By Louise Parkes
The last qualifying leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ 2013 series certainly lived up to expectations with thrills, spills and a gripping battle before Brazil won through and Austria clinched the only remaining qualifying spot for the series Final. France and Switzerland shared second place ahead of a courageous British side who didn’t have the easiest of days. But for the host nation it was an emotional afternoon as they went into the second round jointly in the lead, but lost their chance in the very closing stages to finish fifth.
There were two separate plots unfolding throughout the competition. The first was the battle for supremacy on the day, and the second was the battle for that tantalising last remaining place available to just one team from the Europe Division 2 league at the inaugural Furusiyya Final which will take place in Barcelona, Spain in two weeks’ time. Austria, Italy and Poland all started today with a chance of making it to sunny Spain, and with the greatest number of points as today’s competition began, their sixth-place finishing spot would ensure it was the Austrians who would make the cut.
Thriller
Clever course-building set the stage for a thriller from start to finish. As course designer, Italy’s Uliano Vezzani, said afterwards it wasn’t easy to find the right balance for riders and horses with such a wide range of experience. Some were making their Nations Cup debut while others were very seasoned campaigners. The course tested them all however, and Sweden’s day started with a big surprise when Rolf-Goran Bengtsson’s 10-year-old stallion, Clarimo ASK, declined to go any further than the first fence in the opening round. To the crowd’s amazement the very handsome grey horse stopped halfway between the opening vertical and the following triple bar, possibly having taken a dislike to the nearby lake which is one of a number of derby-course features in Arezzo’s lovely Boccaccio Arena.
The vertical at fence three stood a full 1.60m tall and a right-hand turn then brought them down to the oxer at four and the following triple combination with a one-stride distance between each element at fence five. From there it was left-handed to the red oxer at six and a roll-back to the open water at seven. It was here that the opening round for Britain’s last-line partnership of Matthew Sampson and Lennox Luis came to an end. The grey gelding refused to go down to the water and when Sampson tried to encourage him the horse was having none of it and the rider ended up on the floor.
Vezzani set them the traditional test of accuracy after the open water with two fences on a snaking line. The first was a not-inconsiderable oxer, 150m x 150m, and then a gate of narrow white planks that headed towards the arena entrance. Time and again horses ran strongly to the oxer and riders couldn’t gather them up enough to adjust their angle in order to meet the white planks on a good stride. This proved the bogey fence of the day.
Influential
The following double, oxer to vertical, also proved influential when horses were distracted by passing the entrance, while the penultimate oxer was followed by a right-hand turn down the side of the arena to the final water-tray vertical. A number of riders made it all the way there only to make a last-minute mistake.
Ireland’s day got off to a bad start when Capt Michael Kelly’s Drumiller Lough pulled up very lame after stopping at the second element of the triple combination. There was relief all round however when his Irish army groom quickly spotted that the front shoe had slipped back so that the horse then stood on the clip. Once the shoe was removed the 10-year-old gelding left the arena feeling a lot better. But this didn’t help Irish chances and when they were drawn level with Colombia on 12 faults at the end of the first round they lost out on a place in round two by just 0.83 seconds.
Belgium, Poland and The Netherlands also sat it out during the second round when just eight of the 12 starting nations returned, with Italy, France and Brazil holding sway at the top of the order when each carrying four faults and Austria, Switzerland and Sweden just a fence behind carrying eight. The British returned carrying nine ahead of Colombia with 12.
Gargantuan Battle
And it turned into a gargantuan battle between the leading teams, with a great start for the host nation when Luca Maria Moneta and Neptune Brecourt went clear to match the second-round effort of Brazilian openers, Rodrigo Pessoa and Citizenguard Cadjanine Z.
The French began to slip with a double-error from David Jobertie and Quastor de la Vallee, and four faults from each of the remaining team members saw them adding 12 to their tally which seemed likely to leave them well out of the reckoning on a final score of 16 alongside the Swiss. But there was a lot more excitement to be played out.
It was still neck-and-neck between Brazil and Italy, Eduardo Menezes, making his Nations Cup debut for Brazil, lowering only the vertical at fence three with Calavda before Italy’s Filippo Moyersoen and Loro Piana Canada hit the second element of the double at 10. But Roberto Turchetto and Baretto got into a muddle at the third fence and also hit the troublesome vertical at nine to return with a total of 10 faults including time which left the Italians very vulnerable. And when Alvaro de Miranda and AD Uutje hit only the final fence and then Marlon Zanotelli delivered the second part of the only double-clear performance of the day with Clouwni it was clear that Brazil would finish with a total of just eight faults.
Now it was left to Italian veteran, Juan Carlos Garcia, to save the day and force a jump-off by going clear. But the home crowd groaned as Prince de la Mare hit the second element of the triple combination, the oxer at six and the second element of the double at ten for a total of 12 faults which proved the second-round discard. The Italian finishing score of 14 would only be good enough for fifth place and suddenly their hopes of getting to the Furusiyya Final were gone.
Steadier Day
Austria enjoyed a much steadier day, adding four-fault scores from Dieter Kofler (Glock’s Prince de Vaux), Julia Kayser (Sterrehof’s Ushi) and Stefan Eder (Chilli van Dijk NRW) and therefore discarding the 17 collected by Astrid Kneifel (Royal des Bisson) to complete alongside the Swedes on a 20-fault final scoreline. And Chef d’Equipe, Thomas Istinger’s side are now on the road to Barcelona along with Sweden and Belgium from the Europe Division 2 league.
Italy’s plunge down the order saw the French and Swiss rise to joint-runner-up spot with their 16 faults apiece while the British finished a very close fourth with 17 at the end of the day despite finishing with only three team scores after a second elimination for Matthew Sampson. The Swiss team consisted of Martina Meroni (Socrates ll), Fanny Queloz (Celtic), Barbara Schnieper (Ragrusa H) and Claudia Gisler (Touchable).
The Brazilian team, led by Chef d’Equipe Jean-Maurice Bonneau, were understandably delighted with their result. And there was the sense of the start of a new era for this country today. A combination of great experience and rising talent suggests this team could be a real force for the future.
Facts and Figures:
At the podium presentation following the last qualifying leg of the Furusiyya FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping 2013 series at CSIO 3* San Marino Arezzo in Italy today: (L to R) Carlo Bernardini, Bruno Quadrelli and Riccardo Boricchi from CSIO 3* San Marino Arezzo Organising Committee, Brazilian team members Rodrigo Pessoa and Alvaro de Miranda, Chef d'Equipe Jean-Maurice Bonneau, team members Marlon Zanotelli and Eduardo Menezes, FEI Jumping Director John Roche and Lazzaro Volpinari, President San Marino Equestrian Federation. Photo: FEI/Stefano Secchi.
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