Sunday, January 31, 2016

USA Olympic Team Prospects To Compete in France & Holland As Final Selection Shows

rio2016 logo


LEXINGTON, Kentucky, Jan. 31, 2016–United States team prospects for the summer Olympic Games will compete at Nations Cup events in France and the Netherlands and a CDI5* also in Holland as selection events of the four horses and riders and a reserve that will go to Rio de Janeiro for the dressage competition in August.


Up to eight combinations will be named after the California and Florida winter circuits, the U.S. Equestrian Federation said, to go to Europe for the three observation events:


–May 19-22 Compiegne, France, which is hosting a CDIO5* Nations Cup for the first time as well as a CDI3*;


–June 1-5 Roosendaal, Netherlands CDI5*, and


–June 22-26 Rotterdam, Netherlands which hosts a long established premier CDIO5* Nations Cup and a CDI3*.


Riders on the squad can choose whether to compete at Compiegne or Roosendaal but Rotterdam will be required for all combinations.


Other events may be added to the schedule at the request of riders.


The final team selection, the USEF said, will be made on or before July 1, the U.S. Olympic Committee Final Entry date.


The riders and horses selected for the Olympics will fly directly from Europe to Rio.


The U.S. squad will be based  at Studfarm de Begijnhoeve in Retie, Belgium.

Holland’s Leida Collins-Strijk & Germany’s Michael Klimke Fierce Competitors in Florida

Leida Collins-Strijk on Don Tignanello and Michael Klimke on Djamba Djokiba in awards ceremony at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Leida Collins-Strijk on Don Tignanello and Michael Klimke on Djamba Djokiba in awards ceremony at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


By KENNETH J. BRADDICK


WELLINGTON, Florida, Jan. 31, 2016–Competition between Leida Collins-Strijk of the Netherlands and Michael Klimke of Germany as young adults in Europe has become intense 20 years later at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival.


Leida is now 45 years old and with three children and Michael a year older with two children that neither had back when they were riding at shows in Germany and Holland.


Although Leida competed on the winer-long Global circuit at the Palm Beach International Equestrian Center in 2014 and Michael last year they did not compete against each other until this year–and the competition at Small Tour has been intense.


Michael was first to claim success by winning the circuit-opening CDI Prix St. Georges on Djamba Djokiba, his nine-year-old Westfalen gelding.


Leida and Don Tignanello, an 11-year-old Hanoverian gelding owned by she and her husband as well as his father, Michael Collins, an international businessman who owns a Wellington dressage center, was third.


Suzan Pape of Great Britain on Harmony's Don Noblesse topped them both in the Intermediate 1 with Leida and Don Tignanello second and Michael and Djamba Djokiba third.


Leida Collins-Strijk on Don Tignanello competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Leida Collins-Strijk on Don Tignanello competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


The Dutch pair won the Intermediate Freestyle with the German duo second.


At the second Global CDI, the World Cup at the end of January, victory clearly went to Leida and Don Tignanello, winning the Prix St. Georges, Intermediate 1 and Intermediate Freestyle with Michael on Djamba Djokiba second in all three classes.


"Leida is an elegant rider and I like to watch her ride," Michael laughed.


"I could be a gentleman and say, ‘ladies first,' but I'm competing to win."


Told how seriously Michael takes the competition between the two Leida quickly responded, "Me, too."


As Michael walked by after the awards ceremony, he laughed and said, "next time…"


"That's what you said last time," Leida shot back.


Both are thinking about moving their horses up to Grand Prix at national that would raise the competition stakes.


Michael Klimke and Djamba Djokiba competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Michael Klimke and Djamba Djokiba competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Canadian Olympic Qualifying Scores in California & Florida for Week Ended Jan. 31 – Unofficial

Belinda Trussell and Anton competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Belinda Trussell and Anton competing in Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com



Jan. 31, 2016


Belinda Trussell on Anton that won a summer Olympic Games individual place for Canada based on their results at the Pan American Games in Toronto last year posted the highest Grand Prix score for a Canadian combination so far in 2016 when the pair won the World Cup Grand Prix at Wellington, Florida.


