Click For Home - Equiworld and the logo device are registered trademarks.
horseEquestrian Chat Rooms and Message BoardsEquiworld Horse Site IndexHow To Contact The Equiworld TeamNeed Help Using Equiworld?horse
horse
Special Sections for Members
Equestrian Products and Product Reviews
Information on Horse Care and Breeds
HorseLinks and Equestrian Search Engine
Sports, Events and Results
Equiworld On-Line Equestrian Magazine
Riding Holidays and Travel
Training and Education of Horse and Rider
Equestrian Services
horse





Culpeper Margie Engle and Hidden Creek's Perin Win $100,000 Cosequin® Invitational Grand Prix at Cosequin USGPL Finals

CULPEPER, VA (September 30, 2001)--U.S. Sydney Olympic Team Member Margie
Engle, 43, of Wellington, Florida, riding her Olympic mount Hidden Creek's
Perin, beat a field of 26 entries that included eight Olympians, to win the
$100,000 Cosequin® Invitational Grand Prix at the Cosequin U.S. Grand Prix
League Invitational Finals in Culpeper, Virginia, today. Perin earned $30,000
for his owner, Hidden Creek Farm. "This was one of the strongest fields that
I've shown against in a long time," said Engle. "There were a lot of the same
people here that were at Spruce Meadows, which is the biggest Grand Prix in
the world. Most people used their top horses." Dave Ballard of Ontario,
Canada, who was the assistant course designer at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics
and 2000 Sydney Olympics, designed today's course. The $100,000 Cosequin®
Invitational Grand Prix will be televised on the Outdoor Life Network on
Tuesday, December 18 at 8pm and 11pm EST, and again on Wednesday, December 19
at 11am.

For Round One, Ballard built a 14-jump track that included a triple
combination at Fence No. 5, and a double at Fence No. 13. Time Allowed was
set at 90 seconds. Three riders voluntarily withdrew on course. Five riders
had clear rounds and qualified for the Jump-Off. "The course Dave built was
perfect," said Engle. "It was a very, very strong field and he built
accordingly. It was an excellent course. It tested the horse's scope and
carefulness. That last jump was extremely careful. It was a long course, so
it tested their ride-ability. And it tested the rider too, which is what I
like--when it tests a little of everything. He did a really good job." The
last jump was a vertical--a white plank with three dark blue rails above
it--and at 5'-2 ½" it was the tallest fence on course. It came down for nine
riders, more than any other jump in Round One.

Ballard's seven-fence Jump-Off course included a double built from the last
two elements of Round One's triple. Time Allowed was set at 43 seconds. First
on course was 19-year-old Marilyn Little of Frederick, Maryland, on her
Landman who blazed around the course fault-free in 35.040, setting the pace,
but she ended up in second place, earning $22,000. Next to go was U.S.
Atlanta Olympic Team Silver Medallist Anne Kursinski of Frenchtown, New
Jersey, on her Olympic mount Eros, who had one rail down for four faults in
36.493, which put her in fourth place. Eros earned $8,000 for his owners, The
Eros Group. Third to go was seven-time Canadian Olympic Team Member Ian
Millar of Perth, Ontario, Canada, riding Aftershock owned by The Point &
Millar Brooke Ltd. Millar put in a careful clear round in 39.929, but his
time was only good enough for third place and $13,000. Engle went next and
snatched the lead from Little with her clear round in 34.859 on Perin, which
proved to be the winning time. Last to go was U.S. Sydney Olympic Team
Alternate Todd Minikus of Loxahatchee, Florida, riding his Olympic mount Oh
Star, who lowered two fences in 35.065 for fifth place and $6,000.

Engle recognized that in the Jump-Off, it was one teenager against four
Olympians. "Marilyn will probably get to the Olympics pretty soon," said
Engle. "She's well on her way. Marilyn went great. She put in a fantastic
ride. She's the only one I actually got to see in the Jump-Off. I really
thought she had it. She was very fast everywhere. She was almost like 'junior
jumper fast'. She really never took back anywhere. She put in a beautiful
round, especially for going first." Engle beat Little by about a half a
second and explained how she shaved time. "My horse is huge and he's got a
huge step. He's comfortable leaving from far back. He's very scopey. So I
thought possibly on the two long gallops I could cut time. I tried to be as
fast as I could from one to two, and he turned back excellent and met the
triple bar just how I wanted off the turn. I took a little bit of a shot
because he got stopped so much in the two-stride. I thought I lost some time
there because that two was so tight for him and I turned a little bit inside
the track to the plank. I took a shot at the last jump-he just really
galloped up and left out strides for me there and jumped it beautifully,
especially off the long gallop."

