Molly Sewell and EL Raymond Conclude Kentucky Summer With USHJA Derby Win

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Lexington, KY July 31, 2016

The Kentucky Summer Horse Show wrapped up today with Molly Sewell clinching the $5,000 Hallway Feeds USHJA National Hunter Derby. Sewell was aboard Leslie and Stuart Campbell’s El Raymond and pair earned an impressive score of 186.00 to best a field of 36. 

“I thought my rounds went really nicely today,” Sewell said. “The first round was quite smooth. Raymond was wonderful and the handy is usually his best round where he really shines. He always delivers in the handy. “

This year marks the third year that Sewell, who is a professional based in Orlando, Florida, has won the Kentucky Summer Derby on El Raymond. Last year Sewell captured the $10,000 Hallway Feeds Leading Professional Rider Award for the 2015 USHJA National Hunter Derby Series. She returned to the Kentucky Summer Horse Show to defend her derby domination on the 18-year-old Warmblood gelding. 

The $5,000 Hallway Feeds USHJA National Hunter Derby is part of the $40,0000 Hallway Feeds USHJA National Hunter Derby series which is returning for the fifth year in a row at the Kentucky Horse Park. The five-part series a $15,000 Hallway Feeds Leading Rider Bonus presented at the conclusion of the series.

1. El Raymond/Molly Sewell/186.00
2. Rio’s Figaro/Taylor Kain/182.00
3. Acado/Molly Sewell/179.00
4. Fondant/Blythe Marano/177.50
5. Phantom/Leylan Gleeson/173.00
6. Almost Royal/Sydney Shulman/169.00
8. Symbolic/Catherine Stafford/168.50
9. Rubix/Taylor Kain/161.00
10. Front Page/Daniel Bedoya/152.00
11. BeforeAnythingElse/Christina Kelly/136.50
12. Beckham/Victoria Watters/132.00

Adam Edgar is Making His Dreams Come True With Hard Work

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By Catie Staszak

Junior rider Adam Edgar is not afraid of the word ‘No.’

“There are so many people who are going to tell you that you can’t do it,” said Edgar. “I had numerous people tell me, ‘You can’t do this. You don’t have enough money.’ My thing was, I was never afraid of no or someone telling me, ‘You can’t do that.’ That was more of a drive to do it.”

Edgar, 17 and from Leesburg, Va., did not have the luxury of owning his own horse or pony growing up, but he catch-rode his way into a working student position at Over The Hill Farm under the tutelage of trainer Bill Schaub.

Last month, he was awarded a U.S. Hunter Jumper Association Foundation “Making A Dream” Grant, enabling him to compete at the U.S. Junior Hunter Championships - 'East in Devon, Pa., with Jamie Stryker’s 10-year-old Holsteiner gelding UpCountry Charmer (Contender X Geriance). In the large junior, 16-17 division, they finished fifth in Monday’s classic round, 10th in Tuesday’s handy, and were fifth overall in a division of 39 competitors.

“It’s so shocking just how many people really do want to help,” Edgar said. “For me, that’s something that’s just astounded me and made me so unbelievably thankful. It’s been such an amazing experience so far.”

Edgar received $2,500 from the USHJA to cover “transportation, hotel and supplies needed.” Stryker offered UpCountry Charmer for the competition. Other sponsors stepped up to help fund the young rider’s trip, including CWD, who gifted Edgar with a new saddle, and Diane Schiereck of Seashore Acres, who provided a veterinary exam for “Charmer.”

“It’s really been a big relief, not only for my mom and me, but also for Bill,” Edgar said. “It really helped make this all possible.”

Entrepreneurship

Edgar has been catch-riding since his mother won him a free riding lesson at Red Gate Farm in Hamilton, Va., through a school raffle; he rode a horse named Misty and was hooked from the start. Initially, though, he was not drawn to the hunter ring.

Once he was past basic walk-trot-canter lessons, Edgar started eventing on Carbon Copy, a pony owned by a friend of his mother’s. “I got really into [it]. I wanted to do it and go to the Olympics for it; I loved cross-country,” he said.

But Carbon Copy had some antics up his sleeve. “He tried to buck me off a lot. At one event he tried to buck me off in cross-country, and I ended up just stopping and getting off,” Edgar recalled. “I walked all the way back to the trailer. My mom was like, ‘I don’t know if this is the safest thing you should be doing.’ "

It didn’t take long for Edgar to pick up another mount, but this time he relocated to the hunter ring. Carol Eichner, the trainer next door to where Carbon Copy was stabled, asked him to catch ride one of her ponies. Working with Eichner at her Everready Farm in Loudoun County, Va., led to Edgar getting the ride on his first “real medium pony” mount, a pinto pony gelding named Damingo.

“I just fell in love with [the hunters],” Edgar said. “[I enjoyed] learning to ride well and then learning how to finesse it, and I loved the challenge of having to go in and be perfect, and I never looked back.”

