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Articles: Press Release
Team USA Sits in Fourth Place in Team Show Jumping at XV Pan American
Games in Rio de Janeiro
Contact:
United States Equestrian Federation, Inc.
4047 Iron Works Parkway
Lexington, KY 40511-8483
Tel: (859) 258-2472
Fax (859) 231-6662
Web site: www.usef.org
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 26, 2007
Rio de Janeiro-Some 47 Pan American Games show jumpers entered the arena
at Deodoro Stadium outside of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Thursday
morning to begin the first of two days of team competition. Leading the
way for Team USA was rider Lauren Hough aboard Casadora. The last of the
four to go was Todd Minikus and Pavarotti. Team USA ended the day in a
surprising overall fourth place after the first team qualifier on a
computed score of 10.2. They finished behind the teams from Canada
(first place - 2.72, Brazil (second place - 5.67) and Mexico (third
place - 5.89) among the 10 fielded teams in competition. Seven
individual riders tackled the course. There are high hopes that there
will be a repeat of the U.S. Team Gold medal that was won at the last
Pan American Games in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic in 2003, but
there is plenty of work for that to be realized on Friday. In short, it
was a morning of show jumping filled with some surprises and unexpected
twists.
Fourteen combinations totaling 17 jumping efforts comprised the test.
The class held three double combinations and an open water. There were a
handful of efforts that seemed to turn into curveballs. A first fence
in the combination at 11 was a predominant problem, as was the oxer at
12. Another tricky question for most of the horse-and-rider pairings
came at the double combination at 13, not to leave out the final
obstacle, 14, where the rail seemed to drop time and again. Among the 47
entries, only 17 navigated the course without posting jumping penalties.
Leading the pack for Team USA was the first to enter the ring - Hough.
Partnered with the 11-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare, Casadora (owned by
Laura and Meredith Mateo), the Wellington, FL, resident turned in a
performance on plan. Hough and Casadora posted a computed score of 1.29
to sit in fifth place (or final time of 82.24 seconds, zero faults).
"I thought the course was good, but perhaps a touch on the small side,"
said Hough. "I hope tomorrow's has a little bit bigger fences to
separate these countries a little bit better," referring to the tight
scores between the countries in contention for a Team medal.
"I'm pleased with my round today," she continued. "It was a ride
according to plan, and I'm less than one pole, individually, and we have
a lot more jumping to go. I think, as a team, we are going to rally
tomorrow."
Her conviction and determination were evident, despite sitting just
outside the reach of a spot on the medal podium after the first day's
competition.
"Two poles sounds like a lot, but we are not far from the lead," said
Hough. "We are going to fight for it and try to win a Gold medal."
Immediately behind Hough in the standings from Day One, and the third
member of Team USA to tackle the course, was New Jersey's Laura Chapot
and her 13-year-old KWPN Dutch Warmblood, Little Big Man. The gelding,
which has had several tough days due to a displaced colon, bounced back
and turned in a clean round, though there was a split second where it
seemed that fence 12 might say otherwise. Some quick thinking and
control on the rider's part helped prevent it, which is another wonder
considering she has been up with her mount for the past three days.
"I'm just amazed at my horse...he had a displaced colon," she said.
"Somehow, it got back where it belonged. We were up through the night.
But [before the competition], the vets said it was OK, and everything
was in order. George [Morris, chef d'equipe] said, 'Give it a shot,' and
despite my horse being tired...he put in an amazing performance."
The clean-and-clear round, on a time of 82.41 seconds, sits Chapot and
Little Big Man in sixth place overall on a computed score of 1.38.
The horse has been totally cleared by the veterinarians to compete - an
issue that was of the utmost importance to the vets, the team and the
rider. Chapot made it clear that under no circumstance would she compete
otherwise.
"I made it very clear this morning that in no way was I going to take my
horse [into the ring] if there were any possible repercussions," she
said.
North Palm Beach area rider Cara Raether sits in 28th place after Day
One aboard Trelawny Farm's Ublesco, a 10-year-old Belgian Warmblood
stallion. The pair picked up eight jumping penalties, downing the first
rail of the oxer at the double combination at fence six, as well as the
front rail of the course's final oxer at 14. They finished on a computed
score of 7.53.
"The course was good...I was happy," said, Raether. Noting her two
rails, she added, "One was a mistake on my part, and one was a 'cheap'
rail at the last fence."
Last to enter the ring was former USEF Equestrian of the Year, Todd
Minikus. With his 10-year-old KWPN Dutch Warmblood gelding, Pavarotti,
the rider gave the crowd a startle before even clearing the first
obstacle. In his approach to the initial question, Pavarotti ran out
and refused. Minikus recovered the situation, and they continued on
their test.
"I was very confident in the schooling area, maybe a little too
confident," said Minikus. "I went in there with a lot of stride... that
much stride surprised my horse a little bit. Disappointedly enough, he
ducked to the right [before fence one]. I tried to make up the time. We
ended up trying too hard too fast."
The refusal cost time, and the two downed rails added 8 faults to his
score. Minikus and Pavarotti finished the day in 31st place on a
computed score of 8.36 (an adjusted time of 96.37 seconds).
A pair of Canadian riders occupy the two top spots - Jill Henselwood
aboard Special Ed (0.0, 79.66 seconds) and veteran Ian Millar aboard In
Style (0.29, 80.23 seconds). Following in third place is Mexico's Simon
Nizri aboard Cataro Ask (0.47, 80.59 seconds) and Brazil's Bernardo
Alves aboard Chupa Chupa 2 in fourth place on a computed score of 1.09
(81.84 seconds).
Show jumping continues on Friday with two rounds of jumping to determine
the Team medal. The first round will begin in the morning and will be
followed by a lunch break, after which, the horse-and-rider combinations
will return for another round. Through both of these rounds, the
computed scores (where jumping penalties are converted into seconds and
then into discounted points) will be counted and are valid for the Team
and Individual results.
Brian Sosby
ENDS
As the National Governing Body (NGB) of Equestrian Sport, the United
States Equestrian Federation(r), Inc. (USEF) is the regulatory body for
28 breeds and disciplines, including our country's international teams
competing in the disciplines of dressage, driving, endurance, eventing,
para-equestrian, reining, show jumping and vaulting. With over 87,000
members, it is the country's largest multi-breed organization and
annually license more than 2,800 competitions nationwide. The USEF
governs all aspects of competition, including education and licensing of
all judges, stewards, and technical delegates who officiate shows.
Vision Statement: The vision of United States Equestrian Federation(r)
is to provide leadership for equestrian sport in the United States of
America, promoting the pursuit of excellence from the grassroots to the
Olympic Games, based on a foundation of fair, safe competition and the
welfare of its horses, and embracing this vision, to be the best
national equestrian federation in the world.
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