Oliver Townend, last month’s Kentucky 5-star winner with Cooley Rosalent, is missing out on a chance to make history this week.
With a win at the Burghley 5-star last year and then Kentucky this year, all he would have had to do was win the Badminton 5-star this weekend to collect the $350,000 Rolex Grand Slam prize. Okay, that wasn’t a given, but Ballaghmor Class, the horse nicknamed Thomas, has a record that made it seem a real possibility.
Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class were Kentucky 5-star winners in 2021. (Photo © 2021 by Nancy Jaffer)
Only two riders in history, Pippa Funnell and Michael Jung, have been able to do it. But Oliver won’t be the third, at least this year.
“Absolutely gutted to withdraw Ballaghmor Class from this week’s MARS Badminton Horse Trials,” the British rider reported about his 17-year-old Irish sport horse.
“He had an abscess earlier in the season and consequently missed a couple of runs and gallops. This morning, he went for his final gallop and with the 11.5 mins cross-country course combined with the possible soft ground, we don’t feel he’s at his normal 5-star fitness right now.
Oliver Townend and Ballaghmor Class on their way to winning the Kentucky 5-star in 2021. (Photo © by Nancy Jaffer)
“This is the first time in his career he’s missed a 5-star and with the Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing being at stake (for the third time for me!) and Thomas’s record with 10 top-5 placings at 5-star, 4 of which are from Badminton including twice second place, and his three wins at Burghley and Kentucky, we really hoped he would finally get the Badminton trophy he so badly deserves.
“He’s fit and well, and knowing his huge heart. he’d give us his all, but it’s simply not in his best interest to run this week and his welfare is our top priority.
“Thomas will be rerouted to plan B, but for now, we’d like to give a huge thanks to his owners, our sponsors and our team, who are all equally gutted but support us to make this call to look after our superstar.”
Oliver had two other shots at the Grand Slam and had been itching to make the third time the charm.
“The first time, I nearly killed myself trying to win it,” he recalled about his cross-country fall at Kentucky that landed him in the hospital in 2010.
And that was after he was stranded in Britain by the Icelandic volcano fallout. Desperate to get to Kentucky for the last leg of the Grand Slam after winning Badminton and Burghley, he took a train to Paris, hoping for a connection to Madrid, where the airport was open, but encountered a train strike. He then hopped in a cab and convinced the driver to take him from France to Spain, which cost about $3,000.
His next shot at the Grand Slam also was disappointing, but less traumatic.
“The second time,” he remembered, “I was second at Badminton.”