Edgar and Damingo moved up to the medium pony division in 2014. Qualifying for the U.S. Pony Finals in Lexington, Ky., was easy - they earned a spot in the line-up the first time they contested the division - but the logistics of going were not. Edgar’s mother, who owns a skin care shop in Leesburg, could not afford to send her son to the show on her own.

“The story I like the best is from when he was riding with Carol Eichner,” Schaub said. “He qualified for the medium pony [division], and as he walked out of the ring, he was like, ‘Now I get to go to Pony Finals!’ Carol said, ‘Yes, but you’re not going to be able to afford to go.’ And he was like, ‘Yes I will. I’ll figure something out.’ He made dog cookies, and he went around and sold them. He took them to school and went around the neighborhoods and sold dog cookies, and that’s how he paid for his first Pony Finals.

“Adam is just one of those kids with such a good savvy and such good people skills,” he added. “It wasn’t taught; he just figured it out.”  

A Second Family

Edgar met Schaub at those Pony Finals. He had another ride there, Anna Rossi’s One More Time, in the large pony division, and Rossi had Schaub train him at the competition. The two immediately hit it off, and Edgar and “Ditto” ended up ribboning.

“I was so nervous when I first met [Schaub], and I was so awkward, but he ended up being just one of the funniest, nicest people,” Edgar recalled. “I ended up 16th overall, and it was great.”

“I used to summer in Virginia, so I saw him as a really little boy, and I watched him ride through the years,” Schaub said. “I would help him a little bit with [Ditto] when we were at the same shows, and I really liked the kid. He’s a hard worker; he’s just one of those kids that everybody wants to help.”

Schaub worked with Edgar at Capital Challenge (Md.) that year and helped Edgar find rides at the Winter Equestrian Festival in Wellington (Fla.) in 2015, when Edgar began picking up rides in the pony divisions and in the children’s and junior hunters.

“It was really Bill who said, ‘I want to help, and I want to campaign you for rides,’ " Edgar said. “You really just have to find the right people, and you have to take every safe ride that you can get. Anything that’s rideable and that you’re not going to get hurt on, you have to take. The more you ride and get noticed, the more you’re going to find the people that you’re going to get in the right situation with.”

The following year, Schaub took him on as his working student.

“I have learned so much, not only about riding, but also so much about being a horseman and always putting the horses’ care first,” Edgar said. “We just learn so much every day, and Bill has just been awesome. He understands my mindset, so we work really well together. He lets me do my thing, and he’s never once tried to make me ride the way that I don’t ride; he’s always just tried to help me polish my riding and make me better and better - not different. I could never repay him for that.”

“I always try to sponsor at least one kid - a Shawn Cassidy, a Parker Wright, a Taylor St. Jacques, a Taylor Adams - and right now I’ve got [Edgar] and [12-year-old] Luke Jensen as working students,” Schaub said. “I just try to give back. I was never able to do this either when I was a kid in this kind of manner.”

Edgar still calls Leesburg home, but he spends a lot of time on the road traveling to horse shows. He takes online classes through EdOptions Academy, and while spending time at Over The Hill in Sanford, Fla., he stays with Jensen and his mother Martha.

“Martha Jensen takes care of those boys and has them everywhere they need to be, because Adam’s mother can’t go, and Adam is pretty much on his own,” Schaub said. “They’ve got to do their schoolwork, and I make sure they’ve got their formal stationary with their monograms on it, because ‘Thank you’ notes have to get out.

“That’s just my style,” Schaub continued. “I tell my boys, ‘Listen, a text and an email, in my book, are not thank yous. You’re going to hand-write notes.’ With this USHJA grant, we have a list of who gets thank you notes. That’s part of the job, and it just becomes familiar.”

“Bill is like a dad to me,” Edgar said. “He always gives me a hard time about things, but I have to remember that we’re like family. We’re always joking, we’re always having fun, and it’s just like we’re one big family. There’s no drama; there’s none of that. It’s just fun.”

The Gift Of Grant

Edgar and Schaub first heard about the Making a Dream grant through the Wellington-based trainer Charlie Moorcroft, who is on the USHJA Foundation Board of Directors. That led to a meeting with USHJA Foundation President Jennifer Burger.

“I sat down with her at WEF, and she asked what some of my goals were, and I told her I’d love to do Junior Hunter Finals,” Edgar said. “She told me she wanted to help me make that a possibility.”

A few months later, Steve Rosenberg, the foundation’s coordinator, called Schaub to tell him his pupil would be receiving the grant.

“He got a unanimous vote, because everyone on the board had been watching him from the corner of their eyes, since we started this during Florida circuit time,” Schaub said. “His mother was really straining to help, and I’m doing all I can, and a lot of people will help him, but [this grant] really made [Junior Hunter Finals] happen for him to have this experience. Hopefully next year, he’ll have more catch rides. He’s just getting more in to the junior hunters.

