2019 USDF FEI-Level Trainers Conference

2019 USDF FEI-Level Trainers Conference

Monday, September 10, 2018

Ready or Not, Here Comes the WEG—and Maybe Florence

Eventing competitors school in the Tryon Stadium on the day before 2018 WEG opening ceremonies. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.


TIEC isn’t really ready—but by all accounts it’s ready where it counts.

Two years ago, the still-fledgling Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, North Carolina, was awarded the 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games when original host Bromont, Canada, backed out.

It was a damn-the-torpedoes moment for TIEC mastermind Mark Bellissimo, who with his Tryon Equestrian Partners team was well aware that the usual lead time is more like six years. Bellissimo said he originally planned for TIEC to bid to host the 2026 WEG, but he believed his team could go into hyperdrive and make it happen for 2018.

Is it too harsh to say he thought wrong? It depends on which side of the arena fence you’re seated on.
From the competitors’ perspective—which, because it encompasses the horses’ well-being, is the most important—all is well at TIEC.
Look who we ran into outside the dressage stabling area! US dressage team members Laura Graves, Adrienne Lyle, and Kasey Perry-Glass take time for a photo. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

“For us over in dressage land, it’s wonderful,” Team USA member Adrienne Lyle said at today’s US dressage-team press conference. “The stabling is great: It’s well thought out, there’s plenty of air, and every stall has its own fan. [There are] big matted aisles. We’re right next to the schooling arenas. Everything’s nicely condensed; we’re not running all around the property. The footing is great. It’s amazing what they’ve built for this; it’s really impressive-looking.”
Officials including the USA's FEI 5* dressage judge Anne Gribbons, who is the head of the dressage ground jury for the 2018 WEG, inspect the competition arena in the US Trust Arena. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

The TIEC grounds, set amidst the picturesque foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, were obviously designed to evoke a resort/mountain lodge feel: lots of rustic-looking wood and stone that blend in with and set off the surrounding natural beauty. The effect is, well, somewhat marred at the moment by the masses of construction equipment, trucks, and miniature mountains of red clay (or red mud, given recent persistent heavy rains) being excavated and moved 24/7 as the venue works frantically to ready itself for tomorrow evening’s opening ceremony.

It’s not all going to be ready.

The promised on-site hotel, which was to house the grooms, isn’t. Bellissimo himself issued a written statement of apology to the grooms and their national federations
Construction of WEG facilities is ongoing the day prior to opening ceremonies. The dressage competition venue, the US Trust Arena, is in the background. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

An internal road isn’t completed. Crews can’t pour asphalt when the ground is slop from this summer’s rains, my shuttle driver told me this morning.

(PSA for anyone coming to WEG: Bring water-impervious footwear that you don’t care if it gets stained by red clay.)

I’m writing this blog post from the makeshift media center in TIEC’s Legends Club. The wooden chandeliers are pretty, but we’re not supposed to be in this VIP space at all; it’s crowded, the public WiFi is iffy, and we’re thankful it’s not hot today because the air conditioning is not robust. Unfortunately, the real media center isn’t finished yet—as in, the building didn’t yet have doors when I peeked inside this morning. Fingers crossed for tomorrow—but maybe not. 

Interestingly, most people I’ve talked to have decided to go with the flow instead of complaining. Parking, logistics, and plans apparently change daily—sometimes more frequently—around here, and you just roll with the punches. That may change after the media descend in force—the opening ceremony isn’t until tomorrow night—and of course the spectators aren’t here either. 
The Netherlands' Edward Gal and Glock's Zonik N.O.P. seem unfazed by construction activity. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
The horses are going with the flow, too. Asked whether mounts are disturbed by the construction going on around the schooling area, Lyle said no. 

“These horses are used to a lot; they’ve traveled the world to many, many venues,” she said. And indeed the dressage horses seemed relaxed and focused this morning as they passaged and half-passed with earth movers in the background and endurance horses being jogged vigorously along the adjacent horse track.

The show must go on, as they say—but folks here are keeping a wary eye on the weather forecasts, which as I write this have announced that Hurricane Florence has attained category-4 status and is taking aim at North Carolina. Being far inland, TIEC is not in real danger of sizeable hurricane damage, says my local host, USDF secretary and US Equestrian “S” dressage judge Margaret Freeman; but it’s looking likely that the area will be slammed with rain on Friday, which is the day the dressage Grand Prix Special competition—for this WEG’s first dressage individual medals—is scheduled to be held. 

Florence or no Florence, the dressage competition at the FEI World Equestrian Games Tryon 2018 officially gets under way tomorrow morning with the horse inspection. All of the American horses have been working well, according to US Equestrian dressage national technical advisor and chef d’équipeRobert Dover, for whom these Games are his swan song and the finish line of his famous “Roadmap to the Podiums” initiative. Steffen Peters’ named WEG mount, Rosamunde, is in good health and faring well, Peters said, but his reserve mount, Suppenkasper, was training so well that US Equestrian decided to sub in “Mopsie” after “Rosie” suffered what US Equestrian called a minor case of dehydration after shipping to Tryon.

“I could not be more proud of everything the riders, the federation, and our entire United States dressage community has come together to produce for the years I’ve been involved as the chefand the technical advisor,” Dover said. “I just can’t wait to in the arena and get going!”

2 comments:

  1. Disgraceful. This facility should NEVER have been awarded this event.

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