2019 USDF FEI-Level Trainers Conference

2019 USDF FEI-Level Trainers Conference
Showing posts with label Grand Prix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grand Prix. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Sweet Sixteen

Team USA wins FEI World Equestrian Games dressage silver for the first time since 2002
 
2018 WEG team dressage silver medalists Kasey Perry-Glass, Adrienne Lyle, Steffen Peters, and Laura Graves of the USA with technical advisor and chef d'equipe Robert Dover. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. 
“They’ve worked very hard for this.”

Not that we had any doubts that the four members of the 2018 US World Equestrian Games dressage team had put in the time and the blood, sweat, and tears to get there; but there was the affirmation, standing next to me ringside for the dressage team medal ceremony at the FEI WEG Tryon 2018.

It was Diane Perry, Team USA member Kasey Perry-Glass’s mom and the owner of Perry-Glass’s WEG mount, Goerklintgaards Dublet. Between wielding her smartphone video camera to record the ceremony for posterity and exhorting “Dublet” to please keep all four feet on the ground, Perry was every horse-show mom writ large: proud, perhaps a little overwhelmed, adrenaline-fueled but tired from the long hours in the North Carolina heat and humidity, and already gearing up for her daughter’s next effort (asked whether they’d be celebrating tonight, Perry quickly replied: “Oh, no. We have a horse show tomorrow,” referring to the Grand Prix Special).
 
Group hug! Team USA's Debbie McDonald, Kasey Perry-Glass, Adrienne Lyle, and Steffen Peters embrace after watching Laura Graves clinch the team silver medal on Verdades, while sponsor Betsy Juliano and chef Robert Dover look on. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. 
It’s easy to forget, when we see our dressage idols on the covers of magazines, and when they and their entourages and their sponsorships and their celebrity make them seem larger than life, that top riders are daughters and wives and moms and dads—people who were endowed with a generous helping of talent and ambition and grit and of course luck, but also people who probably have a lot in common with those of you who are reading this. They love horses. They love riding. They love dressage. Watching Diane Perry cheer for her daughter as she stepped onto the WEG dressage medal podium for the first time, the glamorous medal ceremony suddenly felt very personal.

But competition at this international level isn’t really personal; it’s about national pride first and foremost, with glory for one’s team and one’s country superseding individual accomplishment. Although dressage is ultimately about one rider’s partnership with one horse, “top sport,” as the Europeans call it, is a machine the way NFL football is a machine: an industry and a very serious business while at the same time serving as entertainment and hobby for the spectator and fan.
 
German team gold medalist Isabell Werth and Bella Rose were the highest-scoring pair of the WEG Grand Prix team competition. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
The German dressage machine has dominated the discipline for decades, and today was no exception. The team of Isabell Werth on Bella Rose, Sonke Rothenberger on Cosmo, Jessica Bredow-Werndl on TSF Dalera BB, and Dorothee Schneider on Sammy Davis Jr. swept the 2018 WEG dressage team competition with a total score of 242.950. Werth and her “dream horse,” Bella Rose, topped both her teammates and the entire field with their score of 84.829 percent in a largely flawless test marked by elegance and elasticity.
 
Top USA scorer Laura Graves and Verdades. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Last to go in the entire team competition was the most hotly anticipated pair of the largely American crowd: top-ranked US rider Laura Graves and her famous Verdades. They did not disappoint, laying down a powerful Grand Prix test marred only by “Diddy’s” slight spook at an FEI TV camera near C to earn a score of 81.537 percent, which put Graves second individually behind Werth. 

Graves’ usual sparkling smile seemed a bit dimmed during the medal ceremony, and at the press conference we found out why: She confessed to being “a little under the weather.” Here’s hoping she gets some needed rest and feels better for tomorrow’s GP Special—although she said that “adrenaline is an amazing thing” because as soon as she put her foot in the stirrup today, all else was forgotten.