“I’ve just been amazed at how good everybody has been to help,” Schaub continued. “We’re getting more and more sponsorships, and the zones are willing to help, and they set an example.”

The USHJA Foundation’s funding should go a long way, because Edgar says he is in this sport for the long run. The rest of his summer includes a month in Kentucky and another shot at Pony Finals, and next season he hopes to pursue the “big eq” finals as another stepping-stone to becoming a professional.

“I love helping kids, and I love teaching, so I’d love to eventually become a professional, have my own barn, teach kids and ride,” he said. “I just really love helping kids, and it’s so important, especially after all the help I’ve gotten, to give back and help other kids that need.”

“One of the mothers came up to me the other day and said to me, ‘You don’t realize, Adam saved my kid the other day. She went in the first class and got a 55 and was so depressed, and he came up and sat down and said to her, ‘Well, I just got two 36’s. That beats you!’ ” Schaub said.

“He’s really good that way with the other kids. He’ll sit down with them and tell them not to worry, because he went through all of that, the worry stage and the nervous stage. He just had to figure out a way to overcome it. He’s a real team player, which is nice to have around. It just seems to come natural to him.”

Edgar already knows the advice he’ll give his own students.

“Catch-riding so much and riding with Bill is still a lot of work, but I love it, and I’m finally starting to feel that all of that work I’ve put into it is paying off,” he said. “People notice hard work, and they want to help. My biggest advice to anybody is, ‘Don’t take no for an answer. Don’t be afraid of people telling you that you can’t do it, because if you put your mind to it, anything really is possible.”

A Look Back: Mind Games 1985 AHSA Working Hunter Horse of the Year

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By Marianne Taylor

His mother was blind, so for as long as Mind Games was at her side, he wore a bell around his neck so that she would know where he was at all times. Whether or not wearing the bell contributed to his insecurities and quirks no one really knows, but it is suspected. Luckily for the seal brown Thoroughbred gelding, for almost all of his life, he was in the hands of great horsemen that knew how talented he was and learned to deal with his idiosyncrasies. They adapted to him and didn’t try to get him to adapt to their "program”. The name Mind Games suited him perfectly.

Bred near Richmond, Virginia by Kathy Browning, Mind Games was by Richard S. Reynolds’ imported English Thoroughbred stallion *Bettered, out of a Thoroughbred show mare named Miss Jackie, that had come from Neely Blair (she was also the dam of Gary Kunsman’s Miss Libby and Arbitrage that belonged to Wilson Dennehy). Mind Games was bred to show, so he was not registered with the Jockey Club.

Debra Hoffman, also of the Richmond area, bought the big brown colt as a yearling. She nicknamed him “Junior” because of his size. Junior was the barn name that stuck with Mind Games throughout his show career. With Jan Simpson doing the ground work, Debra broke Junior as a two-year-old, but because of his big size (by now he was 16.2), he was uncoordinated and couldn’t really figure out how to canter well. He was turned out in a field for another year. At three, the same problem and the same solution- out in the field for another year. Same thing at four. Finally, by the time he was five, he was used to his own size and could advance in his training.

As a six-year-old, it was time for Junior’s first horse show. By then, Debra had figured out some of the tricks for keeping him happy - mind games, if you will. There his show name was born. Debra showed him at his first show, a small schooling show near Richmond. In the pouring rain, Mind Games marched around the course with his ears up and won the class. After that, Debra got Eric Dirks to show him at some local shows. Kitty Beveridge (now Barker) then took over and showed him in one Pre-Green division, and then they went right into the 1st Year Greens the same year.

After Florida, when Mind Games was a 2nd Year horse, Kitty became pregnant and stopped riding. Debra then made a decision that was the best for her horse…she got Tommy Serio to show Junior. Tommy had been around great horsemen all of his life and learned from each of them. He had an uncanny ability to figure a horse out and a soft, easy, accurate way with each of them. Tommy was the perfect rider for Mind Games.

Some people might call Mind Games’ little idiosyncrasies “quirks,” but Tommy called them “insecurities”. Quickly, Tommy figured out how to deal with each of them. They never cantered a jump in the schooling ring and were known to trot a vertical as high as 4’6” with ease. After warming up, Tommy would get off at the ring, adjust the saddle, and let Junior just stand and relax before going in the ring. He rode him in a double-twisted snaffle with no martingale. Tommy said he just looped the reins and Mind Games would canter around the course and jump “impeccable” over every jump. It was a match made in heaven.

Tommy Serio didn’t start showing Mind Games until Upperville of his 2nd Year, but the next year, 1985, they started in May at Keswick in the Working Hunters, where they were Champion. They showed at more shows that year in both the Working and the Conformation divisions and were champion at many “A” shows including Devon, Upperville, and Pennsylvania National (Harrisburg, PA). Mind Games was Conformation Champion at Harrisburg and Working Reserve Champion at Washington, where he also won the Hunter Classic. By the end of 1985, Mind Games was American Horse Show Association Horse Of The Year in the Working Hunters and Reserve Horse Of The Year in the Conformation Hunters. Mind Games was hurt early in 1986 so he sat out much of the year from showing.

