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Articles: Press Release
Flameng and Roxanne Wow Crowd for Victory in Rolex/USEF National Show
Jumping Championship, CSI-W Phase One at 123rd National Horse Show and
Family Festival
Photo Credit: Roxanne and Eric Flameng, winners of the Rolex/USEF
National Show Jumping Championship, CSI-W at the 123rd National Horse
Show and Family Festival. Photo (c) 2006 Peter Llewellyn/PMG Pictures.
Contact:
Jennifer Wood of
Kenneth Kraus of
Phelps Media Group, Inc.
at (561) 753-3389 or at info@phelpsmediagroup.com
Wellington, FL - December 1, 2006 - Riding out of the first spot in the
order and in the jump-off, Belgium's Eric Flameng picked up his second
win at the 123rd National Horse Show and Family Festival at the Palm
Beach Polo Equestrian Club. His second time in the winner's circle came
with the gigantic mare Roxanne, owned by Floriac, LLC, in the first
phase of the Rolex/USEF National Show Jumping Championship, CSI-W.
Flameng also won the opening speed class on Wednesday afternoon with
Mazelle.
Today's course was a Timed First Jump-off format and was designed by
Jose Gamarra of Bolivia. The class had a maximum height of 1.60m and
offered first place prize money of $15,000. The winner of class also
received the Walter B. Devereux Memorial Challenge Trophy, which was
donated by Mrs. Ernest Sleddon Bessette, Jr., Mrs. Kris Colvin, and the
late Mrs. Walter B. Devereux. The Devereux Perpetual Trophy is awarded
to the highest placed international rider, which went to Flameng.
Today's class was the first phase of the Rolex/USEF National Show
Jumping Championship and was a qualifier for the 2007 Rolex FEI World
Cup Jumping Finals in Las Vegas, NV, in April.
The class saw 32 entries, of which seven made it to the shortened speed
round. One rider had one time fault in the given 74 second time allowed,
and five riders had four faults. There were three retirements and one
elimination.
Flameng rode first in the order and made the course look smooth as
Roxanne powered over the course. He was quickly joined by Olinda and
Todd Minikus, who went third. Two rounds later, BCO Olymp and Eliza
Shuford joined the list. Just three trips later, Canada's Frankie
Chesler Ortiz and Picolien Zeldenrust made the jump-off. It took another
ten trips, but McLain Ward and the dependable Sapphire were clear for
the jump-off as well. Another nine trips later, Candice King and
Caliskan joined them. The group was rounded out by another Canadian,
Mario Deslauriers, who went clear on Naomi.
As the first to go in the jump-off, Flameng took a somewhat conservative
approach to get a clear round and put pressure on those following him.
The almost 18 hand high Roxanne had no problem stretching through the
one stride and over fence 4c, which was a wide oxer. They finished clear
in a time of 37.92 seconds.
Minikus and Olinda were next to attempt and just barely touched the back
rail at 4c, causing four faults, but they finished in a speedy time of
35.47 seconds.
Shuford and BCO Olymp tried to best Minikus' time and made a short cut
back to the one stride, which left them with four faults at fence 4b.
They galloped to the last jump, another wide oxer, and rolled the front
rail for a total of eight faults in 36.96 seconds.
Ortiz and Picolien Zeldenrust were yet another to fall prey to fence 4c,
and had the plank at the oxer of fence seven. A refusal at the final
jump gave them twelve jumping faults and seven time faults in 46.94
seconds.
When Ward and Sapphire entered the ring, many knew that they might be
the pair to beat in this jump-off, but it was another heartbreaking rail
at 4c that gave them four faults. Ward raced home in a time of 35.30
seconds, which slotted them into second place.
Caliskan and Candice King lost momentum in turning to the one stride and
were another to have a rail at the long 4c oxer. Their slower time of
37.95 seconds gave them an eventual fifth place ribbon.
The last to challenge Flameng's clear round was Deslauriers. He made a
different turn to the one stride, deciding instead to take a wide turn
around the light stand for more room. It was not enough for Naomi,
however, and the pair had a rail at the oxer. They finished with four
faults in a time of 37.65 seconds.
Flameng termed his second win here as "excellent!" and noted that it was
his biggest win and the second grand prix win for Roxanne. He did not
think his time would hold up, as Roxanne is a large mare and not the
fastest across the ground. "Sometimes you have to go first, but nobody
likes that," he said with a grin.
"It was nice for me today," he went on to say. "The course was tough
enough. With the lights like that, you never know what will go on
exactly. I think my mare wouldn't like it, but actually she liked it.
Her size makes me a bit more confident."
Flameng has been paired with Roxanne for four years and knows her speed
limitations. "She's not a fast mare. I've never been fast with her. I
just tried to do what was possible to do for me and my mare," he said.
