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Longines FEI Jumping Nations Cup™ Final 2018: Team Germany clinches the Challenge Cup

Sunday, 07 October 2018
CSIO5* Barcelona 2018

Photo (c) FEI/ Lukasz Kowalski Challenge Cup winners Team Germany. Photo (c) FEI/ Lukasz Kowalski.

Marcus Ehning was the hero of the hour when clinching the Challenge Cup for Germany at the Longines FEI Nations Cup™ Jumping Final 2018 in Barcelona (ESP) on Saturday night riding Comme Il Faut (Cornet Obolensky x Ramiro). Team-mate Philipp Weishaupt produced a foot-perfect pathfinding run from the lovely mare Asathir (Diamant de Semilly x Papillon Rouge), but when Hans-Dieter Dreher left two fences on the floor with Berlinda (Berlin x Gento) and youngest team member Maurice Tebbel had a fence down and a time fault with Chacco’s Son (Chacco-Blue x Lancer), then all the pressure was piled on Ehning’s shoulders. He knew exactly what he had to do because he’s done it so many times before.

"I had to go clear to win the class. This last 20 years I’ve been doing the sport I’m used to the pressure. Especially this year I had a few rounds where I had to be clear and I was lucky I was clear, but I hope that will change and that in future years the pressure is on someone else!" Ehning said with a smile after his team won through on a total of five faults. 

Of the seven competing nations there were two with just three team-members, Canada who started out that way in Friday’s first round of the Final and USA whose numbers were reduced when Jessica Springsteen and RMF Zecilie (Acolord x Canturo) were a late withdrawal this evening. But Alex Granato, who was on the reserve bench Friday, really rose to the occasion by steering Carlchen W (Chacco-Blue x Continue) through a foot-perfect round. So when all the US had to count was a double-error from Andy Kocher and Kahlua (Tygo x Caritas) and a single time fault from Lucy Deslauriers with Hester (Wandor van de Mispelaere x Palestro vd Begijnakker) then their nine-fault total was good enough for runner-up spot. 

That time fault was costly however, because Deslauriers was the last of the five riders chasing down a €50,000 bonus on offer to anyone producing clear rounds both Friday and Saturday. If she had been just that little bit faster she would have had it all to herself. 

Brazil lined up third on 10 faults ahead of Spain with 15, Canada with 16, Great Britain with 20 and the United Arab Emirates on a big score of 40 faults.

The Germans had mixed feelings about Saturday night’s success. The competition was open to the teams that did not qualify in Friday’s first round for Sunday’s top-eight Final. Philipp Weishaupt said it was tough to miss the cut by such a narrow margin when time was taken into account after four teams completed with an eight-fault scoreline. “We missed out by less than a second, and it wasn’t so easy to keep the motivation up today. We put our breeches on in the hotel and came out to jump tonight but all the other teams had their jeans on. But we knew we had to do it and we knew we had to try our best”, he added.

Ehning, who along with Tebbel was a member of the German team that claimed bronze at the FEI World Equestrian Games™ 2018 in Tryon, USA two weeks ago when their team-mate, Simone Blum, also took the individual title with the lovely mare DSP Alice, is one of the world’s most admired horsemen. On Saturday night he had the crowd spell-bound as he cruised at high speed around the track to bring glory to his country once again.

Asked how he prepared to go into such a pressure round he explained that Comme Il Faut had been jumping too high in the practice arena, so he schooled him over small fences to get him to jump lower which would allow them to take on the course at greater speed.

“Especially at the first fence I wanted him to be fast. The time was a bit tight…but if you can flow with him then you just have to follow him and he makes it very easy for the rider, he’s a very clever horse!” Ehning said. 

Meanwhile his Chef d’Equipe described the Longines FEI Jumping Nations Cup™ series as “the biggest thing we have in our sport! All of our different stakeholders are fighting for it, the breeders, supporters, owners, the riders, the Chefs’ d’Equipe, the Federations, everybody. It’s something special to be in a team, to fight with a team, to lose or win together for your country. I love this!” Otto Becker said.

 


Press release from FEI

Photo © FEI/ Lukasz Kowalski



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