It’s Sweden/Sweden at the Show Jumping World Cup

by | Apr 18, 2024 | On the rail | 0 comments

It was a Swedish showdown for the top placings on the second day of the Longines FEI Show Jumping World Cup Finals, but an American who hadn’t ridden in the event for 17 years impressed by moving up the ranks to take third in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Henrik von Eckermann and King Edward.

As expected, world number one Henrik von Eckermann of Sweden successfully continued to defend the title he won in Omaha last year with the fabulous King Edward, galloping hard to the final fence in a seven-horse jump-off to top the leaderboard once again. His longtime teammate, Peder Fredricson, was behind him today in the number two spot with Catch Me Not.

“For two really nice rounds, the horse jumped first jump to the last both rounds, couldn’t be better,” said Henrik.

“It was an amazing feeling. Of course, it was a little bit nervous, but I really enjoyed just riding in there. Peder keeps pressure on me,” he added good naturedly.

Henrik von Eckermann explains it all to Swedish chef d’equipe Henrik Ancarkcrona during the course walk.

Californian Jill Humphrey also wowed the crowd with her exacting trips aboard the U.S.-bred Chromatic BF. She moved up from 12th after Wednesday’s one-round speed opener after putting in a perfect jump-off effort the next day, clocked in 48.36 seconds.

Although she was nearly five seconds behind Henrik’s time of 43.38, which in turn edged Peder’s mark of 45.45 seconds, she understandably was excited about coming very close to the world’s best.

“ I feel honored to be in such company. I am so thrilled with my horse,” she said.

“It was so exciting being out there. My horse was just fantastic, I’m so proud of him. He tried so hard. I had no idea what to expect, but he continues to surprise and impress.”

Sadly, Chromatic died in the stable shortly after the class. Read about it here or click on the featured story on this website.

The top-ranked U.S. rider in the finals, Kent Farrington, was ninth in today’s first round with the fastest four-fault performance on Greya after dropping a rail at the oxer that followed a demanding oxer/oxer/vertical triple combination. Even though he didn’t make the jump-off, his tie for fourth from Wednesday helped keep him in fourth place overall with 13 points, two ahead of Jill. French rider Julien Epaillard has nine points for third place overall, behind Henrik with zero and Peder with 4.

The third-best American is another Californian, 19-year-old Skyler Wireman, who outdid herself with a tenth place finish on Tornado the first night. Her luck ran out this time around, however as she had four rails down. With  28 points, she is in nineteenth place.

Meanwhile, Sophia Siegel, in last place on Wednesday, redeemed herself with just two knockdowns on A-Girl to finish twenty-second in the field of 34 starters this afternoon. She is twenty-ninth overall.

Thursday’s course.

The course designed by Frank Rothenberger with Alan Wade as technical delegate had several challenges that required pitch-perfect decisions from the riders. One was the two-stride to one-stride triple, where the B element caused trouble; the other was at the penultimate obstacle, a double with an A element vertical that had a delicate plank on top. It was between six and seven strides from the previous fence, which made the approach a tricky one.

This is the first Cup finals to be held in the Middle East. It is being presented superbly, with top class facilities. Dressage judge Janet Foy said it has the best horse show food ever. The native dress worn by some spectators and even the prince who presented trophies Thursday gives the competition and intriguingly exotic air. Of course, the home side went wild when Saudi rider Ramzi Al Duhamy on Untouchable 32 left all the rails in place (sadly, he had one time penalty for going over the 74-second time allowed, but he finished a respectable eighth in the class.)

Spectators dressed for the occasion at the World Cup Finals.

The knowledge that the Cup offers the largest prize money ever given for such a competition, approximately $2 million, adds to the energy.

The competition continues Saturday with a two-round finale. Only the top 20 horses will compete in the second leg. Friday’s action in Arabia will be the FEI World Cup Dressage freestyle.

Click this link for Thursday’s results.Click here for the current standings.