
- Phillip Dutton aced the course on Mystery Whisper to stand 12th as the highest-placed American after cross-country at the Olympics.
- Photo © 2012 Nancy Jaffer
July 30, 2012--The crowds attending the Olympic eventing cross-country today were both inspiring and frightening. More than 50,000 streamed into Greenwich Park, with a good portion of them spread out in the field next to cunning obstacle number 8, the tri-part "River Bank," modeled on "The Wind in the Willows." They watched live action as the riders went through the water, and also kept their eyes on the enormous screen on the other side of the jump, where cameras followed competitors around the course.
People come from everywhere to the Olympics, naturally, but this crowd definitely had a British bias (I could tell by the number of Union Jack flags in the group), cheering each fence, live and on the screen, as they were aptly handled by their country's riders. Perfect weather, sunny and cool, added to the festive feeling.
While it was inspiring to see such enthusiasm for eventing, the frightening part was moving between fences against a sea of humanity. Talk about claustrophobia in the open air. Some obstacles, the exciting ones, had people 10-deep trying to get a glimpse of the action, and there was plenty of that.
Yes, yes, I know eventing "is not a dressage test." I get it. So, unfortunately, do Japan's Yoshiaki Oiwa and Italy's Stefano Brecciaroli, who were 1-2 at the conclusion of dressage yesterday.
Stefano was just too slow; part of his beautiful test in the arena was a great gallop down the long side, but apparently his mount, Apollo WD Wendi Kurt Hoev, couldn't keep it up while scaling the hill at Greenwich. He now stands 16th, with 11.2 times penalties added to his original score of 38.5 penalties. But Yoshi fared far worse. He took a tumble when he didn't sit up coming off a big step bank jump toward the Royal Greenwich Borough obstacle elements, and that was that. Japan's moment in the sun ended abruptly. It had been sixth, ahead of the U.S. yesterday. Now it's last, with three of five riders eliminated.
Australia, second to Germany in the rankings yesterday, also took a tumble. It sank to sixth after Clayton Frederick's horse, Bendigo, slipped and fell coming off the same step where Yoshi came to grief. The ground was soft in spots and demanded the proper studs in horses' shoes; course designer Sue Benson said they wouldn't have watered it yesterday if they knew it was going to pour in the afternoon.
British weather: If you don't like it, wait, it will change (and probably not for the better). Clayton's wife, Lucinda, had a refusal with Flying Finish, which didn't help matters (I wouldn't want to be sitting at their breakfast table until the smoke clears) and Sam Griffiths also had a fall with Happy Times, contributing to Australia's decline.
Canada was eliminated. The country that showed its stuff with a surprising silver medal at the 2010 Alltech FEI World Equestrian Games said goodbye to coach David O'Connor with disastrous performances as three riders were eliminated. Hawley Bennett-Awad had a fall from Gin & Juice that left her in the hospital with a concussion and a fractured sacrum.
David is taking over for Mark Phillips as coach (officially technical advisor) of the Americans after the Games. So let's talk about the U.S. The good news is that its squad moved up from seventh to fifth. The bad news is that its 138.8 penalties puts it far from the leading Germans (124.7), not to mention the second-place Brits(130.2) and third place Sweden (remember what I told you about Sweden two days ago? They were a stealth threat; now they're out in the open). Sweden's 131.4 penalties is just two ahead of New Zealand. The medals will be hard-fought tomorrow in the show jumping wrap-up, but I think it's safe to say that it will continue to be between Germany and the Brits for the gold medal.
Interestingly, all four of the women on the British team finished ahead of William Fox-Pitt. I was very surprised that he chose to ride the relatively inexperienced Lionheart here, instead of one of his big names, and it may have caught up with him today.
"My chap was tired. I do not know why -- it was unlike him. I had to nurse him home, but he went on jumping and galloping," said William, adding he was very glad that the female members of the team did well and took the pressure off him.
All eyes were on Zara Phillips, whose royal relatives, Prince William, Kate Middleton (can I still call her that, even though she's a duchess?), Prince Harry and others were on hand to cheer for her, along with Prince Charles' wife, Camilla.
All that moral support must have done the trick. Zara tore around the course on High Kingdom, as gutsy as they come, to stand 10th on her first wedding anniversary to rugby player Mike Tindall.






[...] from Equisearch: 2012 Olympic Eventing Cross-Country By Nancy Jaffer More than 50,000 spectators attended the Olympic eventing cross-country in London, where Germany’s Ingrid Klimke and Sweden’s Sara Algotsson-Ostholt rose to the top to tie for first going into show jumping. [...]