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Life Happens

 

CottonBlossom&Foal.bmpGreetings, friends, it's been far too long since I last blessed this dear blog with my presence.  I doubt you've missed me though...John has been doing an exceptional job (as always) and the content has continued to improve.  Still, I've missed my rambling writings, and hope to be back on a more regular basis!

 

Sorry for the absence, but you know life just sometimes gets in the way.  In the past 7 months, I've gotten married, moved once, and then back again, started a new job (a "promotion" of sorts) and gone to a whole lot of Kentucky basketball games (life ain't all bad, is it?!).  I've survived the most brutal Kentucky winter anyone can remember, and just starting to get ready to compete again (though the "real job" makes it difficult).  I've been in the far reaches of eventing's Outer Loop and trying to work my way back into orbit.  It's tough!

 

For one thing, I have a lot of responsibility on my plate.  I've managed horses for most of my life, some pretty nice horses too.  I'm quite comfortable caring for the best of upper level eventers; and now I've been around the TB business for three or four years.  But let me tell you, it's very different when you have about $7M worth of Thoroughbreds to check over every day.  Right now is the busiest time of breeding season, full of hope, promise, and lots of calls to the repro vets (I just checked my phone-- I have 16 vets saved in my address book).   Which leads to calls to the breeding sheds, calls to the van company, and follow-ups with owners.  Kind of like an event organizer, actually-- it's all great when things go to plan, but the real job is handling the unexpected and keeping everybody happy.  Oh, and a lot of boring, but necessary, paperwork.

 

It's exciting, being around such classy horses, and among these connections.  But it has limited time with my own horse; for the first time in ten years, I don't get to see my horse all day at work.  For the first time in ten years, I have to "commute" to the barn to ride after work each day.  Man, it sucks.  All you ammies out there-- I feel ya pain, y'all!

 

And so, I'm gradually settling in to this new life.  Things are evening out; it's always rough in transition, but my life should soon get back in balance (with a regular dose of EN writing).  One thing's for sure, I'll have a bit more free time when basketball season ends this weekend.  Mr. Visionaire has scored Final Four tickets and a trip to Houston...I guess I'll have to force myself to go and keep him company.  Married life has its perks! 

"Why I do this sport" - Update

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Back in June, I wrote an article about cross-country schooling a green horse, and how we all seek some special feeling this sport gives to us.  This past weekend, the ex-broodmare officially became an Event Horse (for real).  

 

Tuesday of last week, I made the (right) decision to scratch my preliminary level entry; the ground was hard, and that horse really didn't need to go.  On a whim, I asked the event secretary if I could substitute a lower level entry.  She agreed (bless her!) and I had to choose a horse to enter.  My preferred (somewhat experienced) novice candidate was suffering from lost-shoe-itis, making him more or less unrideable for the past two weeks.  I was left with Rocket, the ex-broodmare, and the possibility of going beginner novice.  Keep in mind, she has only been in riding work since February.  She learned to jump at the end of March.  And her first attempt at cross-country was six weeks ago.

What the heck, I figured she could probably do it.  It wouldn't be pretty, we wouldn't be competitive, but I believed she could handle it.  I made the necessary arrangements (things like a last-minute Coggins!) and crammed as much preparation into her as I could in four days.  A quick jump, a brief xc school, and two days of "intense" beginner novice flatwork.  I had mostly worked on her relaxation and rhythm...not doing precise transitions at particular points around the arena (this proved most difficult).  But c'mon, any horse can walk, trot, canter a few big circles, right?  

Saturday morning we were off to the show.  I worried how she would act once we got there-- would she settle in her stall?  Would she be a "screamer," stall walking and whinnying her head off?  She's used to living outside 24/7 in a herd situation.  Would she eat and drink normally?  How would she handle being in a tent?  What about a crowded (and often CRAZY) warmup?  She'd hardly worked around other horses before.  There were lots of questions to answer, outside of the "can she finish three phases of a horse trial."

I needn't have worried.  She settled in like an old pro, munched her hay and enjoyed the activity around her.  She made friends with her neighbors, but did not become attached to them.  She was polite, respectful of her stall guard, and just extremely pleasant in general.  I was encouraged, though I knew the riding part would still be a challenge.