Perry-Glass’s score of 76.739 percent was the second-highest of the US team, which clinched the silver medal on a team total score of 233.136.

“It felt great,” Perry-Glass said of her Grand Prix test afterward. “He was 100 percent in warm-up, and I really felt like he brought the power that we were looking for in the test.”

“He’s so sensitive,” Perry-Glass said of the 15-year-old Danish Warmblood gelding (Diamond Hit x Ferro). “I had to figure out that balance between asking for more and not asking for too much. I think we’re really right on the cusp of being really great with that. 

“He has every opportunity to be up with Isabell and Laura,” Perry-Glass continued. Referring to their excellent finishes in Aachen this year, she said: “We’ve done it once before. I know we can do it again.” With tears welling, she said, “I’m going to cry because I love him so much.”

For a report on Team USA silver medalists Steffen Peters’ and Adrienne Lyle’s tests yesterday, click here.

Since the retirement of Charlotte Dujardin’s superstar mount Valegro, the dressage world has wondered whether Great Britain would remain among the top powers in the sport. The answer, as evidenced by today’s WEG team dressage bronze medal, is yes. 
 
Great Britain's Charlotte Dujardin and her new star partner, Mount St. John Freestyle. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Dujardin, back on the international scene for the first time since winning individual gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics with Valegro, was Team GBR’s top scorer, earning 77.764 percent on the astonishingly young-yet-accomplished nine-year-old Hanoverian mare, Mount St. John Freestyle (Fidermark x Donnerhall). “Freestyle” handled the atmosphere in the US Trust Arena with ease, making just a few green mistakes—this was only Freestyle’s sixth Grand Prix—and Dujardin said afterward that the mare’s nickname of “Mrs. Valegro” is not an exaggeration.

“She has three very normal paces,” Dujardin said, “but when I started riding her, she has unbelievable trainability. And then her scope for what she can do: She can just put her legs wherever she wants! She’s so brave and she gives so much… She has the same attitude [as Valegro]: She goes in that arena, she’s not afraid of anything; she tries so hard. I know when she’s stronger and the mistakes aren’t there, it’s going to be very, very exciting. I think she may be as good as him one day. 
 
2018 WEG team bronze medalists Carl Hester of Great Britain on Hawtins Delicato. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Finishing just behind his most famous pupil was Carl Hester, also on a relatively inexperienced horse, the 10-year-old Hanoverian gelding Hawtins Delicato (Diamond Hit x Regazzoni). The stunning “Del” put in a lovely and elastic test with just a few bobbles to earn a score of 77.283. The British team was rounded out by Spencer Wilton on Super Nova II (74.581) and Emile Faurie on Dono di Maggio (72.795), for a team total of 229.628.

Said Hester afterward: “I said to Charlotte, with these young horses, we can’t compete them all around Europe and then fly them to a WEG and expect them to be on form. They would be exhausted. Our plan was to do the British shows and then come here. Having said that, I’ve had a week…it’s been a bit tense because the horse hasn’t really walked, he hasn’t really halted. Then this morning, one week later, we walked around the ring at 7:30 this morning on a loose rein; he walked around twice and I thought, I’m going to have a good ride today. And I did. He has such good paces, this horse. He might not be the superstar flash of some of the others, but he is so good with his hind legs, he has such a great walk.”

With that, the stage is set for an exciting start to the WEG individual dressage competition. Two medals are at stake—GP Special and GP Freestyle—and the Special kicks off tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. EDT. Watch on FEI TV or catch WEG dressage on NBC Sports' Olympic Channel.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

A Strong Showing and a Surprise on Day 1 of WEG Team Dressage Competition

Adrienne Lyle and Salvino piaffed Team USA into third place after the first day of team dressage competition at the 2018 WEG. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

With two days of dressage competition needed to accommodate the 77 entries at the FEI World Equestrian Games Tryon 2018, half of each team competes each day. After the draw that determined start order, each team’s chef d’équipe got to decide which horse-rider combinations would ride today, day 1; and which will go tomorrow.

