Ok I wasn't there, but it was great to see a horse I had followed since 2018 take the win at the prestigous Badminton Horse Trials
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Laura and London 52 at Blenheim 2018 |
Press release
Laura
Collett realised a childhood dream as she won Badminton Horse Trials, presented
by Mars Equestrian, after a superb performance on Karen Bartlett and Keith
Scottās London 52. Lauraās finishing score of 21.4 ā she added a mere 0.4 of a
show jumping time penalty to her dressage mark ā is a record completion score
for Badminton.
Runner-up Ros Canter, the only rider to finish on her dressage score, showed
she has another world champion in the making with the 10-year-old Lordships
Graffalo, while Oliver Townend cemented his world number one position with
third and fifth places on Swallow Springs and Ballaghmor Class respectively,
each of his greys hitting a fence apiece.
It was the first British one-two-three since Pippa Funnell led William Fox-Pitt
and Leslie Law 20 years ago in 2002, and Laura Collett revealed that Pippaās
win on Supreme Rock had been her childhood inspiration. āI was going round the
cross-country on my auntās shoulders and I wanted to be Pippa Funnell winning
Badminton,ā she said.
When Laura entered the arena, she had the luxury of a fence in hand over Ros,
but the pressure was huge. āThat horse is amazing,ā she said of her Tokyo
Olympic gold medallist. āHe jumped his socks off. I couldnāt see a distance
anywhere but he just got higher and higher.ā
Ros was full of praise for her new superstar who was contesting his first
five-star. āāWalterāsā eyes were on stalks when we arrived but he enjoyed every
part of it ā especially the prize giving. He will have learnt so much in the
last few days.ā
Piggy March and the gallant 17-year-old mare Vanir Kamira, the 2019 Badminton
winners who set the early standard on the cross-country, finished an honourable
fourth with just one pole down. āI think thatās the best āTillyā has ever
jumped. She left her heart out on the cross country course yesterday so I was a
bit worried today, but shouldnāt have been,ā Piggy said.
David Doel, who lives just 20 minutes down the road from Badminton, had a dream
debut, finishing in sixth place on Galileo Nieuwmoed with a double clear, and
Kitty King, a member of last yearās winning European championships team, was
seventh on Vendredi Biats.
Irishman Austin OāConnor interrupted British domination with eighth place on
the spectacular Colorado Blue, and American first-timer Tamra Smith was ninth
on Mai Baum. Britainās Richard Jones and Alfies Clover rounded up the top 10.
After a gap of three years, support for the event was huge: 180,000 visitors
attended over the four days, and the many tradestands did a roaring trade,
delighted to be back.
āIt was everything I could have wished for,ā said Event Director Jane Tuckwell.
āLots of happy people, fantastic result, wonderful sponsors in our presenting
partner Mars Equestrian and our official partner Lifesource BP. It's a dream
come true at last. Bring on 2023.ā
My final bit
Great result for British riders, would have been happy with any of Laura, Ros or Ollie winning, but not a great result for British Breeding. I'll try again next year (if I'm fit enough) and take it from there. Finally here's a video from 2018 featuring the 9yo London 52.
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