Having shown for many years with much success, it was riding Mind Games that Tommy said “broke the ice” and got him known widely as the great horseman and rider that he is. When Charlie Weaver left the riding position at Cismont Manor Farm in the Fall of 1986, it was Tommy Serio that Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler hired to take over the reins of their successful stable of show hunters including Two For One, Missouri, Super Flash, and many others. Mind Games, still owned by Debra Hoffman, joined the Cismont Manor string for 1987 and won his fair share.

In the Fall of 1987, trainer Bill Schaub was looking for a horse to move his student, Courtney Kennedy, off of her large pony Chardonnay, and it was Mind Games that he picked. Courtney’s sister, Ashley, had won about all there was to win for the previous three years on her Large Junior horse, Lyrik, so soon after Courtney got Mind Games, the two sisters switched horses for the next year. It was Ashley’s last year Junior in 1988. She showed Mind Games to much success, including Large Junior Champion at Washington International (Courtney was Reserve to Mind Games on Lyrik).

Like Tommy Serio, Bill Schaub figured out ways to keep Mind Games happy. When he’d get nervous in his stall, they tied a bell on him. That must have brought back memories and security from the days when he was a foal at his mother’s side and he’d calm down. Bill and the Kennedy girls did nothing in a hurry around Junior. Their trick to keep him calm at the ring and around the course was to wad up some grass and put it in his mouth with a tight noseband to hold it. He’d suck on the grass all around the course.

By 1989, Courtney Kennedy was showing Mind Games in the Large Junior, as well as Lyrik. The two champion horses were best buddies and inseparable. Courtney learned right away that you couldn’t “make” Junior do anything. You had to ask nicely. He hated showing at night at Devon. Courtney said he went in the ring and just stood there until she left the ring. He also didn’t like big grass grand prix fields, so they avoided showing on them. Courtney said, “As long as we kept him relaxed and happy, he was just the greatest horse.” The highlight of their year together was at Pennsylvania National (Harrisburg) where they won every Over Fences class and ended up Grand Junior Hunter Champion.

After several happy years with Debra and Tommy, then Bill and the Kennedy girls, unfortunately Mind Games’ luck ran out. He was sold into a top stable that tried to make him conform to their routine. The horse that had won so much was now a shell of his past self - he was a nervous wreck. Finally, the owners sent Junior back to Tommy Serio.

Tommy took his time and got Mind Games’ confidence and security back. After the pair proved themselves once again in the show ring in Florida, and the Junior rider was able to win a class, Junior was retired and given to Tommy.

Mind Games lived out his life with the man that loved him so much at Springdale, the farm that Tommy rented near Cismont Manor. One day, at the age of 26, Junior seemed a little colicky so Tommy took him to the vet clinic. Tommy said that he knew in his heart that was the last time he would see his old friend. Sure enough, later that night, the vets decided there was nothing more they could do for the grand ol’ horse and they called Tommy with the recommendation to put him down. Tommy sadly agreed.

Every horse is an individual. Some are easier than others. If not for Mind Games ending up in the hands of Debra Hoffman, Tommy Serio, Bill Schaub, and Ashley and Courtney Kennedy, he would have been just another great horse that slipped through the cracks. As it was, the sweet, insecure horse shone as one of the bright lights of the “A” shows from the mid to late 80s.

Luke Jensen Wins Devon 2016 Pony Sportsmanship Award

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Congrats to Luke Jensen! Interviewed below by The Plaid Horse

By Ella Baltus

The 2016 Devon Pony Sportsmanship Award is award is sponsored by Pony Tail Bows and the owner, Tracey Currey.

I had the pleasure to interview this year’s winner of the 2016 Devon Pony Sportsmanship Award, Luke Jensen

Q: How old are you and how long have you been riding?
A: I am 12 years old and I have been riding for as long as I can remember.

Q: What division did you show in this weekend and what is your pony’s name?
A: The regular medium ponies and my pony’s name is Highland’s Heaven Sent or “Haven”.

Q: What barn do you ride with?
A: Over the Hill Farm in Florida

Q: What was your favorite part about Devon
A: I just really enjoyed how intense the show was, but when you left the ring it is just so fun with the fair, the pony hunt teams, and all the other fun stuff you have.

Q: Who is your horse/pony crush?
A: Probably Brunello, I just love that horse. I even know him.

Q: What does sportsmanship mean to you?
A: I just think it is really important because no one wants to be around you if you don’t have good sportsmanship, and it is also a huge part of integrity.

Molly Sewell and MTM Caruso S Win the USHJA Hunter Classic at ESP Spring II

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Wellington, FL - April 18, 2016


Molly Sewell of Winter Park, FL, and MTM Caruso S, owned by Brynn Hanson finished the week with a the win in the $5,000 USHJA Hunter Classic, earning an overall score of 170.5 from the judging panel. Michael Zukerman of Huntington, NY, piloted Denmark, owned by Patricia Adikes-Hill to second place with a 164.5, while Katie Schell of Cleveland, OH, and Candor, owned by Redfield Farm, took third place honors with a score of 159.

