Oliver Townend is poised to win his second five-star in two weeks having maintained pole position after the cross-country phase at the Mitsubishi Motors Badminton Horse Trials.
When Townend's first ride, dressage leader Cillnabradden Evo, clocked up time penalties in double figures, it was left to his stablemate, Ballaghmor Class, Karyn Shuter, Angela Hislop, and Val Ryan's 12-year-old Irish Sport Horse by Courage, to deliver the goods. The aptly-named grey gelding did so in exemplary style, adding just 0.4 of a time penalty to his dressage score of 21.5.
“This was his best round to date for me. I wanted to give him a clear run and show the world what he’s capable of. We were 14 seconds down coming out of the Lake, and I just had to press go and off he went. He’s a special athlete,” said Townend, who won Kentucky last week and will have a handy one-fence cushion going into tomorrow’s final show jumping phase. “When I was sitting in the lorry between my two rides I was listening to Ian Stark and Harry Meade talking on the live stream and Ian said that anyone who doesn’t get nervous before they go cross-country at Badminton either has no brain or is no good and I thought, ‘oh sh*t’!”
Piggy French and Vanir Kamira rose one place to second despite finishing a shade over the optimum time.
“She’s so game and gutsy,” said an elated French of Trevor Dickens' 14-year-old Irish Sport Horse mare (Camiro De Haar Z x Fair Caledonian). “She’s not flashy like some, but give her a Badminton or a Burghley and she comes into her own. I’m a bit annoyed about being two seconds over as I thought I’d got the time, but I’m not going to let that take away from what she’s done.”
There were five rounds inside the time and two of these came from Australian Chris Burton, who steered Graf Liberty and Cooley Lands effortlessly home and clear at opposite ends of the day.
“My rides were very different, but I was thrilled with them both,” said Burton. “Graf Liberty doesn’t pull, is snaffle-mouthed and we know each other very well, whereas Cooley Lands can get keen and strong but is incredibly fast – I was slowing down on my way home.”
Burton lies in third and fifth going into tomorrow’s final show jumping phase.
Sandwiched in between Burton’s two rides is the 2017 winner Andrew Nicholson, who enjoyed a storming – and completely penalty-free – round with the super-classy Swallow Springs.
Tim Price and Ringwood Sky Boy – another pair to make the optimum – occupy sixth place.
Savannah Fulton is the sole U.S. representative who finished the cross-country course after Jenny Caras retired Fernhill Fortitude after two stops. Fulton rode Captain Jack, the 16-year-old Thoroughbred gelding (Numerous x Lady Malone) owned by the Full Moon Farm Syndicate, to a clean round with 43.2 time penalties. They moved up from 80th to 55th position heading into tomorrow's show jumping round. Fulton is competing in Europe as the recipient of the Wilton Fair grant from the USEA Foundation.
Forty-seven of the 78 combinations who left the start box came home with clear jumping rounds under their belts. There were 15 retirements, four eliminations, and only one horse fall – for Becky Woolven and Charlton Down Riverdance, who tipped up over fence 6, the Worcester Avenue Table.
Tom McEwen and Toledo De Kerser, who were lying in second place at the beginning of the day, dropped to 16th after they triggered the frangible pin at the huge triple bar coming out of the Wadworth Lower Lake (fence 26) and incurred 11 penalties.
Neither Pippa Funnell (fifth after dressage on Billy Walk On) nor Kitty King (Vendredi Biats, sixth) completed, although Pippa enjoyed a brilliant pathfinding round on her first horse, Majas Hope, who lies in 24th.”
Course-designer Eric Winter, commented: “It’s not often I say at the end of the day that I’d not change anything about the course, but it was the case today. It showed off the best to be the best and showed everyone else what they had to work on.”
Tomorrow’s final horse inspection will take place in front of Badminton House at 8:30 a.m. The final show jumping phase will begin at 11:00 a.m. for the lower placed riders, while the top 20 will jump at 2:00 p.m.
“What a truly awe-inspiring day of cross-country action. We have seen some brave partnerships taking on the course with some wonderful displays of athleticism and skill. It will be a totally deserving winner who takes home the prestigious Mitsubishi Motors trophy at the end of the final showjumping phase tomorrow afternoon,” said Managing Director of Mitsubishi Motors in the UK, Rob Lindley.
For the full results, click here.
Catch up on what happened in the ChatZoneMMBHT today, here.
The 2025 United States Eventing Association (USEA) American Eventing Championships (AEC) presented by Nutrena Feeds is just over three months away, which means it is time to start planning your trip to Temecula, California! This year, the AEC will be on a Western rotation to the ever-popular Galway Downs, which is a staple on the Area VI calendar each year.
The U.S. Equestrian Federation is pleased to announce that the Maryland International and Horse Trials at Loch Moy Farm in Adamstown, Maryland, has been chosen as the host of the 2026-2027 USEF Eventing Young Rider Championships (CCIJ1*-Intro, CCIYJ2*-S, CCIU253*-S). The championships will be held on June 25-28, 2026, and June 24-27, 2027.
What makes a trainer qualified to coach? Could it be a master’s degree in psychology from Harvard University? A career as a five-star event rider? Being an ‘A’ rated Pony Club graduate? Getting your license as a U.S. Equestrian Federation ‘R’ judge and technical delegate for eventing?
The MARS Bromont Rising U25 scholarship program, administered by the USEA Foundation, is pleased to announce the recipients of this year’s grant funding for riders aiming to compete in the MARS Bromont CCI (Quebec, Canada) taking place June 5-8.