Leah Wilson Wilkins who was the standout on Fabian JS in the first CDI of Florida's Adequan Global Dressage Festival did not compete in the World Cup event the last week of January but remains a strong contender at this stage.


Karen Pavicic on Don Daiquiri is the only other combination with scores above 70 per cent that they attained in the Grand Prix and the Special at Wellington.


-0-


As Equine Canada has not released its Olympic selection criteria or produce a leaderboard, dressage-news.com is posting unofficial standings of Grand Prix and Grand Prix Special. The average of the four highest Grand Prix scores, or a Grand Prix Special score can be included for consideration to represent Canada at the Games in Rio de Janeiro from the beginning of 2016. These unofficial standings include averages above 64 per cent.


Canadian Olympic Qualifying Scores as of  Feb. 1, 2016 – Compiled by dressage-news.com


RIDER

HORSE                            W/E 1/17/2016         W/E1/31/2016         AVERAGE

Leah Wilson Wilkins       GP – 71.700

Fabian JS                        GPS – 72.683


Jill Irving                           GP – 68.600

Degas 12


Jacqueline Brooks           GP – 68.500             GP – 68.200     GP – 68.350

D Niro


Megan Lane                     GP – 64.880             GP – 67.240       GP – 66.060

Caravella                       GPS – 69.000          GPS – 69.078     GPS – 69.039


Brittany Fraser                GP – 64.920             GP – 68.380       GP – 66.650

All In


Karen Pavicic                                                      GP – 70.840

Don Daiquiri                                                    GPS – 70.157


Belinda Trussell                                                 GP – 72.860

Anton


Evi Strasser                                                         GP – 65.100

Renaissance Tyme


Joni Lynne Peters                                            GP – 66.180

Travolta                                                          GPS – 66.196


Wendy Christoff                                               GP – 64.180

Treffer

Steffen Peters Does It Again With Rosamunde Winning Burbank CDI-W Grand Prix Special With Personal Best

Steffen Peters riding Rosamunde. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Steffen Peters riding Rosamunde. © 2015 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


Jan. 31, 2016


By KENNETH J. BRADDICK


Steffen Peters and Rosamunde produced another personal best result of almost 79 per cent in the Grand Prix Special, the fourth new mark for the American rider in competing both Legolas and the nine-year-old mare at the LA Winter World Cup event in Burbank, California.


Steffen, of San Diego, California and Rosamunde scored 78.827 per cent for the win with Canada's Joni Lynn Peters on Travolta second at 66.196 per cent and the USA's Mark Carter on Bellino third on 64.765 per cent. Sandra Hotz of the U.S. awarded the pair 80.980 per cent, Cara Whitham of Canada giving them 79.216 per cent and Bo Jena of Sweden 79.188 per cent.


Steffen described Rosamunde's ride as "clearly better" than in the Grand Prix Friday when he rode both horses to personal best scores for first and second places then followed up with a personal best on Legolas in the Freestyle on Saturday.


This was the first show of this Olympic year as Steffen prepares Legolas that he is ranked No. 7 in the world and Rosamunde, ranked No. 23 for United States team selection trials that will go to Europe after the California and Florida circuits before the team of four horses and riders head to Rio de Janeiro for the dressage competition in August.


"She had lots of energy and did better piaffe-passage transitions," Steffen told dressage-news.com after the ride at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center. "Very expressive trot and passage work. I started the second pirouette too late. Rosie had so much energy after the one-tempis down the centerline it took me just a little too long to prepare for the right pirouette and it ended up too big.


"Rosie was clearly better than in the Grand Prix, which was already a wonderful test."


Since beginning Big Tour a year ago, Steffen and Rosamunde, a Rhinelander mare, who was then eight years old, started 12 times in the United States and Europe in 2015, never scoring below 70 per cent at any of the three Grand Prix levels. Their previous best score in the Special was 75.863 in California last winter.


In two weeks both Legolas and Rosamunde will be at the Adequan Global Dressage Festival competing in the CDI5*/3* competitions in Wellington, Florida. Rosamunde began her Big Tour career at the same show a year ago.


