NZ Win Bronze Medals At World Equestrian Games
NZ Win Bronze Medals At World Equestrian Games
New Zealand's eventers are celebrating tonight after winning two bronze medals at the World Equestrian Games in Kentucky.
Veteran rider Andrew Nicholson, aboard his
lovely chestnut Nereo (owned by Libby Sellar) won his first
individual medal at World Games level.
The Kiwi effort
today qualified New Zealand for eventing at the 2012 Olympic
Games in London.
Nicholson has been part of plenty a team
winning performance at both Olympic and World Games level,
but individual glory has long escaped him. He was ecstatic
with the result but said he'd arrived in Kentucky with a
good feeling.
“This is the first time I have left home
really feeling I was good enough for an individual medal.
It's nice that it has all come together.”
He had plenty of praise for his horse Nereo and it was his solid anchor ride that secured the bronze medal for the team, after being truly brilliant through the three disciplines – dressage, cross country yesterday and finally the showjumping today.
“I have a lot of confidence and faith in Nereo
and he is very consistent through all three, getting
stronger and stronger all the time.”
Nereo and
Nicholson were the 52nd of 55 combinations to go and they
rode into a pressure-cooker atmosphere in a packed arena
filled with nearly 20,000 very vocal spectators.
It was a calm and polished performance that saw them round clean, clear and into bronze. With hardly a thing separating the top four riders, it was a nail-biting few minutes as Team New Zealand watched the remaining riders go to see if there was to be an even better result in the making.
Gold medal winner Michael Jung (Germany) was untouchable at the front of the field, leading from start to finish in superb style aboard La Biosthetique-Sam FBW.
In the end, there was just 1.5 points between silver medallist William Fox-Pitt on Cool Mountain and Nicholson.
American rider Karen O'Conner and Mandiba had a nightmare in the showjumping, with a stop, a rail and then time penalties. It was that mistake that gave New Zealand the chance to move up the ranks.
It is the
first time New Zealand has been on the World Games podium
since 1998.
Nicholson said the team had been brilliant to
be part of.
“We have been through a rebuilding and are
on the way up now,” he said.
It had been a real team
effort, from management through to vets, grooms and others
who helped and supported the horses and riders to achieve
glory.
Mark Todd was “absolutely thrilled” with the
podium finish.
“We are all over the moon.”
He and NZB Grass Valley rode a polished clear round in the showjumping. He'd had to push the horse to step up a little quicker to top level than he had planned after losing his Olympic horse NZB Gandalf in December.
Caroline Powell picked up four faults in the showjumping but took the blame for that herself.
“I was a bit disappointed with the dressage but thrilled to bits with the cross country.”
The efforts of her 12-year-old horse Mac MacDonald, owned Powell and Pat Melville-Evans, made up for the nasty nip he gave his rider earlier in the competition.
“It has all been a bit of a whirlwind,”
she said.
Powell finished 22nd overall.
Clarke Johnstone and Orient Express had 13 faults in the showjumping and finished 39th overall.
Individual competitor Jonathan Paget, aboard Clifton Promise, rode the event of his life at his first World Games, finishing seventh overall after going clear today in the showjumping.
Chef d'equipe and trainer Erik Duvander was somewhat lost for words. The bronze was his first medal in 10 years of international coaching. But he says nerves were never an issue as he knew just what his team was capable of.
“That said, there are never any guarantees, but all the preparation had been done.”
Duvander said it was incredibly exciting to see the team progress so positively over the four days of competition.
“The targets we set two years ago have been achieved – for the team, they have gone beyond. It is rather unbelievable.”
The eventing
press conference drew the largest crowd of any of the
disciplines so far, with standing room only in the large
auditorium, with photographers and journalists from all over
the world keen to get words and images of the stars.
The
New Zealand showjumpers start their competition tomorrow (US
time).
ends