Downed rails rearrange Burghley’s order of finish

by | Sep 3, 2023 | On the rail

The show jumping phase of the Defender Burghley 5-star was the decider big-time for the British event, with a reshuffling that left Great Britain’s Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class as the winners, after leader Tim Price had three rails down with Vitali to sink to fourth place with 38.7 penalties on Sunday.

Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class (Photo courtesy Defender Burghley)

Oliver Townend riding Ballaghmor Class for GBR during the show jumping Defender Burghley Horse Trials, in the parkland of Burghley House near Stamford in Lincolnshire in the UK on the 30th August to 3 September 2023.

Oliver wasn’t perfect himself, dropping one rail on the Paul Connor-designed course aboard his Irishbred campaigner, which gave Tim a bit of breathing space he hadn’t had with his Holsteiner going into the final segment.

But as the last to go, he needed more than that to be on the podium when Vitali–after a record-setting dressage performance and 8 time penalties cross-country–struggled with falling poles to topple his chances for the coveted trophy and the first prize payout of 110,000 British pounds. Tim is a previous Burghley winner, having taken the crown in 2018 with Ringwood Sky Boy.

Oliver, who also won Burghley in 2017 with Ballaghmor Class, is a three-time winner of the Land Rover Kentucky 5-star, collecting the title in 2018 and 2019 with Cooley Master Class, and 2021 with Ballaghmor Class. He has quie the resume, on which you can add in his 2009, Burghley victory with Carousel Quest.

Another Brit, David Doel, was just 0.7 penalties behind Oliver’s 33 penalty score to take second on the Dutchbred stallion Galileo Nieuwmoed with a perfect show jumping effort. British mainstay Harry Meade was third with another clear show jumping round on the Irish mare Cavalier Crystal (37.4).

The USA’s best, Boyd Martin, finished ninth and tenth on his Olympic partner Tsetserleg, who had three rails, and with On Cue, who had two. Tseterleg moved down from seventh after cross-country and On Cue moved up from 12th.

Boyd called Tsetserleg “an absolute hero this weekend.”

After mishaps in two other 5-stars this year, he said, “it was a big relief to have a great cross-country round.”

In contrast, show jumping was “a disaster. I jumped fence one and made a turn to fence two, and then we were cross-cantering and then we fell to trot and then we were on a completely impossible distance and plowed fence two.”

He praised On Cue as “absolutely fantastic this weekend.”

Boyd noted she had not done a big 5 star since Maryland in 2021, which she won.

At Burghley, “She was pretty tired and had to dig deep for me on the cross-country day,” observed Boyd, who was happy for a top-10 finish.

In show jumping, “We had two poles down, she sort of gets in there and gets starstruck.”

All the same, he noted, “This horse has been such a fantastic partner.”

Jennie Brannigan Saville of the USA did a very credible job in her first Burghley to wind up 12th with FE Lifestyle after a rail and 0.8 time penalties in the final phase. Three rails moved the only other U.S. rider to finish, Will Faudree, down from 10th to 16th.His compatriot Grace Taylor, 16th after cross-country with Game Changer, did not present her horse on the final day.  U.S. rider Tiana Coudray had been eliminated on cross-country with Cancaras Girl.

The demanding Derek DiGrazia cross-country course also was unlucky for Great Britain’s Ros Canter–who won the European championship just three weeks ago in France. She hit the ground when Penco’s Crown Jewel left a leg at a triple bar arrowhead in the 20ABC combination.

Luckily both horse and rider were okay, but that’s just another example of how fast things can change for even the most experienced riders.

 

Click here for final results from Burghley.