I'd already accepted that dressage was going to be ugly.  She'd never been in a dressage arena; I knew there would be gawking at letters, and possibly deer-in-headlights looks at the judge's booth.  I figured transitions would happen "in the general vicinity" of a letter, most likely inverted.  I just wanted to keep all four feet inside the arena, and not run over anything.  In that respect, it was a success.  She actually had two or three rideable moments, and her transitions were relatively prompt.  Yes, she was tense; yes, she was above the bit a lot; but she did her best, didn't dodge sideways at the letters, or prop and duck at the judge.  It was an ugly test to be sure, but considering her inexperience I was very proud.  We barely managed to break 50 (you know it's bad when your best comment is "Nice Turnout!"), putting us solidly in last place out of 16, but I was happy.

 

The show jumping course seemed fair enough for the level; I still saw lots of potential challenges for such a green horse, but I didn't think it would overface her.  She warmed up quite well, after nearly stopping cold at the first crossrail.  The chaos of BN warmup (kids on ponies flying around, others in minor panic) didn't seem to bother her at all.  We went straight into the show ring (surrounded by the flapping temporary tents) and she focused completely on me and the jumps in front of her.  Yes, I took the "scenic route" making big loopy turns...she still lacks a bit of balance, to be sure.  But Rocket approached the jumps with enthusiasm, and felt great.  Her only green moment came at the very end of the course-- the two-stride combination.  She came boldly through the turn, but did a typical green-horse prop-and-wiggle when she realized there were TWO jumps right there!  I gave her a kick and she jumped in anyway, knocking the rail (deservedly so), but straightening herself to jump out nicely.  A rail and three time penalties...I was pleased with her performance, and moreso with the confidence she displayed.  We moved up from 16th to 14th place; I told you I didn't expect to be competitive! (LINK to photo)

 

Cross-country seemed well within her capabilities.  Granted, that's the first BN course I've walked (with the intent to ride) in about eleven years...but given how well she has schooled (um, twice in her life) I thought she could do it.  I expected her to be green starting out, but I knew her confidence would build as we went.  As it turned out, she blasted out of the startbox (so much for trotting!) and attacked the course from the first fence.  Rocket settled into a great rhythm, and I hardly had to kick at anything.  The water had caused several issues for my division-- it was a narrow entrance, and too many riders were walking their horses to the beach and then letting them stop.  I cantered up to it, she broke a trot, but I kicked her on positively and she went right in. 

We finished the course with hardly a hesitation.  Just as that first xc school, her ears were up and her eyes were beaming, looking for more.  I had the same big grin on my face... now I *knew* I had myself a new event horse.  Yes, it was only beginner novice.  I have no idea how far she will want to go.  But overcoming her inexperience to perform as well as she did, with her confidence growing all weekend-- that's the best you can hope for from any horse. 

To top it all off, she moved up from 14th to 7th after cross-country.  A pretty purple ribbon...well-earned, and well-appreciated. 

 

 

 

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more event photos

The votes are in... hanging chads have been inspected, absentee ballots cast, and unless Al Gore strongly lobbies for a re-count, we are calling this thing official.  May I have the envelope please...


Drumroll...(struggling to break the sealed tape)


The 2010 Eventing Nation Bracket Battle of Event Horses Champion is...


WINSOME ADANTE.  (cue celebratory music, camera pans to ecstatic Kim Severson, hugs from the O'Connors, and Mark Todd clapping politely with a fake smile of appreciation).

It was an extremely tough battle, and for the first 20 hours it seemed Charisma would pull it off.  Dan earned 53% of the 712 votes, and despite commenters' protests, Charisma came up just short. (no pun intended, Podge!)  Congratulations to Winsome Adante, a worthy champion.  And let's give a round of applause to our runner-up, who seemed destined to win...but alas, it wasn't meant to be.

Just so you know, I had another results post all written up at 10pm March 31, when Podge was winning at 54%.  I basically declared Charisma the champion, thanked Winsome Adante for participating and gave him his parting gifts.  I was stunned the next morning when Dan fought back to take the lead, and then steadfastly retained it despite the fanatic support for Podge.  As with anything, it ain't over till it's over! 

Thanks to all who voted, I hope you enjoyed the Bracket Battle.  It was fun remembering all these great horses, it really puts our sport in perspective through the years.  I know we left some awesome horses off the list, so we'll try to get them next year. 

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Go Eventing!


