Versatility, commitment and pure ability all have served jumper rider Skylar Wireman well, but that combination of assets was never better illustrated than by her achievements during February.
Still eligible for Under 25 classes, the young professional made her U.S. international senior team debut against the exotic backdrop of Abu Dhabi, where coach Robert Ridland rode a camel in the parade of participating countries at the Longines League of Nations’ 2025 opener. With only a single rail down there, Skylar –the youngest rider in the entire competition — proved she belonged in the heady company of top international team competition.
Then, as the month ended, the 20-year-old switched gears to focus on style while taking the $100,000 Pro Equitation Challenge on home turf in California at the Desert International Horse Park. Its catch riding test played to her strengths and secured the victory.

Schuyler Wireman on her way to winning the $100,000 Pro Equitation Challenge (High Desert Sport Photo)
It was only a little less than one year ago that Skylar had her introduction to a major championship at the FEI Show Jumping World Cup Finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
“It was my first FEI show out of the country; my first show internationally was the World Cup Finals,” she reflected, still seeming to be a bit amazed.
“It was a great takeaway, being able to watch so many of the top 10 in the world.”
In an imposing, unfamiliar setting, she was clean and fast with her 10-year-old Tornado (Diarado X Chacco Blue) to finish tenth in the first round and earn the admiration of other countries’ chefs d’equipe. In the second round over bigger fences, however, lack of mileage for horse and rider showed. With four rails down in that leg, Skylar wisely decided not to contest the even more difficult third phase.
As she explained at the time, “Tornado is inexperienced at this level and having studied our round on Thursday and talked extensively to my coach and many others whose opinions and experience I have high regard for, I will not risk his welfare or his future in the sport by asking Tornado to jump a course he might not be quite ready for.”
Smart. That’s Skylar.
The experience overall benefited Skylar and her mount, however.
“I came home with an even better horse than I went with. He really learned a lot there, as much as I did. It was a huge growing week for us.”
They proved that by jumping four clear rounds in a row at Thunderbird in British Columbia upon their return.
She noted that before Riyadh, “if he was impressed, he’d kind of hurl himself over the jumps, rather than opening up and following through behind.”
He finally figured it out over the big fences in Saudi Arabia.
When they came home, “he had a whole new hind end. He found the shape of his body and a true correct bascule over the jumps,” said Skylar.
She has always had to work for what she got. Her mother, Shayne Berridge-Wireman, acts as both her trainer and her groom when necessary, and together they make things happen from their base in San Diego County, Calif. Being women going to the Middle East last year for the first time may have seemed a bit intimidating at first, but as Shayne noted, everyone was very nice and they felt welcome. In Abu Dhabi, where the hotel staff was the friendliest they had ever encountered, the U.S. group even visited a mosque.

