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Katie Lindsay: JUST DO IT

Eventing Nation guest writer, event organizer, and officiating extraordinaire Katie Lindsay has sent us her next post.  Thanks for writing this Katie, and thank you for reading.

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From Katie:

(No, this is not a Nike commercial!) 

I've finally emerged from my spring officiating back to back, (Twin Rivers, Rolex Kentucky and Jersey Fresh), and I'm glad to have a reprieve from flailing my way through O'Hare Airport at all hours of the day and night. (Believe me, that's a creepy damn place at 5 AM after a red eye!) It's good to be home, too many loads of laundry notwithstanding, and also good to have a little distance in order to evaluate everything I've seen in the past month. 

First of all, a big shout out to Mike E-S, Derek DiGrazia and John Williams for their courses at these events. I was happy to see that the tracks at both Rolex and Jersey were more open, "gallopy" and straightforward than they were last year. Horses actually had the time to look at and understand a problem before tackling it - and I think the good results reflected this trend. Kudos! Hopefully the popularity of the "show jumping without walls" kinds of courses that seemed to have been the trend in the last decade has waned?  

Horses can't run any faster, jump any higher, or think any faster than they did at the turn of the century. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think Greyhound still holds the world's trotting record for a mile and a half that he set in the 30's? And how many Triple Crown winners have we seen in the past 25 years? Yet we have asked these wonderful animals to jump higher, run faster, and react quicker than they are capable of by endorsing a course design philosophy featuring one cluster of very technical problems after another separated by straight galloping stretches Start, stop, start, stop ... Safety wise, this hasn't turned out very well at all. (One reason given for this kind of design is to create prime cross country viewing areas for potential sponsors. Yikes. Can you spell tail wagging the dog?) 

I had an interesting chat at Jersey with Eric Smiley, the President of the Ground Jury. My mother always used to say that everyone needs a little bit of Irish to survive in this world. Being a typical daughter, I ignored her. Silly old woman. However, while listening to Eric, I had a huge head slapping, "aha" moment. It seemed that many years after the fact, I finally got what Mom was talking about. Eric couldn't be more Irish if he were wearing a green top hat and weird pointy shoes, and in the course of one of our conversations in which I was ranting in a somewhat agitated and pissed off manner, he said something that stopped me cold and essentially summed up the feelings I've been struggling with about the current state of this sport we all love. Let me elaborate and expand.   

I was whining about something or other that had happened during the day, and he looked at me and said calmly "It would appear that we have lost the ability to get out there and just do it." This simple comment shone a spotlight for me on why we all seem to be having so many problems getting along and communicating with each other. He was speaking at that moment from a rider's perspective, using as an example the time he had entered Badminton during a rainy spring season. (Is there any other kind in Ireland?). He had only done one hunter trial as a warm up. "I didn't ask Hugh Thomas to change the course for me. I just kicked harder and would have pulled up if I'd had to." Bingo.  

I think the advice to just soldier on and do it is applicable to everyone involved in our sport, not just riders. We organizers tend to overthink and obsess about things. It's in our job description. "If we increase entry fees, will we lose entries?" "If we invest in stabling, will it attract more riders?" "If we ask judge X to officiate, will trainer Z boycott us?" There comes a time in every organizer's life when he or she needs to throw caution to the winds, stop intellectualizing, take the plunge, and just do what feels right. That of course doesn't negate sleepless nights - but most organizers have these anyway! 

Officials face decisions many times during the course of a competition, and here too the principle of "just doing it" should come into play. The least effective officials are the ditherers. These hapless souls wont make a decision without agonizing stretches of time spent dithering about it. What rule covers this? Will a decision cause an ugly confrontation? Will I get sued? Maybe if I don't answer, the problem will go away. I was a T.D. for a very long time, and during my tenure, came to the (over simplified) conclusion that people who ask questions generally don't really care whether the response is a thumbs up or a thumbs down - they just want an appropriate answer in an appropriate length of time. Of course this is a rank generalization, but essentially, I think the philosophy holds true. The two tenets that must be followed in such situations are what is the intent of the rule, and how can a playing field be made level for all? Come to think of it, these two questions should never be too far from anyone's mind when dealing with eventing problems! 

