sights on the last two East Coast qualifiers in Wellington and Ocala. (FEI/Aimee Makris)
Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis have won the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping qualifier in Calgary (CAN), and are now setting their sights on the last two East Coast qualifiers in Wellington and Ocala. (FEI/Aimee Makris)

Clear matters

As the rails dropped through the night’s rounds, riders quickly realized the challenging course demanded precise timing and decisions at every step.

“I think the course was very technical tonight,” Henselwood said. “The jumps came up very fast. Obviously there were only three clean, but there were quite a few with four faults.”

“Werner is a fantastic course designer and we’ve used him for numerous events at our place,” said Anderson, also a competitor and 5th place finisher in the evening’s class. “And of course, he was the course designer last year at Royal West. He knows the ring and he pays attention to all the horses that compete over the ten days. He gradually builds the horses to peak and then at the final event today, he sets the bar high and challenges us all. The jumps came up very quickly, you had to be on your game all the time, you didn’t have a lot of room to rest in this particular round and it showed. The cream rose to the top.”

With a triple combination, a double combination, and tight turns in the indoor space, rounds saw a variety of rails drop. But in particular, fence 12, off a short turn, caused some heartbreaking four faults, just one jump away from the course’s end.

“Who cares about three cleans,” Werner said, in response to how he reacted as the designer to the low number in the jump off. “It was, for me, a fantastic final. You can’t always talk about how many clear rounds [in relation to a good course].”

Results

1. Atlantis (Samuel Parot), CHI, 0 faults/39.23 seconds (JO);
2. Granit S (Yann Candele), CAN, 0/41.58 (JO);
3. Farfelu du Printemps (Jill Henselwood), CAN, 0/44.17 (JO);
4. Worlds Judgement (Lisa Carlsen), CAN, 4/72.44;
5. Terrific (John Anderson) CAN, 4/72.69;
6. Tomtom (Femke Courchaine), CAN, 4/72.97;
7. Roulett (Marion Ostmeyer), GER, 4/73.27;
8. Nirvana de Terlong (Vanessa Mannix), CAN, 4/73.34.

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: The Netherlands’ Harrie Smolders Claims Top Honours…

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: The Netherlands’ Harrie Smolders Claims Top Honours at the Washington International Horse Show

The Netherlands’ Harrie Smolders expertly navigated two challenging courses to win the $125,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Qualifier at the CSI4* Washington International Horse Show. In his third visit to the historic competition, the Dutch rider etched his name into the President’s Cup for a second time, having won the headlining class in 2006.

“This show suits me,” Smolders said. “I don’t know why, but the results are always good. And for our stable, it’s been very successful this week. My student Jos Verlooy (BEL) was fourth in tonight’s class and won the Puissance on Friday night, and is the leading rider of the show. It’s a bit busy with the classes going on and telling my students all the information that I know, but it really worked out.”

Smolders drew the final position in tonight’s order of go, which allowed him the advantage of basing his strategy on the others’ performances. Only one other rider, Callan Solem (USA), rode double clear in the jump off of six horse-and-rider pairs, directly before Smolders’ turn.

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

“I didn’t see many go in the jump off, but I heard the results, of course,” Smolders said. “So then there was no one clear until Callan put some pressure on because she had a fantastic round. She wasn’t super fast, but she put the pressure on. I was quite pleased that she was clear because that meant I had to go. I had to decide. There was no other option.”

At the beginning of his final round, Smolders lost valuable time when his mount Emerald (Diamant de Semilly x Carthago) slipped in an early turn, forcing the rider to add an extra stride.

“I knew I was getting close so I tried to make the turn to the last two fences quite short,” Smolders said. “I knew I was close. To be honest, I didn’t know if it was enough.”

But luckily for the Dutch rider, it was just enough, winning the class by 11-hundredths of a second.

“I must say Callan did a super round,” Smolders said. “She put some pressure on. I was also pleased because I knew what to do. Otherwise, if there’s no one clear, you have to decide what to do, but now I had no choice but to go.”

Indoor challenge

The course designed by Anthony D’Ambrosio (USA) challenged the 28 riders by utilizing the long and narrow arena.

“There’s not an abundance of space, and the ring is quite narrow in relation to its length,” said D’Ambrosio, who also happens to hold the show’s Puissance record that he set in 1983. “It’s a particular type of ring, and it’s a little bit of a puzzle to get a World Cup Qualifier course in there. But for the most part, things ride fairly smooth, and we’ve had some nice competitions. I would say that it keeps me on my toes. I think it keeps the riders on their toes as well.”

