Much-anticipated appearances by new horse-and-rider combinations in the 3* —spearheaded by Endel Ots and Bohemian— and another 4* victory for Swedish routinier Tinne Vilhelmson-Silfven were the flavour of the day on Thursday 28 March 2024.
It marked the opening day of week 12—the final CDI of the 2024 season of the Global Dressage Festival (GDF) in Wellington, FL. AGDF, which hosts seven weeks of CDI competition, runs through March 31.
3* Victory for Ots and Bohemian
In the CDI3 Grand Prix Zen Elite Equestrian’s team of three new top horses filled every podium step. Owner Heidi Humphries bought the high-profile horses Bohemian, Helix and Lars Van De Hoenderheide for the U.S. riders Endel Ots and Olympic team silver medalist Adrienne Lyle at the end of 2023, and this was the first CDI appearance for all three.
Bohemian was fourth at the Tokyo Olympics and won freestyle silver in 2021 under Denmark’s Cathrine Laudrup-Dufour. Bohemian is no stranger to Wellington as his previous owner, Dong Seon Kim (KOR), campaigned him at Global in 2023, but this is the horse’s first win on the circuit. He was subsequently sent to Patrik Kittel to be shown in Europe and sold through an ad on Eurodressage, before returning stateside at the beginning of the year for new owners.
Under the saddle of Ots Bohemian once again graced the upper echelons of the scoreboard, topping the class of 24 starters with 72.761%. The pair picked up healthy helpings of eights—particularly for piaffe and passage—but the final score was suppressed by mistakes in the two-time changes, which earned twos and threes from the panel of five judges.
Lyle, who was first to go down the centerline with Lars Van De Hoenderheide, held on to third place with the 13-year-old Negro gelding, scoring 70.652% on the horse previously campaigned by Great Britain’s Lottie Fry. The horse was fairly short in the neck and tension in the canter half pass right as well as a mistake in the one tempi changes influenced the score.
Lyle went one better with her second ride, the 12-year-old Apache son Helix, whom she has taken over from Sweden’s Marina Mattsson. They slotted into second with 71.065%. Ots and Lyle led a clean sweep for the home nation, with U.S. riders filling the top six places in the class, which was a qualifier for Saturday’s Grand Prix Special.
“It’s all very surreal,” admitted Ots, who has trained with Albrecht Heidemann since he was 18. “You always see all the famous people like Adrienne Lyle and Kasey Perry [who finished fourth with 70% on Heartbeat WP], and I am just thankful and happy to be in there with them and part of the group."
Grand Prix Debutant
Remarkably, Ots was making his international grand prix debut with the 14-year-old by Bordeaux. Although a seasoned competitor nationally, this was the rider’s very first grand prix in a CDI and he only rode his first national, classic Grand Prix test in January on Sai Baba Plus.
On his mistake in the two-time changes, he added, “I should have warmed up for 10 minutes less today. I’ve been trying to get comfortable with doing less warm-up with Bohemian, and Cathrine reminded me that if the rider has the right mindset with him, he can go in there and do everything great. It’s been a question of getting my own mind under control.”
Ots will continue working with Heidemann, and their weekly schedule includes a couple of schooling sessions plus bareback riding and hand walking. Next, Bohemian will be focused on two Florida CDIs to hopefully secure a place on the U.S. squad who will compete in Europe this summer to bid for a place on the Olympic team.
However, Ots is not allowing his new-found fortune to get to his head.
“Yesterday I got into a fight with a stall fan and zip ties because I couldn’t get it to hang up, and then today we are out here doing this. It’s a very humbling sport and every day is a blessing,” added the 39-year-old.
Vilhelmson Back on Top in 4*
Flags of many colors adorned the podium in the CDI4* Grand Prix. A very blustery afternoon provided challenges, and Sweden’s seven-time Olympian Tinne Vilhelmson Silfvén was delighted to head the class on Lövsta Stuteri’s inexperienced 12-year-old Hyatt with 70.979% in the horse’s four-star debut.
She bought the Apache mare a year ago from Germany’s Anna-Cristina Abbelen, who finished second to Vilhelmson Silfvén in the class by just 0.1 percentage points. Abbelen rode her own 17-year-old Sam Donnerhall, the oldest horse in the class, to 70.87%. Less than a percentage point behind, Katherine Bateson Chandler (USA) and Haute Couture captured the yellow ribbon with 69.913%.
Vilhelmson Silfvén, who is a regular at GDF, relishes the opportunities to show all season in Wellington without long journeys. They have contested both CDIs and national shows this year to get experience under the horse’s belt.
“I’ve been working on my relationship with Hyatt, doing some shows then training a bit,” she explained. “I needed this time in the arena to get to know her and see how hot I want to have her in the warmup, or how careful I have to be, or how I should prepare her.
“Right now it’s getting better. She was a bit excited from the wind, but it’s good for her to train that too—she has to learn all this. She has really no experience actually, as before I got her she had done just a few shows. She will tell me how fast we can go. She has so much more power in her that I’m still saving so that she feels secure, and I don’t want to overdo it,” she concluded.
Vilhelmson Silfvén and her team of horses will return to Europe after AGDF wraps up, take a break in April and then gear up to show at the CDI Compiègne in France in May.
-- GDF press release by Alice Collins, edited by Eurodressage
Photos © Lily Forado
Related Links
Scores: 2024 CDI Wellington
Jochen Arl Sells Two Paris Olympic Hopefuls for Adrienne Lyle to Ride
Bohemian Sold to the U.S.A.