Thursday, December 31, 2015

Charlotte Dujardin & Valegro Start Olympic Year As World No. 1 for 4th Straight Year

Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro adorned with gold medal, sashes and winner's rug as European individual champions. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro adorned with gold medal, sashes and winner’s rug as European individual champions. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Jan. 1, 2016

By KENNETH J. BRADDICK

Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro start the Olympic year of 2016 as No. 1 in the world for the fourth year in a row, more than any other horse and rider since the current system of global standings was introduced a decade ago.

Charlotte and Valegro, a KWPN gelding that officially turned 14 years old on New Year’s Day, were undefeated in nine starts in 2015 that included the second World Cup title for the pair as well as European Championships individual gold medal.

The coming year, according to Carl Hester, part-owner of Valegro and coach and mentor of Charlotte, will likely be the last in the show ring for the pair, competing for Great Britain at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro in summer and what will surely be a monumental farewell performance at home at London Olympia at Christmas.

Charlotte, 30 years old, and Valegro ended 2015 at the top of the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) rankings to be released officially in the next few days, as the pair did in 2012, 2013 and 2014.

Kristina Bröring-Sprehe and Desperados FRH, the Hanoverian stallion that officially became 15 years old New Year’s day, moved up to No. 2 in the world at the end of July, their highest ranking ever. The pair consolidated their position taking individual silver at the European Championships a month later.

Kristina, 29 years old, and Desperados, had an unbroken string of nine victories in 2015 ahead of the Europeans.

The pair began their international Grand Prix partnership in 2011 and a year later were on Germany’s Olympic silver medal team followed by team gold at the World Games two years later and European Championships in 2013 and 2015.

Kristina Bröring-Sprehe and Desperados FRH performing their best ever Grand Prix Freestyle to win the European Championship individual silver medal. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Kristina Bröring-Sprehe and Desperados FRH performing their best ever Grand Prix Freestyle to win the European Championship individual silver medal. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

In the 10 years since the current ranking system was introduced, the year-end winners were always Dutch until Charlotte and Valegro–Anky van Grunsven and Salinero in 2006, 2007 and 2008; Edward Gal and Totilas in 2009 and 2010, and Adelinde Cornelissen on Jerich Parzival in 2011. Germany’s Isabell Werth was No. 1 on two horses but not at the end of a year.

In the past 10 years, only six combinations have been No, 1.

Charlotte and Valegro have have held the top spot 36 months starting after the duo’s historic team and individual gold medals at the Olympics in London in 2012. To the end of 2015, the pair held the No. 1 position for 27 months straight, the longest continuous run of any combination in the past decade.

Charlotte Dujardin on Valegro celebrating successful defense of their World Cup title in Las Vegas. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Charlotte Dujardin on Valegro celebrating successful defense of their World Cup title in Las Vegas. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Anky van Grunsven and Salinero were at the top of the standings for a total of 29 months with some breaks, Adelinde Cornelissen and Jerich Parzival 22 months, Edward Gal and Totilas 19 months and Isabell Werth on Satchmo for 11 months and Warum Nicht FRH for three months.

However, under the system in effect before 2006 only riders were ranked with greater weight given to championship results. Anky was No. 1 at the end of 2004 and 2005, a period in which she rode Salinero to gold at the Athens Olympics and the European Championships as well as capturing the World Cup title both years.

Last year was the second time Charlotte and Valegro were undefeated in competition, the other being 2013 when the pair also started nine times. Though the combination did not finish first on two occasions in 2014, they won 10 times.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Auction of Valegro Shoe Raises $4,000 to Support Young American Dressage Professionals

Valegro shoe and signed photo in framed set. © Christy Cunningham-Adams

Valegro shoe and signed photo in framed set. © Christy Cunningham-Adams

LINCOLN, Nebraska, Dec. 28, 2015–The auction of a shoe from Valegro at the Las Vegas World Cup Final raised $4,000 to benefit The Dressage Foundation’s Karen Skvarla Fund to support young dressage professionals.

The top bidder received Valegro’s shoe from the 2015 Las Vegas World Cup Final, a photo of the 13-year-old KWPN gelding autographed by rider Charlotte Dujardin and a Certificate of Authenticity from Carl Hester in a framed set.

