Articles: Horse News
Burnett Remains Perfect to Win CCI3*; Montgomery Dominates CCI2* at USEF
National Eventing Championships at Dansko Fair Hill International
Hannah Burnett and St. Barths
(Stockimageservices.com)
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NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 17, 2010
By Joanie Morris
Elkton, MD - There was a plenty at stake at the Dansko Fair Hill
International, as 44 CCI2* horses and 24 CCI3* horses went to task in the
USEF National Eventing Championships over Sally Ike's show jumping courses
on a perfect October day.
Hannah Burnett did something no one has ever done, the 2009 National CCI2*
Champion returned to Fair Hill with Richard Thompson's St. Barths and
finished on her dressage score to claim the 2010 USEF National CCI3*
Eventing Championship 12 months later.
"I'm really excited," said Burnett. "I have been building up to this event
all year. I feel like I've improved over the year and my horse has too. Nike
is a typical chestnut redhead. He sometimes comes out like a horse I've
never sat on before, so it's difficult to guess who he is going to be on the
third day sometimes. I felt very good, I can tell over the first jump if I
am really going to have to help him out."
Nike didn't need any help today and despite an immaculate ride from Burnett,
the diminutive Thoroughbred never looked in danger of having a rail on
course.
"When we walked it I thought it looked really good," said Burnett.
"It was open and really going but there were turns to set you up. I thought
it looked pretty flowing and nice but the time was obviously an issue."
St. Barths, a nine-year-old Thoroughbred gelding was in second after the
dressage on a score of 49.4, he and Burnett then rocketed around the cross
country with the fastest time of the day to hold on to their position behind
Nate Chambers and Rolling Stone.
Show Jumping has been Chambers' Achilles heel all season, and it came to
fruition again today when Rolling Stone punched out five rails to slip down
the leader board to sixth.
Burnett rode like a woman on a mission, she inherited a little bit of
breathing room after Phillip Dutton (West Grove, PA) had one down on
Fernhill Eagle but she won in a far less dramatic fashion than in 2009 when
she went crashing through the final jump in the show jumping.
St. Barths was foot-perfect around the track and didn't look the slightest
bit spent from his exertion on Saturday even though he was contesting his
very first CCI3*. He was one of only two horses to finish on his dressage
score (the other was Kildronan Abbott ridden by Canadian Peter Barry), and
took home a truck load of prizes back to The Plains, VA where Burnett trains
with Karen and David O'Connor.
Burnett also won the USEF Young Adult Championship awarded to riders aged
22-24, Chambers was the reserve champion. She won the Gladstone Trophy from
the USET Foundation and the Beale Wright Morris Trophy which is awarded to
the Leading Lady Rider.
A two-time Olympic Gold medalist, Dutton just recently returned home from
the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games and has realized another superstar in
his stable. Fernhill Eagle materialized into a CCI3* horse over the
weekend.
Dutton was pleased with the effort put in by the 10-year-old Irish Sport
Horse who has only been in the U.S. since last winter. With bottomless
scope, Dutton continues to work on rideability as the horse has progressed
through the levels.
This pair started the weekend with a 53 in the dressage, skipped around the
cross country well under the time on Saturday but Fernhill Eagle, who is
owned by Rebecca Broussard and Emery Warren, had the front rail of the very
last fence down in the show jumping to mar his perfect weekend. They moved
from third to second after Chambers' debacle.
"I thought it was about right," said Dutton of the course. "There was more
pressure on the time than in the two-star that always adds an element of
difficulty. I though she got it about right."
Kristin Schmolze (Califon, NJ) made a steady rise throughout the weekend
with her veteran Irish Sport Horse Cavaldi. Runners-up here in 2003,
Schmolze was ninth after the dressage on a score of 55.4, she had 4.8 time
faults on the cross country to move up to fourth and then slipped into the
top three on the strength of a beautiful show jumping round.
