Countdown: 500 days to Paris 2024 Paralympic Games

Media updates
18 April 2023 Author: FEI Communications

The road to the Para Dressage arena of the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games is now just 500 days long.

 

The Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, which will run from 28 August to 8 September, will see the Para Dressage competition take place at the iconic Château de Versailles from 3 to 7 September, with 78 athlete and horse combinations from around the world eligible to compete for 33 medals awarded across the Team, Individual and Freestyle Events.

 

A total of 15 slots are available for the Para Dressage Team competition, with each qualifying nation eligible to send up to four athletes each to Paris, for a total of 60 athletes.

 

France, as the host country, directly qualified for first slot while seven countries – the Netherlands, Denmark, USA, Great Britain, Belgium, Germany, and Italy – secured their ticket to the Paralympic Games through the ECCO FEI World Championships 2022 in Herning (DEN).

 

The FEI Para Dressage European Championships, which will take place in Riesenbeck (GER) in September 2023, will provide another opportunity for the top ranked team from the competition (not otherwise qualified) to secure a place in Paris.  

 

Four other slots will be filled by the highest ranked teams from Asia, the Americas, Africa, and Oceania, while the two highest ranking teams on the FEI Paralympic Team Ranking List will also qualify.

 

A further 18 individual athletes will also be eligible to compete. These will be the top three ranked athletes from the FEI Paralympic Individual Ranking List in Europe, Asia, Oceania, the Americas, and Africa. Finally, three individual places will be allocated by the FEI and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC).

 

The competition

The Para Dressage competition starts with the Individual Medal Test and qualifier for Freestyle Medal Event, known as the FEI Para Grand Prix A, which is where the athletes in each Grade perform a set routine of movements around the arena.

 

This is followed by the team competition – the FEI Para Grand Prix B – where three athletes from each Nation, declared by the Chef d’Equipe, ride the Para Grand Prix B routine in their Grades. The cumulative scores from each athlete forms the overall team score.

 

On the last day of the competition, the top eight Athlete/Horse combinations in each Grade perform their Grand Prix Freestyle. This is always the most popular day of any Para Dressage event, giving the athletes the chance to express themselves through their own choreographed routines.

 

Ones to watch

The team medal will likely be the most hotly contested of the Games. It has been won by Great Britain at every Paralympic Games since Atlanta in 1996 (the first Para Dressage competition of the Paralympics). At the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo, Great Britain won by less than one percentage point, but then failed to make the podium at the FEI Para Dressage Championships in Herning (DEN) in 2022.

 

The Netherlands, who are the current European and World Champions, will be desperate to add a Paralympic title to their collection. They will face stiff competition though, not just from Great Britain, but also from Denmark and the USA.

 

Individually, The Netherlands Sanne Voets (Grade IV) will want to add more golds to the two she won in Tokyo, as will Denmark’s Tobias Thorning Joergensen (Grade III), Belgium’s Michelle George (Grade V), and Great Britain’s Lee Pearson (Grade II). Great Britain’s Sophie Christiansen is hoping to regain a place on her team to compete in Grade I, where she will face tough competition from Paralympic gold medallist Roxanne Trunnell (USA) and Rihards Snikus (LAT)

 

Also hoping to compete, and regain the titles she last won in Rio in 2016, is Great Britain’s Natasha Baker. “I’m so, so excited for Paris,” she said. “Tokyo was a very different Games, with no crowds, and no friends and family. So being able to ride in such an iconic venue, with everyone there, would just be amazing.”

 

Baker faces one additional challenge to her qualification though, as she is due to give birth to her first child later in April. “I have a great team around me,” she added, “and the timing of the baby couldn’t be better. I’ll have 16 months to get back to the high standard I need to qualify and be selected. But it would be lovely to compete knowing the baby is in the audience!”

 

Editor notes

 

The FEI was one of the first international sports governing bodies to govern and regulate global para sport alongside its able-bodied disciplines when Para Dressage joined its ranks in 2006. The Para Equestrian Committee was created in 2006 when the governance of Para Equestrian passed from the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) to the FEI. At the same time, the FEI also created the Athletes’ Committee for all FEI disciplines (able-bodied and para), with 14-time Paralympic gold medallist Lee Pearson becoming its first Chair.

 

Over the years, there has been more integration of Para Equestrian sport into the FEI Governance and World Championship structures, which has raised the profile of Para Sport alongside the FEI’s other disciplines.

 

At the 2020 FEI General Assembly, the Chair of the FEI Para Equestrian Committee became a voting member on the FEI Board, ensuring that Para Sports has a place at the top table’s discussions alongside able-bodied disciplines.

 

Other governance related initiatives included in the FEI’s host bidding requirements, require world and continental championships for para athletes and able-bodied athletes to be held at the same venue. A handbook is currently being created by the FEI to assist Organising Committees with accessibility planning at equestrian Events.

 

The FEI Solidarity and Para Dressage Departments have worked together to create the FEI Para Dressage World Challenge series, a development programme in place since 1 January 2023. The Series aims to give athletes, who are unable to participate in international events due to financial or geographical reasons, the opportunity to compete in events in their own country. These competitions are in place to help National Federations develop Para Dressage, and close the gap between National and first level international competitions.

 

While these top-down initiatives have been important to the development of Para Equestrian within the FEI’s structures, it has also had a positive impact on the general attitudes towards disability and inclusion within the equestrian community more generally.

 

The FEI’s online Para Sport magazine – The Para Equestrian Digest – launched in February 2022 was created for Para Equestrian athletes and the people connected to the sport so they can share – in their own words – their personal experiences and disability stories. The Digest puts the spotlight on an athlete or project in Para Equestrian sport with the aim of increasing visibility for the sport and improving disability awareness and inclusion.

 

FEI Contacts:

Vanessa Martin Randin

Senior Manager, Corporate Communications & Media Relations

vanessa.randin@fei.org

+41 78 750 61 73

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