The Karen Skvarla Fund for Young Dressage Professionals was created in 2014 by Diane Skvarla in memory of her sister, Karen, a budding equestrian when she passed away in 1968 at the age of nine years. The fund provides grants to young dressage professionals to pursue training or educational opportunities.

Monday, December 28, 2015

Patrik Kittel & Delaunay Post Personal Best Score to Win Mechelen CDI5* Grand Prix Freestyle

Patrik Kittel and Delaunay at Mechelen. © Paardenfotograaf.be

Patrik Kittel and Delaunay at Mechelen. © Paardenfotograaf.be

MECHELEN, Belgium, Dec. 28, 2015–Patrik Kittel and Delaunay posted a personal best score to capture the World Dressage Masters CDI5* Grand Prix Freestyle Monday to wrap up a year in which the nine-year-old Oldenburg gelding moved into the top 40 in the world.

Patrick and Delaunay (Dr. Doolittle x Feinbrand) were awarded 78.575 per cent in the final international dressage competition of 2015. Their previous best Freestyle result was 78.475 per cent set at Kaposvár, Hungary two months ago.

This was the eighth victory in 10 starts for the German-based rider and Delaunay since March this year.

Delaunay is owned with the family of Patrik’s Australian wife, Lyndal Oatley and is one of four horses competed by the Swedish Olympian at international Big Tour.

Tommie Visser of the Netherlands rode VarioHippique’s Vingino to second place on 76.075 per cent with Finland’s Terhi Stegars on Axis TSF in third on 75.575 per cent.

Results:

CDI5* Grand Prix Freestyle (E) (H) (C) (M) (B) Total
1. 0714 Delaunay Kittel,Patrik SWE €15.500  A:  75.000 % 76.000 % 78.750 % 73.750 % 77.250 % 78.575 %
bay / 9y. / G / Dr.Doolittle / Feinbrand / 103HO85  B:  79.000 % 81.000 % 84.000 % 78.000 % 83.000 %
 Total:  77.000 %
(1)
78.500 %
(1)
81.375 %
(1)
75.875 %
(2)
80.125 %
(1)
2. 0731 VarioHippique’s Vingino Visser,Tommie NED 12.500  A:  74.500 % 70.500 % 76.250 % 73.500 % 77.000 % 76.075 %
black / 13y. / G / Polansky / Variant / 103KW03  B:  76.000 % 74.000 % 79.000 % 77.000 % 83.000 %
 Total:  75.250 %
(5)
72.250 %
(8)
77.625 %
(2)
75.250 %
(4)
80.000 %
(2)
3. 0722 Axis TSF Stegars,Terhi FIN 9.500  A:  72.250 % 74.000 % 73.750 % 71.250 % 72.500 % 75.575 %
black / 16y. / S / Sixtus / Angard / GER44244 / Hartmann,Ewald  B:  77.000 % 79.000 % 78.000 % 77.000 % 81.000 %
 Total:  74.625 %
(6)
76.500 %
(2)
75.875 %
(5)
74.125 %
(7)
76.750 %
(3)
4. 0727 Annarico Verliefden,Fanny BEL 8.500  A:  73.250 % 73.000 % 74.500 % 74.000 % 71.500 % 75.525 %
bay / 10y. / M / Lord Loxley / Havel / 103VJ44  B:  78.000 % 77.000 % 78.000 % 78.000 % 78.000 %
 Total:  75.625 %
(4)
75.000 %
(5)
76.250 %
(3)
76.000 %
(1)
74.750 %
(7)
5. 0728 Tiamo Verwimp,Jorinde BEL 7.500  A:  75.250 % 72.500 % 76.000 % 73.000 % 74.000 % 75.275 %
bay / 15y. / S / Lester / Hemmingway / 103CA97  B:  76.000 % 79.000 % 75.000 % 76.000 % 76.000 %
 Total:  75.625 %
(4)
75.750 %
(4)
75.500 %
(6)
74.500 %
(6)
75.000 %
(5)
6. 0706 Eres DL Devroe,Jeroen BEL 6.500  A:  74.250 % 71.000 % 75.250 % 72.250 % 73.500 % 75.225 %
bay / 11y. / G / Sir Lui / Balzflug / 104JB56  B:  79.000 % 75.000 % 77.000 % 79.000 % 76.000 %
 Total:  76.625 %
(2)
73.000 %
(7)
76.125 %
(4)
75.625 %
(3)
74.750 %
(7)
7. 0733 Zaire von Bredow-Werndl,Jessica GER 5.500  A:  70.500 % 73.750 % 73.500 % 72.250 % 74.250 % 74.825 %
bay / 11y. / M / Son de Niro / Jazz / 102VM17 / Empelaer Stoeterij  B:  76.000 % 78.000 % 76.000 % 77.000 % 77.000 %
 Total:  73.250 %
(7)
75.875 %
(3)
74.750 %
(7)
74.625 %
(5)
75.625 %
(4)
8. 0711 Thriller Gevers,Katja NED 4.500  A:  71.500 % 71.000 % 70.250 % 69.750 % 70.000 % 72.150 %
15y. / G / Gribaldi / Amor / 103HL43  B:  74.000 % 76.000 % 72.000 % 74.000 % 73.000 %
 Total:  72.750 %
(8)
73.500 %
(6)
71.125 %
(8)
71.875 %
(8)
71.500 %
(8)
 Judges:
(E)  M.Sanders van Gansewinkel (NED)
(H)  S.Baarup (DEN)
(C)  J.van Daele (DEN)
(M)  R.Saleh (FRA)
(B)  P.Holler (GER)
 Prize-money: €70,000

