Adrienne Lyle (USA) and Wizard capped off the first day of the final week of competition in Wellington, Florida, this 2014 spring season with a win in the Grand Prix CDI 5*. The pair earned a personal best score for the grand prix with a 74.160%. Ashley Holzer (CAN) and Tiva Nana scored a blue ribbon finish earlier in the day, winning the Grand Prix CDI 3* on a score of 70.000%.
Adrienne Lyle topped the class with Wizard, a 15-year-old Oldenburg gelding owned by Peggy Thomas. Second place went to fellow American Tina Konyot and Calecto V for their score of 72.720%, while Danish rider Mikala Gundersen rounded out the top three with My Lady and a score of 72.520%.
Lyle was thrilled to post her all-time grand prix high score with Wizard in the on Thursday evening. A triumphant return to the ring was the best she could have asked for after having to withdraw Wizard from the CDI-W a week ago.
"I was thrilled with him. He felt fresh and happy and really amazing for being the end of a long season," Lyle grinned. "That's my best grand prix score I've had on him in our career, and I think the most rideable; the best combination of him having energy, and he was listening to me. It was a little nerve-wracking. We were entered for the CDI-W but he got himself cast in his stall. He came out with banged up legs the day before the jog. We made the decision to scratch and not try to get him through it since he wasn't a hundred percent. It was hard to go home and sit out a couple of weeks. Everyone is wondering what's wrong, and of course they always think it's the worst and you're never going to come back. So it was nice to come back and do really well."
Lyle admitted to having a good feeling about their test, but insisted a rider can never really know when they're going to have the "test of tests" before it's over. Her main focus, and possibly the difference in their score, was the extended trot.
"I think he's got a great, amazing, trot extension, but I think we lose a little balance. He gets a little tight, and we've done some skip steps a couple times. So we came in around the outside of the arena, and I really made him gallop around a couple times and got going. I felt like I was able to ride it, not to not have a mistake, but to have more power and really go for it and not feel like I was being conservative," Lyle described.
Lyle will forgo the Grand Prix Freestyle 5* on Friday, opting instead to contest the Grand Prix Special 5* in preparation for the 2014 World Equestrian Games (WEG) selection trials.
"I love doing the freestyle with him, but he just had a couple weeks off and he hasn't been working that much before the show, I thought it would be smarter to put him in the special. He doesn't need to get himself all hyped up again. I've done the freestyle the last two shows. I think I need to get back to focusing on the special a little for the trials," Lyle explained.
Second place finisher Konyot is known for her jubilant expressions after a test with Calecto, but explained that her serious look on Thursday evening was not a reflection of the overall test.
"I was happy, actually. I've been trying to get a little bit cleaner grand prix. I've had several shows with so many mistakes in my grand prix, so I was much, much, happier with my grand prix," Konyot said. "Until the end. He really cheated me at the end, he stopped very early and thought it was over. He did his final halt-salute and there was no budging. He just caught me a little bit by surprise because he can do a little bit further than that."
Konyot pointed out her canter tour as the highlight of the test for her, along with a trot tour she thought was well done. With the FEI World Cup Dressage Finals next on her calendar, she was pleased to have achieved her main goal for the class.
"I felt great because I had a better grand prix. I often have quite a good freestyle, and since I am leading North America and going to the World Cup, I was happy that I could have a better grand prix. That was something that I was looking towards," Konyot said.
Gundersen and My Lady have a different championship competition looming; their sights are set on the Danish Championships, an event Gundersen described as one with the most pressure of the season. The show plays a large role in choosing the Danish team for the WEG this fall.
Gundersen has been more than satisfied with how My Lady has progressed throughout the season in Wellington, describing her test on Friday evening as very rideable and supple.
"I could have had a little more energy from behind, but I had a lot of really good movements. There were some things that I worked very hard on, to get better, and they were. I look at my scores and see that they got better, and then I lost a bit on other things," Gundersen shared. "That's how it is," she continued. "You go to shows and you feel like 'Oh I need to improve this,' and then you go home and work on that. Maybe you lose something else a little bit on the way. I think in the end, we'll get it all together. For me, it's most important when I get to the Danish championships in the summer that it should all be there."
Holzer Back in the Blue with New Grand Prix ride, Tiva Nana
In only her second outing at the CDI level, Tiva Nana enjoyed a victory with Ashley Holzer earlier in the day during the Grand Prix 3*. Holzer finished at the top of the class with a score of 70.000%, while American Laura Graves took second with Verdades on a score of 69.140%. Third place went to Megan Lane (CAN) and Caravella, who earned a score of 69.120%.