Nonetheless, D’Ambrosio had predicted ahead of the class’s start that six would ride clear and into the jump off, which ultimately proved to be accurate.

“The first course was quite tough,” Smolders said. “When I walked it, I thought it was not too big, but my horse is quite scopey. The ring is quite long but not so wide, and the fences down the sides and right off the rail were quite tough for the horses.”

D’Ambrosio purposefully set a demanding course to ensure that the right horse-and-rider combinations would earn the valuable points toward qualifying for the culminating event in the spring.

“I strive to design a course that rewards the riders who are capable of going to the World Cup Final,” D’Ambrosio said. “World Cup Qualifiers have to have a standard that is somewhat similar in consistency. It’s to prepare the horses and riders to have the accuracy to jump the dimensions. That’s an important part of my job.”

Solem gave some credit for her final round to fellow competitor McLain Ward (USA) who inspired her to ride for the first double clear in the jump off.

“I was fortunate to have the counsel of McLain,” Solem said. “And he said, ‘Callan you have to try to win. Harrie’s going to be so fast. You have to do it.’ He encouraged me to do four in the first line, and he said, ‘You’re third a lot; try to win this class.’ I really appreciated that encouragement. Going to these shows on my own, trying to find my way a little bit, and producing the horses; I’m always trying to leave them better than I found them and sometimes it’s nice for me to have a little push to say, ‘Come on, you’re good enough, go ahead and try.’ I appreciate that.”

Harrie Smolders (NED) and Emerald (left), winners of the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Washington International Horse Show, were presented with a Longines watch by Taylor Mace, National Event Manager for Longines. (StockImageServices.com/FEI)
Harrie Smolders (NED) and Emerald (left), winners of the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Washington International Horse Show, were presented with a Longines watch by Taylor Mace, National Event Manager for Longines. (StockImageServices.com/FEI)

A breakthrough year

Smolders has had the ride on his flashy, 11-year-old, chestnut stallion for the past five years.

“I had him as a 6-year-old,” Smolders said. “He was always an amazing talent with great scope, technique, and rideability, but I must say this year is his biggest breakthrough. He’s very consistent in the big classes, the World Cup Qualifiers. Now that he’s 11, I feel that he has the experience in his body, and is physically able to compete at the highest level.”

The next stop for horse-and-rider team is the National Horse Show in Lexington, Ky. for their second Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League qualifier. Then Emerald will fly back to Europe, where he’s scheduled to compete in the World Cup qualifier in Madrid in November. Smolders hopes to qualify Emerald for the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Gothenburg (SWE) in March.

“He’s a very spectacular horse,” Smolders said. “He’s a bit of a stallion, a bit of a character, but his talent and technique are endless. When people see him once, they normally never forget him.”

Solem is also hoping to qualify her 12-year-old gelding, VDL Wizard (Gentleman x Ahorn), for the World Cup Final.

“I’m very lucky to have him and every day that I ride him is such a pleasure,” Solem said. “He loves this sport so much. He’s taken to whinnying at the in gate before he goes. He really likes to do it. He had a rough start when he came as a seven-year-old. He was riddled with this and that and he didn’t really do much for the first three years. So even though he’s 12, he’s more like a ten-year-old. He’s just getting fit and strong and ready to peak in this next year, I hope.”

“I am also going to do Kentucky next week and hopefully Toronto after that and those couple of last World Cups in Florida,” she continued. “I didn’t do the first two [World Cup qualifiers]. I had gone to Europe this summer so I thought the horses should have a little break and freshen up for the fall, so I’m a little bit behind. But if we keep doing a good job, hopefully we’ll be at the Final.”

Results
1. Emerald (Harrie Smolders), NED, 0 faults/39.32 seconds (JO);
2. VDL Wizard (Callan Solem), USA, 0/39.43 (JO);
3. H&M Forever D Arco ter Linden (Nicola Philippaerts), BEL, 4/38.17 (JO);
4. Sunshine (Jos Verlooy), BEL, 4/40.07 (JO);
5. Cafino (Victoria Colvin) USA, 8/38.93 (JO);
6. Emilie de Diamant A S (Jack Towell), USA, 8/41.91 (JO);
7. Simba de la Roque (Conor Swail), IRL, 4/66.00
8. Valeska (Charlie Jayne), USA, 4/66.12.

