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NewsOlympic Games

Carl Hester takes the lead as dressage gets underway at Greenwich Park

Britain’s Carl Hester and Laura Bechtolsheimer got the host nation off to a great start when claiming the top two places in the Grand Prix on the opening day of Dressage at the London 2012 Olympic Games in Greenwich Park today.

But Bechtolsheimer wasn’t content with her score of 76.839 with Mistral Hojris which leaves her just under one percentage point behind her team-mate as the second tranche of riders take on the Grand Prix challenge tomorrow. “I’m pretty gutted for my team that the score didn’t reflect what we thought it would be,” said the 27-year-old British rider who took three silver medals at the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games™ in Kentucky (USA) two years ago with the same horse. “It is by far the lowest percentage that I’ve had in a few years. I hope it is just because the marks are lower here,” she said.

And she may have every reason to be concerned, because the mighty Germans, whose dominance of this sport at Olympic level includes 12 team and seven individual titles, sent out only one of their team members today. That was Dorothee Schneider who steered her lovely young mare, Diva Royal, through a calm and tension-free test to post a score of 76.77 for third place at this halfway stage of the Grand Prix competition.

If Bechtolsheimer thought she was having a bad day however, it was nothing compared to the nightmare elimination incurred by Canada’s David Marcus after his 12-year-old gelding, Capital, went into a dizzy spin when disturbed by the crowd during one of a series of rainstorms that swept across the arena. No matter how hard he tried, the rider couldn’t get the horse back under control, and his departure has ensured that only nine of the 10 teams that started today are still medal-contenders because, with only three riders per team, every score counts and the Canadians are down to just two.

Set the Standard

Hester set the standard when last to go of the first group, riding the 11-year-old stallion, Uthopia, with which he won team gold and double individual silver at the FEI European Championships last year. He was already thinking about how his score would affect Great Britain, considering the new format which means that the team title will be decided by combined scores from both the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Special. Asked if the format will assist his team’s chances he replied, “potentially it will. Valegro (Charlotte Dujardin’s horse) and Mistral Hojris (Laura Bechtolsheimer) are both ‘hot’ horses, and having another chance to compete in the Grand Prix Special just might help them.” Having posted 77.720 to take the lead, he said of Uthopia, “he’s the coolest horse around. If I say walk, he walks, if I say stop, he stops. He’s a bit like a computer with a furry body!”

Defending individual Olympic champion, The Netherlands’ Anky Van Grunsven, who is the only Dressage rider to win three back-to-back Olympic titles and who set a new record today when becoming the first Dressage rider to compete at seven Olympic Games, lined out in the second group of riders with her double Olympic champion ride Salinero to rack up a score of 73.343 which slotted her into fifth place. But she was battling strong emotions.

“It has been very difficult. My husband (Dutch team trainer Sjef Janssen) fell ill today. He has flu, but because he had an operation for a tumour last November, I had to get someone to be with him this morning. He is OK but it was a big worry for me. I blocked it out while I was in the ring but now I am thinking about it,” she explained. “This is the first time in my seven Olympics Games that he has not been here to watch me,” she added tearfully.

She is determined to continue to support the Dutch Dressage effort however. “This time I am only here for the team, not for myself. If it was for my own result, I could have stayed at home. I do not have a good chance this time, but it is the team that matters,” she insisted.

Temporary Second Place

Schneider followed her into the ring to take temporary second place, and then Denmark’s Anna Kaksprzak and Donnperignon slotted into third with a score of 75.289, but when Bechtolsheimer entered the ring, the leader board was altered as she wedged herself into runner-up spot between Hester and Schneider ahead of tomorrow’s action.

The British rider produced a powerful and eye-catching performance, but there were mistakes including one in the extended canter, where Hester also faltered, and she didn’t overtake her team-mate as she had clearly expected to do. “I felt like Mistral Hojris put in a really solid performance as always,” she said afterwards with disappointment in her voice. “In parts he got a bit strong, but I was always able to bring him back. He remained concentrated and focused throughout the test, and I felt like I put in a solid performance.”

