Five tough rounds of show jumping over the last week were no match for Henrik von Eckermann and his barefoot King Edward, as the world’s number one ranked rider and team gold medalist for Sweden took the individual title at the Agria World Championships in Herning, Denmark, today.
King Edward was the only horse not to incur a single penalty in a competition that drew 102 starters. Despite his previous exertions, the 12-year-old Belgian warmblood gelding (Edward X Feo) looked fresh and fit for this afternoon’s two-round competition, which presented the usual amazing challenges by imaginative Dutch course designer Louis Konickx, who was the technical delegate at the Tokyo Olympics.
Henrik moved up individually from fifth after Wednesday’s speed round to fourth following the first team test on Thursday. After that, he was ranked number one and no competitor was able to displace him. As soon as he finished his final perfect round, Henrik saluted the crowd whipped off his helmet and hugged his horse.
The man who was just out of the individual medals in fourth place at the Tokyo Olympics last year smiled broadly as he waited to step onto the podium following the final 12-horse Agria competition at Stutteri Arena,. There were nearly 12,000 fans watching the finale of the world championships. Though not everyone in the audience was Swedish, of course, it certainly sounded as if they were, judging by the sound level and the abundance of blue and yellow in the stands.
“My horse jumps so many clear rounds, and he has done so many good things for me, it is a privilege and unbelievable,” said Henrik, cataloguing his feelings after the medal ceremony.
“At the moment, I am just a bit empty, I have tried to keep all those emotions down and tried to just get things done. And now we have pulled the plug and it is just pure happiness,” he said.
“Thank you, King Edward. I owe you for life.”
Although Henrik looks as if he has nerves of steel when he is riding even the most complicated course, he feels the tension beforehand.
“It is always the same with me,” revealed Henrik, who also won a team gold medal in Tokyo.
“Around two hours before my ride, I am so nervous, you know, like difficult to eat and stuff like that. But when I get up on my horse, it somehow changes to focus, and I am just trying to really do the best round for my horse.”
Henrik worked 12 years for German show jumping legend Ludger Beerbaum before starting is own stable in 2020.
Silver medalist Jerome Guery of Belgium, whose horse, Quel Homme de Hus, came closest to King Edward’s achievement, was as effusive as Henrik.
“It feels amazing,” he said.
“My horse deserves it. It is nice to bring a medal home. It means a lot to get an individual medal, but my team deserved to get one too.”
At the same time, he acknowledged, “The Swedish are amazing, and we knew it before we came here.”
The Belgians were seventh in the team competition, behind the silver medal Dutch and the bronze medal British, as well as Ireland, Germany and France. They just missed by one place qualifying for the 2024 Paris Olympics, since the top five teams from the championships are qualified, excluding the host team, which is France.
Quel Homme de Hus, a 16-year-old Holsteiner stallion (Quidam de Revel X Candillo) accumulated only a single penalty throughout the competition, a time fault.
Dutch rider Maikel van der Vleutin, 34, is known as a can-do guy. The individual bronze medalist in Tokyo, he rode the same horse there as in Herning. That’s Beauville Z N.O.P., a 12-year-old Zangersheide gelding (Bustique X Jumpy des Fontaine), who earned him another bronze today.
Recounting his time at the championships, Maikel said, “Friday (in the second team round), I made a little rider mistake. My horse deserves the medal, and I had two amazing rounds. It gives pressure on the last riders with my two clear rounds– and the luck was on my side today.”
Funny story. Someone asked Maikel’s teammate Harrie Smolders how he could be calmly eating his lunch during Maikel’s ride in the team competition. Why wasn’t he nervous? Harrie explained his calm demeanor this way, “It’s Maikel.” That’s a man in whom his team has confidence.
Maikel had the biggest jump up the standings in the top three; he was ninth after Friday’s test. Ben Maher of Great Britain, aboard Faltic HB, was fourth, less than a rail back of Maikel.