Esther Hahn

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: USA’s number one Beezie Madden clinches $150,000 win at the Del Mar International

Against a field stacked with seasoned, international competitors, Beezie Madden (USA) reinforced her ranking as the USA’s number one Jumping athlete, and the world number two in the Longines Rankings, by riding the fastest clear in an eight-man jump off.

The stands in the indoor venue were packed as Madden strategically maneuvered 16-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding Simon (Mr. Blue x Polydox) to the win in 37.33 seconds, over a second faster than Jack “Hardin” Towell’s 38.75-second round.

“I saw a couple of the earlier rounds, thanks to the TVs that Longines now provides in the schooling areas,” Madden said. “I planned to do seven strides up the first line, same as the others, but then to catch them on the turns later in the course.

“I actually didn’t see Hardin go, but I think my turns at least to the double combination and probably after the double combination – my horse is brilliant with that. He has a lot of practice trying to do short turns because running isn’t always his best thing. But I have to say, he and I together are figuring that part out a little better and doing seven up the first line wouldn’t always have been in our plan, but tonight and the way he’s been going lately, I’m very comfortable doing that with him. Indoors especially, he can be really fast with the short turns.”

Madden’s plan worked accordingly, and she and her veteran mount shaved additional time with tighter turns than the rest of the field.

“Simon has been my World Cup Final horse for the last three years,” according to Madden. “He doesn’t really have any quirks except that he whinnies at the in gate every time before he goes into the ring. He’s a pleasure to deal with and to ride.”

Earlier in the year, Madden helped launch the inaugural Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League, but tonight’s event was the first of the series that she could attend, without conflicting with her international commitments. She recently returned to the United States after competing on the country’s all-female team at the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping Final in Barcelona in September.

“I like that the North American League has reduced the number of qualifiers and number of scores that count toward qualifying for the Final,” said Madden. “It gives more opportunities for international competition. This is the first one I’ve done in the League, but I can still get enough in to get four good scores and not really over jump my horses.”

The next qualifying class for Madden will be aboard Breitling LS (Quintero x Acord II) in Lexington, Ky. on November 1, followed by the East Coast stops in Toronto, Palm Beach, and Ocala. Madden will also compete in the CSI-5* in Thermal on November 8.

Leading the pack

“It feels great to be at my current rankings,” Madden said. “It’s the highest I’ve been in the world rankings. I’m just lucky to have a string of good horses that can let me be there and a fantastic owner in Abigail Wexner. It gives me a chance. I’m very lucky to have my whole team.”

Staying at the top is especially important this year as Madden hopes to be selected to represent the United States at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games next summer.

“We’re trying to hit the grand prix classes that are high on the list,” said Madden. “We’re not trying not to run around to a bunch of shows but trying to pick the ones that are worth the effort and trying to do well at them.”

With such high stakes on the line, Madden’s ability to focus on the task at hand while competing is both an asset and a testament for one of the country’s most decorated riders.

“Anybody who says that they never get nervous isn’t telling the truth,” according to Madden. “I get excited and anxious for sure and with some nerves. But luckily when I get on a horse, it all goes away.”

By mid-November, Madden will have the opportunity to rest herself and her horses before returning to competitions at the beginning of January.

 USA’s number one and world number two Beezie Madden rode Simon to victory in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Del Mar International Horse Show last night. (FEI/Kim F Miller)
USA’s number one and world number two Beezie Madden rode Simon to victory in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Del Mar International Horse Show last night. (FEI/Kim F Miller)

Crème de la crème

The Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League class gave reason for many of the class’ 29 riders to schedule their first visits to the Del Mar International Horse Show in California.

The solid, 13-obstacle track designed by Germany’s Heiko Wahlers presented multiple challenges to the horse-and-rider pairs that included optional striding and a very large triple combination. One of the biggest questions, according to the riders during the course walk, was the decision between six or seven strides from a double combination to a wide oxer over a liverpool. The decision to set a really big course stemmed from the many great riders featured in the class, Wahlers said.

When the evening’s first two riders, Richard Spooner (USA) and Kent Farrington (USA), both managed faultless rounds, it was clear to the full house of spectators that the riding level was elevated to an international caliber. Kirsten Coe (USA), Michelle Rodal (USA), Kevin Babington (IRL), and Christian Heineking (GER) joined Spooner, Farrington, Towell, and Madden in the jump off. All eight riders have extensive experience competing at international level, including multiple FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final and FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping appearances amongst them.

