Niklas Lindbäck (SWE) and Mister Pooh, the super-talented horse many international riders would love to own, scored a brilliant back-to-back victory in the FEI World Cup™ event at Malmö (SWE), the penultimate competition in the 2011 series.
Lindbäck, who triumphed in 2010 and went on to impress at several other international events, including a fifth place at Badminton (GBR) this year, jumped clear in the final phase to take the top spot after overnight leader Ingrid Klimke (GER) on FRH Butts Abraxxas hit three fences.
“I am very pleased with how Mister Pooh jumped,” said Lindbäck. “We had a few mistakes in the dressage, but he is on great form ready for the Europeans. I didn’t expect to win again and to do it in front of a home crowd is great.”
Third after the Cross-Country, Lindbäck finished the competition with just 0.4 of a penalty in hand over the highest-placed German rider, 22-year-old Julia Krajewski, second on After The Battle, for whom it was a best three-star placing.
Kai Rüder (GER) had an expensive two rails down on the stallion Leprince des Bois and dropped from second to third, but he joked: “I’m keeping my clear round for the Europeans!”
Lindbäck now moves into 10th place in the FEI World Cup™ Eventing rankings, with one more event to go, at Haras du Pin (FRA). However, the main beneficiary from Malmö was Lucy Wiegersma (GBR), the sole British rider to make the long journey. She was fourth on Simon Porloe and seventh on Woodfalls Inigo Jones and now moves into eighth place in the rankings.
A strong field of 40 started at Malmö, a key selection trial for German and Swedish riders before the HSBC FEI European Eventing Championship later this month (25-28 August).
Simone Deiterman (GER) and FRH Free Easy led the Dressage phase from Klimke, but suffered a Cross-Country refusal. The only rider to achieve the optimum time was Sandra Gustafsson (SWE) on Top Select, but she was one of three riders to withdraw before the Jumping. A total of 36 completed the Cross-Country with 23 clear rounds.
Lindback said he didn’t push Mister Pooh across country, but he still finished with the second fastest time of the day. “When Mister Pooh gets into the rhythm he is a very fast horse, and you don’t need to push him,” he explained.
Former Swedish rider Yogi Breisner, who trains the British team and had paid a flying visit to his homeland, described the track designed by Guiseppe della Chiesa (ITA) as “a very decent track, difficult and twisty”.
Malmö is one of the more unusual Eventing venues, but popular with riders for its attractive seaside setting against the backdrop of the Twisting Torso. The showground will host the HSBC FEI European Eventing Championship in 2013, the first to be held in Sweden. Klimke said she had already told her friends to book the date: “Even if I am not picked, I want to come back. It is a very special track,” she said.
Catrin Norinder, Director of Eventing & Olympic at the FEI, said: “Thousands of spectators flocked to watch the cross country at FEI World Cup Eventing in Malmö - the event was a major success and the support from the city was immense.
“Malmö now has its preparations underway for the FEI European Eventing Championship for Young Riders, which will take place 10-12 August 2012.”
Results
1 Niklas Lindback/Mister Pooh (SWE) 44.3 + 2.4 + 0 = 46.7
2 Julia Krajewski/After The Battle (GER) 43.7 + 3.6 + 0 = 47.3
3 Kai Ruder/Leprince Des Bois (GER) 40.7 + 2.8 + 8 = 51.5
4 Lucy Wiegersma/Simon Porloe (SWE) 47.8 + 7.2 + 0 = 55
5 Ingrid Klimke/FRH Butts Abraxxas (GER) 37.6 + 5.6 + 12 = 55.2
6 Peter Thomsen/Horseware’s Parko (GER) 50 + 5.6 + 0 = 55.6
7 Lucy Wiegersma/Woodfalls Inigo Jones (GBR) 48.5 + 8.8 + 0 = 57.3
8 Peter Thomsen/Horseware’s Barny (GER) 47.6 + 14 + 0 = 61.6
9 Sandra Aufforth/Opgun Louvo (GER) 48.3 + 15.2 + 0 = 63.5
10 Malin Petersen/Sofarsogood (SWE) 52.4 + 7.6 + 4 = 64
FEI World Cup™ Eventing Standings (after 6 of 7 events)
1 Clarke Johnstone (NZL) 118
2 Chris Burton (AUS) 108
3 Aliaksandr Faminou (BLR) 96
4 Michael Jung (GER) 79
5 Shane Rose (AUS) 70
6 Yoshiaki Oiwa (JAP) 66
7 Mykhailo Nastenko (RUS) 64
8 Lucy Wiegersma (GBR) 62
9 Peter Thomsen (GER) 56
10 Niklas Lindback (SWE) 41
To view full standings, please click here.
If you are wanting to get a good parking spot at the Kentucky Horse Park this morning, you better be on your way as early as possible! Cross-country day at the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event is easily the busiest day the Kentucky Horse Park sees each year, so it's time to grab your coffee and go ensure you get the viewing spot you want for both the CCI4*-S and CCI5*-L divisions today.
Riders in both the Cosequin Lexington CCI4*-S and the Defender Kentucky CCI5*-L are sharing similar sentiments about this year's cross-country courses: course designer Derek di Grazia didn't play around this year. Here is what some of the riders across both divisions had to say about the tracks they will aim to conquer on Saturday.
Off The Record decided not to let Michael Jung be the only record-breaking entry at the Defender Kentucky Three-Day Event this week and delivered a career-best score in the Cosequin Lexington CCI4*-S on Friday morning. He and Will Coleman delivered a test that received a score of 21.8, not only marking a personal best for the horse but also securing their position at the top of the leaderboard going into cross-country tomorrow.
Boyd Martin and the 12-year-old Holsteiner gelding Commando 3 were the last pair to go in the Defender Kentucky CCI5*-L field on Friday afternoon and were warmly greeted to the bluegrass with an impressive downpour that outshined anything the other horse and rider pairs had to combat throughout the day. But that didn’t stop this pair from putting their best foot forward and impressing the judges enough to earn them a score of 26.0, just 0.2 points ahead of second-place pair Tom McEwen (GBR) and Brookfield Quality.