More solid performances can be expected tomorrow, but the remaining two members of the Canadian dressage team are now competing as individuals following Marcus’ elimination. Jacqueline Brooks posted 68.526 with D’Niro today, and Ashley Holzer and Breaking Dawn will take their turn tomorrow morning. It’s been a stormy Olympic Games for the Canadians so far, their Eventing team failing to finish with three eliminations on cross-country day and their Dressage team chances now also dashed.

Facts and Figures:

A total of 25 horse-and-rider combinations competed in the Grand Prix today. The remaining 25 will compete tomorrow.

10 teams started in the Grand Prix today but only nine finished following elimination for Canada’s David Marcus and Capital.

There have been some changes to the Olympic Dressage format since the Beijing 2008 Games. A panel of seven judges each test. All seven award marks in the Grand Prix and Grand Prix Special These points are used to calculate the percentage scores.

During the Grand Prix Freestyle, three judges award the technical marks and four judges award artistic marks. The total is used to calculate the percentage scores which decide the final individual classification.

The oldest horse competing in Dressage at the London 2012 Olympic Games is the 18-year-old Salinero, ridden by The Netherlands’ Anky Van Grunsven who is defending the individual title she has won on three consecutive occasions and the only Dressage rider ever to take three back-to-back Olympic titles – at Sydney (AUS) in 2000, Athens (GRE) in 2004 and Beijing (CHN) in 2008.

The youngest horses are all 10-year-olds – Diva Royal ridden by German team member Dorothee Schneider, Don Auriello ridden by Sweden’s Tinne Vilhelmson Silfven, Dorina competed by Norway’s Siril Helljesen) and Valegro ridden by Great Britain’s Charlotte Dujardin.

The highest placed 11 riders (including all riders tied for 11th place) not otherwise participating as qualified team members, plus all riders from the best seven teams (including all teams tied for seventh place), qualify for the individual second qualifier (Grand Prix Special).

The judging panel took positions around the dressage arena as follows: At K – Wim Ernes (NED); At E – Jean-Michel Roudier (FRA); At H – Leif Tornblad (DEN); At C – Gary Rockwell (USA); At M – Stephen Clarke (GBR); At B – Maribel Alonso (MEX): At F – Evi Eisenhardt (GER).

Quotes:

Dressage rider Minna Telde (SWE), asked how her inexperienced, one-eyed horse (Santana) coped with the occasion, scoring 67.77: “Only quite well. He was scared by the sound of all the cameras clicking and we made two big mistakes. Apart from that, he was very willing and very forward-going. His (lack of an) eye is an extra thing to take care of. He can see nothing to the left and has to rely on me to tell him it is OK. He has to believe me. It's a matter of trust between us.”

Dressage rider Anabel Balkenhol (GER) on her performance with Dablino, finishing on a mark of 70.973: “My horse was pretty hot. He was very excited about the spectators. He can get scared and he managed quite well. I am not over the moon, but it was really OK. This horse has all the possibilities and it will be sad if I cannot show him again.”

Dressage rider David Marcus (CAN) on his performance riding Capital, eliminated for disobedience of the horse: “Things were going fine until he spotted a TV camera in the corner, and the crowd were moving around in their seats due to the rain, and it all went wrong. He doesn't normally do anything like that. It was totally out of character and I am desperately disappointed.”

Emma Kanerva (FIN) – On her test, riding Spirit to a score of 70.395: “I’m very relieved, that is the biggest arena I have ever ridden in. My horse concentrated on what I was saying to him, he stayed with me. It was a shame we had two mistakes as usually he is perfect.”

Patrick van der Meer (NED) – On his performance with Uzzo, scoring 71.003: “It went well but I made a very expensive mistake in the flying changes. That movement counts double and probably cost me a personal best. I will work for four years as Rio (2016) was always my aim. This is my own horse and he does not have a lot of experience.”

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