Views varied on the designer’s courses. Germany’s well-traveled Marcus Ehning, for instance, called the first round today “Not an easy course.” Harrie, however, saw it as “very gentle.”
But time definitely was not as much of an issue in the first round as on the previous days. The 87-second time allowed for 16 jumping efforts meant only five riders had time penalties, with 13 of the 21 starters free of jumping penalties. The course had some flow, with striding options.
The challenges included a rollback to a narrow vertical, a 1.65-meter high vertical final obstacle and difficult colors. The white standards that were replicas of Denmark’s Men at Sea monument were connected with red rails offering contrast on Friday. Today, that double had a grey top rail at A and yellow at B, which were not that easy for horses to see, especially coupled with the white standards.
Although that round was supposed to include 25 competitors, five riders withdrew in the interests of their horses’ welfare after a long week. Yuri Mansur of Brazil, who was seventh after Friday’s competition, did not ride because his horse, QH San Antonio, failed to pass the ground jury’s inspection this morning. Even though the list of those able to compete was expanded down to 30th place, but even so, there were still only 21 participating. They were, however, the cream of the original 102-rider starting list from every continent (except Antarctica, which didn’t field a team…).
The second round, for the top 12, had plenty of difficulty, up more than a notch from than the initial round. Among the tasks set for competitors were a first fence standing 1.6 meters, a double of liverpools with a vertical in and an oxer out set seven strides off a bend from a red and white oxer, and a triple combination of a triple bar to a vertical and an oxer that was 1.6 meters wide.
Only one woman, Tiffany Foster of Canada, made it to the top 12, where just four riders jumped clear. Interestingly, the first woman ever to win the world championships, Gail Greenough in 1986, also was Canadian.
But Tiffany, who was tenth in the first round today, would not repeat that feat. In the second round, a rail in the middle of the triple combination, followed by another rail down at the ECCO vertical at fence seven, plus one time fault for exceeding the 77-second time allowed, added nine faults to Tiffany’s score, giving her a total of 17.95 penalties and 12th place in the final individual standings.
It actually was quite a good result at the level, and Tiffany had high praise for her mount, Figor, a 12-year-old Dutch warmblood (Zagreb X Indoctro).
“I’m thrilled with him,” said Tiffany, the highest-ranked female rider in the world at number 36.
“We’ve never been in this sort of situation before. I was too deep to the triple bar, and I think he was getting a little strong and I was thinking about the time.
“The jumps were big, and I have to learn how to give him more space as the jumps get going. This has been such a great experience and I’m so proud of him. I loved my horse before, but I love him even more now. Everything that he did for me this week and the feeling that he gave me; that’s my number one takeaway. I’m so thrilled.”
There was no U.S. representative in this class, as Brian Moggre did not qualify during Friday’s individual competition, while McLain Ward pulled up there after three fences down. The other two American riders, Adrienne Sternlicht and Lillie Keenan, did not qualify for the group of 60 who competed in that first individual competition. The U.S. was 11th in the team competition.
These Games were amazing. The talent we see in show jumping continues to improve, even when it has seemed to be at its pinnacle. There are always interesting horses and riders coming along.
In the former category, keep on eye on Cayman Jolly Jumper. He is a son of the great Hickstead, Eric Lamaze’s late 2008 Olympic individual gold medal and team silver mount. This 10-year-old gelding is registered as a Selle Francais out of a Quaprice Boimargot Quincy mare. Ridden by former world number one Simon Delestre of France, he seems to have inherited his sire’s athleticism and elasticity. Jolly Jumper (great name!) finished seventh.
And in the category of riders coming to our attention, Ioli Mytilineou of Greece certainly impressed, ending up 13th with L’Artiste de Toxandra265 an 11-year-old Belgian warmblood gelding (Toulon / Kashmir van Schuttershof ).
One of the many nice things about these championships was the recognition given to the grooms, who for too long have labored without acknowledgement to the public, in many cases. Their names were mentioned in conjunction with the announcement of the horses’ names, and they had their own lounge where they could relax and eat free of charge.
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