Legolas will compete in the CDI5* in which 34 combinations are entered while Rosamunde will be in the CDI3* for which 41 horses and riders are entered. Twenty nations will be represented in the two Big Tour classes.


Results:

CDI-W Grand Prix Special

Saturday, January 30, 2016

Steffen Peters & Legolas Post Another Personal Best Score to Win Burbank World Cup Grand Prix Freestyle





Steffen Peters and Legolas. © Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Steffen Peters and Legolas. © Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


BURBANK, California, Jan. 30, 2016–Steffen Peters racked up another personal best score on Legolas when the world's seventh ranked partnership won the Los Angeles Winter World Cup Grand Prix Freestyle Saturday.


Steffen and the 14-year-old Westfalen gelding were awarded 84.050 per cent to top the field of five combinations and put the pair close to the highest Freestyle scores by an American combination–when Steffen rode Ravel at his peak in 2009 when the duo won the World Cup Final and the 2010 World Games individual medal performances.


Günter Seidel of Cardiff, California on Zero Gravity was second on 71.700 per cent with Michelle Reilly of Encinitas, California on Umeeko third on 71.025 per cent.


American judge Lilo Fore awarded the highest winning score of 87.500 per cent with Canada's Cara Whitham the lowest at 81.875 per cent.


The result for Steffen of San Diego topped their previous best Freestyle score of 81.325 per cent set in Thousand Oaks, California last September and a day after posting a personal best in the Grand Prix.


Although the score and a qualifying result from 2015 put Steffen and Legolas way at the top of the North American League to earn an invitation to the Final in Gothenburg, Sweden in March the rider told dressage-news.com he won't go because he is focused on the summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.


"Because of the traveling schedule for the Olympic Games and the required European shows prior, we decided to skip the World Cup," said Steffen who won team and individual gold medals at last summer's Pan American Games that helped earn the U.S. a team start in Rio.


"It is mainly the lengthy transportation that concerns me. After you arrive in Amsterdam it is still a long distance to go to Gothenburg." The road trip is more than 11 hours each way.


Laura Graves of Plymouth, Florida and Verdades, team mates of Steffen and Legolas at the Pan Ams and the 2014 World Games, are second on the NAL standings that is determined by the average of the two best scores.


There are two more World Cup qualifiers in Wellington, Florida and one at Burbank for the 2016 Final.


Steffen will ride Rosamunde in the Grand Prix Special Sunday. On the nine-year-old Rhinelander mare in the Grand Prix Friday, he was also awarded a personal best score.


Results:


Burbank CDI-W Grand Prix Freestyle





Belinda Trussell & Anton Make It 2 for 2 for Canada in Caputring Florida World Cup Grand Prix Freestyle

Belinda Trussell riding Anton to victory in the Adequan Global Dressage Festival World Cup Freestu;e. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Belinda Trussell riding Anton to victory in the Adequan Global Dressage Festival World Cup Freestu;e. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


WELLINGTON, Florida, Jan. 29, 2016–Belinda Trussell was "really riding a rocket" on Anton to win the Adequan Global Dressage Festival World Cup Grand Prix Freestyle Friday night, a day after claiming the Grand Prix. The USA's Laura Graves on Verdades again performed with costly mistakes that put the pair in sixth place.


The partnership that was almost ended by a 2 1/2-year absence from competition with a career-threatening injury to Anton, scored 75.025 per cent and the first Grand Prix-Grand Prix Freestyle double victory in six years at this same Palm Beach International Equestrian Center.


America's Allison Brock on Rosevelt placed second on 73.900 per cent, the second best Freestyle result, while Shelly Francis on Doktor was third on 73.400 per cent.


