The French recorded a back-to-back double when winning the Mercedes Benz Prize, the fifth leg of the 2009 Meydan FEI Nations Cup™ in the hallowed Aachen arena in Germany on July 2nd.
Winners in Rotterdam, The Netherlands two weeks ago they secured this second victory with the only zero score of the competition, while Germany and The Netherlands shared runner-up spot on a four-fault tally and the USA slotted into fourth on a total of five.
The anxious Irish had the worst of the draw but coped admirably to line up fifth ahead of Belgium in sixth, Switzerland in seventh and Sweden in eighth. It was another tough day for the Swedes and they now lie below the Irish in the standings going into the next leg of the series on their home soil in Falsterbo in two weeks time.
Italy and Great Britain failed to qualify for today’s second round and things are now looking grim for the Italians. With just four points after five legs of the series they are really struggling, but the British will need to smarten up next time because they now occupy that second-last position on the leaderboard – a dangerous place to be since two of the 10 participating nations will be relegated at the end of the season.
Kind
Frank Rothenberger’s track appeared kind when five teams – France, the USA, Germany, Switzerland and The Netherlands – shared a zero score after round one. Sweden carried five faults into round two, and the Irish carried only seven despite the dramatic departure of Denis Lynch and Lantinus who fell on landing over the second element of the triple combination. This proved the bogey of the day and would play an even great role as the second round unfolded. Belgium was lying eighth with eight faults, but the competition was still wide open.
Horses seemed to tire as the second round progressed however and it really fell apart for the Swedes and the Swiss, the former adding 33 faults this time out and the latter adding 30 to their scoreline. The Americans were compromised when Lauren Hough and Quick Study hit the narrow planks at fence nine and also picked up a time fault before Todd Minikus and Pavarotti added eight more at the triple combination. A single error from Harrie Smolders (Walnut de Muze) and two from Albert Zoer (Oki Doki) damaged Dutch chances, and although Marcus Ehning produced another copybook clear from Plot Blue, the 17 collected by relative rookie Phillip Weishaupt (Souvenir) left them vulnerable and Carsten-Otto Nagel’s single misake at the second-last with Corradina put paid to their chances of a home-side win.
Cool Second Clear
Because by this time the French already had it in the bag. A cool second clear from 30 year old Timothee Anciaume and Lamm de Fetan clinched it after fault-free performances from Penelope Leprevost (Jubilee D’Ouilly) and Roger-Yves Bost (Ideal de la Loge) – Kevin Staut and Kraque Boom Bois Margot would jump only for their Grand Prix qualification now.
To ensure joint-second for Germany however World No. 1 Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum would have to leave the course intact and she did it effortlessly with Checkmate.
Marcus Ehning congratulated the French team afterwards – “they have improved so much over the last few months and they were the right winners tonight” he said. He had produced one of the seven double-clears of the competition with Plot Blue and said “we have a nice team here, with good relationships between us and we are happy with our second place”.
Team Spirit
When it comes to team spirit however, the French are right out in front. “It is the most important thing to us – we have a strong team because we work so well together” he pointed out. He has a great mix in his side, Roger-Yves Bost supplying the maturity, Kevin Staut an asset to any side and there is a strong friendship that goes right back to their childhood between Penelope Leprevost and Timothee Anciaume.
“We have known each other since we were kids, we come from the same town in Normandy, Royan, and we rode against each other in pony competitions” explained Timothee whose father owns an equestrian centre. He was really pleased with his own result tonight. “When I came into the ring I could feel the pressure but I told myself – just one clear round and we have victory, you can do it!” Penelope said “for me this is a dream come true – to come to Aachen is one thing but to win in front of the great Aachen crowd is something very special”.
The French now lie three points behind the Americans who continue to head up the Meydan FEI Nations Cup™ standings with just three legs of the series remaining. Germany is next, just a single point ahead of The Netherlands and Swiss are another point further behind. Belgium lies sixth and Ireland seventh – at last out of that danger zone after a shakey start – and Sweden lies eighth. The British and Italians are in ninth and tenth respectively.
Facts and Figures
The bogey fence of the competition was the triple combination at fence 10 – elements of this fell 20 times during the class.
