Paris, the City of Light, will welcome the world to the XXXIII Olympiad exactly one year from today, presenting 19 days of competition from 26 July to 11 August 2024 over 41 competition sites including the spectacular equestrian venue at the Palace of Versailles.
Once home to the kings and queens of France, and developed to majestic proportions by the “Sun King” Louis XIV who believed that everything revolved around him, the Palace is considered one of the most extravagant and beautiful in Europe. And, not for the first time, the sound of galloping hooves will be heard across its beautiful gardens as athletes and their horses go for gold in the three equestrian Olympic disciplines of Dressage, Eventing and Jumping.
History
Equestrian sport’s Olympic history officially began at the 5th Games staged in Stockholm, Sweden in 1912 where Swedish riders claimed Team gold in Jumping and Eventing and Individual gold in Dressage and Eventing. Only Frenchman, Capt Jean Cariou, broke the host nation’s grip on the top step of the podium when winning the Individual Jumping title in a jump-off against Germany’s Lt Rabod W. von Kröcher that year.
Paris 2024 marks exactly a century since equestrian sport at the Olympic Games came under the jurisdiction of the FEI in 1924, and the battle for qualification is as intense as ever. Teams of three will compete in all three disciplines and France, as host country, is automatically qualified in each discipline.
Dressage
In Dressage there will be a maximum of 60 competitors, with 15 teams of three along with 15 individuals.
Already joining the host nation of France are teams from Denmark, Great Britain, Germany, Sweden, The Netherlands and USA who claimed the top six places at the World Championship 2022 in Herning (DEN) last summer where Australia also made the cut as the highest-ranked team from Olympic Group G. Poland claimed the single qualifying spot on offer at the Group C qualifier in Budapest (HUN) last month.
There are three places to be filled at the forthcoming FEI Dressage European Championship 2023 which will take place in Riesenbeck (GER) from 4 to 10 September, while countries from Groups D and/or E will be chasing the two spots on offer at the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago (CHI) which run from 26 to 29 October.
Individual quota places will be decided based on team uptake and the FEI Olympic Rankings.
Tickets
In all, a total of 10,500 athletes will line out in 32 sports and 329 events at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games for which 7 million of the 10 million tickets available are already sold to the general public.
These Games will be the biggest event ever organised in France and will set new sustainability standards for major sporting events, reducing the Games’ carbon footprint by half compared to the average of London 2012 and Rio 2016.
Paris 2024 hails the “New Era” of Olympic Games - the first to be planned and delivered in line with the reforms of Olympic Agenda 2020, creating social and economic opportunities that are accessible to everyone and located in a more urban and compact setting.
Breaking with tradition, for the first time in the history of the Summer Olympic Games the opening ceremony will not take place in a stadium. Instead it will be held on the main artery of the city, the River Seine, along which athletes in boats allocated to each delegation will travel a 6 kilometre route from east to west ending up at Trocadéro, the expansive complex of museums, sculptures, gardens and fountains with stunning views across the river to the iconic Eiffel Tower.
On 26 July 2024 new Olympic stories will begin to unfold, and new equestrian Olympic dreams will begin to be realised.
1 Year to Go…..don’t miss a hoofbeat…..!
Related Link
2024 Olympic Games in Paris Unveil Logo
Equestrian Sport Keeps Olympic Status for 2024 Olympic Games, New Formet for 2020 Games Approved
Five Cities Bid for 2024 Olympic Games