More to come


Results:










CDI-W Grand Prix Freestyle











E: Umbach – LUX H: Tubman – CAN C: Zang – USA M: Foy – USA B: Hess – GER




















































































































































































































































































































































































Rider Ctzn Horse E Rk. H Rk. C Rk. M Rk. B Rk. T Pl.
Trussell, Belinda CAN Anton 73.375 3 75.750 1 73.875 1 75.375 2 76.750 1 75.025 1
Brock, Allison USA Rosevelt 73.000 5 74.250 2 73.125 2 76.000 1 73.125 3 73.900 2
Francis, Shelly USA Doktor 75.375 1 73.500 4 72.625 3 74.375 3 71.125 8 73.400 3
Matute Jr, Juan ESP Don Diego Ymas 74.625 2 71.000 7 71.875 5 72.750 6 74.500 2 72.950 4
Page, Arlene USA Alina 73.250 4 73.875 3 71.625 7 72.250 7 72.625 4 72.725 5
Graves, Laura USA Verdades 72.000 7 71.875 6 69.750 10 74.000 5 72.375 6 72.000 6
Perry-Glass, Kasey USA Trostruplunds Scarlet 71.000 10 72.375 5 71.875 5 70.875 9 72.500 5 71.725 7
Fraser, Brittany CAN All In 72.750 6 69.875 11 72.125 4 72.250 7 71.125 8 71.625 8
Wilcox, Lisa USA Pikko del Cerro HU 71.375 8 70.125 10 70.250 9 74.125 4 69.500 10 71.075 9
Brooks, Jacqueline M. CAN D Niro 69.875 13 70.500 9 70.375 8 70.125 10 71.625 7 70.500 10
Ebeling, Jan USA FRH Rassolini 70.500 11 67.125 13 67.125 12 70.000 11 69.500 10 68.850 11
Pape, Suzan GBR Harmony's Fiorano 70.500 11 68.750 12 68.250 11 69.375 12 66.250 14 68.625 12
Marek, Anna USA Unico G 68.250 14 70.875 8 63.750 15 69.375 12 69.125 12 68.275 13
Wallenstein, Ricardo POR Bem Me Quer 71.375 8 66.000 15 66.250 13 68.625 15 68.250 13 68.100 14
Jimenez Cobo, Juan Antonio ESP Sunny Boy 66.125 15 67.125 13 65.125 14 68.750 14 61.750 15 65.775 15


Thursday, January 28, 2016

Canada’s Belinda Trussell & Anton Win Global Dressage Festival World Cup Grand Prix

Belinda Trussell and Anton on their way to victory in the Adequan Global Dressage Festival World Cup Grand Prix. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Belinda Trussell and Anton on their way to victory in the Adequan Global Dressage Festival World Cup Grand Prix. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


By KENNETH J. BRADDICK


WELLINGTON, Florida, Jan. 28, 2016–Belinda Trussell who rode her two-time World Games team mount to qualify as an individual at the 2015 Pan American Games, won the Adequan Global Dressage Festival  World Cup Grand Prix Thursday, an event that was saved from two days of torrential downpours by a covered arena but not from widespread criticism of the judging.


The ride by Belinda on the 16-year-old Sachs gelding that scored 72.860 per cent was what she described as perhaps the most harmonious ever in almost seven years of a Grand Prix career that has taken the pair to both the 2010 World Games in Lexington and the 2014 Games in Normandy with a total of 72 Big Tour starts on both sides of the Atlantic.


"He's a hot horse and the things that sometimes happened when we were learning the Grand Prix don't happen now," she said, "he knows so much we can make small changes to improve with no problems."


Arlene "Tuny" Page of Wellington, a 2006 World Cup Final competitor, was just 0.1 behind on Woodstock for second place on 72.760 per cent, the best score for the pair in 18 months of Grand Prix in Europe and the U.S.


The result boosted the pair's chances of being selected for a squad of eight combinations to go to Europe in the spring for selection of the American team of four horses and riders for the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.


Arlene

Arlene "Tuny" Page and Woodstock in the World Cup Grand rix. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


Kasey Perry-Glass, the 28-year-old who moved to Wellington from California to immerse herself in her dressage career, waited through 40 rides over two days to capture third place on 72.320 per cent. She was the ninth to go on the first day of the Grand Prix that was washed out of the outdoor international arena and went to the adjacent Van Kampen arena, big enough to easily hold the competition and warmup arenas with plenty of room for spectators.