Tiva Nana, a 14-year-old KWPN mare, has been owned by Marissa Mastranardi for the past five and a half years. When Mastranardi asked trainer Holzer to ride the mare in September, she handed the reins over to her full-time.
"Ashley started riding her in September, just her riding her, and it was going so well that I was like, 'Take her! See what happens,'" Mastranardi recounted. "Obviously, having Ashley on her is the best thing for the horse and for her education. I'm more than thrilled with how it's been going."
Tiva Nana, known as "Nina" in the barn, has continued to step up to the plate as she has progressed up the levels. Thursday was only the horse's second CDI and fourth time completing a grand prix test.
"She's getting better and better every time. It's really cool to watch," Mastranardi smiled. "It wouldn't happen without a rider like Ashley. If I was in there, I'd be like, 'Oh, I know it's scary!' Ashley knows how to make adjustments and give her confidence in the ring."
For Holzer, Thursday's test, and subsequent win, was a pleasant surprise. "I thought that it was far more in control than the last week! I think that the harmony was much better. I thought her accuracy and her harmony were just really top-notch today. Her focus was better. As a horse, I felt like I had a partner that was really tuned into me."
Holzer admitted she would have to rethink her plan after what the mare showed her in the ring. "I have to sit down and really rethink that after today. She really showed me something in this main ring. We thought she would take a much longer time to settle in this big ring," Holzer acknowledged. "She really has very little experience so this is quite a shocker. When they said to me in the barn today, 'Ok so try to give a 70?' and I was like 'Pfft! Yeah right! Give me a break, I was pretty amazed with 68 last week.' But she went in and was just a joy to ride. She's so much fun. She's a very nice horse to ride."
Second place finisher Graves was thrilled with Verdades' rideability throughout the test, noting that the pair have enjoyed great improvement over the last three months. She's worked with Olympian Debbie MacDonald since the beginning of the circuit on various aspects of Verdades' training.
"It's gotten so much better since our first CDI. It's a little sad that the season is over for us, because we're kind of hungry for more and hitting our stride," Graves explained.
Graves has her sights set on the Festival of Champions in Gladstone, NJ, which also serve as the selection trials for the American team to go to the WEG.
"We'll spend the next two months really training hard, and hopefully, depending on how everything shakes out on the West Coast and who decides to go to Gladstone [New Jersey, for the Festival of Champions], we're crossing our fingers that this might give us a ticket."
Of her test, Graves pointed out the biggest turning point for the test was the piaffe, which she admitted she had been going down centerline and "praying" to go well in each previous test.
"There's nothing more terrifying than having to do something on a centerline and just having to go in there and praying. That's pretty much all we've been doing, because he wouldn't let me touch him," Graves explained. "He's so worked up and he tries so hard, and you touch him with your legs or your hand, and he would just get all out of sorts. To be able to put my leg on a little, or actually ride a half-halt in the piaffe is kind of cool. Hopefully one day it will actually be a highlight for everyone to watch, so that's where we're going."
Lane has also focused on progress at each competition with Caravella. The pair won the Grand Prix Special the first week in Florida and both rider and horse have benefitted from the experience of six CDIs over the course of the season.
"I think both her and I are relatively inexperienced, so the more we get out there, the better. Coming to Wellington, you can only get it here," Lane pointed out. "Progress is always in my mind, so with every show I look for progress in some area. Today, the piaffe-passage tour was definitely the highlight. Normally, that's a little bit tricky."
With Caravella, it's just a matter of channeling her nervous energy into precise focus in the show ring. "Although she's extremely talented, she gets a little nervous in the piaffe, which affects our transition to passage. Today, that was excellent. I was really happy with her," Lane smiled.
Junior and Young Rider competition kicked off the first day of the CDI 3*/5*. Paula Matute (ESP) earned top call in the Junior Team aboard Firmamento with a score of 70.946%. In the Young Rider Team Prix St. Georges test, it was Laurence Tetreault (CAN) and Lowelas who emerged victorious. The pair earned a score of 68.860% for the first place prize.
In a special award of the night, Lars Petersen (DEN) was presented with the FEI Grand Prix Circuit Championship for his scores with Mariett. They had the highest cumulative of average scores competing at a minimum of four CDI competitions in Wellington.
By Laura Cardon - Photos © Sue Stickle
Related Link
Scores 2014 CDI Wellington