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Patrik Kittel & Delaunay Win Mechelen CDI5* Grand Prix

Patrik Kittel and Delauney at Kaposvár World Cup. © 2015 Andrássy Zoltán

Patrik Kittel and Delauney at Kaposvár World Cup. © 2015 Andrássy Zoltán

MECHELEN, Belgium, Dec. 27, 2015–Sweden’s Patrik Kittel rode the nine-year-old Delaunay to victory in the World Dressage Masters CDI5* Grand Prix Sunday at the last international event of the year in the world.

Patrik and the Oldenburg gelding scored 74.640 per cent for the seventh win in 10 starts since beginning Big Tour a year ago.

Germany’s Jessica von Bredow-Werndl and Zaire placed second on 72.720 per cent with Belgium’s Jeroen Devroe on Eres DL third on 72.220 per cent.

Delaunay (Dr. Doolittle x Feinbrand) is one of four Grand Prix mounts the German-based rider is competing, three ranked in the top 40 in the world.

Results:

CDI5* Grand Prix (E) (H) (C) (M) (B) Total
1. 714 Delaunay Kittel, Patrik SWE 2800.00 EUR 376.0 370.0 364.5 380.0 375.5 1866.0 points show score sheet
bay 9y.G /Dr.Doolittle/Feinbrand/OLDBG/103HO85/ Patrik Kittel & Carol u Andrew Oa 75.200 % 74.000 % 72.900 % 76.000 % 75.100 % 74.640 %
1. 1. 2. 1. 1.
2. 733 Zaire von Bredow-Werndl, Jessica GER 2000.00 EUR 355.5 357.5 367.0 367.0 371.0 1818.0 points show score sheet
bay 11y.M /Son de Niro/Jazz/KWPN/102VM17/ Aubenhausen GbR 71.100 % 71.500 % 73.400 % 73.400 % 74.200 % 72.720 %
6. 5. 1. 2. 3.
3. 706 Eres DL Devroe, Jeroen BEL 1700.00 EUR 365.5 354.0 357.5 354.0 374.5 1805.5 points show score sheet
bay 11y.G /Sir Lui/Balzflug/BWP/104JB56/ Lousberg Daniel 73.100 % 70.800 % 71.500 % 70.800 % 74.900 % 72.220 %
3. 7. 4. 4. 2.
4. 728 Tiamo Verwimp, Jorinde BEL 1400.00 EUR 366.5 361.5 353.5 360.5 358.5 1800.5 points show score sheet
bay 15y.S /Lester/Hemmingway/KWPN/103CA97/ Verwimp (dressuurstal) 73.300 % 72.300 % 70.700 % 72.100 % 71.700 % 72.020 %
2. 3. 5. 3. 8.
5. 731 VarioHippique’s Vingino Visser, Tommie NED 1000.00 EUR 361.0 362.5 358.0 344.5 362.5 1788.5 points show score sheet
black 13y.G /Polansky/Variant/KWPN/103KW03/ T. Visser 72.200 % 72.500 % 71.600 % 68.900 % 72.500 % 71.540 %
5. 2. 3. 7. 6.
6. 727 Annarico Verliefden, Fanny BEL 600.00 EUR 363.0 360.0 337.0 343.5 364.0 1767.5 points show score sheet
bay 10y.M /Lord Loxley/Havel/KWPN/103VJ44/ Fanny Verliefden 72.600 % 72.000 % 67.400 % 68.700 % 72.800 % 70.700 %
4. 4. 13. 8. 5.
7. 722 Axis TSF Stegars, Terhi FIN 300.00 EUR 347.5 349.5 340.5 352.0 359.0 1748.5 points show score sheet
black 16y.S /Sixtus/Angard/TRAK/GER44244/ Stegars Terhi + A bis Grand Prix 69.500 % 69.900 % 68.100 % 70.400 % 71.800 % 69.940 %
9. 8. 9. 5. 7.