This is the fourth annual Cosequin® U.S. Grand Prix League Finals to be held
at Commonwealth Park. In addition to the Olympians in the Jump-Off, the class
included Olympians Norman Dello Joio, Nona Garson, Leslie Howard, and Lauren
Hough, as well as a host of USET members that have represented the U.S.
internationally--Molly Ashe, Kim Frey, Mark Leone, Patricia Stovel, Aaron
Vale, and McLain Ward. Engle explained why the League is important to the
sport of show jumping. "Whenever you have an Invitational and you bring the
cream of the crop into the class, it makes it more important. I like the idea
of qualifying for it and going in reverse order. They put a tremendous amount
of prize money in, which is a big, big draw for the owners. It's an expensive
sport, especially with the economy going up and down. The bottom line is, it
helps the owners pay their bills. Owners enjoy watching their horses and get
great pleasure from that, but prize money definitely helps."

Engle, Minikus and Millar signed autographs for fans for more than 30 minutes
after the victory lap. Engle said she is in favor of horse show management
promoting that type of contact with spectators. "I think that's great. That's
what's going to help build our sport. The spectators have to feel a little
bit of a rapport with the riders." Engle added that she also enjoyed the
crowds in the grand stand today. "I really think it helps most of the riders,
and the horses even to some extent, to have a little more atmosphere and to
have more spectators out there."

Course Designer Dave Ballard said he built today's course bearing in mind
that it was a series Final. "For a final the course had to be substantial,
but not a career-ending experience. You set a test. Some people should pass
the test and some people should fail the test. I factored in scope and
technicality. I'm known as a rider's course designer, because I build in
rider problems rather than just horse problems. I tried to incorporate all
those things into the course, which in the end seemed to work out the way I
wanted it to. It's always nice to see that the top-rated people are the ones
that come back for the Jump-Off, and certainly Margie, Todd Minikus, Anne
Kursinski, and Ian Millar are the cream. On the other hand you had a young
rider like Marilyn Little who rode great, and actually set the tone for the
class. Until she went clean in the first round I think a lot of people had
questions about certain parts of the course, about the Time Allowed, and she
dispelled a lot of the mental problems about the Time Allowed. The class
improved after Marilyn went. Today was a good day for me as a course
designer."

Ballard also agreed that the Cosequin® U.S. Grand Prix League is important to
the sport of show jumping. "To be in a League puts us in the same category as
other professional sports. We have to think of ourselves more in those terms.
The riders need to personally promote their own League. They need to deal
with the public more. We have to lose the stigma that the equestrian sport
has a little bit of elitism. We have to make this sport more appealing to
spectators. We have to generate personalities, and to do that we have to have
a League and a Final and superstars just like in soccer and baseball. People
want to see their League be the winner rather than just an individual thing
every week. And it's good for the promoters and horse show management to know
that their League is the best and that they can attract the type of field
that we had today. I was very happy to be here."

$100,000 Cosequin® Invitational Grand Prix, September 30, 2001
HITS Culpeper VI, Cosequin® USGPL Finals, Culpeper, Virginia
Course Designer: Dave Ballard
Pl#/Horse/Rider/Owner/Prize Money/Rd 1 Faults/J-O Faults-Time
1/Hidden Creek's Perin/Margie Engle/Hidden Creek Farm/$30,000/0/0-34.859
2/Landman/Marilyn Little/Raylyn Farm & Marilyn Little/$22,000/0/0-35.040
3/Aftershock/Ian Millar/The Point & Millar Brooke Ltd/$13,000/0/0-39.929
4/Eros/Anne Kursinski/The Eros Group/$8,000/0/4/36.493
5/Oh Star/Todd Minikus/Todd Minikus/$6,000/0/8/35.065
6/Lancier 4/Jimmy Torano/Sir Ruly Inc./$5,000/ ¼ /NA
7/Toyz R Us/Jill Henselwood/Juniper Farms Ltd/$4,000/4/NA
8/Graf Rossini S/Mary-Lisa Leffler/Mr & Mrs Bruce Chovnick/$3,000/4/NA
9/Rio/McLain Ward/McLain Ward/$3,0004/NA
10/Glasgow/Norman Dello Joio/Glasgow Group/$2,0004/NA
11/Conwara/Kimberly Frey/Katherine Miracle 7 Overlook Farm/$2,0004/NA
12/Nonix Le Parc/Aaron Vale/Millstream/$2,000/4/NA
Number of horses who competed in this class: 29
Class Prize Money: $100,000


www.HitsShows.com



Find out more, visit the links page or find answers on the message board.


Copyright 1994 to 2024 Equiworld at Hayfield, Aberdeen, Scotland - 30 years on the web. Archived Version.