Ward said of Flameng's ride, "It was the ride I expected. I know his
horse very well. She's a very big, powerful horse. She's like Sapphire;
she's not the fastest horse to move across the ground. I know Eric is a
very smart rider. He did the right thing. To run the horse crazy and
have four faults, you put no pressure on anybody. To put in a solid,
efficient round and put pressure- we all felt it a little bit.
Unfortunately for Todd and I, we had to think about a couple people
behind us as well. At that point, you really wanted to put the gauntlet
down, so to speak."
Ward made the decision after the first round to remove his spurs, which
may have had an effect on his jump-off. "It was a big oxer coming out of
a tight combination. It came early in the first round. It was a scope
test. I thought other than that, it wasn't that scopey of a jump-off,"
he explained. "One of these days, maybe I'll stop letting Sapphire down.
I took the spur off for the jump-off. She felt like she jumped amazing,
but was a little fresh. I hadn't jumped a fence with her since Syracuse.
Normally, she handles that [kind of fence] very well, but when I went to
kick her, because it was so early, she just went so high. I think I made
a little bit of a tactical error doing that, but she was brilliant again
like she always is."
Minikus was another rider that was disappointed in his four faults, but
very happy with his mare. He expressed, "I think I cheated Olinda out of
a win. She came out of there quite well." Minikus explained why he
thought he had the rail at the out of the one stride, "In a couple of
the jump-offs she's been in, she's been so aggressive in the
combinations that she's had the front rail. I kind of protected the
front rail and didn't really leg her enough to the back end. She had the
lightest rub of all. If you had told me this morning that I'd be third
tonight, I wouldn't believe it."
Minikus feels that Olinda had lots of potential in these types of big
grand prix classes for the future. "I think she's a very quality up and
coming mare. I started showing her in August in the grand prix and she's
been very competitive. She's very green as far as this level of
competition, but I'm pretty excited about the winter circuit coming up.
She's a class horse."
Today's class gave riders points towards qualifying for the World Cup.
McLain said he felt "a little anxiety" before today about qualifying,
but today's points put him squarely in the top rankings. Minikus laughed
that he did not know where he stood in the list, but that he had plans
for his mare. "I'll be heading to Jacksonville to try and claim some
more World Cup points. I think she deserves to go to the World Cup. I'm
going to try and get in there," he said.
Today's class was the first phase of the Rolex/USEF National Show
Jumping Championship. The Final Phase of the Rolex/USEF National Show
Jumping Championship will offer another $50,000 in prize money and is
scheduled to start at 2 p.m. on Sunday, December 3.
To determine the champion, points will be awarded to each horse and
rider combination according to the following system: The point scale for
both Phases will be determined by the number of entries competing in
Phase I. The winner will earn two more points than the second placed
combination, and the second placed combination will earn one more point
than the third. Each placing will subsequently be given a score based on
this formula and the order in which they finish the competition. The
Rolex/USEF National Show Jumping Champion will be the horse/rider
combination who has received the most points combined from Phase One and
the Final Phase.
In addition, another generous Rider's Bonus Pool of $25,000 will be
awarded to the top two horse and rider combinations that have received
the most points in both phases. The champion will win a trophy and
$15,000, and the reserve champion wins $10,000.
The National Show Jumping Championship is made possible this year by one
of the most generous sponsors in equestrian sport. Rolex has partnered
with the USEF (formerly the AHSA) to help make equestrians' dreams come
true since 1997. They were the title sponsor of last year's event as
well.
The Young Jumper Championship International held their second qualifying
class today. Today's class for each division, combined with Thursday's
class, count cumulatively towards qualification in Sunday's final and to
determine the final's order of go. The orders of go, with the best rider
going last, have been determined for the three age divisions.