8. 711 Thriller Gevers, Katja NED 200.00 EUR 346.5 339.5 342.0 352.0 366.5 1746.5 points show score sheet
15y.G /Gribaldi/Amor/KWPN/103HL43/ Dhr. R. Gevers 69.300 % 67.900 % 68.400 % 70.400 % 73.300 % 69.860 %
10. 14. 8. 5. 4.
Other, non-placed competitors
9. 701 Vitana V Barbançon Mestre, Morgan ESP 352.5 355.5 339.0 340.0 354.0 1741.0 points show score sheet
bay 13y.M /Donnerhall/Hemmingway/KWPN/103CD42/ Morgan Barbancon Mestre 70.500 % 71.100 % 67.800 % 68.000 % 70.800 % 69.640 %
7. 6. 11. 11. 10.
10. 724 Zippo van der Meer, Patrick NED 345.5 343.0 346.5 342.0 358.5 1735.5 points show score sheet
chest 11y.G /Rousseau/Haarlem/KWPN/103NA98/ Trainingsstal De Hoeve 69.100 % 68.600 % 69.300 % 68.400 % 71.700 % 69.420 %
11. 11. 6. 10. 8.
11. 705 Kingsley Lucky Dance de Deken, Julie BEL 345.0 343.0 343.5 342.5 346.0 1720.0 points show score sheet
dbay 14y.S /Lucky Lionell/Placido – Sun/HANN/102OE64/ De Deken – De Vos 69.000 % 68.600 % 68.700 % 68.500 % 69.200 % 68.800 %
12. 11. 7. 9. 13.
12. 720 Breanna Raine, Kathleen USA 352.5 341.5 330.5 340.0 347.5 1712.0 points show score sheet
bay 15y.M /Brentano II/Weltmeyer/HANN/USA42245/ Kathleen Raine/jennifer Mason/dav 70.500 % 68.300 % 66.100 % 68.000 % 69.500 % 68.480 %
7. 13. 14. 11. 11.
13. 717 Don Gregorius Logutenkova, Inna UKR 341.0 344.5 340.5 334.5 346.5 1707.0 points show score sheet
black 13y.S /Don Cardinale/Placido/OLDBG/UKR40057/ Llc Vian – Group 68.200 % 68.900 % 68.100 % 66.900 % 69.300 % 68.280 %
13. 10. 9. 14. 12.
14. 726 Wilco V van Orshaegen, Mario BEL 335.5 346.0 338.5 339.5 343.0 1702.5 points show score sheet
black 12y.S /Rousseau/Centauer Z/KWPN/103AL99/ Mario Van Orshaegen (10431153) 67.100 % 69.200 % 67.700 % 67.900 % 68.600 % 68.100 %
14. 9. 12. 13. 14.
15. 718 Wipsy V. Heihof Meiresonne, Delphine BEL 334.5 334.5 330.0 333.5 340.0 1672.5 points show score sheet
bay 16y.S /Flemmingh/Saygon/BWP/102OK89/ Christine Kesteleyn 66.900 % 66.900 % 66.000 % 66.700 % 68.000 % 66.900 %
15. 15. 15. 15. 15.
16. 725 Ucento van Mierlo, Danielle NED 330.5 321.5 320.0 317.0 321.0 1610.0 points show score sheet
black 14y.G /Metall/Allegro/KWPN/NED41808/ A.C.J. V. Mierlo-V Luipen & W.J.M. 66.100 % 64.300 % 64.000 % 63.400 % 64.200 % 64.400 %
16. 16. 17. 17. 17.
17. 709 Symphonie Gallardo Muñoz, Lucia ESP 312.0 314.0 321.5 326.0 322.5 1596.0 points show score sheet
grey 16y.S /Krack C/Aktion/KWPN/ESP03527/ Lucia Gallando Munoz 62.400 % 62.800 % 64.300 % 65.200 % 64.500 % 63.840 %
17. 17. 16. 16. 16.
Data of competition:
 Judges: (E)  P.Holler (GER)  Total prize money:
10000 EUR
(H)  R.Saleh (FRA)
(C)  M. Sanders-Vangansewinkel (NED)
(M)  S.Baarup (DEN)
(B)  J.van Daele (BEL)

