Fans of the Thoroughbred horse flocked to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Ky., by the thousands over the weekend for the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, a $100,000 competition in which trainers take less than a year to transform a racehorse into master of up to two equestrian disciplines. The event is organized by Retired Racehorse Project and is presented by Thoroughbred Charities of America.
Three hundred horses recently retired from 64 different racetracks competed in the arenas and outside courses throughout the park on Thursday and Friday in barrel racing, competitive trails, dressage, eventing, field hunters, freestyle, polo, show hunters, show jumpers, and working ranch. Seminars, training demos, and a bustling trade fair combined to make the event a true celebration of the talent and trainability of the Thoroughbred horse.
Twenty-five hundred people were on hand to watch the performances, and organizers expect that most will be back next year. “The feedback we are getting from competitors, vendors, judges and spectators has been fantastic.” said RRP founder and president Steuart Pittman. “Who knew that horses could learn so much so fast, and have so much fun doing it? Every ten minutes I saw something inspiring.”
The top three scorers in each discipline performed Saturday afternoon in the covered arena before a full house and a livestream audience of three thousand more. Every thirty minutes the arena was reset for a new sport, with every manner of jumps, a polo goal, barrels, trail obstacles, freestyle props, and cattle. Over one hundred very dedicated volunteers performed this logistical feat.
All ten division winners returned to the arena at the end for the crowd to select America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred through thunderous applause measured by an electronic meter. The winner was dressage victor Fairway King, trained and ridden by Lauren Turner a 26-year-old event rider who works full time in marketing while also managing a training business.
“I am in total shock,” said Lauren. “When I bought this guy out of a field he was probably 100 pounds underweight and his neck came out of the bottom of his shoulder. If he didn’t remind me so much of my long-time partner who is retiring I wouldn’t have bought him. It wasn’t until a few weeks ago that he found his balance and started to really connect. It was like a switch went off. This whole experience has been surreal.“ When asked how she would spend her $15,000 in winnings she said it would pay off debt and allow her to do with more horses what she has done with King.
At the end of the weekend not all horses left with the trainers who brought them. Just over 100 were available for sale and some sold at the event, including two of the division winners. Grand Prix dressage trainer Yvonne Barteau bought aptly named Trick Roper, the winner of the working ranch division, and Bernie Traurig purchased Carajillo, the show jumping champion. Statistics on Makeover horse sales will be forthcoming.
The 2017 Thoroughbred Makeover will take place on the first weekend of October. Application information will be published in December.
Here are the top three in each division.
Barrel Racing
Competitive Trail
Dressage
Eventing
Cathy Wieschhoff and Speed Rail. Photo via Retired Racehorse Project's Facebook Page.
Field Hunter
Freestyle
Polo
Show Hunter
Show Jumper
Working Ranch
Link to Final Results
Link to Contestant Information
Link to Discipline Descriptions
Link to Horse Sale Information
About the Retired Racehorse Project
Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) is a 501(c)3 charitable organization working to increase demand for off-track Thoroughbreds and build the bridges to second careers. It publishes Off-Track Thoroughbred Magazine, hosts the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, maintains the Retired Racehorse Resource Directory, manages the online Bloodline Brag, and presents programs at major horse expos across the country. Visit RRP online at RetiredRacehorseProject.org.
Riders in the CCI4*-S at the Setters’ Run Farm Carolina International CCI4*-S were in for a change this afternoon as Brody Robertson made his show jumping course design debut in the class and built a challenging track that shuffled the top 10.
When Monbeg Zebedee came to Allison Springer’s barn nearly three years ago, she wasn’t sure where he might end up or how far his talent would take him. The Irish Sport Horse gelding (Dignifed van’t Zorgvliet x Bolacreane Dolly) had been purchased out of the Monart sale in Ireland by British five-star rider Kitty King as a sales prospect when he was 3, and King had started him but never competed him.
In their first trip down centerline at the Setters’ Run Farm Carolina International CCI4*-S, Monica Spencer and Artist slipped into the top spot this afternoon with a score of 28.6. The New Zealand native, who’s now based in The Plains, Virginia, has been partnered with “Max,” a 14-year-old Thoroughbred gelding (Guillotine x Maxamore) she owns, since he was 4.
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