-- FEI press release by Louise Parkes, edited by Eurodressage
For the second time this season Great Britain’s Charlotte Fry and Everdale left the opposition in their wake at the eighth leg of the FEI Dressage World Cup 2023/2024 Western European League in Amsterdam (NED) on Saturday 27 January 2024.
In the Grand Prix they pinned Germany’s Isabell Werth and Quantaz into second place and longtime league-leader Sweden’s Patrik Kittel into third with Touchdown. In the Kur they did it all again, but this time the judges granted them an even a wider winning margin which left them well clear of the rest of the field.
Fry has now moved comfortably into third place on the Western European League table from which the top nine will qualify for the Final in Riyadh (KSA) in April.
"I’m still taking it in I guess, to win here in Amsterdam is kind of a dream - especially with such a competitive field of horses and riders! Everdale has been feeling so good the last two days and I’ve had two really great rides so I couldn’t really ask for more," she said.
Field
The 15-strong starting field in the freestyle was filled with exciting talent from first to last, and judges Isobel Wessels (GBR), Patricia Wolters (NED), Mariette Sanders-van Gansewinkel (NED), Raphael Saleh (FRA) and Maria Colliander (FIN) had the Dutch partnership of Marieke van der Putten and the 12-year-old Totilas gelding Torveslettens Titanium (by Totilas x Stedinger) out in front at the halfway stage on a score of 79.725.
Second to go after the interval however, Belgium’s Flore de Winne and Flynn FRH (by Fahrenheit x Sir Oldenburg) took the lead when posting 80.315. This pair have been showing great promise this season, de Winne’s quiet balance helping the 10-year-old stallion sparkle as he continues to learn his trade while presenting a pleasing picture.
Next in however, multiple gold medallist Werth opened up the whole competition with big marks from the outset with Quantaz whose score of 86.455 was never going to be easy to overtake. The enthusiastic crowd loved the German star’s trademark punchy performance and rose to their feet in appreciation as the five-time FEI Dressage World Cup™ title-winner pranced out of the arena at the end of her test with a big smile and a wave.
Fry followed with a disobedient halt, but the scores started piling up for piaffe/passage and rock-solid flying changes, and boosted by four 10’s for choreography and five more for Music and Interpretation they pushed the new target score up to 88.180 which proved impossible to better. At the start of the Olympic year the experienced judges' panel clearly set a tone for the type of test, frame, back usage, and energy they like to see as they rewarded it with a score close to 90%
Sweden’s Kittel and Touchdown (by Quaterback x Sack) posted 84.905 for third place despite a muddled moment when he dropped his reins early in the test, and when the Danish duo of Nanna Skodborg Merrald with Blue Hors Don Olymbrio (by Jazz x Ferro) and Carina Cassøe Krüth with Heiline’s Danciera (by Furstenball x De Niro) posted 84.030 and 82.905 they slotted into fourth and fifth places respectively, Belgium’s de Winne sealing sixth spot at the end of the day.
Consistent
Tokyo 2021 Olympic partners, Fry and Everdale (by Lord Leatherdale x Negro) have been enjoying a really consistent run of form having also won the sixth leg of the Western European League in Mechelen (BEL) in December, just two weeks after finishing second in London (GBR). The result in Amsterdam has firmly sealed a qualifying spot for the Dutch-based Briton at the World Cup Final 2024 in Riyadh (KSA) in April, but with the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on the horizon there is no perfect plan in place just yet.
“Everdale is going to have a small break now. There are a lot of stallion shows coming up and then hopefully we will go to Den Bosch (s’Hertogenbosch, NED) and then do the outdoor season with Glamourdale so we will see how it all works out," said the rider who with her other superstar stallion, Glamourdale, took double-gold at the Dressage World Championship in 2022.
At the post competition press conference there was much talk about the forthcoming Paris 2024 Olympic Games, and asked which horse she intends to bring Fry wouldn’t commit herself - “I’m very lucky to have two really top horses at the moment so we will see!”, she replied.
Meanwhile when asked if she expects to be in Paris, Werth modestly replied, "it’s not so easy to get in a team, especially in Germany or Great Britain. There are only three to go and I will try my best and we will see!"
Spoiled for choice
Kittel, who has long led the Western European League standings, admits he is spoiled for choice when it comes to horses for both the World Cup Final and the Paris Games.
“I’m lucky because I have a couple of horses in the World Cup and I can do more shows without having to ride so much on each horse which is very good. For me that’s like a big bonus at the moment”, he explained. But he takes nothing for granted.
Where Paris is concerned he said “I think for every rider the Olympic Games is something we always dream of but it’s always in the stars. The day you are there and you’ve done your test and you say thank you to the judges - that’s the day you know you’ve ridden in an Olympics!”, he pointed out.
The Western European League now moves on to the final three stages at Neumünster (GER) in three weeks time, Gothenburg (SWE) at the end of February and ’s-Hertogenbosch (NED) in early March.
Photos © Digishots
Related Links
Scores: 2024 CDI-W Amsterdam
Eurodressage Coverage of the 2024 World Cup Finals