“I thought (before my jump-off round) that Kent had already gone and Spooner had already gone and had a rail and knew I had Beezie behind me, but with Lucifer this year, too many times I’ve gone too fast and had the last jump down in several grand prix in Europe that I could’ve easily taken one more,” Hardin said. “My turns on him are not great, and I knew from the beginning that Beezie was definitely going to be able to go faster. And going to the last jump, I saw one less and then I thought, you know what, I’m probably going to gallop down there, knock it down, and I would’ve still been slower than Beezie.

“So I decided to take one more, and Beezie beat me. But I’ve been the bridesmaid a lot in the past couple months, so it is what it is. But having Beezie behind me, you can only do so much, and I was thrilled with my horse. He’s really improved in the past two years, and even in the past year. This was his first World Cup last year, and I hope next year that he’ll have a bright future ahead of him.”

Heineking managed a clear first round despite his horse losing a shoe after the liverpool. The pair successfully completed the remaining eleven fences and had the shoe reattached ahead of the jump off, finishing in third overall.

Results
1. Simon (Beezie Madden), USA, 0 faults/37.33 seconds (JO);
2. Lucifer V (Jack “Hardin” Towell), USA, 0/38.75 (JO);
3. Nikh Quanto (Christian Heineking), GER, 0/40.80 (JO);
4. Czardas (Kirsten Coe), USA, 0/41.83 (JO);
5. Cristallo (Richard Spooner) USA, 4/37.45 (JO);
6. Gazelle (Kent Farrington), USA, 4/38.85 (JO);
7. Darius de la Ferme Rose (Michelle Rodal), USA, 4/46.62 (JO);
8. Mark Q (Kevin Babington), IRL, 12/40.52 (JO).

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League: Chile’s Samuel Parot Scores At Sacramento

Last to go in a six-man jump off proved pivotal when Samuel Parot (CHI) delivered the fastest double clear in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Sacramento International Horse Show on Saturday night. Aboard 12-year-old bay gelding Atlantis (Andiamo-Royal Bravour L), Parot shaved over half a second off the USA’s Quentin Judge’s target time of 37.55 seconds to finish at the head of the 24-starter field.

“The jump off was super,” Parot said after the win. “The design was perfect. I had the opportunity to see all the rider make the mistakes, but my horse is very fast so it was unnecessary to leave out the stride.”

Before Parot’s round, both Richard Spooner (USA) and Karl Cook (USA) attempted to leave out a stride to the final fence, resulting in knockdowns for both. After watching the eight strides lead to mistakes on the Alan Wade-designed course, commentator and 1976 Olympian Buddy Brown said that if he were to attempt the course, he would put in the nine strides without having to sacrifice speed. Just as the words left his mouth, Parot did exactly that, proving that Brown’s approach was the winning one.

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

California love
“There is something I would like to say about Samuel because I know him very well because he shows a lot in France,” said Eric Navet (FRA), third place finisher in the class. “Before I moved here to California, I met Samuel at many of the shows in France. He’s a great guy, always happy, always friendly, and he’s a very, very efficient and fast rider so I’m not surprised that he got the win tonight.”

Parot’s partnership with his horse only began in May, ahead of this year’s Pan American Games. A broken collarbone at the beginning of the Spruce Meadows Summer Series sidelined the 50-year-old rider for a few weeks, but he was back to his winning ways shortly after. On his first trip to California this week, he won the $35,000 Open Stake World Cup qualifier with Atlantis, giving a strong indication that the pair were on top form for the big class on Saturday evening.

“Today (Atlantis) jumped super,” Parot said. “This is our seventh show together. He likes a very soft ride. He’s very sensitive, very careful. I’m very happy. I love California. It’s my first time that I’ve come here.”

Next on the schedule for Parot and Atlantis is a stop in Los Angeles for the Longines Masters event before moving onto Del Mar, Calgary, and Las Vegas to compete in the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping North American League qualifiers. He plans to head back to Wellington, his home base, by the end of the year.

Indoor challenge
The evening class, inside and under lights, proved to be quite an adjustment for many of the horses, especially after the long summer season in large, outdoor arenas. The Irish-bred stallion Flexible, a crowd favorite and winner of the first West Coast North American League event at Thunderbird, was first in the order of go with Rich Fellers but his round resulted in uncharacteristic rails.