Sewell earned an 83.5 in the first road aboard MTM Caruso S, and followed in the second round with an 87, to secure the win. Fifteen entries vied for top honors. Sewell also rode E.L. Raymond, owned by Leslie Campbell to a sixth place finish. 

Coco Fath of Fairfield, CT, and Akinda rode to the top of the $1,000 3'6" Junior/Amateur Owner Hunter Classic presented by Sweet Oak Farm. Adam Edgar of Leesburg, VA, and Candescence owned by Clare Sargent finished in second, while Madelyn Porter and Dragonfly's Encore, owned by Dragonfly Farms finished in third.

Continuing with consistency throughout the week, Molly Sewell added another win at ESP Spring II in the $1,000 Pre-Green Incentive aboard Dragonfly's Cellestine, owned by Dragonfly Farms. Taylor Kain of Boynton Beach, FL, and Market Trend, owned by Daryl Ziegler Henning earned second place, while Sewell picked up another top three finish, piloting Quentin, owned by Janice Cannizzo to third place.

Leslie Campbell Captures Adult Amateur, 50 and Over Championship

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For Immediate Release
Lauren Fisher and Callie Seaman for Jennifer Wood Media, Inc.

Wellington, FL - February 12, 2016

Leslie Campbell rode her own E.L. Raymond to the Camping World Adult Amateur Hunter 50 & Over Section A championship. Campbell, who is from Arkansas, topped the under saddle and placed first, second, third, and fifth over fences over the two days of competition. Reserve honors went to Lynn Rogers and her nine-year-old Selle Luxembourgeois gelding Blue Point. The pair earned fourth in the under saddle and first and second over fences.

Campbell began riding as a child on Quarter Horses and Saddlebreds, but started showing hunters following her college graduation. "When I finished college and started paying my own way for horses I rode with John French for a few years, and then I took 16 years off to work on my career," Campbell explained.

When Campbell began competing again four years ago, she teamed up with Bill Schaub. "It was just a perfect fit, and we found Raymond. I leased him first. Then I decided I was ready to buy a horse, and made a list of all the things I wanted in a horse, and looked down and realized I was sitting on it. So I bought him," she detailed. "It's been wonderful since then. He's a fantastic horse."

E.L. Raymond has had an illustrious career, beginning as Hardin Towell's first junior hunter. Since then many riders have showed the Warmblood gelding to great success. "His name is E.L. Raymond and it stands for Everybody Loves Raymond, which everybody does," Campbell laughed. "He's had a long, long career and now he's with me for life. It's a really good partnership, and I feel very privileged," she stated.

Despite Raymond's age at 18 years old, Campbell insists, "he shows no signs of slowing down." "He feels great physically. We take really good care of him," she said. "He's our precious Raymond, so whatever he wants he gets."

Campbell has battled some health issues, which made competing difficult. "This is kind of a comeback year for me. I had heart surgery, so I'm so grateful I can have a horse like Raymond that I can trust and know is going to help me get back in the saddle in the right way," she stated.
Campbell enjoys showing in the competitive Adult Amateur division. "It's fun to have lots of friends riding with you that are rooting for you, so this is a really nice division," she explained. "I was just happy to put in two consistent rounds. I think as adult amateurs that is a really important piece of this whole thing, just to be consistent."

Campbell lives in Wellington for the entirety of the WEF circuit. Each year she sets a goal to be champion at least once, which she has accomplished each year. "I'm delighted because this is really good company. These horses are good, these riders are good, and so it's an honor to be champion ever in this division," she said.

Photo Credit: Photos © Sportfot, An Official Photographer of the Winter Equestrian Festival, sportfot.com. 

Molly Sewell Tops the Turf Tour's First Hunter Derby Days

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Wellington, Florida (February 6, 2016) - The fantastic covered arena of the Jim Brandon Equestrian Center set the stage for the first of this year’s Hunter Derby Days, presented by The Ridge at Wellington. As a branch of the 2016 Turf Tour, the Hunter Derby Days showcased some of the top hunters in the world being judged on their form and their horse’s movement over elegant natural obstacles.

2014 Hunter Derby Days Champion Kelley Farmer returned to defend her title, and for the second year in a row she clinched the international class. Farmer and her own It’s Me put in a fantastic performance in both rounds of the $15,000 USHJA International Hunter Derby to the standard for world class hunt seat at The Ridge. She was followed closely by Louise Serio aboard Jessica Burger’s Rock Harbor who rode to the Reserve Champion title. Round one of the International Derby was won by Farmer on Kent Farrington’s Like I Said, while Serio and Like I Said secured the win in the Handy. Farmer and It’s Me placed second in both rounds, ultimately earning them the overall win in the International Derby.

