2005
Sunshine Tour
Spain and Portugal Cover Ground Internationally
What
would the Sunshine Tour in Spain be without Andalusians
and Lusitanos competing there? It was absolutely refreshing
to see such a multiplicity of Iberian bred horses perform
at top level in Vejer de la Frontera and the major
advancement the Iberian riders have made in five years
time is staggering. The Andalusians are no longer piaffe-passage
machines, but they now can actually walk and extend
as well.
With Spanish Olympians Ignacio Rambla and Juan Antonio
Jiminez and Spanish team rider Antonio Cid, Spain had
its best of the best represented at Montenmedio. Remarkable
was the surge forward of the Portuguese riders at all
levels -- from young horses to Grand Prix -- in
the show.
A
Spanish rider that is definitely upward bound is the
former young rider Jose Antonio Garcia Mena riding
the Andalusian stallions for Alvaro Domecq.
Aboard
Osado, an 11-year old Andalusian licensed stallion,
Garcia Mena rode a delightful freestyle on Rafael
Soto's old music for Invasor. Osado is really impressive
in
the piaffe and passage and judge Patrick Collard
confessed to even given him a 10 for it. Garcia Mena
scored 68.167%
and placed fourth in the Freestyle
The
Grand Prix freestyle, which was an invitational class,
was the apex of the three-week Sunshine Tour. Twelve
riders performed to music and the level of competition
and artisticity varied.
Aboard
the PRE stallion Bandido, Antonio Cid rode a lovely
freestyle, but his score was only 64.20%.
Cid had to rely on the kindness of friends to save
his kur. Right before the class started, the
CD with his kur music turned out to be scratched and
useless. Ignacio Rambla lend Cid his old kur, which
Cid only
practiced
once in the warm up.
His programme came off remarkably well, except
that Cid had forgotten to do a pirouette to the left
and had done two to the right instead.
Ignacio
Rambla made a technical error in his choreography as
well. Riding the 12-year old Distinguido, Rambla did
not perform a piaffe passage transition once, but did
canter pirouettes with a transition into piaffe, extended
trots with a transition to passage. Rambla did every
thinkable combination with piaffe and passage, but
not the normal piaffe-passage transition.
"It
was a very exciting freestyle, lots of things happened," Withages
joked afterwards. "One rider lost his music, and
another forgot to do a simple piaffe-passage transition."
Withages was extremely satisfied with the rising level
of competition in Spain. "The level is getting
better year after year. I was here two years ago, but
this year there were more horses, more Grand Prix combinations,
and more Spanish and Portuguese riders," said
Withages.
The
FEI Dressage Committee chairwoman has been doing intensive
judges' training clinics in Portugal and
she believes Portuguese dressage is reaping the fruits
now at shows. "Of course these clinics have effect,
it's a virtuous circle."
Text
and Photos copyrighted Astrid Appels/Eurodressage
- No reproduction allowed without permission
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