1503 - $20,000 YJC 5-YEAR-OLD INTERNATIONAL START ORDER
Horse Rider
Owner FAULTS TIME
Chalupa Amanda Flint
Rory Hovell 16 67.793
Solomon Derek Peterson
Bridget Imparato 13 70.399
Feature Attracton Roberto Teran
King Ridge Stables 12 66.090
For Rosas Pleasure Juan Ortiz
Sher Al Farm 12 64.403
Onno Z Sergio Campos
Annemarie Kennedy 11 62.390
Uno Niall Grimes
H&M Stables 8 67.014
Skylands Con Chino Z Josh Dolan
Josh Dolan 8 63.830
No Worries Devin Ryan
Barbara Rowland 8 62.333
Brisco Niall Grimes
Amanda Dinsmore 4 63.045
Hidden Creek Remarkable Judy Garofalo Torres Hidden
creek Farm 4 62.775
Baloume Z Pablo Barrios
Ronald Krise 1 72.927
Sirena Craig Martin
Craig Martin 0 66.331
Adonis Darragh Kerins
Natalie Nicodema 0 63.788
Uno 002 Laura Kraut
Mary Moricoli 0 60.466
Utmost ISF Kate Gerhart
Cathy Gerhart 0 60.247
1506 - $20,000 YJC 6-YEAR-OLD INTERNATIONAL START ORDER
Horse Rider
Owner FAULTS
The Who Niall Grimes
Alicia House 12
Turbo Jonathan McCrea
Candy Tribble/Windsor Show Stable 12
Grey Goose Blythe Masters
Blythe Masters 12
Monkey du Parc Sergio Campos
Dianna Rodolpho 12
Blue Danube* Darragh Kerins
Tatra Farm 12
Sandhya Sergio Campos
Mill Creek Stables 8
Court Jester Casey Hodges
Wendy Arndt Hodges 8
Troubador Mariano Bedoya Guido
Bullneck Barn 4
Aslan Frankie Chesler Ortiz
Sher Al Farm 4
High Society 002 Darragh Kerins
Ralph Caristo 4
Encore 3E Roberto Teran
King Ridge Stables 4
Timo Kate Gerhart
Cathy Gerhart 0
Executive Privilege 3E Roberto Teran
King Ridge Stables 0
Moet Walk* Aaron Vale
Tatra Farm 0
Quilmes Holly Shepherd
Sarah Patterson 0
Blast Off Kate Goodman
Kate Goodman 0
1508 $30,000 YJC 7&8 Year Old International Start Order (Reverse)
Horse Rider
Owner SUBTOTAL
R2T
Varnese Charlie Jayne
Alex R Jayne 0
58.220
Olympia Laura Kraut
Olympia Partnership 0
61.088
Curioso Z Pablo Barrios
Ronald Krise 0
63.004
Quick Study Lauren Hough
Laura Mateo 0
63.964
Qena II Colin Syquia
Ladson LLC 0
64.113
Savanna B Aimee Aron
Kinloch Enterprises 4
59.255
Distant Star Roberto Teran
King Ridge Stables 4
60.358
Palm Sunday Yvonne Bryan
Amen Corner Farm 4
61.798
Versailles Holly Mitten
Wassic LLC 8
60.735
Witney van Berkenbroek Kate Levy Kate
Levy 8
61.372
Accordian Robert Kraut
Happy Hill Farm 8
61.955
La Congo Nona Garson
The Ridge Farm LLC 8
62.457
Phelox Francisco Martinez
Erika Morales 8
63.661
Double Diamond Roberto Teran
King Ridge Stables 8
64.460
Results of Class 1004 Rolex/USEF National CSI-W
National Horse Show
November 29 - December 3, 2006
T/A: 74.00 T/A: 40.00
1 334 ROXANNE ERIC FLAMENG BEL 0.00 71.56 0.00 37.92
FLORIAC LLC
2 587 SAPPHIRE MCLAIN WARD USA 0.00 69.39 4.00 35.30
MCLAIN WARD
3 247 OLINDA TODD MINIKUS USA 0.00 72.21 4.00 35.47
HOULIHAN LAWRENCE
4 539 NAOMI MARIO DESLAURIERS CAN 0.00 68.52 4.00 37.65
MARIO DESLAURIERS
5 279 CALISKAN CANDICE KING USA 0.00 72.50 4.00 37.95
LOUISBURG FARM
6 200 B.C.O. OLYMP ELIZA SHUFORD USA 0.00 71.08 8.00 36.96
ELIZA SHUFORD
7 101 PICOLIEN ZELDENRUST FRANKIE CHESLER ORTI CAN 0.00 70.64 19.00
46.94
SHER AL FARM
8 44 LANGUSTER NONA GARSON USA 1.00 75.28
RYAN AUTOMOTIVE
9 548 ILIAN SCHUYLER RILEY USA 4.00 70.55
SOUTH BEACH STABLE
10 541 OBELIX R LISA SILVERMAN USA 4.00 70.60
LISA SILVERMAN
11 637 CARLOW CLOVER ROBIN SWEELY USA 4.00 71.02
ACORN HILL FARM
12 146 VENT DU NORD KATE LEVY USA 4.00 71.10
KATE LEVY
13 569 DARVIN GARBO HENRIK S. GUNDERSEN DEN 4.00 71.24
HENRIK S. GUNDERSEN
14 611 CIM CHRISTO GEORGINA BLOOMBERG USA 5.00 75.33
GOTHAM ENTERPRIZES
15 656 HIDDEN CREEK'S PERIN MARGIE ENGLE USA 8.00 66.43
HIDDEN CREEK FARM
Tomorrow's jumper schedule at the 123rd National Horse Show and Family
Festival includes the NHS Amateur-Owner, Junior and Open Jumper Speed
Stakes which will start at 8 a.m. in the Internationale Arena. In the
deNemethy Arena, the NHS Children's Jumper and Palm Beach Daily News
Adult Amateur Jumper Speed Classics will start at 10 a.m.
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