Can you imagine a country that leaves a world champion off its Olympic team?
That’s what Britain has done for its Paris eventing squad, putting Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir as its alternate combination. Britain announced Wednesday who will ride in the Games and who will be the alternates for its Olympic squad.
In my mind, the clear favorites for eventing team gold, Britain will be defending its Olympic title from Tokyo with two members of that squad, Laura Collett (London 52) and Tom McEwen (JL Dublin), as well as newly crowned world number one Ros Canter (Lordships Graffalo). Ros was the traveling reserve for Tokyo, the position Yasmin is in now.
In the dressage, there was no question that Carl Hester, the architect of his nation’s rise to dressage stardom, would be on the team with Fame. Of course, Charlotte Dujardin, who will be Britain’s most decorated female Olympian in any sport if she gets a medal with Imhotep, will be riding, along with world champion Charlotte ‘Lottie’ Fry on the long-striding Glamourdale. There was no way they were leaving Lottie off the team; she was a big star with the black stallion at Aachen last week.
The promising Becky Moody and her Jagerbomb will be the alternates.
Paris is the fifth Olympic Games for Tokyo individual gold medalist Ben Maher (Point Break), and he is joined by Tokyo Olympians Scott Brash (Hello Jefferson) and Harry Charles (Romeo). The reserve is Joe Stockdale (Cacherel), whose father, Tim, represented Britain in Hong Kong at the Beijing Games in 2008.

Team GB selected equestrian athletes (L-R) Ben Maher, Yasmin Ingham, Laura Collett, Scott Brash, Charlotte Fry, Rosalind Canter, Charlotte Dujardin, Carl Hester, Harry Charles, Becky Moody, Joseph Stockdale, Tom McEwen ( Photo Jon Stroud)
Helen Nicholls, the equestrian team leader, commented; “I’m exceptionally proud of the 12 athlete combinations and their connections who will travel to Paris across the three disciplines of equestrian. We have an exciting balance of experience, talent and potential, and we head to the Games in a strong position, and with medal ambitions. The hours of preparation, enormous sacrifice and total dedication will now be put to the ultimate test. The teams behind the athletes – both equine and human – have left no stone unturned in their quest to support them to their very best performances.