The new Olympic individual show jumping gold medalist, Christian Kukuk, is known to have been mentored by another Olympic gold medalist, Ludger Beerbaum. But it would seem that the foundation for his prowess was laid in Christian’s genes by his grandfather, Franz Kukuk, the highly respected head saddle master, or stud keeper, at the state stud in Warendorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
“He could tell exactly from below what you were feeling above. I was very lucky to be able to see him for a few more years,” Christian, 34, said of his grandfather, who died in 2005 but could teach his grandson when the boy was in his teens.
No wonder Christian felt an instant affinity with a Westfalian horse, Checker, by Comme Il Faut 5 when he first went to see him. That was the mount who took him to the only double-clear rounds in the individual show jumping at the Paris Olympics, and from there to the top level of the podium on Tuesday. The horse is owned in part by Madeleine Winter-Schulze, who also is an owner of Wendy, Isabell Werth’s dressage team gold medal ride who was silver in the individual.
Thoms Lehmann, who is associated with an insurance firm, called attention to Christian’s background in a fascinating facebook posting./p>
He recounted that at age 14, Franz Kukuk began working at the Warendorf Landstudüt, the Westfalien state stud. The former state stallmaster, named Bresges, soon recognized the special talent of the young stud keeper and sent him to Vienna at the end of the 1950s for training at the Spanish Riding School.
When he returned, he was entrusted with a beautiful stallion, Radetzky. He was allowed to ride the horse to the Grand Prix in dressage.However, at that time, horses owned by the state were never permitted to be used in competition, even though there were those who thought Franz and the stallion could have gone to the Olympics.
Franz was famous for his calm and soulful treatment with stallions. After 51 years with the state stud, he went to work for Ulrich Kasselman’s PSI stables, where he was known as a master of groundwork.
His grandson started his riding career with three or four months of work on the longe aboard a school horse from the Warendorf Riding Club. After that, he was allowed to jump. His reaction?</p?
“It was cool.”
Even these day, “Whenever I enter the grounds of the national championships in Warendorf, a lot of memories come back,” says the rider.
With determination after his introduction to riding, he was striving toward the top of his chosen profession, enjoying competition opportunities that his grandfather never had.
In 2015, Christian was awarded the Golden Riding Badge in his new home of Riesenbeck. His biggest breakthrough, however, came with the grey stallion Mumbai by Diamant de Semilly, which the rider took over for further training in 2019. With him, he was on the team for the 2021 Olympic Games in Tokyo. In the first qualification, however, the pair had a jumping error, so they did not make it to the individual final.
The two went on to the European Championships that same year and were on the silver medal team, then finished fourth In the individual final. (click on this link to read that story). Sometimes, you just have to wait for destiny.
In Paris, Thoms noted, “Christian has realized the dream that his grandfather was denied. Christian Kukuk is an Olympian for eternity.
His winning horse named Checker has a remarkable pedigree. In the ninth generation of his pedigree there is a stallion named Radetzky, the horse that his grandfather loved so much.”