This was the first CDI Grand Prix for Kasey and Dublet whom she competed at Small Tour in Wellington and in Europe in 2015. She also placed 11th on the 17-year-old mare Trøstruplund’s Scarlet with a score of 70.120 per cent.


The performance of Laura Graves of Plymouth, Florida and Verdades was marked by several expensive mistakes that saw the pair receive a score of 71.620 per cent for seventh place.


The score was the lowest for Laura and the 14-year-old KWPN gelding since two years ago at the Global Dressage Festival and before going on an upward trajectory that took them to the World Games in Normandy, the World Cup Final in Las Vegas last April and the team gold and individual silver medals at the Pan Ams last summer. Laura and Verdades ended 2015 as the U.S. Grand Prix Champion.


The biggest complaints about the judging came from scores awarded by Christoph Hess of Germany at E and Canadian Lee Tubman directly across the arena at B. For Kasey and Dublet their scores were 77.200 per cent and 68.700 per cent, respectively.


Kasey Perry-Glass and Goerklintgaards Dublet in their first CDI Grand Prix. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Kasey Perry-Glass and Goerklintgaards Dublet in their first CDI Grand Prix. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


For Belinda and Anton, the scores from the same two were 75.200 per cent and 70.000 per cent, respectively.


Cesar Torrente of Colombia, the judge at C pointed out that throughout most of the competition the three jury members on the short side–H, C and M–were close together.


It was, he said, a long class with many horses and while "we always like to have very similar results" he used the frequently heard response to complaints, "judges sitting at different angles see different things."


On the line for many of the competitors from 14 countries, were Olympic hopes and dreams–Americans and Australians seeking to get on their team that are among 10 nations already qualified for Rio, Canadians and Danes trying to boost the rankings of individual riders to give their countries a hope of putting together a team and individuals from different geographic groups and the world rankings.


Tinne Vilhelmson-Silfvén on Benetton Dream posted a personal best Grand Prix score in the World Cup event at Wellington, Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com

Tinne Vilhelmson-Silfvén on Benetton Dream posted a personal best Grand Prix score in the World Cup event at Wellington, Florida. © 2016 Ken Braddick/dressage-news.com


Belinda, the mother of two, already qualified Canada for the sole individual spot assigned from the Pan American Games in Toronto and is now riding Anton to earn selection to go to Rio. Canada will most likely get a second individual slot through the North American group but competition is fierce for six individual places based on open world rankings from countries that have not yet qualified a team.


Canada's strategy about the Olympics has raised questions over the past year as only one team slot was available at the Pan Ams and, as expected, went to the United States. As the highest scoring rider in the group for which one individual slot was also available, that was won by Belinda and Anton. Canada will almost definitely earn a second individual start through their geographic group standing.


But because of the Pan Am results, Belinda cannot qualify Anton through the open world rankings where she has the best shot for Canada as the highest scoring combination for that country currently so the chance of the nation being able to put together a minimum of three individuals for a team is slim.


Belinda was asked about the issue by dressage-news.com after Thursday's Grand Prix victory.


Volker Moritz, Canada's Technical Advisor, she said, "asked me 10 months ago whether I would consider not competing in the Pan Ams so as to increase our chances of getting another placing."


Belinda was torn, still fresh in her mind was that Anton had finally fully recovered from a bone lesion in 2011 that was feared to be career ending for the horse and kept them out of the show ring for 2 1/2 years, anyway.


"You just never know when the next ride might be your last," said the 44-year-old rider.


"I had never done a Pan American Games, I'd never ridden in my home town before my family and my friends in a major championships and might never get the chance to do so again."


In her lifetime there have been only three major equestrian Games in Canada–the Olympics in Montreal in 1976, the world championships in Toronto in 1986 and the Pan Ams last year. By the time of the World Games in 2018, Anton will be 18 years old.


"I thought of all the factors, the strategy for Canada on the one hand and on the other that I have two kids I could ride in front of in their home town.


"The Pan Ams was something I wanted to do from my heart."


