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September 3, 2010

Edge Takes The Top Spot After Dressage At Burghley

Ruth Edge and Two Thyme head the leaderboard after dressage at the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials. Photo by Kit Houghton/FEI.

Great Britain’s Ruth Edge and the 17-year-old Two Thyme led the clutch of superbly executed dressage tests which brought the first phase of the Land Rover Burghley Horse Trials in Great Britain, the fourth leg of the HSBC FEI Classics, to a close today, Sept. 3.

However, Edge, a renowned exponent of this phase, has just 0.4 penalties in hand over New Zealander Caroline Powell, who scored a career best on another 17-year-old, the evergreen Lenamore. Defending champions Oliver Townend and Carousel Quest, who produced the only other sub-40 penalty test, are a further 0.5 penalties behind in third.

Two Thyme is only competed sparingly these days—his last cross-country run was in June—but Edge has prepared him specifically for his first crack at the Land Rover Trophy.

“He always tries so hard,” said Edge, whose previous best placing at Burghley was 17th on Marsh Mayfly in 2006. “He’s on great form and feels really up for it.”

There was plenty to excite a capacity crowd enjoying the sunshine and a succession of well-ridden tests.

The young Swedish first-timer Christoffer Forsberg sprang a surprise by slotting into fifth place, just behind William Fox-Pitt on his second ride, Seacookie. At 19, Forsberg, who is just a year older than his horse, Grafman, is the youngest rider in the field, but he produced one of the most consistently rhythmic performances of the day.

Clayton Fredericks of Australia declared himself “rapt” with his ninth-placed performance on his new ride, having leased the Thoroughbred mare Be My Guest from her German owners. “Everything I asked for she gave me. She’s not the biggest mover, but now I’ve got the bitting and warm-up sorted. You’ve just got to keep her sweet,” he said.

Mark Todd’s return to Burghley after a 10-year break elicited huge cheers, and he declared: “It feels as if I haven’t been away.” The New Zealander has only competed Major Milestone, a novice at this level, three times, but he said he was well-pleased with equal 29th place at this stage and, with 20 penalties—the price of a cross-country refusal—covering the top 46 riders, it all could change tomorrow.

Looking ahead, riders have declared Mark Phillips’ cross-country course a typically big Burghley challenge, where the undulating ground tends to make the optimum time harder to achieve than at the season’s other CCI****s.

“It’s a good track,” Fredericks summed up. “You get lulled into a false sense of security when you walk it, but when the crowds are out tomorrow, suddenly the line that seemed so obvious before, will seem much narrower and horses react to that—you have to keep them going forward. It’s going to be a really exciting day.”

Results

1. Ruth Edge/Two Thyme (GBR) 38.3
2. Caroline Powell/Lenamore (NZL) 38.7
3. Oliver Townend/Carousel Quest (GBR) 39.2
4. William Fox-Pitt/Seacookie (GBR) 40.3
5. Christoffer Forsberg/Grafman (SWE) 44.3
6. Mary King/Apache Sauce (GBR) 44.8*
7. Andrew Nicholson/Avebury (NZL) 45.0
8. Mary King/Kings Temptress (GBR) 45.3
9. Clayton Fredericks/Be My Guest (AUS) 45.8
10. William Fox-Pitt/Macchiato (GBR) 46.8*
*denotes error of course

Live results and video streaming on www.burghley-horse.co.uk.

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