“The horses are trying to adjust to the lights,” Brown commented, after a few veteran riders also picked up faults. Additionally, the well-prepared course challenged riders throughout with its complex questions, demanding the highest level of precision from all starters.

“The principles are basically the same,” Wade said about designing tracks indoors as opposed to the large, outdoor venues. “You try and build them over the couple of days, and this was the biggest test. And tonight, the bigger the class, the more fair and open the distances were. The other night, I felt I had to test a bit more control because we were at 1.45 (meters). And when we got the bigger fences, it was more scope tests, and I was just trying to be fair to everyone.”

Many riders will continue to Los Angeles from Sacramento, where they will compete in another indoor venue and hope that they and their horses have gained valuable experience from the first indoor event of the fall season.

Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis were last to go in the six-horse jump-off and galloped to victory in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Sacramento International Horse Show on Saturday night. (FEI/Erin Gilmore)
Chile’s Samuel Parot and Atlantis were last to go in the six-horse jump-off and galloped to victory in the $100,000 Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping at the Sacramento International Horse Show on Saturday night. (FEI/Erin Gilmore)

Results

1. Atlantis (Samuel Parot), CHI, 0 faults/36.97 seconds (JO);
2. HH Copin van de Broy (Quentin Judge), USA, 0/37.55 (JO);
3. Jonkheer Z (Eric Navet), FRA, 0/38.65 (JO);
4. Agamemnon (Alec Lawler), USA, 4/37.37 (JO);
5. Tembla (Karl Cook) USA, 4/37.48 (JO);
6. Chivas Z (Richard Spooner), USA, 4/38.84 (JO);
7. Calero (Allyssa Hecht), USA, 1/80.14;
8. Legis Touch the Sun (Jenni McAllister), USA, 2/83.28.

Facts and Figures
Six horses went clear in the first round, one picked up a single time fault, and one collected two faults. Two horses were eliminated.

The course designer was Alan Wade.

It was an all-male jump-off, with four Americans, one Chilean, and one Frenchman.

The first round was contested over 13 obstacles with 16 jumping efforts. The jump-off round had seven obstacles with eight efforts. The height was set at 1.60 meters.

Esther Hahn

Richie Moloney And Carrabis Z Take Top Honors At The Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup in New York

An accurate jump-off effort from Richie Moloney (IRL) resulted in the only clear round in a six-man field and earned the win at yesterday’s Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup in New York.

The impressive, 1.60-metre track designed by Alan Wade (IRL) featured 14 obstacles with 17 jumping attempts. Utilising the arena’s graded terrain and natural barriers, Wade’s course managed to hold 31 horse-and-rider pairs, out of the original field of 37, from the final round. Liubov Kochetova (RUS) aboard Veyron was the second in the order of go, and navigated a rail-free round, but with less than a second over the time allowed she recorded the only one-fault score in the first round.

Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping

Otherwise, rails fell in a variety of places throughout the course, with increased incidents at the triple and double combinations. “Wade is a horse-friendly, competitor-friendly designer,” according to Frank Madden, the class’ commentator and resident trainer. “He uses no gimmicks and no trickery.”

Daniel Bluman (COL) and Conconcreto Sancha LS recorded the first clear as the third horse-and-rider team to enter the ring. “I had an early draw today in the first round, so I couldn’t really see many people jump before me,” Bluman said. “I just wanted to ride my plan. I found it extremely technical and careful, and it took extremely good horses and riders to jump a clear round today. I was very satisfied with the way my mare jumped. We’ve been together for five or six years, and it never gets old to jump a clear round.”

The next clear didn’t come for another eight rounds, when Catherine Tyree (USA), a 21-year-old student at Northwestern University, piloted Enjoy Louis around a fault-free effort, making for a jump off. Olympic gold medalist Laura Kraut (USA), Moloney, hometown favorite Peter Lutz (USA) and André Thieme (GER) shortly followed with impressive, clear rounds of their own.

Winning time

When the first three jump off attempts each pulled a rail, the door was wide open for a clear round to claim the victory. “The first round was quite technical,” Moloney said. “The course needed quite a bit of scope. In the jump off, there was no-one clear before I went, so the first four jumps in the jump off I stuck to my plan and went a little bit forward, then toward the end of the jump-off round, I got a little bit careful and made sure I jumped a clear round.”