Molly Sewell proved her mettle that morning morning, taking both Champion and Reserve in the $5,000 Dietrich Equine Insurance USHJA National Derby. She topped the field with lovely rides Leslie C. Campbell’s E.L. Raymond, and took the Reserve Championship title with Mtm Caruso S, owned by Brynn Hanson. Generously sponsored by Dietrich Equine Insurance, the National Derby served as a way for riders to qualify and earn points for the National Hunter Derby Championship across the various divisions including Performance Working Hunter, Pre-Greens, Amateur Owner, and Junior Hunter. The Turf Tour’s trademark hospitality and relaxed atmosphere carried over to both the National and International Derbies, with complimentary lunch, an organized horse shuttle, and permanent stabling offered to all competitors.

Judges George Wallace, Diana Carney, Spencer Chatham, and Carol Hoffman were tasked with evaluating and awarding the best rides in each of the USHJA events, and Kevin Giblin’s course designs set the stage for a true test of the agility and elegance of performance hunters. Organized by Olympian Nona Garson, George D’Ambrosio, and Craig Bergman, The Turf Tour’s competitive, utopian show atmosphere is matched only by its hospitality. For only $75, riders can schedule pick up and drop off at the Turf Tour’s weekly venue, including both of the Hunter Derby Days competitions, as well as a trip back to their farm anywhere in Wellington after their rides. With the inclusion the pageantry and athletic prowess of performance hunters through the Hunter Derby Days, 2016’s Turf Tour is setting a new standard for national and international competition.

Casparo and Molly Sewell Third in $234,655 USHJA Pre-Green Incentive Championship

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By Tricia Booker

Lexington, KY - August 13, 2015  

Tracy Fenney may be best known for her prowess in the grand prix show jumping arena, but during the $234,655 USHJA Pre-Green Incentive Championship her talents in the hunter ring carried her to the top.

She guided MTM Farm's MTM Personalized, a 7-year-old warmblood gelding, to the best performance in the Championship Round, earning scores of 91, 92 and 90 for the top check of $29,333.13.

"Wow," said Fenney. "Well, of course I get so nervous. It's so much easier doing the grand prix classes. I just feel privileged to ride against all those guys; they're so good. You hear about them and see them, and they're just amazing. What a great group of people to ride with."

Tonight's Championship Round was the grand finale of the USHJA Pre-Green Incentive Championship. The First and Second Rounds took place August 11-12, with two courses of 3' or 3'3" fences suitable for Pre-Green Hunters.

In this third year of the Championship, 332 horses enrolled in the program. A total of 295 of those horses qualified to compete, with 160 entering the event.

The top-30 horses, with the highest combined scores from the first two rounds, returned today with a clean slate for the Championship Round over a third, beautiful course designed by Patrick Rodes, of Argyle, TX.

Tonight's judges included Linda Andrisani, Rick Fancher, Danny Robertshaw, Claudia Roland, Mike Rosser and Steve Wall sitting in pairs around the Stonelea Ring.

Fenney and her partner Mike McCormick, of Flower Mound, TX, imported MTM Personalized in March, and, fittingly, he arrived into a winning atmosphere. Fenney had just captured that evening's $25,000 Hildebrand Fund Grand Prix at the Pin Oak Charity Horse Show in Texas and was eager to meet her newest hunter.

"He's just amazing and such a fun horse to have," she said. "I feel lucky to have been able to ride him."

After winning the Championship Round and placing second in Round 1 and seventh in Round 2, MTM Personalized collected $41,828.51 in total prize money.  
"I love this program. The test case was in Texas [with Texas Pre-Green Super Series], and Colleen McQuay has done such a good job for all of us," said Fenney. "She's helped people understand the program and shared her knowledge. Usually all we have are Pre-Green horses, because they usually get sold before they're First Year horses. I think we had eight enrolled [in the USHJA program] this year, and we sold five of them. It's really fun watching them all."

Both the second- and third-placed finishers echoed Fenney's feelings after their Championship Round performances. Sandy Ferrell guided Rebecca Stepanoff's Grand Luxe to reserve championship honors with scores of 89, 89.50 and 88.50, while Molly Sewell rode White Hill Farm's Casparo to third place with scores of 88, 89 and 88.

This was the third time Ferrell had shown the 8-year-old Mecklenburg gelding, and they collected $22,527.76 in prize money during the three rounds.

"His regular rider, Rebecca Gibson, couldn't be here, so I lucked out and got the job," said Ferrell. "He's 8 years old, so a little on the older side of the Pre-Green horses. He has very few jumping miles, though. He was a dressage horse, so he's very green as far as his miles in the show ring."

Ferrell, Bernville, PA, described Grand Luxe as a trier who has found his niche in the hunter ring.

"It's safe to say his jump is incomparable to most horses out there," she noted. "He just tries incredibly hard at every jump, which is just his god-given way of going. And he's actually pretty small, so to be able to jump that high and with that much scope is an amazing feature. He taught me to be tight in the tack because he wasn't going to jump lower any time soon."