Saturday, December 26, 2015

Face of USA Dressage Changed by Florida’s Global Festival Entering 5th Year–Part 1 of 2

Packed spectator stands during Friday night Freestyle competition at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Packed spectator stands during Friday night Freestyle competition at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

By KENNETH J. BRADDICK

WELLINGTON, Florida, Dec. 26, 2015–Heading into the Olympic year, the changed face of United States dressage will be highlighted when the Adequan Global Dressage celebrates five years of competitions that have moved the sport to heights not previously seen in the Americas and luring a growing number of Europeans to cross the Atlantic for winter.

With a little over two months remaining for Olympic qualifying, seven of the 27 events on the global calendar to meet the deadline of March 6 to earn a start at Rio de Janeiro are on the schedule for Wellington’s lineup of seven weeks of international competitions with a world leading total of almost $700,000 in prize money.

Top ranked CD5* and CDI4* events, four World Cups and the only Nations Cup outside Europe make up seven weeks of CDIs that in 2014 saw the number of entries in international classes repeatedly break records, exceeding 1,600 rides for the season.

The United States has already earned its start in the Rio team competition but Canada is looking to claim two more individual places to the one it won at the Pan Ams so it can join the lineup of teams while the Dominican Republic’s Yvonne Losos de Muñiz will be competing to hold on to her lead as an individual for South America.

Other prospective Olympians may also join American riders looking to make the U.S. team.

The same organizers of the Global circuit are expanding international dressage competitions outside Florida, including the first CDI3* at the newly created multi-million dollar show grounds in Tryon, North Carolina next April and hosting the North American Junior & Young Rider Championships amidst a growing jumper/hunter circuit in Colorado. That’s in addition to dressage at the Central Park Horse Show in the heart of New York City that has become a world renowned event since being launched two years ago.

The Tryon Interntional Equestrian Center main arena. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

The Tryon Interntional Equestrian Center main arena. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

To give perspective to the impact of the creation of Global at the Stadium complex that’s part of the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center, the year before the circuit was launched in 2012, not one of the 25 international dressage shows in the U.S. were organized by Equestrian Sport Productions (ESP) put together by Wellington-based entrepreneur Mark Bellissimo with groups of owners.

A total of five CDIs were in Florida, none in Wellington that is the world’s leading destination in winter for the largest and longest running jumper and hunter Winter Equestrian Festival also at the Palm Beach show grounds, as well as the biggest series of polo tournaments second only to Argentina.

The 20i6 Olympic year lists 10 of the 25 events on the International Equestrian Federation (FEI) calendar for the United States–more than any other nation–at show grounds owned by Mark Bellissimo’s groups.

Global hosted its first championship in December when the U.S. Grand Prix and Intermediaire championships presented by the Dutta Corp were staged in Wellington for the first time. Despite lackluster promotion by the U.S. Equestrian Federation that owns the event, spectators that typically pack Global’s Friday night Freestyles under lights during the winter showed up in larger numbers than at the traditional championship home in Gladstone, New Jersey.

South Florida’s dressage circuit was formed more than three decades ago with shows in relatively rustic Loxahatchee, a neighboring community to Wellington.  A handful of dressage shows shared space with the Winter Equestrian Festival which at the time was spread over weeks and not months.

When ESP took over the Wellington show grounds and competitions in 2007, the Florida dressage circuit had become significant but still driven mostly by riders based in northern states fleeing brutal winters. Not too dissimilar to European winter circuits in Spain and southern France.