Sadly we live in a "cover your ass" generation in which society habitually shifts blame to everyone else. (Look at the BP/Halliburton tap dance about the oil spill in the Gulf if you want a glaring example.)   Maybe it's time for all of us, at least in our sport and no matter how we're involved, to start accepting responsibility for the outcome and just do it. Maybe then we can start communicating in a reasonable way and solving problems without endless dithering and Ego-testing.  

        END

10 Comments

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I also am happy to see a return to the gallopy courses!

Thanks again, Katie, for an article that "says it like it is".

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The most important part of Eric's philosophy is the "...would have pulled up if I had to...". This is more than rider responsibility. It is the hard work and countless hours to obtain the education AND the ability on that day to evaluate the connection with the horse and then react.

As usual, another brilliant piece of writing from Katie. Thanks for writing, thanks for posting.

I think the 'just do it' mind set is exactly what makes us Eventers. The trouble comes when we are faced with the start/stop/yank/tug courses that are over-technical and make our horses overly cautious (read suspicious). The 'just do it' must be equally balanced with 'I will pull up if necessary' train of thought. When a horse on course scares himself, either through his own mistake, his rider's mistake or a course design mistake, it can be very hard to rebuild that brave side in time to complete safely.

The open, gallopy courses allow our horses a mental break as well as the opportunity to size up the questions he's already completed and the ones he's facing. The completed questions build confidence for the ones yet to be done. Event horses are thinkers-that's why they are good at their jobs, but they must have the time, at speed, to make their good decisions.

I think it's great that we're getting back to the galloping courses instead of the show jumping over solid fence mentality. Now if we can just get the trainers to allow the horses to think for themselves again. I've witnessed many top trainers that don't allow a horse to stop or run out if they're not sure or capable of the task. It's no wonder our sport has had so many major accidents, the horse dares not stop and tries anyway. Then the blame game starts, it's the fence design, the course design, the time of day, on and on. It just might be a training flaw!

"...no matter how we're involved, to start accepting responsibility for the outcome and just do it."

I love this! Thank you Katie. I have observed that those who take responsibility for every aspect of their rides tend to resolve the problems quickly and move forward. Those who blame something or someone (ok, at Galway last weekend for just one rider who had a fall - the trainer, the course design was too hard, the horse, the footing, a spectator was too close) NEVER seem to improve, because it is NEVER their responsibility!

Katie, you hit the nail on the head. Thanks.

The phrase "It would appear that we have lost the ability to get out there and just do it." Can be applied to so many different contexts. I read it as; do what you need to do to get the job done and get on with it. Doesn't matter if you are riding your first entry level course, prepping for WEG, rehabilitating your horse, or trying to get entries in for a schooling show at your barn....
This is a great POSITIVE way to look at any situation.
Well said Katie and thank you.

Another perfectly spot on commentary Katie! Thanks!

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Greyhounds mark has long been surpassed, the current record holder is: 1:49.3 ENOUGH TALK b g, 5, Enjoy Lavec (2008 - Ron Pierce) (from the US Trotting association).
Horses have not changed but training methods change and tack and equipment changes and speeds and disances change as well as the athletic efforts. Yes, you can say, just do it, but you also risk just a disaster. Katie, if the two star riders, young professionals I watched walk the course at Fair Hill 09 went out and just "did it" who knows what carnage might occur. They don't have the experience to know how to get around a major three-day with just a hunter trial as warmup.

OK retread - but it took 50 years to break that great old grey horse's record!

I agree totally with what you say. The question is than how do we fix it? How do we effectively substitute education for experience? I think these are precisely the growing pains, if you will, that we are currently enduring.

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amen! great article! everyone involved with competing horses, including riders, trainers, event organizers has a responsibility to do our absolute honest best for the horses. And, isn't cross country supposed to be a test of endurance going across country?? You don't find too many skinny, technical natural fences out the middle of a field. Besides, don't we have a show-jumping phase to pose the technical questions?? why do we have to put them on cross country?

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