Dan vs Charisma: Too Close to Call...Yet

The Bracket Battle finals between Winsome Adante and Charisma has been a back and forth 'horse race' from the beginning.  It seems that US readers slightly prefer Dan, who picks up votes during the day in the US.  But Charisma comes charging back at night in the US when it's daytime in the rest of the World and our international readers are visiting EN in full force.  

We will leave the voting open until 6:00 PM EST on Friday (11:00 PM GMT I believe) to give as many people the chance to vote as possible.  Tell your friends, call your family, tweet about it, borrow your neighbor's computer, do whatever you can to help your horse win.  We don't have a trophy for the winner, but, after tomorrow, either Dan or Podge will be able to add yet another honor to their long list of awards, and this honor will be a 'fan's choice' award.  Go eventing.
And then there were two.  Nearly four weeks ago, we started this little game with 32 of the best event horses we could think of, and now we are down to the last ones standing: WINSOME ADANTE and CHARISMA. 

Charisma knocked out Murphy Himself yesterday; by Podge's standards, it was a real nailbiter!  Murphy made a strong showing, with over 30% of the vote, but Charisma was simply too much to overcome.  We'll see today if Charisma can dominate one final matchup...


THE FINAL
Winsome Adante or Charisma?  It's so hard to choose.  From two different eras, with two very different riders.  Dan doesn't have an individual gold to his credit, but his presence at a three-day almost meant everyone else was competing for "also-ran."  And Charisma...what more can we say?  Double gold-medallist, Badminton runner-up, and inspiration to all. 

Such a tough decision...maybe I can convince John to let us vote twice!

    1.  WINSOME ADANTE                                vs.                    2.  CHARISMA



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That time in March with lots of basketball insanity but whose name is copyrighted by the NCAA March Madness is well underway at Eventing Nation and we continue our Final Four (also trademarked by the NCAA) matchups today.  Yesterday, Dan's three Rolex victories were just too much for the extraordinary Tailor, but the USA couldn't have a better horse in the finals than Dan.  


COMMENT OF THE DAY:
"Kim" had yet another great story, this time about Tailor:

Eight years ago, when my children were 4 and 7, we went to Rolex for cross country day. Custom Made had been retired, and he was there at Rolex to meet his fan. (I believe the O'Connors were signing autographs also, but not when we were there). Tailor was in a portable corral with a tent over it--probably 20 x 25 feet. His fans were allowed to come up to one side of the fence. My children, wildly excited, reached down and pulled up handfuls of grass, and held them out to him. He walked over, looked my son straight in the eye, and gently ate the grass from my son's hand. Then he stepped sideways, looked my daughter in the eye, and ate the grass from her hand. Then he paused and looked me in the eye. I had the oddest sense that if he could have, he would have shook my hand. The people beside me, imitating my children, offered him grass, and Tailor did the same thing for each of them--stopped, looked, ate the grass--all down the row. Which was when I realized he was standing on grass--he could have been grazing with his butt towards us, but instead he was acknowledging his fans.

As an aside, it started raining hard at lunchtime, but my son was an enormous fan of Bruce Davidson's and refused to leave until he'd seen Little Tricky ride. We were therefore 3 of the 7 people still at the Head of the Lake to see Bruce and Tricky come through like it was some kind of equitation class, easy-peasy and Bruce grinning from ear to ear.

For the record Kim, I was another one of the 7 watching Bruce ride through that hurricane.  I doubt I will ever see a more incredible ride in my entire life.  I should also mention that, while some people did leave because of the weather (dressage folks come to Rolex too, you know), I remember a lot more than 7 people sticking around to cheer Bruce on.  And, despite the wind and rain, those of us remaining made one of the loudest cheers the Head of the Lake has ever heard.  


TODAY'S MATCHUP:  Best of the World

On the other side of the bracket we have (1) Charisma facing (6) Murphy Himself.  Charisma has absolutely steamrolled through this Bracket Battle, winning his first three matchups by 98%, 86%, and 84% of the votes.  The tiny, part-Percheron, two time Olympic champion who was nicknamed 'Podge' for his love of food is going to be tough to stop.  Charisma's opponent, Murphy Himself has had an impressive tournament with wins over higher seeds in two previous matchups, and the horse, who succeeded under both Ginny Leng and Ian Stark, has become a fan favorite.  Can Murphy Himself keep up his upsets, or will Charisma defeat yet another opponent?

