O_Townend_Badminton.jpgOliver Townend realised a lifelong dream when he won the 60th anniversary Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials and, at 26, became the youngest British rider to win since the likes of Ginny Elliot and Lucinda Green in the 1980s and 1970s.

Townend, a hugely successful and hard-working rider on the national circuit in Britain, not only took the £60,000 first prize, the largest single prize in the world, but also sprung to the top of the HSBC FEI Classics™ with one point in hand over Badminton runner-up William Fox-Pitt (GBR).

Townend and Edward Nicholson’s home-bred Flint Curtis, by William Curtis, were 3rd at Badminton, at their first attempt, in 2006, placed at the FEI World Equestrian Games that year and members of the winning British team at the 2007 FEI European Championships. But in a career of highs and lows, Flint Curtis missed Badminton in 2007 and 2008, and was withdrawn from Olympic selection before being pulled up at The Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials last year.

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