The usual strategy is to have the less-experienced combinations go on day 1, thereby saving the team’s biggest guns for the end, and perhaps the higher-scoring end of the competition.
 
Steffen Peters and Suppenkasper. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Team USA’s newest combination, Suppenkasper and Steffen Peters (“a young kid and an old rider,” as Peters put it), was first of the four Americans to go down center line in the U.S. Trust Arena. Ten-year-old “Mopsie,” a KWPN gelding (Spielberg x Krack C) owned by Four Winds Farm, put in a solid effort (although, quivering with excitement at the applause from the home-country crowd, he couldn’t bring himself to stand immobile in the entry halt) to earn a more-than-respectable score of 73.494 percent. 
 
Scott Hassler and Steffen Peters chat before the start of competition. Photo by Jennifer Bryant. 
“I’m very happy with how he handled this,” Peters said afterward, “because it’s a huge step up from Aachen as far as relaxation. He walked beautifully; the rein back was a little bit better; there was overall less tension in there. I could actually push some of the extensions, which was new: Usually I just hold my breath and hope he doesn’t break into the canter because it’s so big. He did beautiful pirouettes today; the zigzag was also good—that’s also a bit tricky for him. The changes felt nice. For this stage and his sensitivity, it’s really good.”
 
The USA's Olivia LaGoy-Weltz, who did the test Grand Prix ride on Lonoir before the start of competition, receives congratulations from a WEG official. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
It’s hard to think of a WEG as a warm-up act, but that’s sort of what it is for Mopsie, said Peters, who said that the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games are “the reason for the purchase. We [‘we’ being himself and sponsor Akiko Yamazaki] are hoping when he turns 12, 13, that will be his prime.”
 
Crowds were sparse for the start of WEG dressage competition but filled in as the day went on. Some attendees reported hearing tales of spectators' being scared off by the threat of the impending Hurricane Florence. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Mopsie is “the kindest, sweetest horse I’ve ever dealt with,” Peters said. The horse turns his head for approving scratches when he halts, and “his favorite thing is to [have someone] scratch his nose. He can do that for hours. He’s a puppy dog. He’s a big Labradoodle, that’s what he is.”
 
Getting ready to step onto the world stage is a major production. An FEI TV camera crew records every moment of last-minute preparation of the first dressage rider to go, Portugal's Manuel Veiga on Ben Hur Da Broa. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Peters said he’s content with the decision to enter Mopsie instead of his originally named mount, Rosamunde, also owned by Four Winds Farm. In training this week, the gelding was stepping up to the plate a bit more “and I was having to ask him to do a bit less,” he said. Mopsie’s can-do attitude won him the spot on Team USA for these Games.
 
A rain-dampened Robert Dover and Debbie McDonald look on during Adrienne Lyle's Grand Prix test. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Besting Peters, with a score of 74.860 percent, was his 2012 London Olympics and 2014 WEG teammate Adrienne Lyle, back on the international stage with Salvino, an 11-year-old Hanoverian stallion (Sandro Hit x Donnerhall) owned by Betsy Juliano LLC. Echoing her experience at the 2014 WEG in Normandy, Lyle encountered a sudden drenching rain that lasted just long enough to soak herself and the previous competitor, the Netherlands’ Hans Peter Minderhoud on Glock’s Dream Boy N.O.P. Mother Nature turned off the faucet just as Lyle went down center line—and turned back on the oppressively sticky heat that reduced competitors, spectators, and officials alike to soggy puddles.

“It starting pouring when I was warming up, and I said to Debbie [McDonald, her coach of 13 years], ‘Well, I know it’s WEG if it’s pouring!’” Lyle said afterward.

“I’ve never ridden in front of our home country [at an international championships] before, and I didn’t know how he was going to handle it, with all the extra cheering,” Lyle said of Salvino, “but I think he liked it.”

