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Articles: Press Release
Kevin Babington And Carling King Win $75,000 PDP Capital Masters Cup,
CSI***
Contact:
Mason Phelps, Jr. of Phelps Media Group, Inc. at 561.753.3389 or at
info@phelpswilkes.com
WELLINGTON, FL - February 29, 2004 - "Some of the horses that are
competing here today will compete at the Olympics and they had as much
of a test today as they'd get at the Olympics," said Kevin Babington,
winner of today's $75,000 PDP Capital Masters Cup, CSI*** at the Winter
Equestrian Festival in Wellington, Florida. "The Olympics is four days
of jumping and you definitely would not get four courses as difficult as
we had to jump today." Leopoldo Palacios of Venezuela designed the
course.
Ireland's Babington, 35, who now resides in Gwynedd Valley,
Pennsylvania, topped a class of 50 entries aboard Carling King for owner
Kindle Hill Farm. In a two-horse jump-off that pitted Babington and
Carling King against Kim Frey, 38, of Virginia and Marlou owned by
Windmill Ranch LLC, no one went clean, but Babington managed to log
fewer faults in a faster time to take the win.
With 17 efforts to jump in a time allowed of 94 seconds in round one,
Frey going 14th in the order posted the only clear trip until
Babington's clear as the 39th rider. Frey said she was not surprised
that her new Grand Prix mount handled the round one course. "No, because
she can jump anything," said Frey. "I knew it was hard but I had the
utmost confidence in my horse. There's nothing she can't jump." Marlou
is a 10-year-old Dutch mare by Jus de Pomme.
Even the more experienced duo found round one an exceptional challenge.
"My horse has a lot of experience and it was a course that I thought
might suit him because of his mileage, but it was very tough. I
definitely felt like I had to ride every step of the way - there was no
'gimme' anywhere," said Babington. Carling King is a 13-year-old,
chestnut, Irish Sport Horse gelding by Clover Hill. "He's been jumping
five years in Grand Prix. I've had him all over Europe and he's been to
the World Championships and two European Championships, so he has quite
a bit of mileage."
Frey and Marlou led off the tiebreaker, which posed 9 efforts in 60
seconds. They incurred 8 jumping faults including a refusal and 8 time
faults for a penalty of 16 in 67.45 seconds. "My horse is young. This
actually is only her third big class," said Frey. "I just didn't get
straight enough at the plank on the end, and then I made up the time
obviously - I was fast there, but again, she's a young horse and I
perhaps should have fit the distance in a little bit better to the green
(Fence 16), but she was by then a little bit dodgy by the gate. She was
confused more than anything and I got a little rough, so that's why she
ran out."
Babington watched Frey go before he tackled the jump-off. "I would much
prefer to have Kim in front of me than behind me. Unfortunately for her,
she didn't have her best jump-off day. She's very, very fast and I was
afraid that she'd go in and put a blazing round down. My horse is not
the fastest horse in the world," said Babington. "So it suited me in the
position that I was in to go in and try to go slow because when I get
fast with him the ride-ability is not so good." Even so, Babington had
the first element of the double down and also incurred 3 time faults for
a total of 7 faults in 62.09, which was good enough for the win.
Babington said he expected this type of challenge from Mr. Palacios. "He
didn't make the time such a factor today, but for $75,000 and Leopoldo,
you expected to jump a very difficult course, and that's one of the
reasons I picked this week." Carling King has been on the Irish team for
the last four years and has been chosen to compete in the Olympics. "We
don't have a selection trial so he's one of the top picks," said
Babington who has never ridden in the Olympics. "So just, please God, he
stays sound and we don't do anything foolish between now and then."
Frey said that she is unsure yet if Marlou will be going to California
for the Selection Trials in May. "She's a little shy on experience but
she's strong on ability," Frey said. "She is an Olympic horse, she just
doesn't know it yet."
2004 WINTER EQUESTRIAN FESTIVAL TICKET INFORMATION
Show days for the 2004 Winter Equestrian Festival are Wednesday through
Sunday. Gates open at 8:00 am. Ticket Prices: Wednesdays are free to
everyone; Children 12 and under are admitted free every day; Young
Adults 13 to 18 and Seniors are $5 on Thursday through Sunday; Adults
are $5 on Thursday and Friday, $10 on Saturday, and $15 on Sunday. The
Palm Beach Polo Equestrian Club is located on Pierson Road off South
Shore Boulevard. For additional information, visit
www.stadiumjumping.com or call
561-793-5867.
2004 WEF SCHEDULE OF COMPETITIONS
February 25 - 29 PDP Capital Wellington Masters CSI***
March 3 - 7 CN Wellington Open CSI-W
March 10 - 14 CSIO United States Cosequin Finale CSIO***
March 18 - 21 Zada Enterprises WEF Dressage Classic
CDI***/Y
(Qualifier for Olympic Selection
Trials)
March 24 - 28 Tampa Bay Classic CSI-W (Bob Thomas
Equestrian Center)
March 30 - April 3 Tournament of Champions CSI-W (Bob Thomas
Equestrian Center)
April 3 Budweiser American Invitational
(Raymond James Stadium)
WEF 2004 MILLION DOLLAR GRAND PRIX SERIES
February 29 $75,000 PDP Capital Masters Cup, CSI***
March 7 $75,000 CN Wellington Open presented by Estates of
Wellington Green, CDI-W
March 12 $50,000 Samsung Nations' Cup, presented by CN,
CSIO****
March 14 $100,000 Cosequin U.S. Open Jumper Championship,
CSIO****
March 28 $75,000 Grand Prix of Tampa, presented by
Kilkenny/ICH, CSI-W
April 3 $200,000 Budweiser American Invitational,
presented by The Tampa Tribune
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