U.S. second by a whisker in Rotterdam Longines League of Nations

Just 0.07 seconds made the difference between first and second place in the Dutch leg of the Longines League of Nations Friday, as Great Britain’s Harry Charles carried victory for his team with a 31.18-second trip on LT Holst Freda. That put him narrowly ahead of a 31.25-second effort by the USA’s Marilyn Little on the speedy La Contessa in a three-way jump-off.

At the end of two rounds, three teams were equal on 8 penalties, necessitating the tie-breaker. Switzerland’s Jason Smith, who did not ride in the first round because his three teammates were clear and he could not improve the Swiss score, appeared in the second round and had a rail over the course laid out by designers led by Bart Vonck.  Although Jason and Picobello van’t Roosakker had a rail, the number 254 ranked rider in the world, was selected by chef d’equipe Peter van der Waaij to be the flag-carrier for the finale. His  horse, after all, was relatively fresh, having jumped only one round. His time of 31.64 for a clear trip was just off the mark, putting his squad third.

Harry only has had Freda for six weeks, and this was the mare’s first major competition with him. Even so, he led off strongly on the 12-year-old New Zealand Warmblood. Like Marilyn, he was triple-clear under pressure.

“To walk into an atmosphere like that is so impressive. I’m very proud of her and so lucky to have her,” Harry said of his “incredible” mare.

“She finds everything so easy.”

As quick as she always is, U.S. anchor rider Marilyn just couldn’t catch Harry. But she has been a valuable member of the team each time she rides for the U.S., and could well be looking at a slot on the American squad for August’s world championships at Aachen.

She was double clear in the first two rounds, as was teammate Karl Cook with Caracole de la Roque. Karl was first to go in the competition because the U.S. was ranked last in the overall LLN standings, and countries go in reverse order of rank. Since he couldn’t see anyone go before he started, Karl had no idea of how tight the time allowed would be. But U.S. Coach Robert Ridland knew Karl and his mare could be clear and speedy, as they were.

Katie Dinan finished 8/0 with Out of the Blue SCF for the U.S., while Callie Schott had 8 penalties with Garant and did not appear in the second round.

The U.S. was sixth after the first round and Britain seventh, but that all “changed in a hurry” as Coach Robert put it, after the second round, when first-round leader Netherlands sank to fifth.

“It almost looked like we weren’t going to make the second round at one point,” Robert recalled.

“We really needed Marilyn’s clear in the first round and all of sudden, we’re in the second round, and that’s when that format gets great. It’s so dynamic without a drop score in the second round  (where only three of four team members can compete). You can really move up the standings if you’re good and somebody ahead of you can plummet if they have a bad round.”

He also pointed out that for spectators, the second round is easy to watch, because there is no math to do in regard to a discard score.

“We started the day at the absolute bottom of the standings, and kept climbing up the ladder. It was kind of fun,” mused Robert.

The runner-up spot in Rotterdam was meaningful for the U.S. in terms of the LLN series, because it boosted the country from last place to seventh overall of the 10 teams that contest the series.  In the previous LLN outing in Ocala during March, the U.S. did not even qualify for the second round, when it fielded a completely different team.

The U.S. team in Rotterdam: Coach Robert Ridland, Callie Schott, Marilyn Little, Katie Dinan, Karl Cook.

The top countries qualify for October’s  LLN final in Barcelona, and there is only one more preliminary match for accumulating points, St. Tropez in September.

Harry rode with Olympic individual gold medalist Ben Maher, also on a new horse (Catelly). Ben was a member of  the 2012 gold medal London Olympic team with Peter Charles, the father of Harry, and Harry’s sister and teammate, Sienna Charles.  Harry bred Sienna’s mount, Chawton.

The fourth member of the British team in Rotterdam, Jessica Mendoza, had 8 penalties in the first round with Summerhouse and did not advance, as only three riders from each squad are allowed to compete in the second round.

The runner-up spot in Rotterdam was meaningful for the U.S. in terms of the LLN series, because it boosted the country from last place to seventh overall of the 10 teams that contest the series.  In the previous LLN outing in Ocala during March, the U.S. did not even qualify for the second round, when it fielded a completely different group of horses and riders.

The top countries qualify for October’s  LLN final in Barcelona, and there is only one more preliminary match to go, in St. Tropez in September, where points can be accumulated.

Click here for class results. Click here for team standings overall.