The water jump – 4.2m wide – also proved influential – 4 horses faulted there in round one and three in round two.
There was one elimination – Ireland’s Denis Lynch who fell between the second and third elements of the triple combination
There were 7 double-clear performances and 12 single clear rounds.
Show organiser, Frank Kemperman, reported that a total of 40,000 spectators had turned out to see the best show jumpers and dressage riders in the world today.
This is the fourth victory for France in the Aachen Nations Cup – their previous wins were in 1980, 1988 and 1990.
Quotes
Mr Mohammed Al Khayat, Commercial Director, Meydan – “I congratulate the winning team and thank everyone for participating in this great event”.
Kevin Staut, French team member – “I rode on the French team here two years ago. We have a stronger team than ever now and I think we can finish top fo the Meydan standings at the end of the series”.
Laurent Elias, French Chef d’Equipe – “There is nowhere else in the world like Aachen – it is an extraordinary place and a fantastic show”.
Otto Becker, German Chef d’Equipe – “We are happy with second place although we had hoped to win but Phillip Weishaupt is a youngster and it was his first time in Aachen – he needs a little more experience – the rest of the team were good”.
Phillip Weishaupt, German team member – “I rode one good round and then a bad one – the second round was almost a disaster but I hope to get another chance in a Nations Cup”.
Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum, German team member – “There is a lot of pressure on every rider here in Aachen – it is a big deal to ride here”.
Results
1. France – 0 faults: Jubilee D’Ouilly (Penelope Leprevost) 0/0, Ideal de la Loge (Roger-Yves Bost) 12/0, Lamm de Fetan (Timothee Anciaume) 0/0, Kraque Boom Bois Margot (Kevin Staut) 0/4.
Equal 2. Netherlands – 4 faults: Blauwendraad’s O’Brien (Angelique Hoorn) 0/0, Walnut de Muze (Harrie Smolders) 0/4, Oki Doki (Albert Zoer) 0/8, Opium VS (Marc Houtzager) 5/0.
Equal 2. Germany – 4 faults: Plot Blue (Marcus Ehning) 0/0, Souvenir (Philipp Weishaupt) 4/17, Corradina (Carsten-Otto Nagel) 0/4, Checkmate (Meredith Michaels-Beerbaum) 0/0.
4. USA – 5 faults: Quick Study (Lauren Hough) 0/5, Pavarotti (Todd Minikus) 4/8, Cedric (Laura Kraut) 0/0, Sapphire (McLain Ward) 0/0.\
5. Ireland – 21 faults: Je T’Aime Flamenco (Billy Twomey) 5/5, Kiltoom (Capt David O’Brien) 1/9, Rancorrado (Cian O’Connor) 1/4, Lantinus (Denis Lynch) Elim/5.
6. Belgium – 26 faults: Vigo D’Arsouilles (Philippe Lejeune) 4/1, Aluna (Niels Bruynseels) 16/9, Sherry Mury Marais Z (Ludo Philippaerts) 4/12, Valentina Van’t Heike (Jos Lansink) 0/8.
7. Switzerland – 30 faults: Carlina (Pius Schwizer) 0/8, LB Robin Hood (Christina Liebherr) 16/14, Cantus (Niklaus Schurtenberger) 0/16, Tresor (Steve Guerdat) 0/8.
8. Sweden – 38 faults: Madick (Helena Lundback) 0/4, Quintero La Silla (Rolf-Goran Bengtsson) 12/18, H&M Arctic Aurora Borealis (Peder Fredricson) 5/16, Montender (Henrik Von Eckermann) 0/13.
9. Italy – 13 faults in first round: SNAI Seldana (Natale Chiaudani) 5, Boston (Giovanni Lucchetti) 8, Landzeu (Giuseppe d’Onofrio) 4, Da Zara Kanebo (Piergiorgio Bucci) 4.
10. Great Britain 14 faults in first round: Rosinus (Geoff Billington) 8, Romanov (Phillip Spivey) 5, Lutine du Charmoie (Gemma Plumley) 15, Pall Mall (Peter Charles) 1.