1. Charisma                                                vs.                        6. Murphy Himself

VISIONAIRE EDITED TO ADD VIDEO:  Murphy starts at about 1:50 in the video; he's shuffled in with Glenburnie, and it's hard to tell the two grays apart!  Murphy is the slightly darker one, often doing outrageously bold things (as usual).  Charisma starts around 3:00.  He really does look like a pony under Mark Todd!


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Well, the end of March draws near and our Bracket Challenge is down to the very best, as voted by you.  Our Final Four has been determined: CUSTOM MADE, WINSOME ADANTE, MURPHY HIMSELF, and CHARISMA.  A truly deserving group of horses, each of whom really showed us what eventing is all about.  From here out, we will present only one matchup each day, as I'm sure it will be tough to decide!

COMMENT OF THE DAY:
"Kim" had a wonderful story about Charisma from last Friday's post.  It's amazing how these horses impact our lives, despite the fact that we may never even meet them in person.

The first time I ever even saw eventing was in 1984. I was 17, had longed for years to someday learn to ride a horse (I was still a few years away from it). On a summer afternoon I flipped on the tv to whatever the coverage was from the LA Olympics, and saw the most wonderful thing--gorgeous acres of green, huge solid jumps, horses galloping over things I'd never dreamed existed. It was cross country, and I was mesmerized, hooked from that moment on. A few days later I sat with my boyfriend and parents to watch the closing ceremonies, and into the LA Colisseum came two big horses and one little. Then the riders dismounted--two little and one big. Mark Todd and Charisma had won their first Olympic medal.

I started riding a little over a year later, but it wasn't until almost twenty years after that that I finally began to event. Charisma's photo hangs in my guest bathroom (my husband--that boyfriend of 25 years ago--won't let me hang it above our bed). I'll vote for Charisma first, last, and always. What a horse!


TODAY'S MATCHUP:  Best of the US

Who will earn the right to represent the Stars and Stripes in the final showdown?  Both (2) CUSTOM MADE and (1) WINSOME ADANTE proved their competitive greatness on the biggest of stages.  Tailor has an Individual Olympic Gold; Dan has an Individual Silver, Team Bronze, and WEG Team Gold.  Tailor won Badminton; Dan won Rolex three times.  Both excelled in all three phases, in the long format.  I would give a slight edge to Winsome Adante; David O'Connor was a very big name aside from Custom Made, but Dan really pushed Kim Severson to the top of the world scene.  I don't think you can go wrong selecting either horse!


1.  WINSOME ADANTE                         vs.                  2.  CUSTOM MADE


  

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Wow, what an exciting night of basketball!  I'm writing this post at 12:46am after watching the end of UK-Cornell (suck it Big Red!) and Xavier-Kansas State (2OT, wow what a finish!).  As the Tournament rolls on, the matchups just get better. And the same is true for the ENCAA Bracket!


In the battle of O'Connors, (2) CUSTOM MADE prevailed over (1) BIKO.  I'm sure David will be bragging to Karen forever about this one...but gold medals do the talking.  MURPHY HIMSELF won the right to represent the British Isles region, and his battle with RINGWOOD COCKATOO was never really close.  Somewhere, a Scottsman is smiling. 

The Elite Eight finishes today to determine the winners of the Davidson Region and Aussie/Kiwi Region.  Get your voting trigger fingers ready, it's another big day!

[John's note: For our readers who have noticed some slight order to the madness that is Eventing Nation's posting schedule, we are working today's schedule slightly differently than normal.  Friday N&N will happen around lunch time, with Competitions this Weekend and probably something else this evening.]


DAVIDSON REGION


Bruce's steady teammate (2) EAGLE LION has nothing left to prove; a win at Badminton, and countless clean cross-country rounds made him a model of consistency.  His statue will stand forever at the Kentucky Horse Park, dropping into the Head of the Lake.  But then there's (1) WINSOME ADANTE.  Simply the most dominant event horse of the 2000s, winning Rolex each time he entered.  How can you beat that?  Your vote decides!

1.  WINSOME ADANTE                  vs.             2.  EAGLE LION  



AUSSIE/KIWI REGION


It's Kiwi vs. Kiwi in what could turn into an epic matchup.  Two double gold medallists who remained at the top of the sport for years, (1) READY TEDDY could have the upper hand simply because he stands out a bit more in recent memory.  But (2) CHARISMA has blitzed through the tournament like a buzz saw, winning 90% of the vote in his victories.  Two amazing horses, and a very difficult decision to choose one over the other.    

