King Edward reigns again at SJ World Cup Finals

by | Apr 17, 2024 | On the rail | 0 comments

Defending champion Henrik von Eckermann of Sweden and his peerless mount, King Edward, took the first leg of the Longines FEI World Cup Show Jumping Finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Wednesday, just as they did last year in Omaha.

“It was a great round today,” the world number one-ranked rider said with a broad smile.

Henrik von Eckermann and King Edward on their way to victory. (FEI Photo)

“It was a much better round than I had in Omaha, even if the result is the same after the first day. It was much more calm. King Edward felt like he jumped amazing from the first jump to the last. and i could do it without chasing.

“I could just keep his big strides going so the course was really my favorite that way.”

The class was a one-round speed affair, with each knockdown adding three seconds to a competitors time. The route was planned by Frank Rothenberger, with Alan Wade as the technical advisor, two gold-standard technicians.

World Cup Course number one.

For young riders with less experience, like 19-year-old Zain Shady Samir of Egypt, it was possible to go around at a careful pace to gain mileage at the top of the sport, trying not to risk a knockdown (he had only one with London Eye, and stands twenty ninth of 34 starters.)

For those who have been there and done that many times at the finals, a daring shortcut and careful planning insured a race around the clock that left the best high in the standings. Henrik’s time of 66.28 seconds was a full 1.12 seconds ahead of his countryman, Peder Fredricson on the aptly named Catch Me Not.

Not surprisingly, Kent Farrington was the best American, tying for fourth on Toulayna with France’s Julien Epaillard (Dubai du Cedre). They both had a time of 69.69 seconds but Kent had a clean round while always speedy Julien had a rail to add 3 to his original clocking of 66.69, which would have put him second if all the poles had stayed in place. They were behind Germany’s third-place Hans Dieter Dreher and the long-strided Elysium (68.49).

Kent Farrington and Toulayna.

Most of the U.S. contingent was young and riding in their first World Cup Finals. But 19-year-old Californian Skylar Wireman impressed, finishing tenth on Tornado (72.49) with no knockdowns. Another Californian, Jill Humphrey, jumped clean on the U.S.-bred son of Connor, Chromatic BF, in 73.79 seconds.

The Cup continues on Thursday with a time first jump-off test.

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