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Khalid Al Eid and Presley Boy lead individually after the second competition. By Dirk Caremans/FEI |
As the American team lost their grip on pole position, Germany snatched the lead in the jumping championship at the Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games in Kentucky, USA, on 5 October.
Lying fifth overnight, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's Khaled Al Eid rocketed to the top of the individual leaderboard when all those ahead of him faltered. The 41-year-old Saudi rider added just a single time penalty to his tally in an otherwise flawless performance from his stallion, Presley Boy. But the 2000 Olympic bronze medallist has his tutor, Brazil's Rodrigo Pessoa, breathing down his neck going into the next leg and only one fence dividing the top 13 riders heading into the third day of competition.
Brazil lies second in the team standings, less than a fence behind the leading Germans, while only fractions further in arrears in third, the host nation holds a narrow advantage over Canada, with France and Saudi Arabia in fifth and sixth places.
Perhaps not the biggest surprise of the day was the success of the strong Australian foursome who produced two of just 17 clear rounds to move up from 14th to seventh. Belgium lies eighth, Sweden ninth and Great Britain holds tenth spot, and only the top 10 teams from today's competition go through to tomorrow evening's second round team medal decider.
Testing course
Conrad Homfeld set them another fascinating test. The problems were widespread, with a narrow 1.60m vertical at four claiming plenty of victims, as did its following treble. The open water at fence seven was particularly problematic.
"That jump can be a heart-breaker," admitted Conrad. "It was bigger today than yesterday, so that may account for some of the activity, but I have no real explanation for why it created so many problems."
He explained his plan for the 13-fence course.
"It is a 'narrowing down' process, devised to reduce the field by increasing the degree of difficulty. Trying to do that while taking into consideration the calibre of the horses and riders we have here." he explained.
The USA's chef d'equipe George Morris congratulated him on his work.
"It's very difficult to build for horses and riders at so many different levels; the quantity and the quality," he said. "Conrad did a great job and I'm proud of him."
The biggest heart-breaker of all however turned out to be the line that included an oxer at 11 and a double at 12. A short five, or long four strides, would cover the distance between the two, but inside the double was very tight and time and again riders fell foul of it. And, having already struggled there, they also often faulted at the final oxer at 13.
Germany
It was the first element of the double at 12 that added four faults to Janne-Friederike Meyer's scoresheet, but second-line German rider Carsten-Otto Nagel steered Corradina clear. When Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum's Checkmate put a foot in the water and also lowered the final fence, the Germans looked more vulnerable, but Marcus Ehning rounded up the team effort with just a single mistake from Plot Blue. And, as it turned out, that was still good enough to move his country into pole position.
USA
The Americans lost their grip when Lauren Hough (Quick Study) collected five faults, Mario Deslauriers (Urico) had two fences down, Laura Kraut (Cedric) fell victim to the middle element of the triple combination at five and McLain Ward (Sapphire) hit the oxer at nine.
These results also seriously affected the individual leaderboard, Mario's double-error sending him plummeting from first to 22nd and McLain's single mistake relegating him from runner-up spot to ninth. Lying overnight third, Hungary's Sandor Szasz (Moosbachhofs Goldwing) dropped right down to 55th place when collecting 12 faults and eight faults demoted fourth-placed Venezuelan Pablo Barrios (G&C Lagran) to 30th.
There is a very new look to the top end of the individual scoreboard going into Wednesday's competition.
All change
Rodrigo Pessoa, whose clear with HH Rebozo helped raise Brazil from seventh to second when added to a similarly impressive run from Alvaro Miranda (AD Ashleigh Drossel Dan) is lying individually second ahead of Belgium's Philippe Le Jeune (Vigo d'Arsouilles). Germany's Carsten-Otto Nagel (Corradina) lies fourth ahead of Australia's Edwina Alexander (Cevo Itot du Chateau) in fifth.
In that memorable final four World Championship finale at Aachen four years ago, it was Alexander who lost out in the battle for the medals, so this is a lady with a score to settle and she is lurking dangerously at the sharp end once again.
But she is followed by reigning Olympic champion Eric Lamaze whose stallion Hickstead put on an exhibition of superb jumping again today. The fact that fellow-Canadian John Pearce (Chianto) is next in line helped boost Canada's position, along with the disappearance of the defending champions from the reckoning. The Dutch team added 24 faults to their scoreline today, and that was altogether too expensive, dropping them right down from fourth to 15th place.
Chances
German team member Marcus Ehning, who is lying in 26th place, was this evening asked what he thought of his chances of getting into an individual medal position.
"I don't know yet. For now I'm focused on the team competition tomorrow and on trying, if possible, to get into the top-25 on Friday," he replied. "Then we will see. There are so many good horses and good riders fighting for the medals here."
Rodrigo, who climbed into team and individual silver medal position today, talked about his stallion HH Rebozo whose clear round was greeted by a roar of approval from the crowd.
"I have had him since February, he's a 10-year-old and Mexican-bred," he said. "This year he had good third-placings in Torino and Rome, and he was fifth in the Queen Elizabeth at Calgary.
"He's a very straight-forward horse and he's in good shape, but the week is very long. We've only done two rounds so far and it's a long way to the final.
"The team is totally based in Europe, but we don't do Nations Cups because we only have four riders. We have done our preparation separately, but we got together two weeks ago for two days and it has worked out good for us. But look at the results sheet - there are seven teams with just one rail between them right now."
two sessions
Due to the extraordinary number of entries for the jumping World Championships, presented by Rolex, tomorrow's team final (the second round of the team competition, which also serves as a qualification for the individual final), has been split into two sessions. An afternoon session, running from 1 to 5pm, is open to all team members whose teams have not qualified for the second round of the team competition and to individual riders not starting in the evening session. All riders in this session start in reverse order of their individual classification.
An evening session begins at 7.20pm and is open to 15 individual riders (taken from individual riders and team members, whose teams have not qualified for the second round of the team competition) and to the top ten teams. In this session, the 15 individuals start before the top 10 teams in the reverse order of their individual classification. The top 10 teams start in the reverse order of their team classification.
For full results, click here
Listen to rider interviews
Rodrigo Pessoa
Edwina Alexander
Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum
McLain Ward
Marcus Ehning
Phillippe Le Jeune (English
Phillippe Le Jeune (French)
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