1.  READY TEDDY                                vs.                          2.  CHARISMA




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Mark Todd's CHARISMA continues to turn back foes with utter disdain as he amassed 90% of the votes yesterday against TRUE BLUE GIRDWOOD.  Will his momentum carry him past READY TEDDY?  In the battle of Bruce's horses, EAGLE LION was clearly the best, sending HEYDAY back to retirement.


The bracket is really taking shape now as the field of 32 is down to the Elite Eight.  Today and tomorrow will determine the regional winners, with the Final Four beginning on Monday.  All these horses are great athletes and champions...but there can only be one winner in the end!  Who will it be?

       
O'CONNOR REGION FINAL

In a dream matchup, we find (arguably) Karen's best-known horse against David's best-known horse.  An individual gold-medal winner, versus a stalwart US team anchor.  They've both been honored by Breyer models (Biko, Tailor).  Which should move on to the Final Four?



1.  BIKO                               vs.                 2.  CUSTOM MADE
 www.oconnoreventteam.com
 



BRITISH ISLES REGION FINAL

This could be known as the "upset region," as neither the one nor the two seeded horses made it to this point.  Instead, it is a battle between two fan-favorite grays, who could not be more different.  Bettina Hoy's RINGWOOD COCKATOO set new standards in eventing dressage, though he could be a bit tentative on cross-country at times.  MURPHY HIMSELF? Not so!  Exuberant and bold, Murphy attacked cross-country with sheer reckless abandon.  Both horses could make you hold your breath, though perhaps for different reasons.  Which gray will move on?  You decide!


4.  RINGWOOD COCKATOO                vs.                   6. 
MURPHY HIMSELF  




Results: In one of the tightest and most passionate contests yet, Tailor and his Olympic Gold narrowly defeated Teddy, his OCET PIC [that's Partner in Crime for our private school readers].  Ally commented that she was surprised the race was so close, but I'm not.  I have never seen fan fanaticism like that displayed by all of us cheering for Teddy at Rolex '08.  Watching him showjump was insane; he cantered down to oxers that stood taller than his head, jumped a mile in the air, and the crowd gasped/cheered every time.  When we do a Bracked Buster challenge for biggest heart in eventing, Teddy will run away with it.  That said, no one is more deserving to move onto the next round than Tailor.  Murphy Himself beat out Supreme Rock in our other contest from yesterday.  

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A few notes from the first round and early second round matchups:

(i) PlayerHater and several other EN regulars have been vocal about Biko being overrated, and I agree.  I obviously have tremendous respect for Biko (we made him a 1-seed after all), and no one questions that Biko is one of the most popular horses of all time.  When Biko retired at Rolex I spent an hour and a half in line to have my picture taken with him.  But, Biko's lack of a major international victory makes it hard for me to think of him as one of the top 10 greatest horses ever, or even of the past 20 years.  I also take into consideration that Biko was ridden by one of the greatest riders of all time, which gave him every possible chance to collect that 4* 'dubya.'

(ii) It's really hard to compare long format to short format horses.  Anonymous made a comment today that Tailor's achievements are even more impressive considering he was a long format horse.  Undoubtedly, some successful horses today with their huge trots, big jumps, and warmblood heritage couldn't make it past the 4th minute on D of a long format.  Like any sport, we should look at the athletes within their own era and evaluate how they succeeded against the particular challenges they faced.  

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DAVIDSON REGION

2.  EAGLE LION

Eagle Lion wasn't the flashiest of horses, and he may not have earned the most blue ribbons, but he has an incredibly solid, if not stellar, record.  With him, Bruce Davidson became the first American to win Badminton, in 1995.  The bay gelding backs this up with other top-5 finishes at Burghley (1993), Badminton (1994 and 1998), and a win at Fair Hill CCI*** (1992).  He completed Badminton four times with double-clear cross-country rounds; he placed in the top 15 in ten three- or four-star events in all.


