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Articles: Press Release
Washington's Kristin Bachman and Gryffindor Lead after Cross-Country at
2007 Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by Farnam
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
April 28, 2007
Nearly 47,000 people turned out for a spectacular day of cross-country
at the 2007 Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, presented by Farnam. A
variation of last year's course greeted horses and riders, and at the
end of a tumultuous day, Kristin Bachman, riding in only her second
four-star on her own Gryffindor found herself on top of a very classy
heap of horses and riders with a score of 48.2.
But, the first "horse" out on course was actually Theodore O'Connor, who
stands 14.1 hands. With one of the most experienced pilots in the game
on his back, Karen O'Connor, he clocked around the course picking up
just a handful of time penalties to end cross-country on a score of
60.1. They ended the day in 15th place.
"I'm speechless," said O'Connor. "Our goal with this pony has always
been to never over face him and never show him what he can't do. I was
very nervous coming into the cross-country today. But, as each exercise
came, he just proved to me that he is just one-in-a-million horse. I'm
in awe of him."
Bachman, a Washington state native now based in The Plains, VA, picked
up a run-out last year here, but made no mistake today clocking around a
track that many of the world's most experienced riders fell victim to.
"I am sitting on the best horse in the world," said Bachman of the
13-year-old U.S.-bred Thoroughbred. "He was amazing. After [fence] 20,
he tripped or bobbled and that was the only thing. He was better than
last year at the quarry. He actually did jump to the bottom."
Sitting in sixth after the dressage, Bachman was the fourth rider to
make the time on course.
Overnight leader Amy Tryon ended Saturday in second after adding 3.2
time penalties, but promptly withdrew the horse at the end of the
cross-country. The horse sustained a serious injury at the last fence
to his left front ankle and was moved from the finish to a veterinary
clinic by horse ambulance.
"He has lost the ligamental support to the fetlock of the left front
leg," said FEI Veterinary Delegate Dr. Catherine Kohn. "He is resting
comfortably this evening."
Second here last year, Heidi White-Carty and her beloved 13-year-old
Northern Spy find themselves in the same position again after the
cross-country. In 10th after the first phase, they added nothing to
their dressage score of 52.0 despite being held before the Head of the
Lake obstacle after Heath Ryan fell toward the end of the course. They
romped around the Kentucky track together for the fourth time in five
years.
"It was all hard," said White-Carty of the course. "But, he was
fantastic. The Normandy Bank to the style was very similar to the fence
at the WEG where I had a bit of a hiccup and had to go the long way, so
I really wanted to pay attention there."
This leaves Bachman without rail in-hand when she enters the show
jumping tomorrow afternoon.
Two riders after Bachman, Australian Clayton Fredericks, who was sitting
third after the dressage, put in a very workmanlike round on Ben Along
Time, the 2005 FEI World Cup Champion and Silver medalist from the FEI
World Equestrian Games, to maintain his position.
"I think I maybe took a few too many half-halts out there," said
Fredericks of his 5.6 time penalties to finish on a new score of 53.0.
American rider, Will Faudree, and 18-year-old Antigua had an impressive
round to easily make the time. Horse and rider, veterans of the Pan
American Games and a teammate of White-Carty's at last year's FEI World
Equestrian Games own a perfect record on the cross-country through their
five-year relationship. Based in Southern Pines, Faudree jumped up from
12th after the dressage to fourth.
"It's pretty exciting when a horse has done as much as he's done, and
he's still pulling to the finish, asking 'What's next?'" said Faudree.
"I'm so lucky. I feel good about tomorrow. I'm going to go in and do my
best. The horse owes me nothing."
The highest-placed young rider in the field is Sarah Mittleider. The
Idaho-native made her third cross-country trip to Kentucky worth it,
picking up the second double-clean of the day and rocketing up the
leader board from 23rd after the dressage to 10th going into the show
jumping. Eleven-year-old El Primero made light work of the track, and
Mittleider eyes her first team spot for the Pan American Games this
summer.
"He was fabulous," she said. "We didn't have a great warm up, and then I
realized that my bit wasn't put on correctly. I got that fixed, and we
had one jump and then we went and he was just so on. He came out of the
box and was like, 'We're at Rolex again...let's go.' He gets so
confident the further he goes in the course, but he never gets cocky. He
never really gets strong. He can be hard to bring back, but he's not
very fast so you're never out of control out there. I would love to take
him to the Pan Ams. He just seems to keep improving this year."
Heading into Sunday's final phase of the event, 33 horses remain to go
forward to the morning's horse inspection.
The Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event, Presented by Farnam, is the only
four-star event in the Western hemisphere. Riders compete in this
competition for their share of $200,000 in prize money, with the winning
owner receiving $65,000. The winning rider gets to sport a new Rolex
watch. The USET Pinnacle Trophy is presented to the top American rider,
who is also named the United States Equestrian Federation (USEF)
National CCI**** Eventing National Champion.
Highlights from the event will be broadcast by NBC Sports in a one-hour
special on Sunday, May 6, from 5:00-6:00 p.m. EDT. In addition, fans who
aren't able to make it to the Kentucky Horse Park for the event can
still catch the action live through NBCSports.com's daily webcast,
available at www.mediazone.com/channel/nbcsports/equestrian/index.jsp.
These webcasts were made possible through the joint efforts of NBC;
Equestrian Events, Inc., the producer of the event; and the USEF.
Joanie Morris
For more information, please contact Maria Partlow, USEF Senior Vice
President of Marketing/Communications at (859) 225-6941 or
mpartlow@usef.org.
END
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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