2010 CDI5* Palm Beach victory gallop by Isabell Werth on Satchmo, Anky van Grunsven on Salinero and Steffen Peters on Ravel. © Ilse Schwarz/dressage-news.com

2010 CDI5* Palm Beach victory gallop by Isabell Werth on Satchmo, Anky van Grunsven on Salinero and Steffen Peters on Ravel. © Ilse Schwarz/dressage-news.com

Except, a more stable sub-tropical climate, literally abutting Everglades National Park; a half hour from beaches and deep sea fishing; resort hotels, restaurants, museums, art galleries and theaters; the Americas crossroads and hub of sports powerhouses like the Heat in Miami an hour away and add another hour to the theme parks of Disney World, Universal Studios, Sea World and a thrill matched by few other events, witnessing the launch of spacecraft from Cape Canaveral (and as of this month returning to Earth).

ESP undertook a major rebuilding costing several tens of millions of dollars, and expanded the jumper circuit to 12 weeks from six weeks, a template that was to be adopted years later in creating the Global circuit. Initial efforts to squeeze in dressage–including staging the first top level CDI5* events ever in the Western Hemisphere in 2009 and 2010–had mixed results and dressage was dropped from the Wellington calendar in 2011.

ground-breaking-1-9T5U3711.jpg

Ground breaking for the new dressage facility at Florida’s Palm Beach International Equestrian Center. Village of Wellington Councilwoman Anne Gerwig, Darell Bowen, mayor at the time, Mark Bellissimo, chief executive of Equestrian Sport Productions and Wellington Equestrian Partners, and Robert Dover, six-time Olympian. © 2011 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Global was founded on the polo fields that were the original equestrian heart of Wellington where Britain’s Prince Charles played while his then-wife, Princess Diana, looked on and where WEF was first held in the parking lot more than three decades earlier.

An ambitious effort to build a condominium hotel, a cluster of permanent equestrian-themed boutiques, coffee and snack shops and wine bars alongside the dressage grounds ran into opposition from an unexpected quarter, the wealthy owners of a nearby farm some of whose family members compete in jumpers, none in dressage. The family launched a vitriolic but unsuccessful drive with a local gossip columnist and press agent their mouthpiece to block ESP from taking over the licenses for the WEF shows at the grounds ESP had acquired.

When ESP created Global, the family re-launched opposition, financing to the tune of $600,000 an election campaign that succeeded in winning a majority of three candidates to the five-member council that controls Wellington’s government with the same gossip columnist and press agent their public face.

Approvals already granted for the hotel and other commercial developments were pulled. Construction of what were to be 400 permanent stables were cut to 200, a permanent VIP club was blocked and remains a tent. Shows were initially limited to just a few months a year and access was limited to a single entryway and exit on to a one-way road. And although the Grand Prix Freestyles under lights on Friday night were filling the stands with spectators the local government ordered early lights out.

Competitors and spectators from around the world voted with their feet and hooves. Some of the restrictions have since been lifted but the majority of the local council is still hostile to the dressage facility.

The schedule of Global events that began with about $250,000 in prize money the first year is now up to almost $700,000 five years later.

Dressage riders representing 30 countries from Asia, North America, South America, Europe and Australasia now make Wellington their winter home to compete in the CDIs at all levels as well as the international amateur division that was launched first in Wellington two years ago.

The VIP pavilion has become so popular that it’s being expanded in 2016.

More Californians are making their way to Wellington despite an effort to improve the Southern California winter shows under the California Dreaming Productions’ banner.

Like other long established CDIs throughout the United States, however, international competitions in California are World Cup qualifiers and 3*s–no 4* or 5* events with big purses and no Nations Cups that are used to upgrade formats for the Pan American Games, a continental Olympic qualifying championship.

2015-Nations-Cup-medals-podium.jpg

The 2015 Nations Cup medals podium with United States gold, Canada 1 silver and Canada 2 bronze. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

The United States has already earned its start in the Rio team competition but Canada is looking to claim two more individual places to the one it won at the Pan Ams so it can send join the teams while the Dominican Republic’s Yvonne Losos de Muñiz will be competing to hold on to her lead as an individual for South America.

Part 2: Opponents still seeking to tear down Global Dressage Festival grounds, but are staging own jumper show almost next door