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(3) HEYDAY

Heyday enjoyed a long, prosperous career, first competing at Advanced when he was six years old, and finishing 13 long-format three-day events in the top 20.  He was yet another plain, average bay with above-average talent for Bruce Davidson.  In 1995 they won the PanAms, and earned the team silver medal at the 1996 Olympics (9th individually).  The next year, he earned second at Blenheim CCI***.  An 8th place finish at Rolex in 1998 sent him to the WEG, as part of the bronze medal winning US team.  From 2000-2003, Heyday partnered with Young Rider Maisy Grassie.  Heyday's success continued as he showed her the ropes from prelim to advanced, winning the NAYRC CCI* championship along the way.




AUSSIE/KIWI REGION

2.  CHARISMA

Charisma, ridden by Mark Todd, stood just 15.3 hh but towered over his competitors during his illustrious career.  Charisma was mostly thoroughbred (1/64th Percheron), and was nicknamed "Podge" because of his love of food.  As the story goes, Charisma had to have newspaper strips for bedding because he would eat anything else.  The pair first met while Mark Todd was working at a dairy farm and Todd felt pity because the horse was was so small.  Just a few years later, Charisma and Todd stormed onto the eventing scene with a second place finish at Badminton and then a shocking victory at the 1984 LA Olymics.  Charisma placed second again at Badminton ('85), second at Burghley ('87), and then dominated the 1988 Olympics, winning Gold by 10 points.  Charisma was the second event horse in history to win back-to-back individual Olympic Gold, after Charles de Mortanges and Marcroix (NED) in 1928 and 1932.  After Charisma retired, Mark Todd said "he is so tiny, I wonder how he achieved so much."


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(3) TRUE BLUE GIRDWOOD

True Blue Girdwood "Jug head" or just "Jug" was the only horse Phillip brought with him when he moved to the US in 1991.  Phillip says Jug the horse who really brought him onto the world stage.  True Blue Girdwood represented Australia in 1996 Olympics, winning team Gold in Atlanta, and also competed with Phillip at the '94 & '98 WEGs, Rolex, and Badminton (placing 6th in 1995).  After his career with Phillip, Jug mentored several of Phillip's students as a schoolmaster.
 



No big surprises yesterday, as Winsome Adante and Ready Teddy move on to the Elite Eight.  They proved they're #1 seeds for a reason! 

COMMENT OF THE DAY:
Anon in Australia continues to bring it, and we appreciate her contributions.
I loved Ready Teddy and saw him in the flesh once - the epitome of a sparking, intense international eventer. But I suspect Bounce taught Vaughn as much as the other way round...and ya have to love Vaughn. So Bounce gets my vote.


TODAY'S MATCHUPS

The toughest pairings of the whole tournament could happen today.  The deserving 2-seed CUSTOM MADE faces fan-favorite (6) THEODORE O'CONNOR, in what could be a voting war.  Also not to be taken lightly, (6) MURPHY HIMSELF and (7) SUPREME ROCK will duke it out in the British Region.  Don't let your favorite horse get knocked out, make sure you vote and tell others to do so!



O'CONNOR REGION


2.  CUSTOM MADE

Tailor teamed up with David O'Connor to make one of the best pairs in US eventing history.  David and Tailor placed 5th individually in Atlanta, 3rd at the '96 Badminton, won Badminton CCI4* in 1997, and then won the individual Olympic Gold at Sydney in 2000.  David has a habit when he rides of focusing so intensely on his horses that he can forget about his course, and, despite that infamous moment of hesitation that brought all of American eventing screaming to our feet, Tailor broke the Olympic score record in Sydney and ended a 25 year US eventing Olympic Gold medal drought.  Tailor is renown for being calm on the flat, and chilly in person, but turning into what David describes as a "Saturn V rocket" (think NASA) when the cross-country starts.  The 17.2 hh Tailor now lives in retirement at Stonehall Farm in Virginia with his stablemate Giltedge.

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6.  THEODORE O'CONNOR

Inspiring pint-sized athletes everywhere, the "Super Pony" took the event world by storm during his tragically-brief career.  Eventually paired with Karen O'Connor, Teddy finished 9th at his first three-star in 2006 at Jersey Fresh.  The next year would see him dominate the US scene, winning the Fork CIC***, finishing 3rd at Rolex, and winning individual and team gold at the 2007 PanAms.  The Pony ended up 6th at Rolex in '08, was short-listed for the Olympic team, when an unfortunate accident resulted in fatal injury.  His short glimpse of greatness proved to all that "pony power" was a force to be reckoned with.  





