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Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials celebrates 50 glorious years

An all-star cast heads to this week’s Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials (GBR), second last leg of the HSBC FEI Classics™ 2011 (1-4 September).

It is a particularly special year for Burghley, as it is 50 years ago that the historic Lincolnshire estate hosted its first competition by invitation of the 1928 hurdling Olympic gold medallist, the Marquess of Exeter.

Since then, Burghley has hosted eight championships, including the first ever World Championships in 1966, and riders regularly vote it their favourite venue in L’Annee Hippique, the annual review of the equestrian year.

Not only does Burghley boast the beautiful backdrop of the magnificent Elizabethan house and deer park, but it is an event that has consistently been at the forefront of innovation, with its own irrigation system for the dedicated Cross Country track and all-weather warm-up arenas.

“Burghley has such charm,” explains five-times winner Mark Todd (NZL). “It is a magical place and I always feel excited when I come in through the gates.”

Besides Todd, eight other former Burghley winners have entered for this year’s golden jubilee, including Mary King (GBR), the current runaway leader of the HSBC FEI Classics™.

King, none the worse for her fall at the HSBC FEI European Eventing Championships in Luhmühlen last weekend, had always declared the HSBC FEI Classics™ to be her major goal this year, and she is taking no chances. She brings her Rolex Kentucky (USA) winner, the home-bred mare Kings Temptress, plus the consistent Apache Sauce, eighth at the HSBC FEI Classics™ in Luhmühlen (GER) in June.

Although seven out of the top 10 in the current HSBC FEI Classics™ rankings are competing at Burghley, only one can depose King from the top of the leaderboard this weekend: Badminton (GBR) winner Mark Todd. However, he will have to win on Major Milestone to achieve this, so it looks as if the series will go all the way to the wire at Pau (FRA) in October.

Those who have already tasted Burghley glory include the defending champions Caroline Powell (NZL) on the sprightly 18-year-old Lenamore, plus her compatriots Andrew Nicholson (NZL), with Avebury and world bronze medallist Nereo, and Blyth Tait (NZL) on Santos.

Particular interest will surround Tait, who scored a one-two in 1998 with Chesterfield and Aspyring as well as a win in 2001 with his Olympic and world champion Ready Teddy, as he is making a welcome return to Burghley after a seven-year absence.

Southern hemisphere riders have taken the honours at Burghley 11 times in the last 21 years, and Lucinda Fredericks (AUS), the 2006 winner on Headley Britannia, returns with the good mare Prada.

Former British winners entered are Oliver Townend (2009), who is entered with Imperial Master and Neo du Breuil; Pippa Funnell (2003) with Mirage d’Elle and Pure Addiction, and five-times winner William Fox-Pitt, who has entered Neuf des Couers and Parklane Hawk.

Another distinguished entrant is the former world and European champion Zara Phillips (GBR), second in 2003 on Toytown. This time she rides High Kingdom. Her mother, the Princess Royal, a key figure in Burghley’s history having won the European Championships there in 1971 on Doublet, will be presenting the prizes on Sunday.
Zara Phillips’ father, Captain Mark Phillips, says he has designed a “retro” Cross Country course in honour of Burghley’s landmark birthday. His track certainly marks a return to the old days of big, bold hedges and ditches – Centaur’s Leap (fence 21) at the far end of the course is a record 1.45m wide – so it will be fascinating to see whether there is an old or a new name on the roll of honour on Sunday night.

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