Sewell reunited with the 6-year-old Westphalian Casparo (by Cascavelle) just three weeks ago after he was sold last March to owner Jennifer Padovani and While Hill Farm of Greenwich, CT.

"So he's just an amazing horse," said Sewell. "He tries so hard. Pretty much every time I've shown him he's been champion or reserve. He gives 110 percent, and he just keeps rising to the occasion. All week he had 85, 86, and it got higher and higher. I was so proud of him tonight; he got so excited with all of the people [spectating] and just turned it on."

In addition to winning $14,226.47 in prize money during the Championship, Sewell and Casparo were presented with this year's Shapley's Best Turned Out Award. Sally Stith-Burdette was on hand to present Sewell and groom Amado Ramos with a Shapley's Awards Package.

Fenney, as the winning rider of the USHJA Pre-Green Incentive Champion horse, also received a one-year free lease on a customized two-horse bumper-pull trainer courtesy of KY Lake Trailer Sales and Sundowner.

Louise Serio received this year's Rider Style Award. The new award, presented by Bill Rube, went to the rider who best displayed the American style of riding in the ring and sportsmanship outside of the competition arena. The recipient will serve as a role model for preserving the integrity of the sport and maintaining a standard of excellence and tradition in his or her riding.

This year's High-Score Mare Award was presented to Splendid, a 6-year-old warmblood, owned by Boggs Hill, trained by Kelly Goguen and ridden by Tim Goguen. Splendid placed sixth in Round 1, 10th in Round 2 and was fifth overall in the combined scoring. Splendid also finished tied for fifth in the Championship Round.

In addition to the substantial prize money, this year there was $16,500 in bonus awards offered. The winners were named based on their performances in the First and Second Rounds. They included:
$5,000 High-Score American-Bred Bonus Award in remembrance of Candie Owens, presented by Oakwell Farms and DS Holdings, LLC - American-Bred -Wish (Be Cool-Hush) a 6-year-old bay gelding owned by Rivers Edge and ridden and trained by Scott Stewart. 

$2,500 International Hunter Futurity Bonus Award - IHF - Roll Call (Redwine-Really The Winner), a 7-year-old Oldenburg gelding, owned by Lorena O'Neill, trained by Alex Granato and ridden by Josh Dolan.

$2,500 High-Score 4- and 5-year-old Bonus Award presented by Barnfield Foundation - Liberty Road (Casall-unknown), a 5-year-old gelding, owned by Betsee Parker and ridden and trained by Hunt Tosh.

$2,500 High-Score American Quarter Horse Bonus Award, presented by Plastilite Corporation and Equine Semen Transporter - Snorkel (Achieva-Divy Up Babs), a 6-year-old Thoroughbred-Quarter Horse mare, owned by Holly Brown Powell, trained by David Warner and ridden by Lanie DeBoer.

$2,500 High-Score Sallie B. Wheeler/U.S. National Hunter Breeding Championship Alumni, presented by The Wheeler Family - Fleur Du Rouet (Balou Du Rouet-All Powder Coated D), a 5-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare owned by Spencer Ranch, trained by Keeley Gogul and ridden by Jeff Gogul.

$2,500 Thoroughbred Bonus Awards, presented by TAKE2 Second Career Thoroughbred Program, Inc. - no Thoroughbreds competed in 2015 so money will rollover to 2016.
The Pre-Green Incentive Program has gained popularity since its debut in December 2012 and has garnered praise from members across the country for its encouragement of the development of young horses. The program would not have gotten off the ground without the early support of many people, including USHJA committee members and staff.

The Founding Members include: Colleen McQuay, Amanda Lyerly, Bill Ellis, Betty Oare, Diana Strumberg, Don Stewart, Emil Spadone, Geoff Teall, Jenny Karazissis, Joey Darby, Liza Boyd, Louise Serio, Peter Pletcher and Susie Schoellkopf.

The USHJA thanks the Official Sponsors who helped to make this championship possible, including: Charles Owen, the Official Helmet of the USHJA; Rood & Riddle, the Official Equine Hospital and Veterinary Pharmacy; Standlee Hay Company, Official Forage Company of the USHJA; The Clothes Horse, Official Cooler of the Pre-Green Championship; EQSportsNet, Official Host Broadcast; KY Lake Trailers Sales, Award Sponsor; Shapley's, Best Turned Out Award Sponsor; Hospitality Sponsor SmartPak; and Contributing Sponsors Perfect Products and Professional's Choice.

For full coverage please look for the USHJA Hunter Derby and Pre-Green Incentive Championships In Stride Digital Special Edition arriving in your email as well as the September print issue of USHJA In Stride. For complete results, please visit the Pre-Green Incentive web page at www.ushja.org.

