British course designer Alec Lochore will produce the eventing cross-country route for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics at Santa Anita Park, the FEI (international equestrian federation) announced Wednesday.
No stranger to the Games, Alec was the eventing manager at the 2012 Olympics in London, overseeing not only planning for cross-country at Greenwich Park, but also serving in the same role at the Tokyo Games in 2021. The 53-year-old official’s resume also includes experience at the FEI World Equestrian Games and the European Championships, as well as two terms on the FEI eventing committee.
“I am humbled, honored and delighted to have been asked to design the cross-country track for the Olympic Games LA28,” Alec said.
“It will be a great challenge, and one which I am looking forward to immensely.
“I am fortunate enough to have been involved with the organization and planning of several Olympic Games, and each Olympics is unique and special. The Olympics is the biggest showcase that our sport — that any sport — has, and to be chosen as course designer is very exciting.”
According to FEI President Ingmar de Vos, Alec “was instrumental in advising the FEI on the cross-country feasibility at the LA28 equestrian venue at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia and we are confident that, in cooperation with Mike Etherington-Smith, he will design a course that challenges the world’s best while showcasing the heart of our sport to a wider global audience.”
Mike, a former chief executive of British eventing, laid out the cross-country at the 2000 Sydney Olympics and was the longtime designer of the Kentucky 5-star.
Alec designs more than 50 courses each year, including for such well-known events as the Burnham Market CCI 4-star, as well as Houghton International and Barbury Castle, also 4-stars. He has also taken his talent abroad, working in India, Australia and Zambia.
In the U.S., he designed at TerraNova, east of Sarasota, Fla., where the November 2024 4-star Long was the country’s last major event of the year.
Santa Anita racetrack hosted the 1984 Olympic equestrian competition, with the exception of cross-country, which was on a golf course near San Diego, south of Los Angeles.
The facility’s selection at the LA28 equestrian venue was a surprise to many, since it seemed that Galway Downs in Temecula had the inside track for the competition under the decision that every phase of the competition had to be at the same location. But Galway, a frequent eventing venue, is further from Los Angeles than Santa Anita, which is in a more populated area close to many hotels, and it is felt that Arcadia would be cooler in July than Temecula.
There were questions about how cross-country could be held at Santa Anita. However, the track is set on 320 acres, and it has a lot of topography, as well as great view of the San Gabriel mountains.

A huge crowd watched at Santa Anita in 1984 when Mark Todd won eventing gold at the Olympics.
It is home to as many as 2,000 horses, with the exception of August, when the thoroughbreds move south to Del Mar so the track can work on maintenance. It also has a veterinary hospital that offers nuclear scintigraphy which utilizes small tracer amounts of radioactive molecules to diagnose diseases involving bone, soft tissues and vessels. It will need to house only 200 horses for the Olympic equestrian competition.
There is ample room for cross-country in the areas set aside for parking, as well as in the infield, where a 5-star grand prix was held last autumn and will be staged again this November.
Work on the Santa Anita cross-country track is scheduled to begin “in the coming weeks.
