The Canadian team gave the best possible welcome gift to its new chef d’equipe, Ian Millar, as it handily won the $150,000 CSIO 4-star Nations Cup at the Winter Equestrian Festival Saturday night.

Ian, formerly known as Captain Canada for his leading role as a rider, had been on the job only a month when he faced his first team competition in Wellington, Florida. Could his squad win the title for a seventh time at the Wellington International venue?

Tiffany Foster, who produced the victory with teammates Mario Deslauriers, Beth Underhill and Erynn Ballard, said the team had been hoping for a long time that Ian would take the chef’s job.

“I think tonight’s win has a lot to do with him,” she said, breathless with excitement, after embracing Ian and her teammates.

“We wanted this for him and we’re glad we could give it to him.”

The victorious Canadian team: Erynn Ballard, Mario Deslauriers, Ian Millar, Tiffany Foster and Beth Underhill. (Photo © 2023 by Nancy Jaffer)

A beaming Ian was understandably proud of his team’s achievement.

“For almost 50 years, I was one of the riders.  I always appreciated the chefs and how much they cared and how much they supported us. Tonight, I feel part of this winning team and it’s a great feeling! I’m so proud to be the chef of our Canadian team. I always said that if I ever did it, I would only do it for Canada. I’ve been offered the position by other countries, but I always said I would only do it for Canada, if ever. And here we are.”

There’s always a big, enthusiastic crowd for the Nations Cup. (Photo © 2023 by Nancy Jaffer)

The venue is packed for Nations Cup night, with the Tiki Hut restaurant converted to the “Irish Embassy” for the occasion, and various nationalities waving their flags and wearing gear that proclaims the country for which they were rooting.

This competition isn’t one that qualifies teams for the Cup finals in Barcelona, Spain, which offers a way to clinch an Olympic berth. But even so, it has value and bragging rights for a special achievement.

The Canadian win was clinched with three clear trips in the second round from Erynn, Tiffany and Mario, who was also fault-free in the first round with the 11-year-old Belgian warmblood Emerson, who had never jumped in a Nations Cup before.

After the first round, Belgium led on 4 faults, while Canada was tied on 8 with Brazil and Ireland. The U.S. barely made the cut to come back in the second round. Its 20 faults put it last in the standings going into the segment, after Venezuela, Chile and Argentina, the lowest-placing of the 11 teams that started the competition, did not make the final eight that jumped the same course again.

Things changed radically in the second round, as leader Belgium was a drop-out after Jos Verlooy fell when Nixon Van ‘T Meulenhof refused the ninth fence, a Liverpool, and the rider took a hard fall. Things continued to go south as Zoe Conter was eliminated, and that was the end for that country.

Canada’s three clears  meant anchor rider Beth didn’t have to ride in the second round as it clinched the victory with just eight penalties.

The U.S. squad had three riders who were relatively inexperienced in this kind of setting.  Mavis Spencer, Natalie Dean and Mimi Gochman were joined by Adrienne Sternlicht, a member of the 2018 FEI World Equestrian Games gold medal team, aboard a young horse, Faquitol-S. Natalie was the team star with a clear on a 4-fault trip on Acota M.The USA moved up from eighth in the first round to finishing fifth overall with 32 penalties, but U.S. fans may not have understood what happened to their country’s effort.

Natalie Dean performed best for the U.S. with a clear and a four-fault-trip on Acota M. (Photo © 2023 by Nancy Jaffer)

Coach Robert Ridland explained, “The plan from the very beginning this year was the 5-star nations cups that are qualifiers for Barcelona have to take priority. This nations cup has always been a great proving ground for the next generation. The road gets bumpy.

“And it was a little bumpy tonight,” he conceded.

“We were pretty darn close. Obviously, there were a couple of rounds we would have liked to have forgotten about. You have to go in knowing we’re going against some teams that are sending their best. We’re the only country that has so many riders that we can take our young talent and put it in a nations cup.

“Our competitors can’t do that, they have to send who they have, and they all have their veterans. In some ways, you might say it’s a little bit of an unfair fight, and you always want to win and get on the podium. But we have to stay the course of why we did this. Otherwise, you don’t give your young talent that’s going to be your next generation, both riders and horses, the experience when it really counts under pressure.”

TheU.S. team was selected from the rankings, and discretion also played a role in naming the squad.

Brazil edged Ireland for second place with a faster time, as both squads had a total of 16 faults. Mexico was fourth with 17, Australia sixth with 32 and Britain was seventh with 42.