What now for U.S. show jumping’s Paris Olympics bid?

by | Oct 2, 2023 | On the rail

After the U.S. narrowly lost its attempt to beat Brazil at the FEI Nations Cup Final and secure a berth for the Paris Olympics in the process, the question became: Now what?

Defeat by a single penalty in Barcelona last weekend was frustrating, but U.S. coach Robert Ridland is focusing on this month’s Pan American Games in Chile. That’s the last chance for the U.S. to get a ticket to the 2024 Olympics. Three nations otherwise unqualified can make the cut there.

With Brazil out of the fray for the berth after securing its spot, that leaves the U.S., Canada and Mexico the most likely to qualify for a trip to Paris, though it’s possible Argentina also could be in contention. So qualifying is not a sure thing, despite the fact that only a small number of countries are in contention.

“We’ll give it our all in the Pan Ams. We’re sending a good team and we’ll go from there,” said Robert.

U.S. show jumping coach Robert Ridland. (Photo © by Nancy Jaffer)

“We’re going to be fighting for the gold, I hope. Regardless of the Olympic spot, we’re not going down there to get a bronze and slip into the Olympics.”

No matter how good the team that competes, however, “what you’re mostly worried about is the unforeseen happening,” Robert pointed out.

“All you need is one horse colicking, if the hay is bad or something, or another steps on a stone or a rider gets Covid. All of a sudden, you’ve got two riders or whatever. Stranger things have happened.”

So what else could be a problem?

“You can have a spur mark. A microscopic particle of blood. You’re eliminated,” he noted.

“Aside from that, I think we’re sending some pretty good horse/rider combinations down there. If they all stay sound and no one trips over a crowbar and breaks their collarbone, we should on paper be one of those three teams” that qualify for the Games.

In Sunday’s final round of the competition in Barcelona, the U.S. had a total of 9 penalties, one more than Brazil. If they each had collected 8 penalties, the U.S. total time of 253.47 would have beaten Brazil’s 253.82.

No U.S. rider had a fault-free trip on Sunday. McLain Ward and Callas, the only American pair clear on Thursday, had a rail, as did Karl Cook with Kalinka van ‘T Zorgvliet. Devin Ryan on Eddie Blue, subbing for Jessica Springsteen who rode Thursday and had a knockdown, logged eight penalties to be the drop score. Laura Kraut collected a single time fault with Dorado 212 for exceeding by a mere 0.62 seconds the 87-second time-allowed over Santiago Varela’s course.

“If any of three things could have gone our way,” mused Robert, explaining the “what ifs” of how the team could have pulled it out.

He cited, “McLain’s rub at 13C (in the triple that was the next-to-last fence on course), no one even heard it, it was so light. If it had stayed up, that would have done it. Same thing for Karl Cook (at the same fence). If either one of those had left that jump up or if Laura had been a half-second faster, any one of those three, not all those three, and we would have beaten Brazil. It was a good fight to the finish.  It just didn’t work out our way.”

Referring to having Devin ride in the final round, Robert explained, “I wanted to bring in a fresh horse on Sunday.”

“It wasn’t a negative against Jessie. We weren’t good enough on Thursday. I wanted to do something different. You have to go with your instincts. My instinct coming down here was to send five ready, fresh horse rider combinations.

“Unless something really unusual happened on Thursday, I wanted to use all five (during the show). You can’t do that in the Pan Ams. There your reserve is a spectator.”

The Barcelona squad wasn’t the normal four plus one team, he said, noting in that case, he generally sends a young rider as the plus one.

“Here, the stakes were high enough that I wanted to send someone going well,” he continued, explaining he felt Devin had done that at the Hampton Classic on Labor Day weekend, and at Aachen before that.

In Barcelona, “it only was going to work if he jumped clean. If he just duplicated what Jessie did with 4, that wouldn’t have made any difference.” What was needed was a clean or for “the time fault to go away.”

The final was won by Germany, the only country to go fault-free. France was second, followed by Belgium, Brazil and the U.S. in fifth. Switzerland, without some of its best horse/rider combinations, was sixth. Britain (which had won the first round, finished seventh) and Ireland was eighth.