Hoy
gets 2006 Campaign off the Mark at Fontainebleau By Kate Green Andrew
Hoy (AUS), the runner-up in the 2005 FEI Eventing World Cup Final, has got
off to a flying start in the 2006 season by winning the first Europe-based FEI
Eventing World Cup qualifier this year, at Fontainebleau (FRA), (23 - 26 March). Hoy
rose from sixth place after dressage to triumph with the fastest cross-country
time (4.4 time penalties)
and a foot-perfect double clear on the evergreen British Thoroughbred Master Monarch,
who has made an emphatic recovery from an injury sustained at Burghley last year.
(Andrew and Master Monarch are pictured at the right during their victory Gallop
at Fontainebleau. Photo courtesy of the FEI Wolrd Cup site.) Master
Monarch, owned by Tom Attwood and Richard Constant, has a consistent record at
four-star level, with several placings at Badminton and Burghley - he will be
one of Hoy's best chances of selection for the Australian team at this year's
FEI World Equestrian Games in Aachen. Hoy was also ninth at Fontainebleau
on Yeoman's Point, an entirely satisfactory result as both horses are bound for
four-star runs at Lexington and Badminton. His wife Bettina Hoy (GER) has
been competing his 2004 Burghley winner Moonfleet this spring and she finished
15th out of the 51 starters from 11 nations. "Both my horses produced
personal best performances, so I'm delighted. This has set me up brilliantly for
the forthcoming three-day events," said Hoy, who finished second on
Mr Pracatan behind his compatriot Clayton Fredericks (AUS) on Ben Along
Time in the 2005 FEI World Cup Final. The reigning champions came 13th at Fontainebleau. Hoy's
immaculate performance denied a home victory to Nicolas Touzaint (FRA)
on Hildago d'Ile, the horse he rode in the silver medal French team at the 2005
European Championships. After cross-country, Touzaint had looked
set for a one-two, having led the dressage and cross-country phases on his 2003
European Champion, the 13-year-old Galan de Sauvagere, who is back eventing after
a year off, with Hildago d'Ile in second. But the grey horse knocked his
stifle on the cross-country and could not be presented at the final horse inspection.
Then he lost his advantage on Hildago d'Ile when he hit the first part of the
treble in the final jumping phase and had to settle for second place. Touzaint's
team mate Arnaud Boiteau (FRA) was third on his Athens Olympic gold medallist
horse Expo du Moulin, ahead of Jean-Lou Bigot (FRA) on a new ride, Icare
d'Auzay. It was a wet weekend in France, but riders were appreciative of
Fontainebleau's sandy going and all-weather arenas. Course-designer Pierre
Michelet had softened his cross-country course in deference to the early season
date; but, the water complex at fence 17 caused several run-outs. Thirty-eight
horses completed the competition. At
this early stage of the season, with 14 qualifiers to go before the final at Malmo,
Sweden (21-24 September), Karin Donckers (BEL), who was third in the 2004
FEI Eventing World Cup final and won the 2005 qualifier at Pau, finished fifth
at Fontainebleau on Gormley and now has a commanding lead in the rankings on 165
points.
Phillip Dutton (AUS) is second on 130 points, having won
and been placed at Tallahassee in Florida earlier this month, and Hoy now
moves into third place with 114 points, just ahead of Rodney Powell (GBR),
who won the Martinvast CIC-W last year, on 112. For the full results,
rankings and additional information on the FEI Eventing World Cup, please check
www.feiworldcup.org. The FEI World Cup action now moves to California,
at Temecula (Galway Downs) this weekend. (March 31 - April 2, 2006) World
Rankings Before Galway Downs Competition: 1. Karen Donckers (BEL)
- 165 2. Phillip Dutton (AUS) - 130 3. Andrew Hoy (AUS) - 114 4. Rodney
Powell (GBR) - 112 5. Marie Christine Duroy (FRA) - 86 6. Victoria Carlerback
(SWE) - 61 7T. Jonathan Holling (USA) - 60 (Jonathan, the highest placed
American, is pictured above left on Direct Merger at the American
Eventing Championships last fall. Jonathan's points were accrued with Lion King
II.) 7T. Nicholas Touzaint (FRA) - 60 ***
The
FEI Eventing World Cup is the sport's only linked series. The 2006 season consists
of 18 qualifiers held in ten countries worldwide. It will culminate in a Final
to be held in Malmö (SWE) from 21 to 24 September. The FEI Eventing World
Cup is organised at the highest level of the sport using the format without steeple
chase. The series is designed in manner to encourage the participation of the
world's best riders and horses and thus promote such emblematic values of Eventing,
as the constant quest for harmony between physical skills and mental balance,
contact with nature, precision, stamina, agility and insightful training. The
FEI Eventing World Cup is a showcase of a sport resolutely turned to the future.
Malina Gueorguiev Communications Department
Fédération
Equestre Internationale Avenue Mon-Repos 24 1005 Lausanne Switzerland t
+41 21 310 47 54 f +41 21 310 47 60 www.horsesport.org NEW: www.feiworldcup.org
|