FEI
Eventing World Cup Update 
Chatsworth
(GBR) and Warwick (AUS) Press Release 5 26 May 2006 Aussies
Dominate Across the World By Kate Green It was Australia
day all over the globe last weekend in the FEI Eventing World Cup series. Shane
Rose (AUS) was victorious in the Horseland CIC-W at Warwick, Queensland (13-14
ay) while, on the other side of the world at the Chatsworth SsangYong Horse Trials
in Great Britain, Clayton and Lucinda Fredericks (AUS) became the
first husband and wife to score a one-two in
an FEI Eventing World Cup qualifier. (Clayton, riding WP In Limbo at Badminton,
is pictured at the right jumping the Mitsubishi L200 Double Cabs.)
The
Aussies seem to be enjoying a purple patch after Andrew Hoy's CCI 4-star
double at Kentucky (USA) and Badminton (GBR) in the preceding two weekends, while
Phillip Dutton (AUS) still leads the FEI Eventing World Cup rankings on
170 points. There are now five Australians in the Top Ten of the FEI Eventing
World Cup rankings after 11 of the 17 qualifiers for this year's final at Malmö
(21-24 September) have taken place. Clayton Fredericks is third on 152
points behind Karin Donckers (BEL), 165), Shane Rose is sixth on
118, Andrew Hoy seventh (114) and Lucinda Fredericks ninth (103). Eight
nations were represented at Chatsworth, but it was yet another Australian,
Bill Levett, who held the clear dressage lead on Minuto (39.1). However, as
the horse was returning to work after a year off, he decided to withdraw him after
that phase. The old turf cross-country going held up well during a damp
weekend at the beautiful parkland of the Duke of Devonshire's Chatsworth House,
but it is an undulating course and no one came anywhere near the optimum time
of 6min 40sec. Lucinda Fredericks (AUS) was second fastest on her
2002 Blenheim CCI 3-star winner Headley Bravo and added 15.6 to her third-placed
dressage score (45.7) which was good enough to take her into a narrow lead for
the final, jumping, phase on 61.3. However, the mare hit two rails to drop
to second place (69.3) and allow her husband Clayton, the reigning FEI
Eventing World Cup champion on Edwin and Peta Macauley's Ben Along Time, to rise
from third into the top spot (66.1) after he achieved one of only seven clear
rounds. Lucinda took her demotion in good humour, saying: "I'm
hoping Clayton will get to the FEI World Equestrian Games so I have more
chance of winning theWorld Cup final!" Cindy Rawson (USA) was
second after dressage on Ashdale Davids Way (43.4), a place she just retained
in the next phase by just 0.1 after adding 20.8 cross-country time penalties.
However, an unfortunate three rails down plus a time penalty dropped her to eventual
sixth (77.2). Fiona Hobby (GBR), who works as a physiotherapist,
was best of the home side and scored her best ever international result in third
place on Smart Approach (71.2). Andrew Nicholson (NZL) atoned for
a disappointing dressage mark (58.4) on the Spanish-bred Fenicio with a storming
cross-country round - easily the fastest (9.6) - and rose to eventual fourth place
with just one show jump down (72). All but six of the 32 starters completed
the competition and there was little trouble over Mike Etherington-Smith's immaculately
presented cross-country course David Evans, the same duo responsible for the track
at the 2008 Olympics. There was one big form upset, though, when the favourite,
William Fox-Pitt (GBR) took a crashing fall over the second fence on Moon
Man (fourth after dressage on 48.3) and was eliminated. Matt Ryan (AUS)
also caused excitement when Slight of Hand ran out and took off over the ropes,
galloping through tradestands and crowds before Matt could get him back
on to the course. He withdrew before show jumping. The winning horse, Ben
Along Time, a quality 11-year-old son of the Irish jumping sire Cavalier, has
rarely put a foot wrong in his Eventing career. Clayton hopes the horse
will gain him his first Australian squad placing since 1995, despite the pair
not competing at Badminton. "The format of these World Cup qualifiers
really suits this horse, so I'm hoping we have done enough to impress the selectors,"
said Clayton, who is the hard-working chairman of ERA (Event Riders Association). Clayton,
36, is from Perth, Western Australia, but has lived in Britain for many years.
He met Lucinda, 38, who represented Great Britain as a young rider, at Blenheim
and, after their marriage, she switched to Australian nationality. The couple,
who run a busy and successful yard near Devizes, Wiltshire, have a baby daughter,
Ellie. Full results on: www.bdwp.co.uk/cha Over at Warwick, (Australia)
Shane Rose (AUS) took a commanding lead from the start on the appropriately
named All Luck, who was returning from a six-month lay off, and was never headed.
Their closest rivals were the 2005 runners-up, Australian team coach Heath
Ryan (brother of Matt), who finished second again on Diablo Heart, 11.1penalties
in arrears. Shane produced a magnificent dressage test (38.2) and
was easily the fastest across country (0.8), all of which proved somewhat fortunate
when, admitting that All Luck's show jumping was perhaps a little rusty, he hit
three rails. His nearest rival after dressage, Craig Barrett (AUS) on
Staccato (45.7), who scored the only other sub-50 mark in the field of 18 Australian
riders, dropped down the order to eventual sixth (87.7) after a cross-country
stop. Carlene Barton was third on Covers (74.9), ahead of Robert
Palm (The Regulator, 75.4) and Blair Richardson (Moneystone Equity,
78.3). A great deal of work had been done on the cross-country course at
Warwick,with six new complexes and themed fences representing kangaroos, echidnas
and wombats.
Full results on: wht.org.au. The FEI World Cup series
stays in Australia, for Melbourne (9-11 June). The Swedish fixture at Segersjo
(15-18 June) has been cancelled. Standings
After Chatsworth (GBR) and Warwick (AUS: 1.
Phillip Dutton (AUS) - 170 (Phillip, riding Amazing Odyssey at the Kentucky
CCI****, is pictured at the left jumping a duck in The Head of The Lake.) 2.
Karin Donckers (BEL) - 165 3. Clayton Fredericks (AUS) - 152 4. Rodney Powell
(GBR) - 142 5. Matthew Wright (GBR) - 140 6. Shane Rose (AUS) - 118 7.
Andrew Hoy (AUS) - 114 8. Darren Chiacchia (USA)
- 109 9. Lucinda Fredericks (AUS) - 103 10T. William Fox-Pitt (GBR) - 100 10T.
Matthew Grayling (NZL) - 100 10T. Robyn Fisher (USA)
- 100
Other
Americans in the Top 30 Are:
16. Jonathan Holling
(USA) - 73 18. Kimberly Severson (USA)
- 63 19T. Jennifer Wooten (USA) - 60 28.
Heidi White (USA) - 41 29T. Lauren Whitlock (USA)
- 40 For the full standings of the FEI Eventing World
Cup, please check www.feiworldcup.org * * *
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
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