The strategy of an efficient and accurate ride – albeit slower than the four-fault jump off rounds – landed Moloney at the top, after the two final jump-off performances from Lutz and Thieme recorded faults.

“Richie’s due for a win like this,” Madden commented during Moloney’s round.

“The difference between synthetic sand and grass footing is that it’s not necessarily the fastest round that’s going to be the best on grass,” he added.

Moloney’s winning round was on Carrabis Z, also his winning mount at the CSI4* $210,000 Tryon Grand Prix earlier in the summer. “He’s a 12-year-old stallion and quite a small horse,” Moloney said. “He’s very scopey and very careful. He has a lot of blood, is a little bit hot, and he’s actually green. I got him when he was nine; he’s getting better all the time.”

The Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping Final in Las Vegas (USA) in April was not an original goal for Moloney, until he won the second qualifier of the East Coast league. “We go to Central Park next then Tryon in October,” Moloney said.

“My goals are to try and be competitive and that’s kind of it, really,” he added. “Long term, I have a few very nice horses, and it would be nice to do Europe next summer and maybe a few Nations Cup classes.”

“I went to World Cup Finals this year in Vegas, and I saw how hard it was and I wasn’t sure I had a horse, or two horses, that it would suit. We’ll see. You never know by the time the end of April comes.”

Although Moloney rides for Ireland, he is currently based in Wellington during the winter and splits his time between Tryon (North Carolina) and Riverhead (New York) during the summer.

“It was great to win here today,” he said. “My horse jumped amazing. He’s been jumping great lately, and it’s nice for him to get the win here today.”

 Richie Moloney and Carrabis Z take top honors at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup in New York (13 September) (StockImageServices.com/FEI)
Richie Moloney and Carrabis Z take top honors at the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup in New York (13 September) (StockImageServices.com/FEI)

Best in show

The American Gold Cup earned the top ranking for the best show in the United States earlier this year by the North American Riders Group. “Everything went as planned today,” said Michael Morrissey, the president of stadium jumping and show manager of the American Gold Cup. “It was a picture-perfect day with standing room, only.”

All four riders involved in the press conference praised the Old Salem Farm venue for providing the best facilities for the class and for the show. Kraut noted that whether she went first or went 60th in a class throughout the week, the footing remained the same.

“I’m from North Salem and grew up in Fairfield, just 20 minutes from here,” said Lutz. “I’ve been coming to this horse show almost my whole life. I’m so happy that the American Gold Cup is here because we live here.”

“It’s very good to jump on the grass,” added Moloney. “I think there should be more grass fields like this because I’ve been jumping on sand all year and the last two shows, Hamptons and here, have been on the grass. I think most horses prefer (jumping on grass). The atmosphere here was great.”

“It was a very good class,” concluded Morrissey. “The field held up really well. Alan Wade did a really remarkable job today and the whole week. It was great, a great class.”

This year marks the 45th anniversary of the annual American Gold Cup and the fourth year that Old Salem Farm has hosted the show.

Results
1. Carrabis Z (Richie Moloney), IRL, 0 faults/45.74 seconds (JO);
2. Deauville S (Laura Kraut), USA, 4/43.27 (JO);
3. Conconcreto Sancha LS (Daniel Bluman), COL, 4/43.38 (JO);
4. Robin de Ponthual (Peter Lutz), USA, 4/43.95 (JO);
5. Enjoy Louis (Catherine Tyree), USA, 4/44.59 (JO);
6. Conthendrix (Andre Thieme), GER, 8/46.11 (JO);
7. Veyron (Liubov Kochetova), RUS, 1/93.63;
8. Chaqui Z (Shane Sweetnam), IRL, 4/86.92.

See full results: http://bit.ly/1iaRawr

Facts & Figures

In the first round of the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup there were six clear rounds, one with one fault, six with four faults and twelve with eight faults. Four horse-and-rider pairs were eliminated.

Conor Swail and Viva Columbia won Friday’s $85,000 American Gold Cup Qualifier, presented by Windsor Show Stables, but missed the jump off with twelve faults in the first round. There were 14 clear rounds in last Friday’s qualifying class, in comparison to only six clear rounds on Sunday.

The top five horses in the Longines FEI World Cup™ Jumping $215,000 American Gold Cup were all bays; two were stallions, two were geldings and one was a mare.

Esther Hahn