The downpour “was a bit of a disruption,” said Lyle, who scrambled to “change gloves and dry off things so I could hold the reins. And then it’s blazing hot the next second! Fitness is a big factor here, as well. He’s a big, dark horse, and I’ve done my best to get him as fit as I could, and I’m glad I did because it took every ounce of fitness he had out there to get through the heat.”
 
WEG dressage spectators did their best to keep cool in the afternoon sun and sticky humidity. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
You can’t open a social-media feed these days without seeing a warm-and-fuzzy photo of members of the US dressage team hugging and looking like BFFs. According to Lyle, it’s not an act.

“We’re all such a good group of friends. It really does make a difference when you know they’ll be there for you at the drop of a hat and support you in any way possible.”

Lyle says she’s “going to have a lot of fun with the [Grand Prix] Special,” Lyle said. “I like that test better.” She feels the Special plays to Salvino’s strengths, including piaffe/passage and extensions, and hopes for higher scores on Friday.
 
German eventing competitor Ingrid Klimke (center) applauds the dressage effort of her countrywoman Jessica von Bredow-Werndl. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

Jessica von Bredow-Werndl and TSF Dalera BB put Germany in the lead after the first of two days of dressage competition. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.

Before then, we have team medals to decide tomorrow. After the first day of competition, the USA stood in third place, with Germany leading and—in a bit of a surprise—the Swedish team in second. Germany’s Jessica von Bredow-Werndl on the 11-year-old Trakehner mare TSF Dalera BB (Easy Game x Handryk) posted the day’s top score of 76.677 percent. Juliette Ramel on Buriel K.H., a 12-year-old KWPN gelding (Osmium x Krack C), was the top rider for Sweden, and Lyle lies in third. Team standings were calculated based on the top score of the two riders who competed today. 

Thursday, March 30, 2017

It's Shaping up to Be an Isabell-Laura Showdown

Germany's Werth wins Grand Prix, with the USA's Laura Graves right behind

The queen of collection: Weihegold OLD's outstanding pirouettes and piaffe-passage tour put Germany's Isabell Werth on top in the World Cup Dressage Final Grand Prix. The photo captured the moment that Werth is making a transition from passage to piaffe, rocking the mare back on her haunches. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.


For much of the afternoon, British Olympic team gold medalist Carl Hester and Nip Tuck looked untouchable in the Grand Prix, the first leg of the 2017 FEI World Cup Dressage Final in Omaha.

Hester’s score of 76.671% set the bar high, and it wasn’t until the last two riders that anyone was able to top it.
 
Great Britain's Carl Hester and Nip Tuck led in the Grand Prix until the last two riders. They finished third. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
Dutchman Edward Gal, who won the Final in 2010 aboard Totilas, seemed Hester’s closest contender. But his score of 74.485% with Glock’s Voice put Gal in fourth place after the last of the 16 riders had gone.

Along the way, the USA saw strong scores from 2016 Olympians Kasey Perry-Glass on Goerklintgaards Dublet (who finished seventh on 73.828%) and Steffen Peters on his new partner, Rosamunde (eighth on 72.257%). “Dublet’s” test showed lovely harmony and relaxation, with accurate and correct work that prompted audio commentator and retired US FEI 5* dressage judge Axel Steiner to call the 29-year-old Perry-Glass “one of our up-and-coming stars.”

“I think she has what it takes to really move up” in the international standings,” Steiner said.

The almost ridiculously supple Rosamunde can flex her loins and hindquarter joints so much that she can “pedestal” in the piaffe, and one wonders if she can be a bit of a Gummy Worm in movements requiring straightness. Her tempi changes “swing” a bit—more noticeable in the twos—and she became a bit quick and frantic for a moment in the final piaffe/passage tour, probably a result of a momentary loss of balance. But it’s important to keep in mind that this mare is only 10 years old—and, as Steiner pointed out, Peters wasn’t really aiming her for this World Cup Final; he knows she needs to mature a bit, and she’ll be stronger, more experienced, and better by the time the 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games and the 2020 Olympics roll around.
 
