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[RC] WEG Endurance Team Hopefuls Prepare to Demonstrate their Abilities - Kristen A FisherMay 18, 2006
WEG Endurance Team Hopefuls Prepare
to Demonstrate their Abilities
http://www.usef.org/content/newsDisplay/viewPR.php?id=1288
By Jennifer Nice With the 2006 World Equestrian
Games just three months away, the top endurance riders in the U.S. are preparing
to demonstrate their abilities in the hopes of earning a place on the U.S.
Endurance Team. In order to be considered, each rider must compete at one of
three FEI***/AERC dual-sanctioned 100-mile rides scheduled for May 20 in Oreana,
ID; May 27 in Grand Island, MI; and June 11 in Ashland, MT. Members of the
National Selection Committee will be present at each event to evaluate the
competitors’ performances.
According to United States
Equestrian Federation®’s Director of Endurance Programs, Mary Lutz, there are
approximately 49 riders scheduled to compete at one of the three observation
trials, including members of the current National Training Squad and former
World Endurance Champion Valerie Kanavy and former Pan American Endurance
Champion Heather Reynolds. Riders who have been nominated on more than one horse
must compete at one observation ride with each horse.
Chef d’ Equipe Tom Johnson of
Loomis, CA, said the he doesn’t expect the nominated horses to be “peaked” for
the observation trials, but should still be building up toward the World
Equestrian Games. “I expect the successful riders to ride strong and smart, and
to finish within a reasonable distance of the winning horse but not necessarily
win,” Johnson said. “The top horses will make it look easy by finishing strong
and looking good while doing it.”
Following the final observation
trial, the National Team of 12 horse/rider combinations plus six ranked
alternates will be selected by the National Selection Committee. “Those riders
will then attend one of two training events,” said Johnson. “Locations of the
events will be selected based on their location in order to minimize how far
they have to haul. Riders will complete a test ride of 30 to 50
miles.”
The final team will be selected
based on several factors, which include but are not limited to the horse’s
fitness and soundness and the rider’s ability to ride to instructions. Johnson
added, “The goal of the selection process is to finish strong in Aachen. The
observation trials are a step in that direction.”
The team of riders selected to
represent the United States in the endurance competition at the World Equestrian
Games will be named by mid-July and will depart for Aachen, Germany, the first
week of August. The 100-mile world endurance championship will be held August
21.
The United States Equestrian
Federation® is the Governing Body of U.S. endurance competition at the
international level. The American Endurance Ride Conference is the National
Affiliate of endurance in the U.S. and governs the sport at the national level.
For more information about the U.S. Endurance Team and the 2006 selection
process, contact USEF Director of Endurance Programs Mary Lutz at mlutz@xxxxxxxx, or by phone at (908)
326-1155.
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