Charlotte Dujardin and Valegro on their way to their second consecutive Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Final title. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. |
Her new logo – just released within the past couple of weeks
– incorporates an image of a crown, so it’s only fitting that Charlotte
Dujardin, the Queen of Everything, retains her title.
With the almost too-good-to-be-real Valegro, the British
woman is now the back-to-back Reem Acra FEI World Cup Dressage Final champion
as well as the reigning Olympic, European, and World Equestrian Games champion.
With the same How to Train Your Dragon freestyle
that won gold in Normandy last August, Dujardin squashed the competition with a
score of 94.196 percent in today’s Grand Prix Freestyle, coming just tenths of
a point short of the world-record score of 94.300 percent she and “Blueberry” set
at Olympia in London last December. The nearly foot-perfect freestyle brought
the crowd of nearly 11,000 in the Thomas & Mack Center to its feet for a
thunderous ovation.
“Valegro just loves it,” Dujardin said afterward when asked
how she keeps the 13-year-old Dutch gelding (Negro x Gerschwin) going. “It’s
not like I have to force him, because he loves the work.”
Dujardin frequently comments on how lucky she is to have the
ride on this reliable horse. “I just sit and steer him ’round. There’s no sweat
involved,” she quipped.
Edward Gal and Glock's Undercover N.O.P. of the Netherlands passage to second place in the World Cup Dressage Final freestyle. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. |
Nearly 10 percentage points behind the untouchable Dujardin
was second-placed Edward Gal of the Netherlands, who piloted the 14-year-old
Dutch gelding Glock’s Undercover N.O.P. (Ferro x Donnerhall) to a score of
84.696 percent. Undercover was more relaxed than he’d been in Thursday’s Grand
Prix, with a longer neck and a nose in front of the vertical. He could have
stretched out more in the extended trots, and the walk rhythm varied a bit at
times on account of tension. His pirouettes drew audience applause. It was a
solid program to mildly interesting but not compelling orchestral
instrumentals; bottom line, it wasn’t Dujardin’s freestyle.
Gal showed a quick wit and good humor when he was asked how
it felt to be the oldest rider at the press conference for the top four finishers.
“Normally I’m not the oldest one because Isabell [Werth of Germany] is here,”
he said with a grin.
World Cup Dressage Final newcomers Jessica von Bredow-Werndl and Unee BB of Germany finished third. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. |
A new face ascended the medal podium in Las Vegas to claim
third place: Germany’s Jessica von Bredow-Werndl on the 14-year-old Dutch
stallion Unee BB (Gribaldi x Dageraad). Von Bredow-Werndl’s unusual freestyle
began with the voice of Martin Luther King Jr. and his iconic “I have a dream”
line. Later in the program, we heard the rider’s own voice as she uttered over
the music, “I have a dream that all living creatures can respect each other.”
Unee BB missed a two-tempi change and swapped leads as von Bredow-Werndl
brought him back from an extended canter down the long side, but the freestyle
was strong enough to earn a score of 80.464 percent.
For the US, Delight…and
Crushing Disappointment
Our new young stars, Laura Graves and Verdades, gave a super
performance in Las Vegas. This competition is “Diddy’s” very first indoor show
– and it happens to be an incredibly close, loud, and electric venue. After an
initial spook at the floodlit World Cup Dressage Final trophy in the corner
near H, the 13-year-old Dutch gelding (Florett As x Goya) got a little backed
off for a short time. He got afraid during a piaffe at A, and later he scooted
forward during a canter half-pass when the crowd applauded. But these were
honest rookie-horse reactions, and Diddy’s overall excellent quality and a
sensitive and sympathetic ride from Graves resulted in a score of 79.125, which
put them in fifth place…except that it didn’t.
In the official standings, Graves was fourth. The reason
didn’t become clear right away, but the first sign of a problem was the buzzing
in the audience when the fourth-placed scorers, Steffen Peters and Legolas 92,
didn’t appear at the awards ceremony. They weren’t mentioned. Where were they?
Where they were, I’m sorry to report, was eliminated. As
World Cup Finals press chief Marty Bauman announced at the press conference
afterward, Peters was eliminated because evidence of blood was found on
Legolas’s side after his freestyle. The FEI has a zero-tolerance rule regarding
blood on horses – you may recall Adelinde Cornelissen and Parzival’s
elimination during their Grand Prix test at the 2010 World Equestrian Games
when the horse showed blood in his mouth from biting his tongue – and so the
FEI stewards had no choice. According to Bauman, Peters “accepted their
decision gracefully.”
I feel terrible for Peters, who is an outstanding horseman
and whose training methods are beyond reproach. He doesn’t need for me to
defend his reputation, but I’ll put in my $.02 anyway.
The elimination is even sadder considering the fact that
Peters had, in fact, placed fourth on a score of 80.286 percent. The
notoriously spooky Legolas kept it together admirably in front of the exuberant
crowd, although the 13-year-old Westfalen gelding (Laomedon x Florestan II) did
lose it for a moment at the loud laughter that greeted the voice-over line at
the beginning of the freestyle: “Hey, I’m Legolas. Let’s go!” His two-tempis
were clean, although he missed a change in the ones; and a double pirouette
directly into piaffe showed a high degree of difficulty. Peters got a standing
ovation from the largely American crowd at the final halt and salute, which was
punctuated by the voice-over words of “Legolas” saying, “Hey, let’s get out of
here!”
The Vegas Experience
For Dujardin, Gal, von Bredow-Werndl, and Graves, this was
their first trip to Sin City. All were in agreement that Las Vegas was living
up to its glitzy image.
FEI World Cup Dressage Final title sponsor and haute couture fashion designer Reem Acra (center) poses with top-placed finishers Edward Gal, Charlotte Dujardin, Jessica von Bredow-Werndl, and Laura Graves. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. |
“It’s everything I thought it would be,” said Dujardin. “Seeing
how crazy the Strip is; going to shows in the evening. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed
it.”
“It’s not real!” exclaimed von Bredow-Werndl. “I go through
the casino [hotel] at six in the morning and they’re playing loud music; I come
to the arena and the people are going crazy.”
“It is very surreal,” Graves agreed. “I left the hotel very
early this morning, before six o’clock, to come ride, and there was still a
party in the bar.”
Although the Vegas lights and boisterous fans may have
bolstered the energy level at the World Cup Dressage Final, at least one
attendee said the thrill was entirely the result of the rush from seeing the
best dressage in the world.
Said US FEI 5* judge Lilo Fore, who was the head of the
ground jury for today’s freestyle final: “No matter how many years you sit in
those [judges’] boxes, the excitement of seeing those good horses and riders
never goes away.”