Boyd Martin stood second with Commando 3 going into the show jumping finale at the Defender Kentucky 5-star three-day event on Sunday. The highest-ranked American in the competition knew he had just two chances — slim and none — of defeating the leader, Olympic champion Michael Jung on fischerChipmunk.

After a fault-free effort in the Rolex Arena, all Boyd could do was watch the leader’s ride and wait. His only hope, he recounted with his typical wry sense of humor, was that Michael either “had too much bourbon” at a club on Saturday night or “maybe he goes off course.”

But other than that, “I was just hoping for second place,” Boyd said. And that’s where he wound up, with 32.8 penalties, as the U.S. national 5-star champion for the third time in his career. He also was sixth with his Olympic mount, Federman B (40.6) and seventh on Luke 140 (44.7).

Following Saturday’s cross-country at the Kentucky Horse Park, where Michi picked up just 2.4 time penalties and Boyd logged 6.8, the gap between them widened from 7.4 penalties following dressage to 11.8.  That meant Michi could knock down two fences in show jumping and collect time penalties before his lead was gone.

So when the German rider had a rail at the vertical obstacle that was just the third of 13 jumps on the Steve Stephens-designed course, the crowd of 11,000 gasped.

Michael Jung and fischerChipmunk on their way to victory. (U.S. Eventing Association photo)

As usual, however, Michi stayed cool.

Recounting his trip around the course, he said, “I start the round a little bit with a nice forward rhythm. I had a pole down very early; I said `okay…we had a long way, many jumps to do.’ I tried to give him a bit more balance.

“He’s jumping great. I tried to do seven strides into the last combination to get him a bit more on the hind leg and slow down a little bit, because it’s a big horse and just (on) the way to the entrance at the end of the course, he’s sometimes a little bit too much forward. It went well.”

That means he picked up the $123,000 winner’s share of the prize money.

Expressing his appreciation for the Kentucky Horse Park, Michi said, “I always had a lot of luck here. Without luck, you win nothing.”

His total was 25 penalties, nearly five more than when he set a record winning the event in 2022, but he still was a wire-to-wire winner, as they say at the racetrack.

In his first appearance at the park in 2015 before he became a legend, Michi won the world championship. Since then, he has collected three Olympic individual gold medals, most recently in Paris last year. His victory this weekend set a record as his fifth in the 5-star event. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who presented the trophy, told Michi, “If you win this one more time, you have to move to Kentucky.”

That might be okay with the champion.

“This place is amazing, so many big fields. I really like this place,” he said.

Finishing third with a clean trip on Et Hop du Matz (34.2 penalties) was Great Britain’s Harry Meade, who also was fourth with Graffenacht (39.6) after toppling a rail and collecting 0.4 time penalties. On cross-country, he was the lone rider to make the tight optimum time, doing it not just once, but on both his horses.

Harry Meade and Et Hop du Matz. (Amy Dragoo photo)

That means he was the only rider to finish on his dressage score. He had moved up with Et Hop du Matz from being seventeenth in the first phase on 34.2 penalties. He was thrilled with his results and his experience in the Blue Grass.

Events such as Kentucky offer “a motivation for these big moments,” said Harry.

“There’s very few places like this that make the hairs on your neck stand up and this is one of them,” he noted.

Three great riders: Boyd Martin, Michael Jung and Harry Meade.

Michi never fails to graciously mention his gratitude to Chipmunk’s sponsor, the fischer group, and his family, with his parents and wife on hand to support him, as well as thanking his team that keeps everything running.

And even at age 17, Chipmunk is running just fine. While Michi doesn’t plan on taking him to Britain’s Badminton 5-star in 10 days time (said with a smile), he notes the horse “is looking super-strong…better and better and better.”

Chipmunk has a good share of thoroughbred blood from Heraldik, his dam sire, which is a big help in keeping him fit.

The big question is whether he can do the world championships at home in Aachen, Germany, next year.

“At the moment,” said Michi, “he has a really great feeling. You can feel that the horse is really motivated (in) what he’s doing.”

How long can he go?

“ Hopefully, a few more years,” the rider maintained.

Boyd called Michi “an inspiration to my riding,” noting he has even tried to copy him.

“I’ve never seen a rider who is so good in all three phases,” he pointed out.

Boyd Martin and Commando 3. (U.S. Eventing Association photo)

For his part, Boyd appreciates the “freakishly talented animals” he rides, saying he was (understandably) “very, very pleased” with his three mounts.

Boyd’s wife, Silva Martin, and their sons supported their main man from the ringside kiss-and-cry stand.

He had questioned whether Commando (known as Connor at the barn) had the “guts and the heart to get through an epic competition like this.

“After going through this event, i think he could be a career-changing horse. He’s beautifully bred with plenty of thoroughbred and he’s strong in all phases. So I think this is just the beginning.”

Boyd added, however, that the Holsteiner “hasn’t been the easiest horse to ride”

At the same time, “He’s got amazing quality; I knew right from the get-go he was a special horse. It’s taken me a fair bit of time to get there, but he’s arrived now.”

click here for 5-star results

 

In the Cosequin 4-star Short that runs concurrently with the 5-star, Will Coleman won for the second year in a row. Riding Off the Record, he, like Michi, was a wire-to-wire victor.

A rail down in the show jumping made his 33-penalty score perilously close to Phillip Dutton’s runner-up, Possante, on 33.9, but close doesn’t count.

Will Coleman collected his second trophy in a row in the 4-star Short.

“I did hear the rail fall,” recalled Will, “and I said, ‘`Now I really have to think about my clock.’ I hustled a little bit.”

Timmy, as the16-year-old Irishbred gelding by Arkansas is called at home, was up to the task.

“The truth is, the horse has gotten this far in the sport with grit and determination and just try. He showed all those things to come home with no more penalties and keep us out in front. I’m just happy for the horse that I didn’t let him down,” said Will.

He mentioned how much he appreciated the course designed by Steve Stephens.”It’s important that every day matters at a three-day event. The show jumping designer has a lot to do with finishing off on a good note.

“I thought he set a really great test.”

Will didn’t have the best year in 2024, missing out on the Olympics when his horses had some issues. So he relished the way things went in Kentucky and was so relaxed he even took a nap before the show jumping.

Will got support from the enthusiastic fans at the Rolex Arena.

“I thought it was an exciting day. I really just enjoyed the whole weekend,” he said with a smile.

click here for the 4-star results

Meanwhile, in Saturday night’s $400,000 Split Rock Jumping Tour Kentucky International grand prix, first-to-go Kent Farrington issued a challenge none of the others in the nine-horse jump-off could match.

The world number two-ranked rider and his ever-improving Greya set an unmatchable mark of 42.930 seconds that forced a few of his rivals to make risky turns that paid off in refusals. Second place went to Ireland’s Shane Sweetnam on James Kann Cruz in 45 seconds, followed by whiz kid Mimi Gochman in 46.060 on Inclen BH.

Kent, a U.S. Olympic medalist who also was the alternate in Paris last year, said of his mare, “She’s incredibly fast, super careful and a fighter. She’s a real winner in her heart and an incredible horse.” He believes that her assets make her “the quintessential modern show jumper.”

The grand prix was a 5-star for the first time at the park.

Click here for grand prix results