There were only four double clear rounds in the show jumping (Burnett,
Schmolze, Barry and Karen O'Connor), and all four ended up in the top 10.
Clark Montgomery (Chattahoochee Hills, GA) was not going to be outdone this
weekend as he stormed to both Champion and Reserve honors in the USEF
National CCI2* Eventing
Championship. Riding Loughan Glen, a seven-year-old Irish Thoroughbred
gelding owned by Kathryn Kraft and Holly Becker, Montgomery won the dressage
and never
looked back. He picked up .8 time faults on the cross country but jumped
perfectly over Sally Ike's show jumping track today to win convincingly over
his other ride, Universe.
Clark Montgomery and Loughan Glen
(Stockimageservices.com)
"He's really careful, but he's a bit slower with his feet," said
Montgomery. "He really wanted to leave the rails up and as he keeps growing
and gets stronger he's going to get better."
With a score of 46.10, Loughan Glen had a rail in hand going in to the show
jumping, but never looked in danger of using it. Both horses firmly lived up
to Montgomery's expectation.
"These horses have been doing really well all season," said Montgomery. "I
felt like they were really prepared. There was no reason, if it went really
well for me, that they couldn't be first and second."
Universe moved up from fourth after the dressage in his first CCI2*, he was
three seconds slow on the cross country but duplicated his stablemate's
effort with an immaculate jumping round to finish on 50.4. Only eight years
old, the KWPN gelding came up through the ranks with Montgomery's wife
Jessica and delivered on his potential this weekend.
"(Jessica) rode him up to Prelim, but she finds Intermediate and Advanced a
bit scary," said Montgomery. "So he has the talent and we discussed that at
least for the time being we will see what he can do."
Montgomery's two rising stars couldn't be more different - Loughan Glen is a
slower, more deliberate horse and Universe lives up to his stable name of
'Buzz'.
"Glen is dead quiet," said Montgomery. "Buzz is a much more active horse, he
was just a little bit more on edge in the dressage but that makes the
jumping stuff a little bit easier for him."
Montgomery, 29, expects to be a fixture in the sport for the future, he had
already won the USEF National CCI2* Eventing Championship when it was held
at the Radnor Hunt Three-Day Event in 2001 on Capetown.
"It's what I'm best at," said Montgomery of his career with horses. "I will
do it as long as I am lucky enough to have the horses and the support."
Veteran Phillip Dutton (West Grove, PA) jumped up from seventh after the
cross country to third at the end of the day on the strength of a clear show
jumping round with Jan Byyny's Why Not. Why Not, another seven-year-old
gelding, proved an exciting prospect for the future with his professional
performance in his first attempt at this level.
Dutton was reasonably confident coming into the show jumping as he hasn't
had a rail on Why Not all season, their three-day score of 54.9 left them
comfortably in third place behind Montgomery's pair.
Byyny has been sidelined with an injury for much of 2010, but Why Not has
continued his education with Dutton. He has matured into a quality horse,
much to Dutton's surprise.
"I helped (Jan) with him when she first got him and I wasn't very impressed,
I told her to sell him," said Dutton. "I've been proven completely wrong as
I think he's going to be a very good horse. He'll be a good horse for her
and has the makings of a four-star horse. Hopefully he'll go back to her
next year and be a good horse for her."
Erin Sylvester, who had been second after the first two phases had three
rails down on No Boundaries to finish the weekend in 10th.
Jennie Brannigan finished sixth overall with Walkabout but won the USEF
National 22-24 Year-Old Championship. The former Gold medalist at the North
American Junior/Young Rider Championships continues to win as she moves up
the ranks.
ENDS
Complete results are available here:
http://www.evententries.com/livescoring/14532.html
The vision of the United States Equestrian Federation(r) is to provide
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for equestrian sport in the United States of America by promoting the
pursuit
of excellence from the grassroots to the Olympic Games, based on a
foundation of fair, safe competition and the welfare
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