BRITISH ISLES REGION



6.  MURPHY HIMSELF

The athletic Murphy Himself began his eventing career with Ginny Leng, and the pair won Burghley in 1986.  Due to the gelding's strength on XC, Ginny decided to trade horses with Ian Stark in 1988 (for the horse Griffin), and Ian Rode Murphy Himself for the remainder of the horse's career.  With Ian, Murphy Himself delivered countless extraordinary XC rounds, completed Badminton multiple times including second in 1991, placed second at the Stockholm WEGs in 1990, and competed for the British Team in 1992 at the Barcelona Olympics.  Click here for a video including Murphy Himself.


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7.  SUPREME ROCK

Supreme Rock, ridden by Pippa Funnel, won back-to-back European Champtionships in 1999 and 2001, as well as team silver at Sydney.  Supreme Rock is one of only a couple horses in history to win Badminton twice (2002, 2003).  Supreme Rock was also part of Pippa's team that won the 2003 Rolex Grand Slam of Eventing, which, depending on how you divide up the winnings, makes Supreme Rock the largest money winner in the history of eventing.



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The Sweet Sixteen headline: NUMBER 1 GOES DOWN!  Northern Iowa (who?) took out number 1 Kansas, just as (4) RINGWOOD COCKATOO rose above (1) TOYTOWN.  On the other side of the bracket, (1) BIKO walked over (4) PRINCE PANACHE into the Elite Eight.


COMMENT OF THE DAY:

Despite Cockatoo's resounding victory, Toytown still had his (anonymous) fans.

Hard one between Ringwood Cockatoo and Toytown but Toytown was the most generous horse I have ever seen go xc. Look at his WEG round how much he dragged his rider out of serious trouble when other horses said no. RC was not so generous and I have seen some cracking refusals by him (Euros)and Bettina always went slowly xc to try and not make a silly mistakes because it did not take much for him to throw the towel in. Luckily Bettina always had an amazing dressage to cushion it all a bit.

 
TODAY'S MATCHUPS:

The (1) vs (4) continues with the Davidson Region and the Aussie/Kiwi Region.  Will WINSOME ADANTE walk to the finals?  Will BOUNCE be bounced by READY TEDDY?  Your vote decides!


DAVIDSON REGION


1.  WINSOME ADANTE

If Biko was the American horse of the 90's, Dan is certainly the horse of the 00's.  Partnered with Kim Severson, he kicked off his domination with a win at Blenheim CCI***, then went on to win Rolex CCI**** a remarkable three times ('02, '04, and '05).  Winsome Adante was a member of the Gold Medal team at the 2002 WEG (6th individually), and won Individual Silver/Team Bronze at the Athens Olympics in 2004.  Once again he represented the U.S. in the 2006 WEG, and closed out his career with a third place finish at Badminton CCI**** in 2007.


vs.


4.  POGGIO (II)

Like something out of a Disney movie, Pogi worked in the mines as a trail horse in the Cascade Mountains before he was rescued discovered by a friend of Amy Tryon.  The bay Throroughbred was notoriously difficult to ride, but he and Amy managed to form a partnership that took them to two Olympics (2004 and 2008) and two WEG teams (2002, 2006).  There, they earned a Team Gold, Individual Bronze (WEG), plus Team Bronze from the Olympics (where I believe he was one of the very few horses to showjump double clear in *both* rounds).  Poggio was 3rd at Rolex in 2002, in awful wet conditions, where he was also named "Best Conditioned Horse."  Pogi was always a fan favorite to watch, even if his "RUN RUN RUN-chip-JUMP!!!!" style made you gasp a few times.



AUSSIE/KIWI REGION


1.  READY TEDDY


Ridden by Blyth Tait, Ready Teddy represented New Zealand in the 1996 Olympics at the age of 8...and won Individual Gold, Team Bronze.  In 1998, Teddy did it again, winning Individual Gold and Team Gold at the WEG in Rome.  He also won Burghley CCI*** in 2001.   


vs.


4.  BOUNCE

Partnered with Vaughn Jefferis in 1994, Bounce would become a top competitor for New Zealand.  He won the Individual Gold medal at the 1994 WEG at the Hague, Team Bronze at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, and Team Gold at the 1998 WEG in Rome.  Bounce was third at Badminton in '94 (behind fellow NZ competitors Mark Todd and Blyth Tait).  



 

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