Although judge Katrina Wuest said Verdades has so much power that his straightness occasionally wavered, in this photo he appears arrow-straight with the USA's Laura Graves in piaffe on the center line. The top US pair was second in the Grand Prix. Photo by Jennifer Bryant.
In today’s Grand Prix, however, both Perry-Glass and Peters took a back seat to the USA’s current number-one pair, Laura Graves and Verdades, who didn’t quite break the 80-percent barrier with their score of 79.800, which was good enough for second place. Graves put in a powerful and accurate test. There was one unsteady moment in the transition from passage to extended walk, and from my vantage point it appeared that “Diddy’s” haunches led in one canter half-pass right in the zigzags. The overall impression, though, was of great correctness and gaits that head judge Katrina Wuest of Germany praised as “maybe the best paces” of the three highest-placed finishers.

The adage about saving the best for last was true today: Isabell Werth of Germany, ranked number one aboard Weihegold OLD coming in to this Final and favored to win, did not disappoint. Despite a flubbed line of two-tempis that Werth later called pure rider error, the 12-year-old Oldenburg mare put in collected work of such high quality that she alone broke 80, winning the Grand Prix on a score of 82.300%. At the post-competition press conference, Carl Hester praised Werth’s unsurpassed ability to produce outstanding piaffe, passage, and other collected work from her mounts, with great shortening of the strides yet maintaining maximum activity.

“I was very happy,” Werth said afterward. “She felt a little bit tense when I came in, and of course there was big applause for Laura, so I had to start a bit careful. Besides the two-tempis—and certainly it was my fault, like always it’s the rider’s fault when you have mistakes—I felt safe. The rest was really good, very fantastic. The pirouettes and piaffe/passage, I’m completely happy, and I’m looking forward to the next days.”

“I came here to win,” Graves said, “and finishing second to Isabell still feels a lot like winning. I’m super-proud of my horse and the way he’s developed in the past two years. He’s extremely spooky; he’s a lot to manage in that kind of environment. He felt really honest. We had a couple of mistakes, mostly rider error, and they were unfortunately in double-coefficient movements, but that puts me in a place to be very excited about Saturday—knowing that if [I] ride clean, it could be a really good show.”

Wuest, who officiated at “C,” offered her assessment of the day’s top finishers.

“Verdades is an extremely powerful horse…. But sometimes Laura has to keep this big, big impulsion under control, and that made her appear sometimes just a little crooked on the center line. Isabell’s horse is extremely collected and does everything with ease and is extremely straight. Except for the two-tempis, there was not the slightest hint of an inconsistency or a mistake. The same with Carl. The motor of his horse is not a Ferrari, and he knows, but he gets a 9 for [the entry halt and salute] for straightness and accuracy.”

Hester has said many times that “Barney” is hot and spooky, and he said that his World Cup strategy was “to give him an easy Grand Prix, coast around so that he’s fresh for Saturday.” But I’m going to make sure I put my foot on the pedal for Saturday,” he said in response to Wuest’s observation, garnering laughs from the audience and the other riders.

Saturday, of course, is the one that counts: the Grand Prix Freestyle, the winner of which will be crowned the 2017 FEI World Cup Dressage Final champion.

One incident marred the otherwise outstanding day of competition: Wendi Williamson of New Zealand was eliminated after the Grand Prix when the FEI steward’s post-competition equipment check revealed blood in the mouth of her mount, Dejavu MH. The FEI “blood rule” mandates automatic elimination.

A score of 60% or better in the Grand Prix is required for a World Cup Dressage Final competitor to advance to the freestyle final. Therefore, the other rider who will not compete Saturday is Hanna Karasiova of Belarus, who achieved only a 58.885% aboard Arlekino today.