Casparo and Molly Sewell Take Tricolor in Pre-Green Level 1 at WEF

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Wellington, Fla. - Molly Sewell piloted David Matisz LLC's horse, Casparo, to championship honors in the Pre-Green Hunter Level 1. Casparo earned two firsts and two thirds over fences, along with a second place finish in the under saddle.

Remaining consistent over the two days of competition, Marksman and Christopher Payne finished the day as reserve champions. The pair earned a first and two seconds over fences.

Although this week was only Casparo's fourth horse show, the six-year-old Warmblood looked like a veteran in the ring. "He [Casparo] has been champion or first and second every time we have shown him. He always rises to the occasion," Sewell noted.

Sewell started riding Casparo in September and has enjoyed getting to know him. Talking about Casparo, Sewell commented, "My favorite part about him [Casparo] is how light he is. One barely has to touch the reins."

While Casparo started off the division with two thirds over fences, he stepped up his game the second day when both over fences classes went in the Rost Arena. "He [Casparo] really liked the bigger ring. He jumped everything great, and it was so much fun to go in a big ring with a brave horse," Sewell explained.

After a strong start, Sewell is looking forward to having Casparo compete in the ECHO Junior Hunter 3'3" division with a junior rider, along with continuing to shine in the Pre-Green Hunter Level 1.

St. Jacques Shines in USEF Pony Medal Final

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Lexington, KY - August 10, 2014 - From 7 a.m. until well into the afternoon, talented young pony rider after talented young pony rider trotted into the Alltech Arena to vie for the win in the Marshall & Sterling/USEF Pony Medal Final, but there was one talented rider in particular that stood out from among the 169 entries: Taylor St Jacques.

St Jacques and her mount, Happy Feet, met the opening vertical of the first round course perfectly, setting the tempo for nine more seamless fences, a well executed simple change of lead down an outside line and a firm halt at the end of her course.

That first round course shot St Jacques to the top of the standby list for further testing, and she would remain untouched in that first place position through to the end of three total rounds, clinching the 2014 USEF Pony Medal Final victory.

"I'm really excited,' said a smiling St Jacques following her win. "This is my second year at Medal Finals, and I wasn't expecting it to go as well as it did today.'

From the initial course, judges Karen Healey and Stacia Madden called back the top 20 riders for round two: another 10 fence, Richard Jeffery's designed course. From there, they whittled it down further, calling back the top four for additional testing on the flat.

St Jacques, Camyrn Halley, Ericka Koscinski and Alexandra Pielet demonstrated the walk, trot, canter and sitting trot in the counter-clockwise direction before reversing and performing the same gaits sans stirrups. 

The final testing confirmed what the judges had thought all the way through from the first round: that the victory was St Jacques'. Finishing behind St Jacques in the second place position was Pielet, while the third place honor went to Koscinski.

"Going into the second part of the first test I was just focused on staying smooth again, trying to keep my heels down and looking up,' 15-year-old St. Jacques said. "There are usually a few minutes when I get really nervous - but then after I realize that it's just another trip at another horse show I'm fine. I try to not let it get to me and just think 'I'm just going in again for another trip just to be judged again.' When I start overthinking I really start over thinking, and it goes badly.'

St Jacques trains with Bill Schaub and Molly Sewell at Over the Hill Farm, and she credits much of her win today to their training and to the generosity of Lily Ezrow. Ezrow is currently leasing St Jacques' winning mount, Happy Feet, and she has allowed St Jacques to show the pony for the past several months.

"I really want to thank Lily and her mom Isabelle,' St Jacques said. "I'm really fortunate to rides these ponies, and I've had a great time on them. I'm really happy that they're happy for me and that they're letting me do this. 

"They've been very generous,' Schaub added. "I'm very proud of Taylor. She's worked very hard and learned a lot. We just really emphasize keeping the basics strong and working on exercises, and then it all makes everything fit together. Pony Finals isn't really something you can practice for. You've got to learn all of your skills so when you're thrown out there you can do whatever test they ask of you."

St Jacques has handled any and all tests thrown her way this week at the USEF Pony Finals with ease. In addition to her win today, St Jacques was reserve champion in the Large Green Pony Hunters with Empire's Victory, champion in the Medium Pony Hunters with Finders-Keepers and the recipient of the 2014 Mindy Darst Perpetual Trophy. The trophy was presented to St Jacques as the rider the judges deemed the most likely to become a top professional rider.  

Perhaps making her final USEF Pony Finals win today a little bit extra special for St Jacques was being able to finish on top alongside some of her closest friends.  

"My top three closest friends were us three that got the top three [St Jacques, Pielet and Koscinski],' Pielet said.

Pielet made one of the biggest moves up the rankings throughout the three rounds, climbing from ninth after the first round to the eventual second place spot.

"I was really nervous because [Secret Love] kept wanting to go faster as he got closer to home. I was like 'no, no,' and I was really nervous,' Pielet said of her first round course. "Then it was a lot quieter and smoother the second one. I was just so concerned about making (the second round]. Then I just relaxed' and it was fun."