The Kentucky 4-star will go down to the wire

by | Apr 27, 2024 | On the rail, Previous Columns | 0 comments

Elisabeth Halliday, who had shared top billing after dressage in the Cosequin Lexington 4-star at the Kentucky Horse Park, found herself alone at the top of the chart with Miks Master C after a trip over the testing cross-country course on Saturday.

Mickey, third in the 5-star last year, had only 3.2 time penalties over a route that saw five eliminations and eight retirements.

Noting Mick “is a pretty keen horse on cross-country,” Elisabeth pointed out, “he’s a very good jumper and very careful. Although he was strong between the fences, he was very thoughtful and very organized in all the combinations. I was very thrilled with him.”

Elisabeth Halliday and Miks Master C. (Photo © 2024 by Nancy Jaffer)

Liz was busy in the 4-star, riding two other horses, Cooley Quicksilver, who is seventh and Shanroe Cooley, eighth.

The lone double-clear of the day over Derek di Grazia’s route came from Will Coleman and his rising star Diabolo, just 0.7 penalties back of Elisabeth’s 29.2-penalty mark.

Going into cross-country day, Elisabeth’s score was the same as that of Lucienne Bellissimo on DYRI, so they were tied. But Lucienne had problems at the five-part combination that was fence six—along with 20 other competitors and on her other horse, Tremanton, as well. She sank to thirty-first on 20 penalties for a refusal and 25.6 time penalties with DYRI.

I asked Will why so many riders had trouble at the combination. I don’t remember one cross-country obstacle getting quite that many victims, at least recently.

“It was a clever question, because it didn’t walk intimidating at all,” Will replied.

“I thought the `in’ to the coffin was pretty close to 5-star (difficulty). A lot of the horses just looked they didn’t quite know where to look. There is a lot going on there, it’s early in the course.  Most people that had trouble, it looks like to me they didn’t get their horse back in what you’d say was a proper coffin canter. If you jump in either too fast or too out of balance…it can be harder for them to recover over the ditch.”

Will, like Elisabeth, said he was thrilled with his mount.

“I do have a lot of belief in the horse. We are still sort of getting to know each other. I think he’s got the qualities of being a winning horse. He’s not quite there yet. It’s kind of what we’re working towards. This was a step in that direction. I thought it was a good track and he actually enjoyed the whole experience; you know, the people and that Kentucky atmosphere.”

Will Coleman and Diabolo. (Photo © 2024 by Nancy Jaffer)

Boyd Martin finished third with Commando 3 (30.1) and just ahead of Will’s other horse, the veteran Off the Record (30.9). In fifth place, Pan American Games individual gold medalist Caroline Pamukcu on HSH Blake has 32.5 penalties, tying for fifth with Boyd on Federman B. So it’s a close race, with less than a rail’s difference among that  group.

“I think we’re all on very good show jumpers, the top four or five horses are very good show jumpers and good show jumping riders,” said Boyd.

click here for 4-star results