2000
World Championships for Young Dressage Horses
Dutch Dressage Riders Rule at Arnhem
Champion Gelderland, formerly Champion Arnhem, is one
of the few shows during the season in which a nation
competition's is attached to the Grand Prix test. Germany
already announced that
it wouldn't send out a team, which was heavily criticized
by the Dutch press and riders, but still
very understandable as the Germans just dealt with their
national Dressage Championships in
Balve and had the important Olympic qualifying CDI show
coming up in Norten-Hardenberg and Aachen.
Holland
presented a possible variant of its 2000 Olympic team.
The team, not yet officially announced but by insiders
generally expected to be like this, consisted of Anky
van Grunsven, Coby van Baalen, Arjen Teeuwissen and
supplementary riders Imke Bartels and Barbara Koot.
Dutch chef d'equipe Jurgen Koschel has not yet decided
which rider to take as fourth. With Teeuwissen and Van
Baalen riding their Olympic horses it was only logical
that the gold team medal in Arnhem would go to Holland.
Furthermore, 'name' and 'fame' does much, even when
you present a second horse. Anky van Grunsven saddled
one of her many spare Grand Prix horses, this time it
was Gestion Idool, a KWPN Maykel son, who has grown
a lot the last two years but which will never equal
the potential of her Bonfire. The Grand Prix was dominantly
won by Coby van Baalen with 75.68% leaving Arjen Teeuwissen
more than a 100 points behind her. Third placed was
Anky van Grunsven on Gestion Idool. The liver chestnut
gelding shows his exercises correctly but he's not as
flashy and as strong behind as a good
dressage horse should be. Number four Karin Rehbein
rode Flambo, a Kaiserstern xx son who
has a terrific passage but a mediocre piaffe. Nevertheless,
the pair showed some nice quality traversal movements
and therefore scored 70.12%. Holland won the gold team
medal, America
the silver and Denmark the bronze. Denmark presented
its B-team in Arnhem. It had to do
without star riders Lars Petersen and Lone Jorgenssen,
the two best Danish riders.
There
was no confrontation between Teeuwissen and Van Baalen
in Arnhem as the latter preferred
to ride the Special. It would turn out to be a good
choice as the rider from Brakel, The Netherlands,
won the test with 77.53%. Her test was very correct
but the trot half passes remained without good suspension
and the rider's aids are too obvious in the piaffe and
passage. Best American rider in the special was Sue
Blinks with Flam Flam. The dark bay Hanoverian owned
by Fritz Kundrun is a very
talented Grand Prix horse but he's too carefully ridden
in order to really score. A very distinctive performance
came from the Australian Kristy Oatley-Nist on Rosemount
Wallstreet. Oatley-Nist, who is trained
by Karin Rehbein, has a super horse in Wallstreet, a
Weltmeyer son discovered by the
Columbian Dr Cesar Parra.
The
freestyle was easily won by Teeuwissen and Goliath T.
The student of van Grunsven rode his new freestyle composed
by Ail Schoneberg. The music is still based on the sound
of the Spanish castanets and, although the whole composition
is impressive, the castanets have become a cliché
in kurs. Teeuwissen received a monster score of 80.61%.
Second place went to Swiss Daniel Ramseier on Parvenue
Royal. The combination is very promising and will definitely
grow in the future.
Images copyrighted Dirk
Caremans
No reproduction without permission/payment
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