The team visits a mosque in Abu Dhabi. Skylar Wireman is fifth from the right. (Photo courtesy Lizzy Chesson)
“We were more comfortable coming to the Middle East because we had done it once. We knew what to expect and how it works, so it was a lot less stressful in the preparation,” Shayne said.
Skylar’s work ethic has made her a standout, and she caught the eye of Olympic team gold medalist Peter Wylde during the U.S. Hunter Jumper Association’s Emerging Athletes Program finals when he was 14 in 2019.
“She had really good instincts as a rider,” recalled Peter, noting Skylar had also impressed in the stable management portion of the competition.
It can be hard to evaluate someone in the EAP, because they are on borrowed horses, some of which are easy and some of which aren’t, he commented.
But “every time there was a problem situation, Skylar’s reactions were correct,” he said.
“She had the most appropriate instinct of what to do when it wasn’t going the right way. As an athlete, she has incredible body control,” he continued, noting she had also been a gymnast.
She didn’t win the final, because of a mistake in the last line of the ride-off, but her talent had made its mark with him.
Skylar and her mother had asked after EAP if Peter could work with them, but at the time, he was too busy. And then Covid hit. With everything shut down, he had the time to give Skylar.
Peter invited the Wiremans to his base in Wellington, Fla., where they stayed in his guest house. He was sharing a stable with international show jumper Lauren Hough, who let Skylar ride one of her jumpers in addition to a hunter being trained by Peter. Mark Phillips, the former U.S. eventing chef d’equipe, was also on the scene and gave Skylar flat lessons.
“Everybody’s like, `This kid is really good.’ It cemented in my mind that she was as talented as I thought she was when I saw her at the EAP,” Peter said.
She’s been busy accumulating honors. Skylar was the U.S. Equestrian Federation’s Junior Rider of the year and topped the 2020 Platinum Performance/ USEF Show Jumping Talent Search Finals West at age 15.
While she didn’t win one of the major indoor finals, finishing second in the Medal and the Washington after working with Andre Dignelli, Peter noted that McLain Ward and Beezie Madden went up to Skylar and said, “Don’t worry. We didn’t win a finals either.”
Explaining his involvement, Peter said, “I feel like she’s exceptionally talented. They have a very low budget and I know it’s going to get better at some point and they already have gotten some money behind them. Skylar works as hard as anybody to get where she’s gotten so far.”
She and her mother make their budget work by pitching in with their own braiding, transport, grooming and stall cleaning . The budget also determines their choice of shows.
“We have to go where she has a shot of paying back the entries,” said Shayne, explaining their financial strategy.
In the spring of 2023, Skylar took over the ride on Tornado, known as Tomato around the barn. He was going to be a jumper for top hunter competitor Nick Haness, but he gave Skylar the ride after breaking his wrist.
She had success with Tornado in the jumpers, despite being sidelined for six weeks with a lacerated liver she suffered when another horse stepped on her after a fall. Nick enabled her to keep Tornado until November of that year, when a group of friends and family were able to purchase the Swedish warmblood for her at the 2023 Las Vegas National on the Thursday, just before she rode in the World Cup qualifier two days later. She was eighth there and then went on to the Cup qualifier in Fort Worth, Texas, where she won and earned points to qualify for Riyadh. Skylar is also hoping to make the cut for this year’s Cup finals in Switzerland next month.
What makes her so good?
“She consistently sees the confident forward distance and is able to get the horse to that distance,” said Peter, who doesn’t charge fo his work with her.
“I call it pro bono,” he said.
“He’s so easy to work with,” said Shayne, noting that even though she is her daughter’s trainer, she defers to Peter “because he knows so much more than me.”
For her part, Skylar commented, “to have someone with such knowledge and expertise helping me is really amazing, and for him to do it all because he wants to.”
From Peter she has learned, “finesse and (that) small things can really make a big difference.” He has also mapped out a show schedule that enables her horses to be at their peak when it really counts.
And he introduced her to Boyd Martin, the Olympic eventer he helps, who aided her in getting a Purina sponsorship. She is also grateful for help from Mary Jo and Todd Kaplan, who own one of her horses, Karen.
Looking back on Abu Dhabi, Skylar mentioned the special dynamics of an all-female team, and noted they did some fun things, such as camel riding and falconry on a desert adventure tour.

Skylar and Tornado in Abu Dhabi.
But they were all business for what mattered most. Skylar noted that her time on a Major League Show Jumping national team in the U.S. had been good experience for riding for her country in Abu Dhabi. But being part of the U.S. squad in the Longines League raised the stakes.
“It adds an element of pressure knowing that your team is relying on your round. You have to be really on point and it takes a lot for all the stars to align for everyone to have that perfect round to end up on top,” Skylar emphasized.
Shayne recounted that Robert Ridland defused tension by giving the team a pre-game pep talk, saying that while they were a little bit the underdogs, “We’re going to ride California strong and for the fires,” referring to the blazes that devastated the southern part of the team members’ home state recently.
“It was a great pleasure working with Skylar at her first CSIO 5-star,” said Lizzy Chesson, the USEF’s managing director of show jumping.
“She is an extremely hard-working, talented and dedicated young woman who really maximized her experience in Abu Dhabi. Her curiosity and desire to learn was remarkable. I truly hope she continues to find backers within the sport that help her achieve her potential.”
When the team didn’t qualify for the second round, “Everyone was disappointed, but everyone was grateful for the experience,” said Skylar, noting the U.S. squad did have the second-fastest first round time of all 11 teams. The riders rightly considered that an achievement.
And at her next team event, she will be able to bank on her first experience.
“It’s a whole different animal to put on that pink coat for a team event versus the World Cup, where it’s every man for himself,” she explained. “I like the team, I like the pressure, it’s well-suited for me.”