Results:










CDI-W Grand Prix











E: Hess – GER H: Zang – USA C: Torrente – COL M: Nivelle – GER B: Tubman – CAN


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Rider Nat. Horse E Rk. H Rk. C Rk. M Rk. B Rk. Total Pl.
Trussell, Belinda CAN Anton 75.200 2 73.200 2 72.400 5 73.500 2 70.000 8 72.860 1
Page, Arlene USA Woodstock 72.800 3 72.700 3 71.900 7 75.700 1 70.700 5 72.760 2
Perry-Glass, Kasey USA Goerklintgaards Dublet 77.200 1 71.800 7 71.800 8 72.100 5 68.700 16 72.320 3
Vilhelmson-Silfven, Tinne SWE Benetton Dream 70.600 12 72.700 3 73.200 3 72.600 4 72.100 4 72.240 4
Brock, Allison USA Rosevelt 70.600 12 73.300 1 74.200 2 72.700 3 70.300 7 72.220 5
Francis, Shelly USA Doktor 72.200 6 72.400 6 74.400 1 71.900 6 69.600 11 72.100 6
Graves, Laura USA Verdades 71.100 10 69.100 14 72.400 5 71.800 7 73.700 1 71.620 7
Wilcox, Lisa USA Galant 71.900 8 71.700 8 73.200 3 71.200 8 70.000 8 71.600 8
Pavicic, Karen CAN Don Daiquiri 70.200 15 72.500 5 70.000 10 71.100 9 70.400 6 70.840
Layne, Kelly AUS Udon P 71.800 9 68.900 17 70.900 9 70.400 11 68.700 16 70.140
Perry-Glass, Kasey USA Trostruplunds Scarlet 72.600 5 69.000 16 68.300 18 68.300 17 72.400 3 70.120
Matute Jr, Juan ESP Don Diego Ymas 72.800 3 70.600 10 69.900 11 69.500 12 67.300 20 70.020
Wilcox, Lisa USA Pikko del Cerro HU 68.200 20 69.400 13 69.500 12 68.600 15 72.600 2 69.660
Marek, Anna USA Unico G 70.400 14 71.300 9 68.300 18 68.800 14 68.900 15 69.540
Rosencrantz, Mette USA Marron 70.000 17 69.700 12 69.500 12 70.800 10 67.200 22 69.440
Pape, Suzan GBR Harmony's Fiorano 72.000 7 68.500 20 69.000 15 68.400 16 69.100 13 69.400
Francis, Shelly USA Danilo 69.200 18 69.100 14 69.200 14 68.900 13 67.400 18 68.760
Fraser, Brittany CAN All In 70.800 11 68.800 18 68.900 17 67.300 20 66.100 24 68.380
Brooks, Jacqueline M. CAN D Niro 69.100 19 68.500 20 67.400 21 66.900 21 69.100 13 68.200
Page, Arlene USA Alina 65.000 27 67.100 23 69.000 15 67.500 18 69.900 10 67.700
Jimenez Cobo, Juan Antonio ESP Sunny Boy 65.400 26 68.800 18 68.100 20 67.500 18 67.206 21 67.401
Lane, Megan CAN Caravella 70.200 15 65.800 25 66.600 23 66.200 23 67.400 18 67.240
Wallenstein, Ricardo POR Bem Me Quer 66.900 21 70.100 11 65.400 27 66.600 22 64.600 29 66.720
Ebeling, Jan USA FRH Rassolini 66.700 22 68.300 22 65.700 26 64.300 28 65.500 27 66.100
Rizvi, P.J. USA Breaking Dawn 64.000 31 65.000 27 67.400 21 63.100 33 69.600 11 65.820
Koschel, Christoph GER Butopiar 64.000 31 66.400 24 65.800 25 64.900 25 66.600 23 65.540
Strasser, Evi CAN Renaissance Tyme 65.800 24 64.000 29 64.200 30 65.900 24 65.600 26 65.100
Pot, Adrienne USA Something Special 64.700 29 64.100 28 62.900 33 64.600 26 65.000 28 64.260
Klimke, Michael GER Don William II 65.500 25 59.900 39 65.900 24 64.300 28 64.500 31 64.020
Losos de Muniz, Yvonne DOM Foco Loco-W